The Negro World
Saturday, February 17, 1923
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
W. E. BURGHARDT DU BOIS AS A HATER OF DARK PEOPLE
FELLOW MEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
W. E. Burghardt Du Bois, the Negro "muleader," who is editor of the "Crisis," the official organ of the National Association for the Advancement of "certain" Colored People, situated at 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, has again appeared in print. This time he appears as author of an article in the February "Century" Magazine under the caption, "Back to Africa," in which he makes the effort to criticize Marcus Garvey, the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the Black Star Line. This "unfortunate mulatto," who bewails every day the drop of Negro blood in his veins, being sorry that he is not Dutch or French, has taken upon himself the responsibility of criticizing and condemning other people while holding himself up as the social "unapproachable" and the great "I AM" of the Negro race. But we will see who Mr. Du Bois is, in that he invites his own characterization. So we will, therefore, let him see himself as others see him
"Fat, Black, Ugly Man"
In describing Marcus Garvey in the article before mentioned, he referred to him as a "little, fat, black man; ugly, but with intelligent eyes and a big head." Now, what does Du Bois mean by ugly? This so-called professor of Harvard and Berlin ought to know by now that the standard of beauty within a race is not arrived at by comparison with another race; as, for instance, if we were to desire to find out the standard of beauty among the Japanese people we would not judge them from the Anglo-Saxon viewpoint, but from the Japanese. How he arrives at his conclusion that Marcus Garvey is ugly, being a Negro, is impossible to determine, in that if there is any ugliness it is on the part of Du Bois and not on the part of the "little fat, black man with the big head," because all this description is typical of the African. But this only goes to show how much hate Du Bois has for the black blood in his veins. Anything that is black, to him, is ugly, is hideous, is monstrous, and this is why in 1917 he had but the lightest of colored people in his office, when one could hardly tell whether it was a white show or a colored vaudeville he was running at Fifth avenue. It was only after the Universal Negro Improvement Association started to pounce upon him and his National Association for the Advancement of Colored People that they admitted that colored element into the association that could be distinguished as Negro, and it was during that period of time that Weldon Johnson and Pickens got a look-in. But even Pickens must have been "ugly" for Du Bois, for they made it so warm for him up to a few months ago that he had to go a-hunting for another job, the time when Marcus Garvey was willing to welcome him into the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Du Bois and White Company
It is no wonder that Du Bous seeks the company of white people, because he hates blacks as being ugly. That is why he likes to dance with white people and dine with them and sometimes sleep with them, because from his way of seeing things all that is black is ugly, and all that is white is beautiful. Yet this professor, who sees ugliness in being black, essays to be a leader of the Negro people and has been trying for over fourteen years to deceive them through his connection with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Now what does he mean by advancing colored people if he hates black so much? In what direction must we expect his advancement? We can conclude in no other way than that it is in the direction of losing our black identity and becoming, as nearly as possible, the lowest whites by assimilation and miscegenation.
This probably is accountable for the bleaching processes and the hair straightening escapades of some of the people who are identified with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in their mad desire of approach to the white race, in which they see beauty as advocated by the professor from Harvard and Berlin. It is no wonder some of these individuals use the lip stick, and it is no wonder that the erudite Doctor keeps a French beard. Surely that is not typical of Africa; it is typical of that blood which he loves so well and which he bewails in not having more in his veins—French.
Lazy and Dependent
In referring to the effort of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Movement Association to establish a building in Harlem, he says in the : "There was a long, low, unfmished church basement roofed over. designed as the beginning of a church long ago, but abandoned. Garvey roofed it over, and out of this squat and dirty old Liberty nausea screams his propaganda. As compared with the homes, the busier and church, Garvey's basement represents nothing in accomplishment to my waste in attempt."
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
GHARDT DU
TER OF DAI
CALLS HIS OWN RACE "BLACK AND UGLY,"
JUDGING FROM THE WHITE MAN'S
STANDARD OF BEAUTY
NEGRO WHO LIKES SOFT CARPET AND LIFE OF EASE, BORN POOR, BUT DESPISES POOR MASSES
Trick of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to Solve Problem by Assimilation and Color Distinction
IS PICKENS HANDSOME OR "UGLY," ACCORDING TO DU BOIS
NEGRO LEADERS USING LIPSTICK AND POWDER PUFFS
THE MAN WHO IS FRENCH, DUTCH AND AFRICAN ALL IN ONE—WHAT IS HE?
effort of his race to create out of nothing something which would be useful to their ownership, in that the utility did Liberty Hall. the speaks of israel property of Negroes, while in another section of his article he praises the "beautiful and luxurious buildings" he claims to be occupied by other black folk, making it appear that these buildings were really the property of these people referred to, such as, according to his own description, "a brick block on Seventh avenue stretching low and beautiful from the Y. W. C. A. with a moving picture house of the better class and a colored 5 and 10 cent store, built and owned by black folks." Du Bois knows he lies when he says that the premises herein referred to were built and are owned by black folks. They are the property of industrious Jews who have sought an outlet for their surplus cash in the colored district. The Y. W. C. A. is a donation from the good white people; but he continues by saying "down beyond on One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street the sun burns the rising spire of an Abyssinian Church, a fine structure built by Negroes who for one hundred years have supported the organization, and are now moving to their luxurious home of soft carpets, stained windows and swelling organ." He also knows that this building has been subscribed to by the Church Extension Society, which is white, and therefore the building is not entirely owned by the members of the Abyssinian Church. Finally, he says "the dying rays hit a low, rambling basement of brick and rough stone." This in reference to Liberty Hall.
Independent Negro Effort
Liberty Hall represents the only independent Negro structure referred to in the classification of Du Bois about buildings up in Harlem, but he calls this independent effort "dirty and old," but that which has been contributed by white people he refers to in the highest terms. This shows the character of the man—he has absolutely no respect and regard for independent Negro effort but that which is supported by white charity and philanthropy, and why so? Because he himself was educated by charity and kept by philanthropy. He got his education by charity, and now he is occupying a position in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and it is felt that his salary is also paid by the funds that are gathered in from the charity and philanthropy of white people. This "soft carpet" idea is going to be the undoing of W. E. B. Du Bois. He likes too much the luxurious home and soft carpets, and that is why he is naturally attracted to white folks, because they have a lot of this; but if he were in Georgia or Alabama he would now be stepping on the carpets of Paradise; but that is not all of the man, as far as that is concerned. He ridicules the idea that the Universal Negro Improvement Association should hold a social function in Liberty Hall on the 10th of August, 1922, at which certain social honors were bestowed upon a number of colored gentlemen, such as Knighthood and the creation of the Peerage.
Social Honors for Negroes
In referring to the matter, he says in the article: "Many American Negroes and some others were scandalized by something which they could not regard as a simple child's play. It seemed to them sinister. This enthrancement of a demagogue, a blunt boaster, who with monkey-shines was deliberating the people, and taking their hard-earned dollars; and in high Hells there arose an insistent cry, 'Garvey must go!' Indeed Du Bois was delicately by the creation of a Peerage and Knighthood by Negroes, and in truth the person who is responsible for the creation of such a thing should be, because Du Bois and those who think like him can see and regard it for conferred only by their white masters. If Du Bois was created a Knight
Commander of the Bath by the ave advertised it from cover to cover of by some white Potenate, he woy written a book and told us how he was the "Crisis," and he would hich a Potenate, but it was not done that way. recognized above his fellows Negroes, in which Du Bois could see nothing This was an enthronement and the "Garvey must gol" program started in worth while He was the enthronement, because he realized that Gary Harlem immediately Negro Improvement Association were usurping the vey and the Univer to himself as being the highest social dignitary, not right he had arrog to himself as being the highest social dignitary, not only in Harlem throughout the country.
Lucus Garvey and His Birth and Du Bois
In the tenth paragraph of his article Du Bois has the following to say: "Look note the facts. Marcus Garvey was born on the northern coast of Jamaica in 1887. He was a poor black boy, his father dying in the almshouse. He received a little training in the Church of England Grammar School and then learned the trade of printing, working for years as foreman of printing plant. Then he went to Europe and wandered about England at France working and observing until he finally returned to Jamaica. He found himself facing a stone wall. He was poor, he was black, he had no chance for a university education, he had no likely chance for preferment in any line, but could work as an artisan at small wage for the rest of his life."
Now let us consider Marcus Garvey in comparison with Du Bois. W. E. B. Du Bois was born in Great Barrington, Mass., in 1868. Some wealthy white people became interested in him and assisted in his education. They sent him to Fisk University, from Fisk to Harvard, where he graduated as a commencement orator. He raised part of the money for his later education by giving recitals in white summer hotels. Where he was born, that is, in Great Barrington, Mass.—he had early is born with white surroundings.
poor whites in his neighborhood, although he was a poor, penniless and humble Negro. As proof of that he wrote the following on the tenth page of his book known as "Dark Water": "I greatly deserved the poor Irish and South Germans who slaved in the mills (that is, the mills of the town in which he was born), and I annexed myself with the rich and well-to-do as my natural companions." Marcus Garvey's father, who was also named Marcus Garvey, was one of the best known men in the parish in which he was born, St. Ann, Jamaica. For a number of years he held prominent positions in the parish and was regarded as one of the most independent black men on the island, owning property that ran into thousands of pounds. Through his own recklessness he lost his property and became poor. His poverty did not in any way affect Marcus Garvey, Jr., in that the mother of the latter assumed the responsibility that the father failed to assume, and he therefore got an early education, not through charity, as did Du Bois, but through the support of a loving mother. Marcus Garvey, Jr., never knew the consideration of a father, because at the time when he was born his father had already lost all he had, and had shifted his obligation to his children to the shoulders of their mother. With the assistance Marcus Garvey got from his mother he educated himself, not only in Jamaica but traveled throughout South and Central America, the West Indies and Europe, where for several years he studied in completing the education that he had already laid the foundation for in his native home. All that was not done for the charity of any one, but by Marcus Garvey himself and the support he got from his mother. While, on the other hand, Du Bois, starting even from the elementary stage of his education up to his graduation from Harvard and his passing through Berlin, got all that through the charity and philanthropy of good white people. Admitting that Marcus Garvey was born poor, he encouraged a hatred for the people of his kind or class, but to the contrary devoted his life to the improvement and higher development of that class within the race which has been struggling under the disadvantage that Du Bois himself portrays in his article.
Marcus Garvey was born in 1887; Du Bois was born in 1868. And shows that Du Bois is old enough to be Marcus Garvey's father. But what has happened? With the fifty-five years of Du Bois' life we find him still living on the patronage of good white people, and with the thirty-six years of Marcus Garvey (who was born poor and whose father, according to Du Bois, died in a poor house) he is able to at least pass over the charity of white people and develop an independent program originally financed by himself to the extent of thousands of dollars now taken up by the New peoples themselves. Now, which of the two is poorest, cheaper and in manhood? The older man, who had all these opportunities, would rather be a parasitic living off the good working mother, such as the younger man, who had difficulty all respect to need and short to do his business, though in his later life he constructs a "drover's building" from which he sends out his propaganda on race relations and self-interest.
race their real solution for the Negro problem because they are that they would be turned down in their intention. They would it appear as if they are interested in the advancement of the Negro of America, when, in truth they are but interested in the subj uf certain types of the Negro race and the ass m on of a the race as possible into the white race
The Negro Problem
know more of our problem has as ILL Negro problem has very different clearly that the problem of the American Negro problem of the problem of the South African Negro or Negro. We have Negro or the problem of the South American problem of the hitherto been so clear as to the way in which the Negro in the United States differs from the problem of for a long time problem in the have been told and we have not the truly been settled" indices, and particularly in common have Now Du Bois sea
in the West Indies and Johns settlement of the problem of the rare kind of a settlement is it with a great deal of attention. What enough to admit it, because Bois knows well he is not honest situation there, wherein an amounself visited Jamaica and the white man is elevated to the loient has been effected whereby the between him is socially and economic heights and Du Bois, and beneath them both only elevated the relative pe of very bottom socially and economically man who is attached to the
Settlement of 2
Du Bois regards this as a settled problem
Indies and Jamaica. Now this is the kid problem in the West National Association for the Advance a settlement that we and in America, and they have not been honest got Colored People want us so, that we might act accordingly. This will come out and tell black blood in his veins. This is why he rega Du Bors bewaits the Universal Negro Improvement Association Marcus Garvey and why he calls Marcus Garvey "black and ugly" possible. The meant in Jamaica and the West Indies satires. Unwhile this settlement would satisfy him in America he must realize that and probable colored people in the United States of America do fifteen million settlement; that outside of himself and a halt dozen miles such a of thought, who make up the Executive of the National His school the Advancement of Colored People the majority of Negation for studying him and his solution of the problem. But all or are not people of whatsoever hue are going to fight together for the colored upbuilding of the Negro race so that in the day to come we general able to look back upon our effort with great pride even is others be positioned than ourselves have struggled upward to their present size economic and political standing among races and nations.
Deception and Hypocrisy
To show the deception and hypocrisy of Du Bois, he pretends in the above-quoted paragraph from his article, as it he were not thoroughly acquainted with the problem in the West Indies, when, in another paragraph, he states the following.
"This is the West Indian solution of the Negro problem:
"The mulattoes are virtually regarded and treated as whites with the assumption that they will, by continued white intermarriage, bleach out their color as soon as possible. There surface therefore the white Colomals save newcomers, who are not of Negro descent in some more or less remote ancestor. Mulattoes, intermarry, then, largely with the whites, and the so-called disappearance of the color line is the disappearance of the line between the whites and mulattoes and not between the whites and the blacks or even between the mulattoes and the blacks."
"Thus the privileged and exploiting group in the West Indies is composed of whites and mulattoes, while the poorly paid and ignorant proletarians are the blacks, forming a peasantry vastly in the majority, but socially, politically and economically helpless and nearly nonexistent. This peasantry, moreover, has been systematically deprived of its natural leadership, because the black boy who showed initiative or who accidentally gave advice to the educated man gained the recognition of the white-mulatto group and might be incorporated with them. Additionally, if he married one of them. Thus his interest and efforts were identified with the mulatto-white group."
This is the kind of settlement that Du Bois speaks of, and this is the kind of settlement that he wants in the United States of America. Du Bois, you shall not have it!
Garvey Challenges Du Bois
Du Bois says that "Garvey had no thorough education and a very lazy idea of the technique of civilization". Du Bois forgets that Garvey has challenged him over a dozen times to intellectual combat, and he has for as many times failed to appear. Garvey will back his education against that of Du Bois at any time in the day from early morning to midnight, and whether he be in the classroom or on the public platform, will make him look like a dead duck on a frozen lake
Is Du Bois Educated
Du Bois seems to believe that the monopoly of education is acquired by being a graduate of Fisk, Harvard and Berlin. Education is not so much the school that one has passed through, but the use one makes of that which he has learned.
If Du Bois' education fits him for no better service than being a lackey for good white people, then it were better that Negroes were not educated. Du Bois forgets that the reason so much noise was made over him and his education was because he was among the first "experiments" made by white people on colored men along the lines of higher education. No one experimented with Marcus Garvey, so no one has to look upon him with surprise that he was able to master the classics and graduate from a university.
Du Bois is a surprise and wonder to the good white people who experimented with him, but to us moderns he is just an ordinary intelligent Negro, one of those who does not know what he wants.
The Man Who Lies
Du Bois is such a bar when it comes to anything relating to the Universal Negro Improvement Association and Black Star Line and Marcus Garvey that we will not consider his attacks on the Black Star Line seriously. He led before in reference to this corporation and had to swallow his vomit. He has led again, and we think a statement is quite enough to dispose of him in this matter.
This envious, narrow-minded man has tried in every way to surround the Universal Negro Improvement Association and Marcus Garvey with suspicion. He has been for a long time harping on the membership of the Universal Negro Improvement Association as to whether we have millions of members or thousands. He is interested because he wants to know whether these members are all paying dues or not, in that he will become very interested in the financial end of it, as there would be a lot of money available. Du Bois does not know that whether the Universal Negro Improvement Association had money or not he wouldn't have the chance of laying his hands on it, in that there are very few "leaders" that we can trust with a dollar and get the proper change. This is the kind of leadership that the Universal Negro Improvement Association is about to destroy for the building up of that which is self-pacificing; the kind of leadership that will not hate poor people because they are poor, as Du Bois himself tells us he does, but a kind of leadership that will make itself poor and keep itself poor so as to be better able to interpret the poor in their desire for general uplift. He hates the poor. Now, what kind of a leader in he? Negroes are all poor black folk. They are not rich. They are not white; hence they are despised by the great professor.
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THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
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fifteen million Negroes of the United States of America and the rest of the West Indies, South and Central America and Africa work toward the glorious end of an unanticipated race and redefine another land.
UNIVERSAL MIGRATION which has been most wickedly used in the Negotiations is a giving or scrupulous solution in New York as decided to and of may
LIBERTY HALL. 120 West 138th Street
POST THE CONSPIRACY OF THE GANG THAT HAVE THE NEGOTIOUS IN THE AFFAIRS
Come and Be Intructed Correctly on Matters Affecting the Race
TALY NIGHT THIS WEEK AND NEXT WEEK SEVEN OCTOBER AND TODAY ACCOMMODATED EVERY NIGHT From February 5th to 20th Inclusive
EVERY MEMBER AND FRIEND OF THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION WILL BE IN LINE AT LIBERTY HALL EVERY NIGHT IN THIS BIG TWO WEEKS' DRIVE TO ENPOSE THE ENEMIES OF OUR PROGRESS
Come and Hear !!! Come and Hear !!! HOT TIME FOR TWO WEEKS
BE EARLY TO GET SEATS AND AVOID THE RUSH
and Memorial Program and Home After Meetings. Come and See the Strength of the Naval Negro Improvement Association in Harlem
Come and See DuBois, Pickens, Chandler, Owen and Their Gang Defeated by Logic and Intelligence
COME AND HELP LAUGH THESE NEGROES OUT OF THE RACE
GOD SAVE AMERICA! . LONG LIVE AFRICA!
DIRECT TO YOUR HOME
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for which I enclose the sum of in payment thereof.
WRITE IN AMOUNT
WRITE NAME AND ADDRESS PLAINLY
Name ...
Street and No.....
By order UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
BIG DEMONSTRATION OF NEGROES AT CARNEGIE HALL
Large Gathering of White and Colored People. Friday Night, February 23
CARNELY HALL at four seventh street and seventh avenue. This meeting purpose to be the most important the great organ at that on that occasion to the great will explain to the white people New York and all subjects of the association the purpose of a meeting the misoperation that has been carried out for the purpose known as the Nation's Amendment Colored People by W. H. D. L. O'Shea and W. H. Johnson. On this occasion the President will be heard to advocate and to expect that the will be crowded with us as usual. The President general of the CARNELY is stated to make the decision the black and White Races the United Nations to expose the tactics of the enemies.
From the demands made for tickets this week, the event will be sold out before the close of the season, and a limited crowd will be allowed to attend. A caution who would like to attend the event should inform that while there are too many attendees and some are not yet ready, everyone is welcome.
Everybody is invited to attend the event.
MEDIATELY LIVERY CARRIAGE PULL
at little south street
UNIVERSAL NORGEO IMPORT ASSOCIATION
West 15th street
PEOPLE WILL BE CORDING
NEW YORK, PENNSYLVANIA
LAND THIS MILITIEN
What do you think about the
The Failure of a Critic
Du Bois Laps upon the custom the public has made no notice of the personal and other laws for lary White Oxington Monroe's Store andollar and Spougham. Du Bois, no doubt pork cops from the counter of the cheapest restaurant in the like man, Necto graduate at Harvard and
Test of Education and Ability
When it comes to education and ability, Gavrey be fair to Du Bois in every respect.
Suppose for the proof of the better education and better carve and Du Bois were to dismantle and put aside all they possess and were placed in the same environment to start life over abroad in the test of the better man? What would you say about this doctor Marcus Garvey is willing now because he is conceived enough to believe that in the space of two years he would make you look like a tramp in the competitive rivalry for a higher place in the social economic world.
Let not our hearts be further troubled over Du Bois but let
BIG MEETING
AND CONCERT
FOR THE COLORED PEOPLE
OF PHILADELPHIA
At Salem Baptist Church
12th Street Below Baimbridge
Saturday Night, Feb. 17th
8 O'CLOCK SHARP
Hon. MARCUS GARVEY
The Greatest Negro Leader and Orator, Will Speak
He Will Expose the Eight Negroes Who Wrote the Infamous Letter to the Hon. Attorney-General of the United States
BIG MUSICAL PROGRAM
Come and Hear!
Come and See!
ADMISSION, 50 CENTS
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
t
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Important Notice
All members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are hereby reminded that their One Dollar Annual Assessment is payable during the month of January.
To be financial you MUST pay this Assessment this month.
MARCUS GARVEY, President-General January 1, 1923.
HAMPTON WINS—25 TO 15
Ignoring Freedcm
ATTENTION!!! ATTENTION!!! TONIGHT! TONIGHT! A Call to the 150,000 Negroes of Harlem HON. MARCUS GARVEY
AT LIBERTY HALL
At 8.15 o'Clock
HAVE A COPY MAILED
Publishers of The Negro World. 36 West 135th Street, New York City:
Field goal's—Hampton: Gunn, 41 Jones, 4, Burrell, 2, McNiphols 2 'Y'; King, 2, Taylor, 1, Epps, 1 Foula—Burrell, 1, Mason 1
The basketball schedule follows February 9 Roanoke All Five at Roanoke February 10, Bluefield Colored Institute at Bluefield, February 17, Morrison College at Hampton
It is the date that February 22 the students will receive themselves on Monday for the defense which they suffer from the hands. Philadelphia few weeks ago.
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NOTICE
The Division No. 112 in Santo Domingo City, Republic of Dominica, of Which
MR. GEO. A. DOUSE
Is Male President
MRS. HENRIETTA GAINES
Is Lady President
MR. CHARLES SCARBOROUGH
Is Treasurer
MR. EZEL VANDERHORST
Is Secretary,
Is the duly recognized division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in that city.
Charter taken from their hall has been this day revoked and a duplicate issued in its stead.
All persons in this city are requested to cooperate with these officers in making the division a success.
ROBT. L. POSTON,
Secretary-General
(Signed)
MARCUS GARVEY, Pres.-Gen'l
February 6, 1923.
Harlem's Great Educational Forum
LIBERTY HALL
120 to 148 West 138th St.
Open Every Night for the Instruction of the Colored People of the City of New York
Spreches Are Delivered Every Night by
PROMINENT SPEAKERS
Dig Variety Musical Program
Full Force of the Universal Band Every Night
Accommodations for 6,000 People Nightly
DOORS OPEN
From 7:30 to 11:30 P. M.
Special Features
on Monday, Wednesday and Sunday Nights
Hon. Marcus Garvey in the
Be Early to Get Good Seats
Let Liberty Hall Be Your Social Center
Come and Hear What Is Good On All Over the World
U. N. I. A. LEADERS EXPOSE THE FALLACIES OF OTHER SUPPOSED RACE LEADERS
LIBERTY, HALL, New York, Sunday Night February 1, 1923. If there were any among the thousands of people who attended Liberty Hall tonight whose faith in the Universal Negro Improvement Association had created and who believed that religion was stationary because of weight of opposition which time is pressing so heavily they left Liberty Hall tonight convinced that the Universal Improvement Association is as a factor and is firmly enjoined the lines of the American
and in the world at large as no other association among Negroes is at the present time, that enthusiasm for the cause is still at its zenith and that the principles for which it stands are so fundamental that no undermining influences can divert the association from the path to freedom and emancipation which it is showing for the race. If ever there was a time in the history of the Negro race when an organization was needed to instill race pride into the minds of Negroes when there are so many disturbing elements as work, training, duty, the race the time is now and the universe Negro impoment Association under the leadership of the Hon. Mat is Carvey and his colleagues is courageously facing the situation in a changing order out of chaos and getting Negroes in all parts of the world unified in thought and action with a common destiny in view—the ultimate entailment of a government of their own on the continent of Africa.
How William Sherrell, leader of American Negroes was at his best tonight and delivered an address which for powerful eloquence and oratory will rank anion, any of the best speeches or delivered from the platform of any publ. forum in America. He joined issue with those traitors of the race who sought to impress upon the white America on public that the University. Negro improvement Association was germinating on seeds of hatred toward white people branding their statement a criminal he and deploying the depiction to which they had hung in bringing such a matter to the attention of the public. Declaring that the N I A does not perpetrate hatred against white people Mr Sherrell, however went on to show that if the Negro did hate he was not to blame for it. To justify his statement he recalled what the Negro had done for two hundred and fifty years in contributing to the making of America and how he had tried in every way to cooperate with the white man, but in vain He drew a beautiful word picture of the Negro joining hands with the white man and fighting side by side with him, spitting his blood in every war beginning from Boston Commons on the Revolutionary War at Valley Borgs in the Civil War, at San Juan Hall in the Spanish American War and in the World War of France and Blandera in the late World War, to make the world for Democracy. In spite of all this the Negro was still regenerated, defended, raised and trained and sounded the rights of citizenship and called Mr Sherrell with dramatic effect of black men have got a job of hate whose fault is at the applause which met Mr Sherrell at the end of his wonderful person who was deafening and laced for several minutes. Never before had an audience in liberty Hall been more thrilled on this occasion and at some points of his speech the audience was held so spellbound that beside the speaker's voice not a sound was audible in any part of this great building. Mr Sherrell wound up with a forceful declaration of the principles of the association. The N I A he said knew no turning back, we have settled to make for the Negro a national home, we have started to get freedom and独立发展 an opportunity for the Negro race we have started having the foundation for a mighty Negro Republic and nothing between him and Heil is going to turn one versed Negro Association back.
Hon Mary Tarey (followed with a speech that was inspiring forful and logical in defense of the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. He chose for his subject The Negro's Forward March and launched forth into a discussion of the reasons and the foundation for the
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
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Liberty Hall Audience Thrilled With Eloquent Speeches by Hon. Marcus Garvey and Hon William Sherrill—The Program of the U. N. I. A Ably Vindicated—Is the Most Logical Solution of the Negro Problem—Governmental Power on the Part of Negroes Will Command the Respect of Nations—U. N. I. A. Working to This End
NEGROES URGED TO STOP FOLLOWING TAILOR-MADE LEADERS—MUST PICK AND CHOOSE LEADERS FOR THEMSELVES AND A PROGRAM OF THEIR OWN—U. N. I. A. WILL NOT TURN BACK IN SPITE OF WHATEVER OPPOSITION—LETTER SIGNED BY EIGHT NEGROES AND SENT TO U. S. ATTORNEY-GENERAL CHARACTERIZED AS MALICIOUS AND FALSE
Du Bois, Johnson, Pickens, Simmons and Others Scored From Public Platform—Are Proved to Be Traitors to the Race—Their Tactics Are Strongly Denounced Negroes Urged to Rally to the Standard of the Red, the Black and the Green-It Indicates the Longing and Yearning of Black Souls Throughout the World
program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in advocating the emancipation of the Negro race through the building up of a government in Africa as the solution of the Negro problem. He treated with contempt the theory of the assimilation of the races advocated by Du Bois as the solution of the Negro problem, and the theory of James Weldon Johnson that the problem would be solved through the Negro development in musk, art and literature. With an emphasis that was significant Herman Marcus Garvey said that he would like to see the Negro with a rope around his neck trying to sing himself into the souls of 500 white men who are determined to have him dead. The Negro will continue to sing and pray, but with that he was determined to create the kind of power for himself which would make the world respect him. He issued the warming to Negroes to be up and doing for the purpose of getting a foothold, or they would find that three hundred years the entire world would be extirpated even as the American Indian was exterminated from the continent of North America. In conclusion he urged the four hundred million Negroes of the world to rally around the standard of the Red, the Black and the Green indicating as it did, the longing and yearning of black people throughout the world.
Among the announcements made was that of a monster mass meeting to be held at Carnegie Hall on Friday evening, February 23 at which the American public both white and black would be properly informed of the aims and objects of the I L A and to correct the misinformation which had been propagated by the enemies of the association. Following use the preamble.
HON. WM. SHERRILL'S SPEECH
Mr Sherrill spoke as follows: I am indeed glad to see such a crowded house tonight of enthusiastic, desirous Negro men and women, for it portrays this fact. That the Negro here in Harlem is still anxious about his condition and is still desirous of helping to carry forward the greatest organization that has ever been created among Negroes. I regret very much that I was not at the afternoon meeting, because whenever I miss a meeting at Liberty Hall I feel as though I have missed a link out of my life for that day, but I want this afternoon to hear Mr Kelly Miller speak at the Y M C A. to about 435 bright intelligent young Negro men of Harlem, conforming a race conference for the purpose of bringing all Negro organizations and factions together, among one line of effort and endeavor. And as I listened to Prof Kelly Miller that struck me most was this. That in that auditorium at the Y M C A, crowded with young intelligent, ambitious, aspiring young Negro men, as he pleaded for race unity and race co-operation and race solidarity—as he pointed out the direction in which the race is drifting, as he pointed to the disaster that faces the race if they keep up this constant fighting among themselves, and as I heard those young men cheer time after time, one could readily understand that the Negro in this country is desirous of co-operating in desirous of coming together, is desirous of fostering a program of unity and solidarity, and that the fighting and the kicking and the wrangling that you hear are simply on the part of a few self-appointed leaders who are ambitious to carry forward some of their own petty schemes or to satisfy some of their own selfish desires.
The Famous Letter to the U. 8. Attorney General
This brings my attention to the letter which was signed by eight Negroes and sent to United States Attorney General Daugherty. For a few minutes tonight I want to call your attention to the first paragraph of this letter. One need only read the first paragraph to find out how low some Negroes in the race can sink. It reads: "As chief law enforcement officer of the nation we wish to call your attention to a hurtful menace to harmonious race relationship. There are in our midst certain Negro criminals and potential murderers both foreign and American-born, who are moved and
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
A Lie of the Most Malicious Kind
We know that this statement is not true. We know that this statement is a lo of the most malicious kind, but I want to call your attention to this. Suppose the statement were true: suppose Negroes were tired of the burdens strapped to their backs, suppose Negroes were so disgusted that they had begun to hate it, suppose Negroes had endured Jim Crow laws, suppose Negroes had had the lynchers trapped around their neck so many times until they had begun to hate, suppose the slave was beginning to resent those things, suppose the slave was beginning to hate his market—it the duty of Negroes who are supposed to love their race to report these things? Even if it were true, can you imagine Negroes born and raised in America—can you imagine Negroes who have come in contact with all sorts of oppression—can you imagine Negroes who have the same load that was strapped to the backs of others strapped to there—can you imagine Negroes taking upon themselves to call white folks' attention to the fact that the slave is getting tired—that the slave is organizing to throw off the burden, that the slave is beginning to hate! Can you imagine eight Negroes supposed to be leaders, working out the destiny of a race, sinking to such depths when they signed this letter to Attorney General Daugherty, saying that the Negroates
A Denial and a Justification
We know it is not go. But we are an organization know that this organza dress does not peripatate hatred against anybody, but, ah, friends! if the Negro does hate I wonder who is to blame?
Who Is to Blame?
If the Negro has got a lot of bitterness in his heart I wonder who is blame. If the Negro has made every effort to cooperate with his dominant master and yet retains on the same status that he has today, I wonder who is to blame. Has not the Negro tried in every way. Has not the Negro at first given 20 years of unquitted to make this country bloom like a rose? Did he not tuned the moe "it a bridge, the streams"? Did he not clear up the swamps? Did he not make harbor earth give birth to vegetation? Has not the Negro tried to cooperate with his dominant master in an effort to get justice and fair play? Has not the Negro watched from election to election and from year to year, hoping that the next year the next election will bring in better conditions. And has he not seen these hopes dashed to the ground?
The Negro's Portion After the War
What Negro acting beneath the sound of my son would have thought that after the great war of 1914 the Negro would have continued to have been aggregated, uninched and disframed in some parts of this country? What Negro hopes did not rise to the highest point when this last war was fought? What Negro did not feel that after we had shouldered gums side by side with the white man and died on the battlefields of France that conditions would have changed? Directly after slavery the Negro started immediately cooperating. He started by educating his children thinking that if these children were educated they would be given every right of citizenship. He started by making Christians of his children thinking that if they were Christianized they would be given every advantage of citizenship. Mothers toiled over the washtub and fathers worked hard to put their boys through school, and they came out and found that they were subjecited to the same conditions, they found that they were barred from the same public places, had the same ballot annotated from their hands. But the Negro under those conditions did not lose hope, he still retained a spark of hope, which was fanned into a flame when this last war was fought
Answered the Call to War
The Negro heard a cry this time a cry that he had never heard before.
He heard the nations of the world crying for democracy. He heard the nations of the world saying, "Come, black man and help us make the world safe for democracy." The Frenchman called from the French colonial possessions England called from her
---
colonial possessions in the West Indies. America called from Mississippi and Alabama and Georgia. They said, Come, there has arisen a Kaiser who is a destroyer of justice, who is bent upon conquering the world that he may rule with an iron hand all the nations of the world, he is the incarceration of the devil himself, come, black men help us rid the world of this killer! And black men answered the call of the Stars and Stripes, black men answered the call of the Union Jack and black men answered the call of the tricolor of France. They forgot the injustices that England had mistreated out to them, they forgot the atrocities that had been inflicted upon them by the liegians in the Congo, they forgot that America had lynched and burned them. Several Negro prophets said that regardless of what the priest had given to the Negro if they died in the tremens of France in this war times will be better and Negroes believed in their leaders and believed in their dominant masters and heart wife and mother and sweet heart good wife and sailed away when the mighty deep beneath whose eyes woke lurked a deadly marine seaking whom it might destroy, and after a few days of attack, they offered the other side and, after offering up a prayer to God for the protection of men who they left behind they took their treasures and advanced to our enemy's line. They cared not for their lives as they rushed on in the wake of shell fire and the burning of shrapnel. They fought on the fields of France and Flanders, while their folks they had left behind in America was subscribed to War Savings Stamp and Liberty Bonds and their wages and so the warships damaged for admission to the ranks of the Red Cross nurses. A while they were dug up in the grim monster prophets and offer a while they were given an opportunity to make their comeback to the green war. But Negroes fought out that after this war on account of their suffering and sacrifice they would have the Jim Crow law abolished, would have the ballast placed in their hands, would have the right of admission to where they had been excluded.
But one day the beleaching cannon ceased to behelf, the guns ceased to roar, victory was on their side and the black man started back, going back to a world made safe by their blood—going back to a democracy—the had bought and paid for, going back to a world they hadrid of a fierce warrior, black men going back to the North Carolina town, going back to the West Indies, black men going back to Mississippi and Alabama and Georgia. But before they even left they discerned the cunning on the part of our masters. Before they even left white men sent one of our supposed to be leading Negroes to the fields of France to tell the Negro his place when he got back here and even on board the transport Negroes had their flags taken away from them and crammed in the storage. And when they returned home they found the same Jim Craw car, they found the same segregation, they hid the same ballot snatched from their hands, and some of them before they even got their uniform from off their backs were strung up in Mississippi and Alabama and Georgia.
Whose Fault Is It?
If the Negro has got a bit of bitterness in his heart, who o f it is! Is Has not the Negro made every little contribution, and has he not done everything to be or has a condition and the condition of the very one who has away over him? If the Negro贮位, Mr. Pickens—if the Negro does hate, Mr. Owen—if the Negro does hate, Mr. Bagnoll—whose fault is it? Has not the Negro laid down his life in every conflict in which this country has engaged and does he see conditions getting any better? Has he not tried the path and spilled his blood all the way from Boston Commons to somewhere in France? If Old Guild could talk she would tell you that. Whose fault is it? If Old Guild could talk she would tell you that he laid down his life on Boston Commons. Old Guild will tell you that at Valley Pier black men like white men left the bloody prints of their feet on the freezing ceil that they marched up San Juan Hill and as they dashed up the heights of San Juan Hill they sang. There be a hot time on the old town tonight? They dashed across the border into Mexico. Black men have never shot a President of the United States, black men have never mounted the Stars and Stripes, black men have never become traitors, black men have never run in fear, and if black men have got a bit of hate—suppose they have whose fault is it? (Great applause.)
Stop Following Tailor Made Leaders
It seems though on the part of those who are criticizing—that they think it is a crime for black men to hate a little bit. I want to tell these hypocrites of the race, those traitors of the race, that I have looked the
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papers through and I have never been a letter written by them to the Attorney-General of the United States calling attention to the white people in the Ku Klux Klan that hate Negroes. I want to say friends that the time has come for Negroes to differentiate between those Negroes who are using the race and those Negroes who are serving the race. The time has come for Negroes to get out of the beaten path, the time has come for Negroes to stop following those law-makers leaders the time has come for Negroes to pick and choose their leaders for themselves and pick and choose a program of their own to the detainment of the Negroes in his own hands.
The U. N. I. A Unifying the Race
The Unified Negro Improvement
Association is watching the trend of
africa and the U. N. I. A Negro Impro-
vement Association the greatest
organization organized for the other
population than to unify the Negro-
s simply working out the details of the
race as the whole, the process of
We are asking for the cooperation of
raceing Negroes we are asking
for the cooperation of those Negroes
who are able to bear a vision of the
gigantic progress in the organization
is being promoted for the U. N. I. A
Negro Improvement Association
that has just started.
No Turning Back
The Universal Negro Impersonation Act is an act that includes a requirement to make for the Negro person and home we have started to get freedom, to index home and upper rooms for the Negro race, we have started buying the foundation of a mans Negro republic and nothing be between her and hell is going to turn the Universal Negro Impersonation Act into a deafening applause.
Africa la Ours
For Africa is ours. Africa is ours it is ours from the Mediterranean a cool waters to Cape Colon) a city in form it is ours by the homes and deck the land it is ours by the path ways to land. Africa is ours by the ages stem demand it is ours by the gift of God and being ours we have sworn to keep a death bleed and make the death rob ours in what we can do with our way) cloud and prolonged applause and cries of "Hurrah for Sher-rrlll")
HON. MARCU B GARVE & SPEECH
Mr Garvey said My subject for tonight The New York Forward Marilyn Boree left into a discussion of my subject I have to read to you a list of news reports by the correspondent of The New York Trade from Paris it reads
FRANCE PLANS RAIL AND
MIR SALARA LIN
New Emperor To be Open Up in
Central Africa to Train
Trip to Africa Destinations
Special Council The Trial
New York Daily News
Since the tractor automobiles have shown their usefulness in the interior of the farm, they also on the outside of the farm, if these can not only continue, at a slower rate, but to maintain in normal service in a war and in a peaceful and well equipped, competent, self-sufficient. This is what General Estienne father of the war tanks, will a larger audience of the great great shed members of the official circle at a conference last week, Marshal Petuni presided at the gathering.
Aerial service General Estienne said will be easier to establish across the Marsh, than in Europe owing to the lack of other competitive means of formation and call shipments from Limbu province, France would be cheaper than those by ocean via Dakar, and to elimination of the number of handlers and transfers necessary on the latter route.
A railway will be completed within
twenty years he said at a cost of
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1 000 000 000 francs. Over this, the general asserted 600 000 tons of raw materials will be shipped annually from the Niger-products which France today buys in foreign markets at a cost of 5 000 000 000 francs.
Aside from its economic value such a railway General Estienne declared would be invaulable from the military point of view. Had it existed during the world war he declared it would have provided the most valuable railroad in all the aided countries. Since South American foodstuffs could have been shipped via Dakar instead of having to venture into a submarine-infested zone.
The manna he added will be built from the colombia Beharite minus of the Vienna line running straight west to Tumounga. There will be a two per foot over the intervening 2 000 m with a 1 000 horsepower, intermission on engine which will use a fuel grids but not a product that would aid a long the Niger. The lack of oil and water precludes the use of oil to imply the general said. He produced 50 000 trans-Baharan (forest) annually (more) on commercial business not counting the tourist traffic.
Another article in the same paper states that the French are developing a system in Morocco.
Theae Against the African Program
We have before us in America and in the West Indies a large number of Negro who claim to represent the highest intelligence of the race who have no idea that the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is a dream and is impossible; that they have absolutely lost nothing in Africa and are not interested in any way in Africa. While these men have positively declared themselves against any African program on the part of Negro peoples of the world we find that the great European nations namely England, France and Italy have and especially since the late war have utilized every bit of energy on their part toward the exploitation and development of Africa as a new center for the white race. France according to the statement here and which has been discussed long before by the Universal Negro Improvement Association, is desirous of building up in Africa a vast French Empire. The same thing is true of the Italians, as well as the English, to build up in Africa commercial empires, out of which they will extract wealth that will not only rehabilitate destroyed and bankrupt Europe, but out of which they will extract the kind of wealth that will render the white people of the world permanently secure. The statement reveals the fact that France can get out of her colonies in Africa enough raw material to supply our needs of France and save her 5,000,000,000 francs annually, which she will for the same raw materials then from other parts of the world. By the powers of exploitation France will at least 5,000,000,000 francs
Tropic Strength the Backbone of
Nations
Every day knows that the backbone of race or nation is the economic strength of the race or nation. Show me the nation that represents wealth of my kind and I will show you the nation or race that is respected by all mankind. It is admitted, it does not need any sage or great philosopher to tell you that, it does not need a graduate of Harvard to tell you that. Every ordinary student of economics and politics knows that Africa is the richest center in the world at this time. Europe is practically over-exploited and has but very little more to contribute to her own unkeep. Africa has become the center of attraction for exploitation for the rehabilitation of Europe' and the permanent security of the white race of Europe France. England and Italy are determined to exploit Africa for her mineral, coal, iron, copper, gold, diamonds, oil, rubber—for all that Africa is able to produce today;
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everything that the other continents have failed to produce out of the last century. Africa, therefore, becomes the most valuable bit of land in the world at this time, to the extent that French statesmen, Italian statesmen and English statesmen, backed up by their financiers, are making a determined effort to control the 12,000,000 square miles of that continent for the purpose of strengthening their financial position, and in the face of the fact that finance makes a race, that finance makes a nation; in face of the fact that Africa today is the most valuable bit of land in the world, we are told by the so-called intellectuals of our race that we have lost absolutely nothing in Africa. While, on the other hand, we remain in America we remain in the West Indies working for what? Working for an economic opportunity for the purpose of providing ourselves with the wherewithal to face the great competition that confronts all the races and nations of the day. Whilst we are willing and whilst they tell us that we must beg a chance to become mixed in the arranged economic condition of the western world they tell us that we must ignore the great possibilities and great opportunities of Africa that are now to be exploited by those who have already fixed an arrangement under which we struggle and suffer in this western world.
Lacking in Thought
It shows, therefore, that these men are not thinking; it shows that they absolutely have no conception of things as they are. Africa as everybody knows has been undeveloped for hundreds and hundreds of years. During that period of undevelopment the natives were left alone with all the vast wealth that Africa contains. During that time Europe was regarded as the foremost continent of the world—the richest continent—for all the wealth practically was there until America started to develop this western section of the globe. But in the war Europe destroyed all her wealth; Europe became bank rupt in the war and Europe had to seek new fields of exploitation. They could not go to Asia or they could no go to the western world because, by arrangement already out, it was impossible for them to pass the Japanese who guard on guard in Asia, in could they pass the United States, we stands on guard in the western world through the Monroe doctrine. The only place was Africa, the undeveloped continent. And here we have France desiring to build up in Africa a great commercial empire, Italy desiring to build up in Africa a great commercial empire and England desiring to build
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A paper published every Saturday in the interest of the Negro race and the Universal Negro Improvement Association by the African Communities League.
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No. 1
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"COLORED" PSYCHO-ANALYSIS?
UNDER the captions, "Who's Who--The Mirrors of Harlem-- Studies in 'Colored' Psycho-Analysis," Floyd J Calvin, an associate editor of the Messenger magazine, is turning the searchlight upon the prominent "cullud" citizens of Harlem Mr Calvin is a very bright, witty and ambitious young man who sometimes wades beyond his depth.
He trained his guns upon the literary editor of The Negro World and the editor of the New York Age in the February issue of the Messenger magazine. This is very flattering to the literary editor of The Negro World because the Messenger never goes gunning after small game. And when the Messenger shells a man it is recognition of the fact that he is some pumpkin, is in the big gun class.
We don't find any psycho-analysis in Mr. Calvin's article. There is psycho-observation, psycho-description, but no psychological analysis in his youthful attempts at psychologizing. The attempted dissertation indicates that Mr. Calvin has very keen perceptions, a breezy style and an original method of presentation, but that he needs severe training in explanatory psychology and inductive and deductive logic. That is, Mr. Calvin can see and describe splendidly what is on the surface, but cannot discern the forces working unseen beneath the surface.
Mr. Calvin characterizes Ferris' "African Abroad" as "two big volumes very little read." Before the World War distracted attention and intellect with the foreign sales there was a steady demand for "The African back bad." Judging from the fact that the book is usually in the hand, some reader when one asks for it in the Harlem library, and judging from the fact that so many white and colored writers are now expressing views and opinions which first saw the light of day when "The African Abroad" first made its bow to the reading public, although few acknowledge their indebtedness, we were under the impression that "The African Abroad" was a much read book.
Then Mr. Calvin contradicts himself. He says in one breath that Ferris wrote two big volumes and had the courage to stand against an entire convention, and in the next breath intimates that Ferris is easy going and lacks principle. He intimates that a man can be weak and at the same time can be strong enough to lift a ton.
"Rote" Learning va. Originality
Then Mr. Calvin proposes to revolutionize modern education He says in conclusion: "Prof. William H. Ferris represents the consequences of 'rote' learning without the balancing force of originality." Now this is something new in educational theory. Mr. Calvin believes that philosophy, psychology and sociology can be mastered as a foreign language is mastered, simply by exercising the memory. What a relief this will be to those students of philosophy who have knitted their brows and scratched their heads in wading through Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason," Kant's "Critique of Practical Reason," Hegel's "Phaenomologie des Geistes," Rieh's "Philosophical Criticism," Lotze's "Microcosmus," Ladd's "Metaphysics," Bradley's "Appearance and Reality" and Royce's "Conception of God."
The conclusion of the matter is that Mr. Calvin is talking through his hat—has never read "The African Abroad" or taken an advanced course in philosophy, psychology or sociology in any of the big universities of the East.
Plato thought differently from Mr. Calvin. He wrote over the door of his temple of philosophy: "Let no one enter here who has not studied geometry," meaning that one who has not braius enough to master geometry and who had not trained his reasoning faculties in demonstrating mathematical propositions couldn't master his philosophy or follow the dialectical processes of his reasoning.
Mr. Calvin's conception of "originality" is on a par with that of a man we once met who was writing a treatise on sociology or anthropology. We asked him, "Have you read this work or that work?" He said, "No, I am not reading any books on the subject because I want to be original." We met another man who said he very rarely read any books because he wanted to be original. These three men revealed indeed in that blissful state of which the poet said, "Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise," and exemplified the saying, "Fools rush in where agels fear to tread."
But that was not the course pursued by the men who thought out the Brooklyn Bridge, the tubes under the East and North rivers, the Woolworth Building, the Platium Building, the big locomotives that pull the Twentieth Century Limited and the Empire State Express, the Littania and the Titanic, the Rolls-Royce car, the linotype machine, the telephone, the telegraph, wireless telegraphy, the airplane and the submarine. That was not the course pursued by Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo and Sir Isaac Newton in their epoch-making mathematical and astronomical discoveries. They learned all that their predecessors could teach them about bridge building, engineering, architecture, physics, mathematics, mathematics and astronomy, and either made additions to their knowledge or applied it to practical problems.
The greatest philosopher and greatest psychologist of modern times followed the same mode of procedure. Inmanuel Kant of Konigsburg, Germany, was the world's greatest metaphysician, the Copernicus of modern philosophy, the man who revolutionized modern thought. After Jesus had raised him from his dogmatic alumbe he spent twenty-five
years in thinking out and seven months in writing his "Critique of Pure Reason." How did he spend those twenty-five years? In dreaming and reverie? No. He critically surveyed and examined the philosophical thinking of the world from the days of Thales to his own, embracing a period of nearly twenty-five centuries. tling camps of the vari has been expended and each other. So it wove Dove of Peace reign for next week
We were fortunate in studying under William James of Harvard, who produced the most brilliant, suggestive and original work on psychology the world has yet seen, during the two years that he was preparing his Oxford lectures and that philosophical attitude known as pragmatism. The first year he carefully surveyed Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" and Lotze's "Microcosmus." The second year he carefully surveyed Bowie's "Philosophy of Theism," Royce's "Conception of God" and Bradley's "Appearance of Reality." We discovered also that he had made a careful study of Wundt and Paulsen of Germany, Hergson of France and Ladd of America. In a word, he was in touch with the development of German, French, Italian, English and American thought in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and also kept posted regarding Hindu, Japanese and Negro thinkers.
Then take Ralph Waldo Emerson, America's representative thinker who preached the doctrine of self reliance and said "Be yourself. Be true to your inner convictions. Don't be an imitation." What sort of a self was Emerson? He was a broad and comprehensive, not a narrow and restricted self. He graduated from Harvard and explored Hindu, Greek, Swedish, German, French, English and American thought, commuting with the Hindu seers, with Plato, Swedenborg, Montagne Goethe and Carlyle, enlarging his mental horizon and the boundaries of his knowledge.
Then we must remember that Karl Marx, the founder of modern Socialism, was not an ignorantus. He studied law and philosophy in Berlin and immersed himself in the Hegelian philosophy. Neither was Dr. Edward Wilmot Blyden an ignorantus.
Mr. Calvin is a very bright, promising and ambitions young man. He is very clever and has natural ability. He has the making of a journalist and writer. But he is a quintate and not a college graduate. He means well, but doesn't know much. And he needs considerable study before he can be an expert at psychoanalysis or can play the role of critic that Sante Benue, Matthew Arnold, Carlyle or Emerson played.
We therefore recommend the following four years' course of study for Mr Calvin. After he has read and digested these twenty five books he will be able successfully to bore in the subsoil of psychoanalysis and psychological criticism. Until he has taken copious draughts of these books we would advise him to content himself with observing and chronicling what he sees on the surface, for which he has natural tastes and aptitudes, rather than to attempt to luxuriate in psychoanalysis and philosophical generalization, where he is like the ass in the house skin that Esop immortalized.
FIRST YEAR'S COURSE IN HISTORY, SOCIology AND SCIENCE Hegel's "Philosophy of History," Buckle's "History of Civilization," Wells' "Outline of History," Ferris' "African Abroad," Ward's "Dynamic Sociology," Carl Snyder's "New Conceptions in Science," Carl Snyder's "World Machine." White's "Warfare of Science with Theology" and Kennedy Duncan's "The New Knowledge."
SECOND YEAR'S COURSE IN LITERATURE, PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION. Taine's "History of English Literature" Carlyle's "Heroes and Hero Worship." Emerson's "Representative Men." James's "Principles of Psychology," Rosencranz's "Philosophy of Education," Harris's "Psychologic Foundations of Education" and N. M Butler's "Meaning of Education."
THIRD YEAR'S COURSE IN PHILOSOPHY. Paulsen's "Introduction to Philosophy," Royce's "Spirit of Modern Philosophy," Ladd's "Philosophy of Religion," Lotze's "Microcosmus."
FOURTH YEAR'S COURSE IN PHILOSOPHY—Ladd's "Philosophy of Knowledge," Ladd's "Metaphysics," Royce's "The World and the Individual," Bergson's "Creative Evolution" and Browne's "The Mystery of Space."
This list is not a list of the twenty-five greatest books in the world. We would include the Bible, Homer's "Iliad," Homer's "Odyssey," Vergil's "Ænead," Dante's "Inferno," Milton's "Paradise Lost," Goethe's "Faust," Carlyle's "French Revolution," Darwin's "Origin of Species," Spencer's "First Principles of Philosophy," Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations," Karl Marx's "Das Kapital" and Dumas's "Three Musketeers" in the group. But Mr. Calvin is desirous of becoming a philosopher, a psychologist and a critic, and we have prescribed the intellectual diet and the intellectual regimen best suited for that purpose. We regard Lotze's "Microcosmus" as the greatest of these twenty-five books. We believe that after Mr. Calvin has knotted his brow and scratched his head a few times grasping and comprehending the meaning and significance of some of these books he will be able to write intelligently about "rote" learning and originality. We wish him good luck and gud speed.
The literary editor of The Negro World has a forty-page critical analysis of Royce's "Religious Aspect of Philosophy" and "Spirit of Modern Philosophy," in which he takes issue with the celebrated metaphysician on several points. It was written while he was still a student. If Mr. Calvyn thinks that he is intellectually equal to the task of understanding it he is at liberty to inspect the manuscript. But the writer doesn't think that Mr. Calvyn will be able to cope with or tackle the essay at present. After he has lived for three years on the intellectual diet that we have prescribed his mental faculties will be able to absorb, assimulate and digest the contents of that essay. But there is still hope for Mr. Calvyn, because he is young yet; and while he has much to learn he has plenty of time before him. We wish him bon voyage on the intellectual journey on which we have seen him.
WERE THE EGYPTIANS NEGROES?
THE special cable dispatch from Luxor, Egypt, to the New Evening World for February 6 says of the tomb of Tutankhamen: "It was an almost life size bust of a queen, presumably Akhnaton's daughter, Tutankhamen's wife, exquisitely carved in wood, over which is a thin coating of plaster pasted in a lifelike manner. The face and neck are colored that brownish yellow which is the conventional hue for the feminine skin in Egyptian art and the eyes and curving eyebrows are painted black."
The fact that Pharaoh's wife and other women were painted brownish yellow in color, the fact that their hair was somewhat curly and their features were more or less Negroid, making them look like the mulattoes and quadroons to be seen in America and the West Indies, indicates that there was a decided strain of Negro blood in the ancient Egyptians, who were a mixed race, some with one-fourth Negro, others one-half Negro, others three fourths Negro, others seven-eighths Negro. According to the modern view of one drop of Negro blood claiming everything it touches, the Egyptians were Negroes.
DEAN MILLER'S SANHEDRIN
DEAN KELLY MILLER lectured before the Y. M. C. A. last Sunday on "An All Race Conference." He desires the representatives of varied organizations and agencies of nation-wide aim and purpose to meet in Washington, not to perfect an organization, but for a real conference and heart to heart talk. He said: "Merely to issue a sudden call of the wise ones to meet and deliver fiery orations and adopt healed and lasty resolutions would accomplish nothing."
tling camps of the various Negro organizations. Too much energy has been expended and is now expended by Negro leaders in fighting each other. So it would be well to call an armistice and let the Dove of Peace reign for a few months. We will comment further next week
DR COUL swept down upon America like a bolt from the blue, propagated his auto-suggestion and then departed for Europe. He said that if you are sick and say "Day by day in every way I am getting better and better" your physical condition will improve. The papers poked a good deal of fun at Dr Coue, but there is a great deal of truth in his doctrine of auto-suggestion. Then, again, he threw light on the question of the will. James showed that motives and desires determine the will. And Ladd said that instead of speaking of the freedom of the will we ought to speak of the freedom of the mind in willing. And now Dr Coue comes along and shows that the imagination is more powerful than he will and powerfully influences the will.
But this is nothing but a restatement of the old-fashioned Christian doctrine of regeneration—change a man's thoughts and ideas and you change the man.
CORRECTION IN DU BOIS EDITORIAL
W. stated in our editorial last week that the Brussels conference was held in 1895. We were a year too early, it was held in 1896. The Brussels conferences on sugar began August 30, 1888, and closed August 28, 1907. The conference to which we referred was held August 1, 1896, instead of 1895, when the bounties offered by Germany and Austria-Hungary were doubled and when France proposed to increase hers correspondingly. Mr Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary, wrote on November 9, 1896, that the importation of cheap bounties fed sugar to British industries might involve the turn of British sugar producing colonies. One of the British commissioners sent to the West Indies in December, 1896, who reported in 1897, "denounced the bounties as the real cause of the utter breakdown of trade and of the grousing distress which all three had witnessed and fully acknowledged."
The article in the Uncyclopedia Britannica which tells how the protectionist countries of Europe stimulated the beet sugar industry by bounties on exports is found under Sugar, rather than Brussels.
ARE AMERICANS TOO LAZY TO STUDY?
AN examination recently held at Lafayette College sheds new light upon the question whether the study of Latin should be continued in the school. For several years many practical men have been advocating the discontinuance of Latin and Greek, and their arguments at first glance seem impressive. They argue that Latin, a dead language, should be supplanted by the study of living languages, that it does nothing to fit the student for practical life, that the time now given to Latin should be put into studying English.
This last argument was riddled by the Lafayette College test. Two groups of students, one of which had several years of Latin, and the other had never studied Latin, were the best of English words to define. The list included in equal proportions words of Latin derivation, of Greek, of pure Saxon, which was the original English tongue. The students of Latin showed an overwhelming superiority, not only in words of Latin and Greek origin, but also in those of pure Saxon lineage. Thus the study of Latin had extended their vocabularies to languages unrelated to Latin; had developed in them a sense of language which was lacking in the non-Latin students. If, as the enemies of Latin say, English alone should be studied, one cannot deny that one of the best aims in mastering English is good, hard study of Latin. It is a matter of common observation that men who have studied Latin speak and write better English than those who have not.
It is useless to argue that Abraham Lincoln, who never studied Latin, wrote better English than Latin students. Lincoln was an exceptional man and we should not confuse a man's ability with the point at issue. If we could compare our Lincoln with another Lincoln who had had Latin we should have something to go by.
To come right down to the root of the question, the objection to Latin comes from laziness. Latin is a hard subject, it makes a student work, and present day students want something easy. Higher mathematics is objected to for the same reason. In these subjects no instructor can do the student's work, the student must wrestle it out himself. This generation has been brought up on motion pictures, which entertain them without making them use their minds as they would have to in reading great books. The whole business shows the softening of the American intellect.
Mechanical inventions have already made our bodies soft. What with subways and steam heat and telephones and faucets, we no longer have to walk long distances, or chop wood to build our own fires, or go out and pump hard for water. Now the labor-saving devices are invading the intellectual realm. Having been spared from physical labor, we now wish to escape mental labor, and that wish is at the bottom of the proposal to do away with Latin in the school—The Negro Times.
CORRESPONDENCE
A VINDICATION OF THE U. N. I. A.
Editor Negro World
Dear Sir I am seeking through this letter or article, if you will—to convey to the reading public especially to our group, the inspiration that the Universal Negro Improvement Association and its dauntless leader have given to the thoughtful and practical members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association I pay practical because all that is done by the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in a large industrial and commercial way was inspired through the doctrines of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
Mr. Editor, the reason for my attempting this article is because of the various attacks by some of the leading Negro papers in the country, which are trying to magnify the seeming failure of some of the business enterprises ventured by the Universal Negro Improvement Association. I notice in the "Cincinnati Champion" as well as the
DR. COUE'S AUTO-SUGGESTION
"Amsterdam News" and other periodicals, the fact that our laundry is another failure of the Universal Negro Improvement Association's business schemes. I, as one of the loyal members of the greatest Negro movement in the world, wish to inform these so-called newspaper editors that would be Negro leaders that these small enterprises in and around New York that seem to have failed, as they call it, are nothing more than a drop in the bucket of the larger things that the members of the Negro Improvement Association are doing outside of New York and for that matter throughout the country. As, for example, here in Pittsburgh And permit me to say that it was all inspired through the preachment of a lurcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association We have the spectacle of the world today attempting to engulf itself in another military upheaval. Land is the past and that will even cause the Armageddon to be fought. We look today and we are France to collect reparations. Now these idiots, as I am forced to call them, are so superficial that they
Feb 6. 1923.
never take time to find out what the Universal Iegro Improvement Association and its members throughout the country are doing in a large way, but would rather deal with trivialities for the sole-purpose of prejudicing the public's mind against the movement by pointing out certain failures, as they call them. There are 110 acres of land owned and controlled by the members of the Pittsburgh Division, which land is heavily underlaid with coal and upon which are hogs, cattle, horses, chickens and fruit trees of various kinds. With
and fruit trees of various kinds. this property we are able to conti-
not only the skepit of our group, but even the white people in
section are compelled to commi-
spirit of the movement to launch an industrial and commercial war
are being sought here not only by
tens, telegrams and other means
communication but also by long dis-
tance telephone for the right to drill
for gas on this property, which we own
in Fayette county, by some of the leading white concerns in Western Pennsylvania.
If some of these empty headed Little Tom and what-not Negroes would follow the doctrines of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the principles as laid down by Garvey instead of trying to alienate Gaines the race would be respected Take too Mr. Editor, this fact that we have here in the City of Pittsburgh one of the most outstanding Negro business men in the coal industry. If B. Sterling one whom the white folks seek daffier information in the mining and operating of coal, He, too, is a member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and one determined to do all in his power to put this great organization where it properly belongs. These aren't all the things that I might be in a position to point out to these real ticket journalists, but, suffice it to say, however, that with all the failures, flaws and faults of our leader that they seem to point out we are fired unbelessess with the spirit of liberty, freedom and national independence, instilled into us by this champion of Negro rights and manhood.
Business failures if that is a fact doesn't change the fact that the philosophy of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is timely and is all important because "Man can not feel otherwise than he is affected" says C F Volney, "and if a truth he palpable and of importance let us pity him who misconceives it, his punishment will be derived from his blindness." Therefore if all is said and done and we destroy the Black Star Line we will say the Negro factory, the chain stores and laundry and whatever else you may choose to name there is one for coming that it Negro has a cause and a case at all.
and no one will bring it to treat but himself. No one can feel like the Negro and we welcome always criticism because criticism can be nothing other than helpful, but we condemn yes, condemn stigmatism, especially from those who should be helping to guide the Negro in this trying time and shape some future policy that will eventually produce the desired product. I saw this, Mr. Editor, with surety and with propriety, that the onleader and editors whom we have at this time that understand the time and period in which we live are Marcus Garvey William H. Ferris and John E. Bruce
GEORGE A WESTON
Pittsburgh, Pa
TO DIAGNE AND HIS KIND
Dec 12 12:22
Edward The Negro World:
Sir-I am a loyal member of the U
N I A. and a constant reader of The
Negro World for over two years I have
read many articles about Messrs. Pickle-
n, Eason, Owen, Dr. DuBois and
others of such dirty, low minded and
bad method of persecuting the Hon-
Marcus Garvey and the U. N. I A.
Let me ask these gentlemen through
the columns of The Negro World if
they know why Moses took so long to
lead the children of Israel into the
Promised Land, and if they do not
know that, it is written that the frui-
tless and useless trees in the garden
are to be beamed down and cast into the
fire.
These men ought to be more careful and not go blindly, for they will surely fall headlong into the ditch. Then it is that they will utter the oft repeated If I had but known," but then they will be just a bit behind time.
Dear friends, Africa is to be redeemed will be redeemed and must be redeemed by the four hundred millions, our race. So it is of no use for you Brooks to be stumbling blocks in our leaders' way, for our Saviour Jesus Christ has said that whatsoever is asked of the Father through the Son shall be given
There are thousands of us who have our knees and lift our thoughts a prayer to the Almighty for long life our Mores and the prosperity and ultimate triumph of the cause. He we have little to fear from these so mentioned men while on faith, steadfast in our creator and our work for the triumph of the one New to Messrs. Rikil and Day they are so anxious to have changed, they may make us Bluefielda, Nicaragua, and, yet ante, I will change their care the new invention. Thanking you for space Be Y MERCIER Peter for the progress of the me Bluefielda, Nicaragua.
SOME IMPRESSIONS OF THE MESSENGER MAGAZINE
The Messenger Not Keen in Detection and Recognition of Men of Worth and Budding Achievement of the New Spirit and School of Thought
If You Want to Be
LUCKY, HAPPY AND WELL
TELL YOUR SECRETS TO THE RIGHT MAN
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To All Divisions of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
All Divisions and Division Officers are hereby warned against paying money to any Officer or Division who intends to receive the New Book on the Field. No Executive Officer, Official or Representative is supposed to receive any money from any Division for dues, taxes or assessments on the field. All such moneys should be sent by mail to Headquarters. Any local Officer or Division who loans an Executive Officer, Official or Representative to the field may be required to return to entertain any Officer, Official or Representative who attempts to borrow money from your Division.
BY ORDER
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
MARCUS GARVEY, President-General
By MODGE KIRNON
Though I recall having seen a few copies of the Messenger prior to 1918, I usually date my real acquaintance with it in the deeper and truer psychological sense from March, 1919. From that time up to the present the Messenger has become one of my regular periodicals, which is always read with much interest. From the outset I was always impressed with the Messenger's its selection of subject-matter, its style and vigor, its method of presentation and general journalistic tone have always pleased me but above all these considerations, its impression was most effective because of its decided radical fearless and uncompromising manly temper. It seemed to have scorned the contemptuous apologetic and servile spirit which was so characteristic of the old Negro journalism. To me it was reminiscent of the days when the Voice, a weekly papered by Hubert Harrison, spoke for the Negro who had radical inclinations. It stirred my revolutionary impulses in much the same way as when they were first fired by speakers like Emma Goldman and Journals like the Messes and Mother Earth. More and more I was strengthened on the conviction that the Messenger was destined to make some control buttons to the race, a long line of radical thought.
Another point from which quite clearly
honesty is the most important
reality a person must have.
It was a radical propaganda.
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journal for the diffusion of a specific radicalism in economic thought. It was somewhat or bodys in its judgment of men and events, that is, they were nearly always measured and judged in accordance to their relationship with a given standardized scheme of thought in much the same manner that orthodox Christians, judge other religions. Of course, this method may be of service for propaganda purposes, but no one will lay claim to it as being scientific.
Immeasurable service has been rendered by the Messenger in its emphasis on the economic aspects of the race question and more especially in their more indirect relations. The real import of the economic interpretation of the race problem in its many and varying forms which has now become common thought is to be largely credited to the Messenger for its popularization of that point of view. It also coined and familiarized such terms as New Negro and Me-too-boss-hat-man and Negro". By sharply contrasting their different connotations they were tremendously instrumental towards the growth and enhancement of the new spirit.
The Messenger Inconsistent
An consistent and perplexing feature of the Messenger is that while it some decision to radicalism and the New Negro it actually utilizes more space in critical and critical comments and structures of Negro characters of what it calls the old crowd, yet strange to say it is not at all keen in its detection and recognition of men of worth and budding achievement of the new spirit and school of thought. Aside from a broad passing mention of comparatively recent date the Messenger failed to recognize J. A. Rogers until Harrison Ferris (the writer) and others who concerning his work Ferris work, "The African Abroad," has never even been mentioned in its pages. Though it is doubtful as to whether the two volumes have ever been read throughout by anyone save the author, yet they contain a great deal of valuable matter on history, education, anthropology and philosophy. Above all, the Messenger has yet to speak of Hubert Harrison and his notable work in behalf of radicalism and general modern thought among Negroes and whites alike. Harrison was the first Negro to introduce liberal and radical ideas in the various departments of learning among Negroes in New York. There is no doubt of the fact that the editors of the Messenger have derived much of educational worth from him. He is a man whose wide and accurate information and critical ability have astonished men of learning of both races. "A. Rogers considers him the most effective Negro thinker of modern thought, yet up to this date he is yet to be recognized by the editors of the Messenger.
The Messenger has always shown a provenness toward fancy writing as well as indulgence in intellectual bombast Passing over the Moors incident, which is an instance of the latter, I cite the following taken from the September 1921, issue as another illustration of this charge "We have in store for our readers some veritable treats this winter [1921]. We shall enter discussion in two most interesting fields—domestic relations and medicine. What we shall have to say of marriage, divorce, prostitution and love will be scintillating, whereas our discussion of the fetish of the germ, the drug, vaccination, super-surgery, along with our exposure of the fallacy of most of the M D practise and an explanation of etiology will keep the physicians scratcing their heads." However though over a year has passed, the
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923 promised articles are yet forthcoming. RUST OF PHARAOH'S which was specially desi Garveyiam nation for his queen. Nat
The editors of the Messenger started some time ago an aggressive campaign against Garvey and Garveyism. Their slogan was "Garveyism must be destroyed!" Since then there have appeared in the Messenger several articles draining with Garvey and the Garvey movement. It is to be regretted that these articles have stamped a most deteriorating effect upon the Messenger. Its hitherto much-lauded journalistic dignity and high standard have been seriously marred by these articles. They breathe hate, malice and ill-will. The best that can be said of them is that they are good examples of chap. tenth-rate abusive journalism. The commonplace abuse and vitupitation which run through them have vitiated the whole career of the Messenger. Randolph's article, "Reply to Marcus Garvey," is a fair specimen.
Opposition to Garvey and his teachings could be pursued in a dignified journalistic tone without any fear of being classed as a straddler or compromiser. Dr. Du Bois' titles on Garvey are worthy proofs of this. Owen advocates the deportation of Garvey. Not only is this opposed to Socialist principles, but it is also petty and unmanly His article, "Should Marcus Garvey Be Deported" is a piece of journalistic trash that is entirely unworthy of him. It now appears as if the anti-Garvey propaganda is being extended to an East West Indian propaganda. This is indicative of nothing but an intellectual and moral collapse of the editors of the Messenger.
At present there is no doubt of the fact that the Messenger is steadily regressing. Instead of waging a battle and indiscriminate war against carvey, it should take due cognizance of the fact of race consciousness and the general moral effects of carveyism which could be directed into channels quite helpful to the race in its spiritual and economic airnings. It is impossible in this age for any Negro to rise to leadership who ignores or undervalues race consciousness. The editors of the Messenger should also adjust themselves once more to internationalistic principles. In the November 1922 issue they informed us that while everybody is interested in great persons, they were interested in the twelve smallest persons in America. Perhaps this accounts for the non-reognition of Harrison and others. The best that can be said at present for the Messenger is while there is life there is hope.
February 1 1923.
"The Days of Childhood"
By JAMES W. STREETER, JR.
The days that are gone will come no more,
When innocent, free and a child.
Over hill and dale we ran
To seek Nature's pleasantest smile.
Across the meadow, into the woods,
Where the little birds build their nest.
And the shade of the whispering pines
Lulled us away to rest.
Up and down the murmuring brook
Joyously, glefly, we ran.
To gather the blooming water lilies,
Or scamper upon the white sand.
Those were the days of childhood
They are gone. Gone to come no more.
Gone as the days of knighthood.
Gone like the days of yore.
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which was specially designed by Akhnaton for his queen, Nettitif, this being painted yellow, to represent gold, and at the forehead is a royal cobra. The face and neck are colored that brownish yellow which is the conventional hue for the feminine skin in Egyptian art, and the eyes and curving eyebrows are painted black.
The arms are intentionally cut off below the shoulders, like those of sculptors' models, and the body, over which is painted a plain white robe fastened at the neck, ends at the waist, the breast being only slightly indicated.
The features of the face show that soft, tangorous expression which Akhnaton's artists loved to portray. The lobe of the ear is pierced, as though to receive a jewel. The mouth amiles slightly in a tired, rather bored manner, as though the ennui of existence had become a matter almost for jealot, and the eyes are sleepy and enigmatic
The finely chiselled, haughty nostril and clear-cut, full lips give an impression of great dignity, but the beautiful curve of the cheek and a slight suggestion of girlish plumpness under the chin are natural and most entrancing.
This bust of the queen is the figure which has been called by excavators a manikin, or dummy of the king.
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BUST OF PHARAOH'S WIFE DISCOVERED IN LUXOR TOMB
The Haughty Beauty Painted a Brownish Yellow Color
LUXOR Egypt, Feb. 6.—The tomb of Tutankhamen was surrounded by visitors yesterday, when a native appeared at the mouth of the sepulchre carrying one of the most astonishing objects which has yet been brought out of this astonishing tomb. It was an almost life-size bust of a queen, presumably Akhnaton's daughter, Tutankhamen's wife, exquisitely carved in wood, over which is a tin coating of plaster pasted in a life-like manner.
On her head she wears a crown.
Good Looka Result of Care
People Overloved
whereon his robes were hung, but actually it is a sculptor's authenticated model of the queen's features, somewhat in the style of those found in the sculptor's studio at Tellelamarna. It bears some unknown significance, such as that of recalling to the Pharaoh's memory in the underworld the beloved features of his girl wife.
Among other objects brought out this morning were another chariot body, much decayed and with one wheel decorated with gold, the lid of a wooden, gold-colored casket, a small box, inscribed with Tutukhamken's cartouches, and some gold-colored cenor.
135th Street. Harlem, Library
Notes. Feb. 10. 1923
Library's new book shelf:
"Where the Blue Begins," by Christopher Morley, "a new kind of fairy tale" for grown-ups.
"Sussex Gorse," by Sheila Kaye-Smith, one of the best by this young English writer, who is one of Britain's new school.
"The Enchanted April," by the author of "Elizabeth and Her German Garden."
"The Man Who Knew Too Much."
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Zura Kinkout a "Godsend"
The general opinion of Zura Kinkout among the overjoyed folks who were lucky enough to get a supply was that "Zura Kinkout" was a Godsend to the race.
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by Gilbert Chesterton, a new book of detective story.
"The Tramping Methodist," a series of Sheila Kaye-Smith's first novel "Education in Africa," an important work published by the African Education Commission, the Phelps-Stokes Fund.
Clement Wood, poet and author, will speak at the library Wednesday, February 14th, at 9 p.m. The public is invited.
A por- son free from earlery malaria wards fever contagious disease.
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FLORENCE MILLS, BROADWAY'S LEADING NEGRO STAR, WILL APPEAR AT HARLEM'S LEADING THEATRE THIS COMING WEEK
BRUCE GRIT'S COLUMN
BRUCE GRIT'S COLUMN
Colored Harlem will be pleased to know that one who is today at the very top of the theatrical profession and fully appreciates the support given her when from a mite of a girl they gave her intently the applause that lent encouragement and inspiration to her efforts has seen fit to make her last appearance before leaving for a European engagement in this section this week.
As the reader will have already supported, we have reference to Miss Florence Milla, one of the most successful and at the same time modest artists today enjoying salvos of applause at the hands of those who have made Broadway the name to be conceived with, not only in America but all over the world.
~ much has been written about Miss Is since she won the hearts of thousands as a member of the Shuffle
The name's sportmen of the Caucasian race are not as game as they in print. Mr Dempsey, the great American white champion, having been forced into a corner in the fight game by a gentleman of somewhat dark complexion named Wills, with a punch with which Mr Dempsey is unfamiliar with which the aforesaid dark gentle-ies is willing and anxious to deliver to Mr. Dempsey at any time or place that can be arranged for it. Mr. Dempsey has been out of town taking chumsel and fresh air and has only recently returned with his lungs full of urine, a pair of new spats, several new suits and a willingness to fight anybody with whom his manager can arrange a fight for him.
His manager, he says, has charge of the fighting end, while he, Dempsey, does the fighting. The Wills-Dempsey match has for a long time regarded as a certainty, and the we been looking forward to it buying emotions. Now come commissioners with an edict declaring Wills-Dempsey match can be in this city. The edict of its final maybe. Anyhow, it willless made Mr. Dempsey feel appy and given him the oppor-tate announce in the press and to have charged him with in the color line, that he was and willing to fight Wills, but the commissioners vetoed the hit. This very likely saves Dempsey from a black eye, a broken pose many various and assorted bruises pains of the body resulting from unfamiliar Wills punch.
It is not difficult to understand the psychology of the action of the fight commissioners, or whatever is the title of the magnates who control the fight in this State. It is a clever ve, and those who are on the oute looking in do not misinterpret it too, with Battling Siki in Europe gland has barred him from fighting that country. He licked Carpentier France, be it known, and white men if it can possibly be done, pro-
MORRIS SPECIALS
MAGAZINE PAGE
Along Company and later as the bright particular star of Low Leaite's Illustration Review we find it would be superfluous to attempt to add to the many good things said of her. For the entire week starting Monday, Miss Millie the highest paid artist of color on the stage, will appear at the Lafayette Theatre to farewell engagement to again receive that hearty welcome and incidentally bon voyage before crossing the ocean to appear before the crowned heads of Europe.
In looking about for entertainers to please their patrons, the Coleman Brothers but upon the plan of engaging the charming Florence, plan which we feel certain will meet with the hearty approval of the thousands who will turn out to enjoy an evening's entertainment which only Florence can give.
vent him or any other Negro fighter from licking another one of their white hopes, which can be done by most any one of our Negro prize fighters if they are given a white man a chance in the ring.
The diplomacy of white champions like Dempsey is shrewd and clever. There never will arise again the color question between white champions and Negro would-be champions. The matter of matching the white hopes will be determined hereafter by the board whose action cannot be reviewed. Great is the white man for ways that are dark and tricks that are plain.
Whenever one of the great down town magazines wishes to sell thousands of Copies of a Slur Periodical to Harlem Negroes and out-of-town Negroes, it selects some white man looking for some easy money, or some well-known Negro hunting for more fame, etc., to write a special article about Marcus Garvey and his organization. These articles do not really interest white people, as they have no financial interests in Garvey's enterprises, and less in those whom Garvey represents. So that the labor and brains spilled on Garvey in these articles only create a nine days' wonder and give the able writers a little more fame and the colored brethren an opportunity to admire and applaud him for his success in burning his name on the pages of the Monthly Echo and reading the notes of his swan song. Meanwhile, the colored brethren, especially the intelligentia, buy the magazine, half dozen at once if they are rich enough, and the coins roll into the business manager's office of that magazine like marbles down a hill. Now, what possible interest the readers of any white magazine can have in the affairs of a Negro undertaking which has made mistakes, just as white undertakings have done and worse, is not quite clear to an obtuse person of my limited experience. It may be that when it is done by a colored man, a sort of a report to the donors to some colored organization tending to show up the incompetency of Negroes, and that if white men had directed the business of the organization being criticized in the report, it had not failed, or if the head of the organization criticized had been as learned and vorsaille and business-like as the critic, a different result would have followed. On the plantation where I was born—and I was born a slave—the house servants could invariably be depended on to tell their masters and mistresses everything that happened among the field hands and other laborers coming within the scope of their observations.
This system was practiced all over the South, and many a field hand got nine and thirty leshes as a result of
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THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
Weekly Sermon
Weekly Sermon
Text. And Micah at the house of Joseph with him in the midst of August 3, 1921.
Subject. The house of Joseph at the house of Jesus.
I We cannot lust after ourselves from the Last.
This fact has an admirable aspect it has also the luminous side. An admitted fact, however, assuredly in We have good illustration in the incident before us. The course of Israel was indeed a new departure. A fresh chronology takes inception and history begins again. All things are become new. Purify in Israel save the past in forever abolished. Not as I look upon the march of the last triumph I say. What does wonder come bear?
It has a strange column burden. It carries, as some of the embalmed body, but seeing he has been dead upward of three hundred
care more probably the disty bones of Joseph, the ever in honor of Prime Minister of Egypt the immortal Israelite. So even the new history in the very dawning has associated with it the pathetic and prized signs of the part. And Moses took the bones of Joseph with him.
This is a truth none of us can afford to forget. In all our exoduses we carry the bones of Joseph with us. We cannot ignore the past. As Dr Punshon expresses it. Part of the past to all the present cleavers." A wonderful thing it is that we can never wholly quit ourselves of the past. How significant it is that as Israel sets forth Canaanward it bears the bones of him who fell asleep more than three centuries before. Consider carefully how this very principle applies in our case. You cannot forget the bones of Joseph, perhaps you do not desire to, perchance you do not need to, but whether or no you cannot.
There is a historical past from which we desire never to be severed. We are its heirs. Our temple has amply storied walls and is affluent in storied windows, rightly dight.
How much we own to the makers of history who bequeathed us such generous legacies? Thank God for the noble past. If we could cut ourselves off from the holy past we should be paupera.
There is a past we long to be dissatisfied from, the evil of history. We have its taint in our blood today. We are fettered today because of the wicked who have lived before us. We come out of Egypt, but the bones are with us. Then the personal past follows us. There is an individual past from which we would on no account be divided.
Praise to God for our blessed past! Our past of holy thought, holy feeling, high endeavor, our past of elevating experience. It is with us still. We are better today for being better yesterday.
But our past of evil shadows us. Would we could get clear of it! Did you ever read Thomas Hardy's striking picture of agricultural life, "Par From the Madding Crowd"? In it he speaks of a man to whom "memories were an incumbrance". Ah, me! we all have memories that are a sore incumbrance. Oh, if we could destroy the past by drinking of some infinite Lothel!
Beeing we all have a painful past—all at least whose consciences are awakened—what is our wisdom? Ever to have recourse to Him who can expunge the guilt of the past "There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus."
Ever make the most of the present Soon our present will be our past. Oh seize and improve and glorify the fleeting now. Whatever we do let us use the present with telling effect for good.
II. The Past Gives Inspiration for Future Experiences.
Oft as Israel were distressed or dejected, oft as their faith faltered and their hopes grew dim, oft as they in climbed to say, "We shall perish in the
the babbling of the house servant whose reward was either a dress or some discarded finery, if a woman, or if a man, a coat or a pair of old trousers. Des Vernier, a South Carolina colored man, betrayed the leaders of the insurrection started there by Denmark Vesey, by joining them and reporting to his master nightly what was said and planned. His reward was $5 in gold and a frock coat from his master. The white people of the city, after the Negroes in the plot had been punished by either hanging, banishment from the country or flogging, set this colored informer up in the draying business.
History has a curious way sometimes of repeating itself. Our white brothel of the press rarely detail or invite Negroes with fat brains and a plethora of words to write the rotten business failures of white organizations that have failed for millions. These tasks are performed by white journalistic surgeons. Still, as the old lady remarked when she saw another kiss a clobbering cow. "There is no accounting for tastes." Marcus Garvey will survive all this kind of propaganda and will be doing his work when the propagandists are forgotten or dead, some of them—Negro Times.
LOVE'S GREETING
LOVE'S GREETING
Accept these lines I send to you
With my best wishes true.
With duo respect, good day, my dear.
Your lips so sweet and face so fair.
Your head so rich with silken hair.
Your eyes so bright.
Oh, what a sigh!
I would like to know how you would
feel.
If you really knew
How I love you.
wild take we a herre freah the land of promise when the smoked upon the house of Joseph the were instred and strong the They might will be Joseph be freed we would fresh the glorious land he was sure the he built us carry the house will be When a rebuke to the de pressed laft la the on the pilgrim agreed the house of Joseph
We too know that the past gives us inspiration for future experience. We can help from the ever present past for duties often are duties burdened. The path of duty in the way to glory that is frequent in unplorious paths has duty beaten easily monotonous. Work degenerates into labor and later into drudgery. Drudgery is the grayscale of success. But the angel is a white grayscale and his relationship with the environment remote. We need amel the routine of duties all manner of inspiration and here is a type. Remember the past. Recognize what his grayscale others have been and done. God did not fail on fathers and they did not fail God. Take the bones of Joseph with you and all they portend will inspire you am I the duties of the house of your pl grimage.
The past inspires us for trials and sorrows. In verse 15 we are told, "I fed the people about. We know what it is to have a roundabout course in life and what trial and sorrow it of an involve. But it surely nerved Israel to look upon that hallowed burden" and by it they received a former faith. What God has done for tired and suffering humanity in the past He will again. The history of the church and biographies of Christians are repaired with inspiration for the chequered experiences of the unknown tomorrow. III. Moses took the bones of Joseph with him." Yet Gods Presence is the Essential Presence
The sombre presence of the dead was not the supreme presence among the ler萨ites as they marched to the bounds of Canaan. What other and more potent presence was there? And the Lord went before them.
Without that august presence it is vain to have 'the bones of Joseph.' The Lord went before them. He is everything in He with us. He will be to be. Alike in heat of the day and the solemn darkness of the night. He profiles to be with us. Is the Lord among us or not? Whoever fails or leaves us all a well of He with us. Lord it! The presence go not with us, carry us not up home. But Thy presence shall go with us and Thou wilt give us rest.
NEGRO WOMEN
An Appreciation
They beat their burden without a murmur.
They sing an smile if they face torture.
In the burning sun or frigid rain
In pleasant rays or times of pain
They never give up if even things look dark.
On and on they go like the merry dark
They gave birth to the pioneers of civilization
(Solomon Jettin Homie, Euclid, the mathematician)
They're the mothers of leaders for black democracy
(L'Ouverture Delacue, Moses Hayford Garvey)
It aches their heart to see their sons
Treated by aliens as priests
Macada, Queen of Sheba
Daughter of Ethiopia
Led the way for noble women in
In the days of Solomon the good
And established (Christ only) in her domain—
Where Japhet a daughter, then who now doth reign?
Our sister, Phyllis Wintle
Was taken in boudage over the sea
From Africa, golden sand.
To younger or older friend.
She fought her way through obstacles
And broke asunder her shackles.
Henrietta Vinton Davis.
Our gifted "fleur-de-lis"
Is an example of true leadership
Who knows how in stormy times to steer the ship
She as fearless as fearless as be.
Fighting for her brethren a liberty.
Of all women whether in boudage or at liberty.
The daughter of Ethiopia are the best for me.
Why not my own ebony maid or brown skin?
My affection now and forever they win.
It would be a curse for me to abandon my own.
And love instead the alien who is not of my blood.
If I could only write as I do wish,
I would in the choicest bit of English,
Eulogise black womanhood.
So stout of heart, and, oh' so good!
God bless our Negro women;
Help them good from bad to keen.
Oh' sons of Ethiopia' Ethiopia sees
Whenever your sister or mother you
displease!
How dare you face the white world as
men
If you need to do your duty to your
women?
Don't sell their rights; cherish them,
honor them and don't let them
suffer;
The Negro woman is the best of women;
the greatest mother.
NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE
RECEIVES $10,000 GIFT
Steady increase in the forces making for cooperation between the North
and white races was emphasized by I. L. L. L. with Wood chairman of the
National Urban League at its eleventh annual meeting in the Russell Page
foundation Building Wednesday afternoon. He reported that the year 1922
had been the most important in the history of the Urban League movement
which started with a small group in New York spending $2500 in 1910
and has grown to a national movement with branches in more than forty cities
spending more than $250,000 a year.
The greatest hardship to better inter racial relations has been the indifference of the great mass of whites and this indifference has been due largely to the limited knowledge by the whites of Negroes said Mr. Wood. The last few years have shown a new and a grim ant change which has come about through the great migration of Negroes from the South into the industrial centers of the East and Middle West and through the attention which has been brought to interracial relations by the export of Ku Klux activists by the Congress,inal debates on the Iber Anti Lynching Bill, by the public discussion of President Lowell's attempt to scrap one of Hari-sa's most prominent traditions and by similar actions in which the Negroes had taken in the news.
These indefensible have made the great civilization of focusing attention on this matter and for every person who prejudice have been fostered, we have had many real enemies. We have accepted the challenge to treat it as of justice and fair play and have become armed to throw their influence with the constructive forces.
The result has been an increased interest in and support of the Urban League movement and a like stimulation of the other forces for cooperation such as the Commission on Interval Relations, which is becoming important an influence in the South and the activities of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America.
As material evidence of this increase of interest, the Urban League announced that four new cities had organized affiliated groups in 1922 and that the income of the national organization had increased from $15 000 to a million of $74 440.
Announcement was also made that friends of the late Mrs. Harry Plotz who died in Paris last spring, had raised $10 000 which had been given to the National Urban League for the establishment of the Little Sons Plotz Fund the income from which is to be devoted to the development and training of some Negro man or woman especially fitted for social and civic service in the community." Mrs. Plotz, who was a daughter of Samuel Bache, was an active member of the Urban League Board and a trustee of Fisk University.
Irving S. Merrell president of the Merrell-Soule Company of Syracuse and a trustee of Tuskegee Institute and C. C. Spaulding, secretary-treasurer of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, the largest Negro insurance company, were elected to the Executive Board and among those re-elected for a term of three years were Felix Adler, Mrs. Julius Rosenwald, Mrs. Booker T. Washington William G. Wilkox Miss Nannie Burroughs of Washington, and James H. Dillard of Charlottesville Va. The officers, including Mr. Wied, chairman, Dr. Robert R. Moton as vice-chairman, William H. Baldwin as secretary, and A. S. Russell as treasurer, were re-elected
The executive secretary of the League Eugene Kinckle Jones, presented his Annual Report showing the establishment of four new branches of the League the establishment of a new monthly magazine "OPPORTUNITY," a journal of Negro life, surveys of the Negroes of Hartford and of the industrial opportunities of the Negroes in Baltimore. Record of the work in local communities was also presented.
REFLECTIONS OF A LOVER
Could I but find an African maid
With taste of soul divine
Just longing to express her loving affeinate mind
By tied I'd call her mine
STRANGE POWER!
There is nothing of the mysterious, supernatural or miraculous about the power within in your being. You already have it. But you want to understand it, use it, control it so that you can accomplish your desire. Grace Gray De Long, "The Little White Mother." "America's Illustrated Adviser," has a system for your development and relief—so simple and so clear that you will wonder why you never before realised how near you were to a way out of your distress. If you are undecided, in doubt, unaware, or will experience more prosperous if you are sincerely seeking the better life for yourself and for person with whom you are particularly concerned, you will experience a write to this believed woman—state your case and make a request for advice, and you will be pleased with the result.
GRACE GRAY DELONG
420 W. Wayne St.
SAVANNAN GEORGIA
HARLEM CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
Established 1902 RICHARD R. HAAS, Director
Plane Violin Cello, Voice Culture, Danjo-Mandolin, Saxophone, All Hawaiian Instruments, Clarinet, Cornet, Theory and Harmony, Mr. George DePre of St. Petersburg Conservatory, a pupil of Leopold Auer, in head of the Violin Dept.
Courses for Music Teachers, Diplomas awarded, Pupils prepared for concert and stage. Apply personally only Monday, Thursday, 3 to 8 P.M. Start not and you will start right
Organized Feb. 27, 1844 Celebrated Feb. 27, 1923
79 YEARS AND STILL GROWING STRONG
HAMILTON LODGE
No. 710, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows
Will Hold Their Original Celebrated Old-Fashioned
Masquerade and Civic Ball
AT NEW STAR CASINO
115 East 107th Street, Near Lexington Avenue
TUESDAY NIGHT, FEB. 27, 1923
MUSIC WILL BE
Furnished by Commonwealth Jazz Orchestra, Inc.
Who will be there? Everybody! Including you,
the Girls, the Boys and all the Old Timers
While This Is the 55th Masquerade Given by Hamilton Lodge, No. 710,
It Will Be the Biggest and Best of All.
Tickets and Boxes on Sale at Oscar Brewster Odd Fellows Office, 364 West 185th St
The W. David Brown Establishment, 3216 Seventh Avenue
General Admission, $1.00 Boxes, SEATING $5.00
RECEPTION BEGINS AT 8 P. M.
JAMES F. ADAIR, Chairman, DANIEL A. SHIELDR, Secretary, 361 West 185th Street
THE DEAREST AND THE BEST
BY J. W. STREETER, JR.
Tonight I sit in silence,
My head is bowed down low
Shall I ever hope, hope in vain?
Only good I could to know
I would I wore with the stars
That twinkle in the sky
Or at the bottom of the Dead sea
Where Day is Looker lies
How sad is my soul?
The tears are streaming down
The silent "the silent"
I hear not a murmuring sound
Oh how late in the night
Long, long after the midnight hour
To me it seems wretched Wretched
And gloomy, this world of ours.
And I sit still and listen
For the sound of a pleasant voice
But none comes. Tis silent yet.
For I have no cause to rejoice
Tis all because to no one I am dear
Yet someone is dear to me
My thoughts of her are numberless
As numberless as the sands by the sea
Tis all because I love someone,
Who may never run my love
Yet my thoughts of her are as Holy
Wat
She is so beautiful Charming
But a man in her bloom
Would she but put my anguish
And save me from an earthly doom
Though you should soon O Fair one
I would bear you no evil
Good for you I return you
And a case in my power to give.
I loved my soul cry out to you.
Grind it not with your heart or
And have compassion on my soul.
You will find no lack of love in me
When I be down to sleep
I dream a lover a dream.
I dream of her who is least to me
The dresst, you and the best
'NES TO H'S EXCELLENCY
MARCUS GARVEY
By ROSALIA PHYFER
As Garry list of the race
Go on fresh courage take
Join link to link in every space
Till thou the race chain make
United unhinder fast to stand.
Amid time a hurry rise.
The great look a mighty sound.
Shall shine effulgent over this plane.
Thy name afar over land and sea.
Is he rd by black men everywhere.
Though enemies art blind to see.
Their ears some humming sound
deth hear.
Hurk even here the habe a faint voice
in heard.
Lisping Garry's name a sound.
Tis he of whom brave statesmen fear
And councils hold, with measures
proud
Stand first, he firm brave hero, you. Till the stairs from their orbits fall Around beneath thy faithful few Shall mid the storm like one great ball. Rolling along, by the wild wind tossed Yet unhurt untainted, shall emerge Almost home—the barriers crossed. Now our ships in port, no more to surge
VIRGIN ISLANDERS:
Keep Abroad of House Affairs - CONSULT
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Organized Feb. 27, 1844
79 YEARS AND STILL
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CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY
Hamilton Lodge No. 719, G. U. O. O. F. will celebrate its 79th anniversary by holding its 85th masquerade ball at New Star Casino, 107th street, Tuesday night, February 27th. For more than 50 years this lodge has held masquerade ball, which have been looked forward to with pleasure by the public. This lodge being the second oldest lodge in America, it has numbered among its members some of the most prominent men of the race in New York. Among its charter members may be mentioned Dr J McCuno Smith, who was the first colored physician to practice in New York and was its first presiding officer. Thomas Hamilton, a leading merchant, Patrick H Reason, one of the most celebrated engravers of New York, Thomas Hoffman, Wright Nerman, Wm Penweck, Peter Paul Simmon and many other leading colored men of that day (1844).
In later years this lodge has included among its members the leading business and professional men.
The committee in charge of this ball are endeavoring to make it one of the greatest and most pleasant in the history of the lodge. If the pressing demand for tickets and boxes is an indication the attendance will be very large. This is not just an ordinary ball, but it is one that was looked forward to by the old New Yorkers from year to year as an event not to be missed. Owing to the war and conditions their prevailing, the masquerade has been omitted for several years.
Many visitors are expected from Washington, Boston, Philadelphia, Providence, New Haven and other cities.
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25 doe leather hair pins and leather caps.
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Art Novelty Company
2192 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
VATORY OF MUSIC
of 123d Street NEW YORK CITY
RICHARD R. MAAS, Director
Banjo-Mandolin, Guitar, Saxophone, All
Richard R. Harmony, Mr. George
a pupil of Leopold Auer, in head of the
an awarded. Pupila prepared for concert
day, Thursday, 3 to 8 P. M. Start now
Celebrated Feb. 27, 1923
L GROWING STRONG
THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS
CAMAGUEY DIV. CELEBRATES SECOND ANNIVERSARY WITH GREAT SUCCESS
Division, now first vice president of this division and I O in the Grand and Noble Order of Mechanism. The representative of the Joboab Division The Hon R. Barrett president of said division, M H. P A Martin, executive secretary of the Nuevius Division as representative, and Mrs J Also who represented the social of the I O of A K, Ashion Unity I K. All representatives went to the height of ovation and delivered to us encouraging messages, leaving every heart pondering over the links that bind fraternity and confraternity together.
The following is the procedure
As the bands struck the air of the first note of the "Ethiopian Anthem" the chapman dressed in the robe of office, approached the door, coming from the secretary's office, followed by the President, also president, executive secretary, treasurer and lady secretary, matching in single file around the hall and then took their seats in the postmortem. Above our heads were the beautiful decorations which drew our attention. One of the most magnificent settings was a flag, the tricolor of the red, black and green, made and presented to the division by A. Tracee. The chairman rose to his feet and bowed cheek and delivered a wonderful address, of welcome and received an end of applause.
The next on the program was Minneapolis, pledged by the chapman.
Autumn, Our Anniversary Day by
chloe
Pleading of the nearly spent by
Solo by Miss E. Phillips,
Address by representative of the
Mary Lodge No. 2
Solo by Mona Hurley
Address by the representative of
the Jobaho Division
Recitation, "The flowers That Fade
Miss Walnut"
Anthem, "Praise the Lord," by the
choir
Address by the representative of
Nuritag Division
Solo, The skies city by Musculosa
of Jobaho, which was exceptionally
rendered
Address by the representative of
Shepherd Social
Violin solo by W. Lefsford
Address by Executive Secretary H.
Angue
Mandolin solo by Mr. Francis
Anthem, "White Fields," by the
choir
Organ recital by Mr. Martin.
Solo by Miss J. Alien
Address by D.C. Austin of Preston
Division
Solo (chassé), "Sowing," by Mr. Bris
cui
Vote of thanks, chairman
Prayer
National air
All efforts combined with the result of
key to every one who witnessed the
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A Year's Subscription to the Negro World, Which Is Ordinarily $2.50, and a-Copy of Either of the Two Great Negro Books Listed Below for $4.00
By Chaplain T. G. Steward
PRICE, $2.00
Decidedly the most authoritative work on the history
the little Black Republic. (Review later)
"EDUCATION IN AFRICA
By Thomas Jesse Jones (Review)
PRICE: CLOTH BOUND, $2.00
This offer, made especially for the convenience of New
is made in conjunction with
Young's Book Exchange,
THE NEGRO WORLD, 84 West 188th Street, New York City.
Gentlemen. Enclosed please find $2.00 for which please send
REVOLUTION] or [THE AFTERMATH OF LAWYER] and one
IN AFRICA"
Times (Review Later)
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for which please send me [THE HAYTIAN
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Decidedly the most authoritative work on the history and sociology of the little Black Republic. (Review later)
By Thomas Jesse Jones (Review Later)
PRICE: CLOTH BOUND. $200
This offer, made especially for the convenience of Negro World readers,
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Gentlemen Enclosed please find 000 for which please send me [THE HAYTIAN
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he NEGRO WORLD
January 29, 1923
Though the economic warlom surrounding the entire world throughout the year 1922 has been mostly felt by the Negro peoples resident in this city and through the Republic of Cuba, the Camaguey Division has battled like a giant, and the officers and members have claimed themselves victors of the fight, for the doors of this division are still open and we are climbing low and the summit. With ardent earnest and loyal off our and members working for the development of our town and to keep up the integrity of our leader the Hon Marcos Gavre, we are invited to stage the program of our second anniversary on Sunday, January 21 amidst a large and enthusiastic gathering.
The postings begun pre-
pended in The Hon. E. Blackwood presi-
dent of the division of the University
for the evening. The museum of pro-
gram was arranged and under the
mastership in W. Lefebvre, board of
magnification in C. C. C. with
the chair of O. Hardy was the right
at for the opening, and W. Lefebvre
leader of the board from the deploi-
ture skullshear in the office of
which was not yet ready for the
specialist.
Ipon the restraint was sent the
representative of the Macro Lodge, No.
22 of the Independent of that Lodge of
Mechanics for formal city services in the
breadshed on the 20th of May, 1874 past easterly play at the Lodge.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
ECHOES FROM AKRQN OHIO, DIVISION 215
I desire to comment on the most excellent work now being done by the Akron division of the U. N. I. A. The work of the division has not been given the publicity it should have received. Therefore I take this opportunity to make known what the division has done and capest to doj. The division is small, but we are proud of the work it has already accomplished in the face of many obstacles. We are all 100 per cent I. N. I. A and have no cowards among us. Every member stands in battle array for the things for which our great leader, Marcus Garvey, contends. We have begun to make the people of the great Rubber tity sit up and take notice of the fact that we are here and here to stay.
We are glad to say that we have purchased one of the best situated lots in the city of Akron, coating $12,500. It is located on the corner of Hill and Center Streets, only two minutes' walk from the court house, in the heart of the city. It is wonderful to record that each member gave from $10 to $20 toward the purchase price. We are glad to say that the U. N. A. is the only colored organization in the city that meets in its own hall. Under the leadership of such men as the Hon. Marcus Garvey, R. L. Polton and others of the parent body we feel that we can do anything that men of any other race have done.
In the near future we hope to be able to erect a five-story brick building for the Negroes of Akron. All we want our leader to say is we can do it, and if he says we can do it we can. We must do it because Mr Garvey says we can do it. The deal was made by Thomas K. Greene, the best colored lawyer in the city. We desire to thank Mr Greene through the columns of the greatest paper the world has ever known for his donation of $10 to the I. N. I. A. We are hoping to do a great work in 1923. We are going to show our great leader what we can do since he has given us an objective. Mr Garvey has done more for the Negroes of the world in four and a half years than all of the alleged leaders have done in fifty-eight years. We are thankful to the Almighty for a man like Mr Garvey and pray that he may live long and do much untiling the Negroes. And that he will not be called from his labor to his reward until he shall have seen the fruits of his labor namely, the 400 000 000 Negroes of the world standing upon our motherland under the Red, the Black and the Green when he can truly say I have fought a good fight.
With very best wishes, we are yours for the cause of liberty.
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印尼雅加达
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UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
No. 3 to 13 West 136th Street, New York City
If you are in the city and want a good place to live and eat, or if you intend pining to the city and want good accommodations—the PHYLLIS WHEATLRY HOTEL is the
celebration of our second anniversary,
and have recorded it as a red-letter
day in the history of our division. We
on the whole, can not avoid giving
thanks to all who helped us to make
this evening a success, but exceptional
pride should and must be given to
Miss Rose of Jobabo Division for the
rendition of a fine solo and we praise
the Jobabo Division for the worth of
such a noble lady. Thanking you for
space.
Yours,
H. ANGUS.
Secretary Camaguey Division
NEGRO DELEGATES TAKE RICHMOND, VA., BY STORM; DIXIE PAPERS COMMENT
U N I A Division 124 held a mass meeting last Monday night, January 21 at which time it presented two of the U N I A delegates who attended the League of Nations Assembly at Geneva, Switzerland, last September. The delegates who spoke here were the Hon William Sherrill and the Hon G. O. Marke of Sierra Leone, W. C. Africa
The speakers were inspired and urged to the heights of eloquence by the softerous plaintics and authority of approval. Mr. Sheerall proved himself a master of oratory and capable of taking care of the situation in any forum. Mr. Marke is a diplomat of note having served in a plenipotentiary capacity herefore. He is said to be the very next man to the Hon. Martin Curve. Mr. Samuel H. Green, former president presided (Chaplain J. H. Burk conducted the devotional services after which Mrs. L. P. Johnson recited an original race poem. Musical numbers were rendered by Mineer Annie Jones Gandol Shaw, Ethel Brook and Fannie Ville Lawse. W. F. Branyt the colored pleader, introduced the speakers with well chosen remarks. Mr. Sheerill gave an account of his trip to Geneva v. Paris, and after a detail I account of his experience launched out into a defense of the reasons for Negroes striving to reach racial perfection through self help in economic and social spheres. His plea for the Carvey plan for African redemption was oratorically superb, his peroration at times literally lifting the enthusiastic hearsay from their seats. He said: "No race can get positioned in this world that is not strong enough to hurt somebody." Concerning the Negro inspiration for a home and government and his effort to secure the mandate over the German African colonies, he said: "The Negro felt like writing and he reached for a pen, he felt like reading and he reached for a book, he felt like sailing the bosom of the mighty deep and he reached for a ship, he feels like ruling and is now reaching for a government."
Mr. Marke's Address
Mr. Marke's address dealt with the mission of the U.N.I.A delegation to the League of Nations. He said they carried a petition asking that the League of Nations grant the U.N.I.A mandatory rights over the former colonies of Germany in Africa, which colonies at present are under the mandate of Great Britain. He outlined the diplomatic procedure necessary for such a venture and gave an outline of the workings of the world's court, with its ramifications of committee procedure. He stated they finally succeeded through one of the signatory powers in setting their petition before the league, and the same will be acted upon next September.
Officers of the U. N. I. A., Division 123, Richmond, Va. are H. L. Johnson, president, W. H. Walkins, vice president, Mrs. L. P. Johnson, lady president, Mrs. Ida Scott, lady vice president, W. H. Scott, chairman Trustee Board, William Randall, Jr., chairman Advisory Board, Arthur C. Lewis, executive secretary, Miss Madeline Dahney, recording secretary, W. H. Howard, treasurer.
The people of Richmond are looking forward to the early return of the Hon William Sherrill and the Hon G. O Marke, for the impression they made upon the hearts of Richmondians will live forever. May God a kind and well directed incarnation keep them and protect them and send them back again to Richmond.
ARTHUR C. LLWIS, Exec. Sec
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Gas distends the stomach and causes that full oppressive, burning feeling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the delicate lining of the stomach. The trouble lies entirely in the express development or secretion of acid. To stop or prevent this souring of the food contents of the stomach and to neutralise the acid, and make it harmless a teaspoonful of Bisurated Magnesia, a good and effective corrector of acid stomach, should be taken in a quarter of a glass of hot or cold water after eating or whenever gas, sourness or acidity is felt. This sweetens the stomach and neutralizes the acidity in a few moments and is a perfectly harmless and inexpensive remedy to use.
An antacid, such as Bisurated Magnesia, which can be obtained from any druggist in either powder or tablet form, tablespoons of it may be poured up within the aid of artificial digestives. Magnesia comes in several forms, but it is certain to ask for and take only Bisurated Magnesia, which is especially prepared for the above purpose.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY HOTEL AND BOOKER WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Akron Division No 315
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THE DEPUTY POTENTATE AND AMERICAN LEADER ADDRESS THE NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA, DIVISION
Newport News Division No. 6 L. N. I. A. was honored by a visit from his Highneas the Supreme Deputy and William Bhrill. American leader, on Sunday January 28. These distinguished gentlemen addressed two meetings, and in spite of the fact; that the day was cloudy, the hall was packed to capacity and over 100 were forced to stand. Hon G. O. Marke made an impressive address in relation to the trip of the delegation to Geneva Switzerland and to the diplomatic course that they had to take to cope with the diplomatic of Europe.
Hon. William Sherrell was then introduced. He spoke extemporaneously for fifty-five minutes, keeping his hearers appalled. One reply concerned that in opinion Marcusey really has the best brain of the country. Named up with wit and talent soon his dream will become a reality. Mr. Sherrell remained a maiden and objects of the ladder. Negroes in the provement Association and paid that it was stronger than that it had been. He told the hearers that the arrest of Mr. Gates was not surprising to the officer and members of the organization because any time a will step out on the platform of leadership it means arrest, prison sentence and sometimes the galaxy.
In such cases the organization becomes stronger. It is then that the hypocritical Negro deserts for they cannot stand by the organization when it is facing its worst trials. Mr. Sherrell said that he has been watching every Negro newspaper since his return from the League of Nations conference in Europe to see what the Negro editors had to say about the delegation. Every one is silent. All that he could see was when Marcos Garvey's trial was proceeding the Negro editors wanted to study the real meaning and use of a newspaper before they entered that field of endeavor. One thing to be admired about the white Associated Press is that it prints the
news. The white man will print news pertaining to the Negro whether he likes the Negro or not. Mr. Sherrill said he did not want to see the Negro newspapers die, but that they should change their present policy. Let them live by the patronage of the Negroes. Mr. Sherrill said that while the delegation was in Europe it was extended every courtesy at the hands of statesmen and governments. The delegation went there as gentlemen, behaved as gentlemen and returned as gentlemen. We knew that the enemies of the association were watching and listening for the toughest mistake we might make, so that they could rush into big headlines on the front page of every Negro paper in the country. Therefore we watched our step.
Brooklyn with his mother.
Mr. Phillips entered a regents' preparatory school on Broadway, Brooklyn, with the intention of qualifying for the regents' examination in the hope of entering a college to study medicine. He served as an organist at the St Paul's Baptist Church, 400 Gates avenue. He was a talented musician.
Being of a very social and agreeable disposition the many friends of Mr. Phillips, both here and in Trinidad, will greatly miss him. We deeply sympathize with his mother and numerous relatives in their great bereavement.
May he rest in peace and eternal light shine upon his soul.
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Awakening Hour
The results derived from ADVERTISING has been tremendously BENEFICIAL to those who have awakened to this practical METHOD of placing their wants before the public at LARGE- THE NEGRO WORLD, if used for this purpose, will bring you desired RESULTS Business houses that have advertised in the medium have SAID that a thousand times. So why don't you who have not as yet used the six columns of this paper avail yourselves of this same PRIVILEGE? Don't delay another day, but get to the point whereby you will be a big success.
Phone Harlem 2877 or write to office, 58 W. 135th St., and I will be more than glad to quote you our special rates to early year advertisers.
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Advertising Dept.
Negroes who use common words.
Negroes who are thrifty. Negroes who are progression. Negroes who have race pride, do not read newspapers. They want a place with a solid, inspiring performance.
THE LARGE WORLD
SETAC aT BT pore it ; . . \y é 4. By
Se mE nS ou. Ce ee ee eee cet \ . ‘ oy me
U.N. LA LEADERS EXPOSE THE FALLACIES
OF OTHER SUPPOSED RACE LEADERS
+Continued fren page “+
Up in Alrwa a greats mimet al ent
Dire, and the Dy Rovere sf Amer, 1 teil
ua we have lost sbeduie. nm 61g tu
Africas
The Desions om Africa
De yen kaon wnat eae ery
PON IL we follow the wy os at | aden
bbip of certain Negrone Weare ge
Ip te remain in ths Weatern wo}
unt the white mar hee some ot
colonized Al:.e and nit up AG 4
A civillgaien even greater thay tut
we some wy cantar! wu we thy
Wertern werd and on some cece from
now the Negte wo be a res utebas
Part el an Afiean svt cgatier an tet
the Whte mane cane eo man
Aftce Whe white mara curtis of tie
future even ae he tine designed 1
mahe Ameria a wtate tina countes
of tuday
The Postion ef tha U NIA
New what ia tho pearion of tha Unt
versal Negro Improvement Annocts
thon? If it ta good for Frane tn denw
wut of Africa: that acction tat rho
controle—Ave billion trans of raw mu
teral annually for tho curichinent wf
the French race and the Irenh nn-
tun what In the tame ef Ged ean
make It impossible for Negrens to ds
that for themselser | What are vou
peeking? You are serking te sume
ecununBe security ae the Frene hmatt
The whole thing wariowe ieelf down
to bread and butter By your laber
You mW that whieh will enateia you
to ea.and if the Frenchman in de
eireus of taking out of Africa thar
whieh will sustain hin that is the
eame thing you want and if you have
ho better senee than to let the French.
man have a monopoly on that which
{a sour moral and legal righ! then
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You want happiness you want wenlth
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‘Thex #8¥) we cannot look toward the
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Sr LEI Fe spent 18 far nny sete re
Weve gave te pt cama and alien
Finnee te utilize net ents the mineral
ce D ameiaitured resmureces at Agries
Tat te uiitias the man power af Ate
for the devel pinent ols gered Deen h
fommiet oat oempins The oer going
Feo banht up Ut einp rs nets much
Chrougt white Fectebinen bat ties ate
enre te build ap that empae through
the black Aftivana themnelves New
LOE te poanitle (ve Prenchmen to une
Mark men te add to their glues and
strength finuneieily omeeally cod an
Pern way why canal Negrven fen
the same material ts thelr own ed-
Vantage?
And that in how the Cave raat Nena
Improvement Ampociatnnt frein It feels
that if France con fad that mur in
Africa ta make It worth while to them
today we ule can fiw that much out
ef Africa ty make at tenet the hind
of place that we munt—the kind of
Roverninent that we would lke where
we woult be protected in any part of
the world
Difference Between U. N 1. A. and
Other Leaders
The difference het worn the Universal
Negra Improvement Anse tation anil
the other leaders In that they for! that
Aa tne much troubles tt ie tee much
effort At in ten much energy atriking
out In a iirer ton of our nwa thereby
thes are wntiefled to he a aecond part
Of any entabiinhed ayatem or ait an.
tablished stvitieation whethey the
(hat of the white man op any onber
race The Unlversal Nofen Improve
wf nelf-relinnce opnf nelf reapert in
Biren the feelltag tial shatanever ans
other race Vue done for ttnelf we nre
capable ©% deing nlxe for ourselven
(Applatiee ) And the effort im being
Mad.n now Me is ll well that Franve
ind Minty have had the greny aeare oe
Folonizing Africa, but an 1 have often
mild the rare in net te the awife tt tn
to thre whe will endure to the end,
and the Univeral Negro Improvement
Asaocintion har given oul a progr smn
othe WORM We are ys SetOMRRORAeR
us they have tried to misrepresent
tun to yrente antageninm oe hatred to
the United Staten of Ametica, the ru
gram of the Universal Negro Improve
ment Ansociation in to redeem sfrieu
for the 400,090,000 Negroes af tiv
world If the French government ©)
find fond reanon to construct a trans
continental raliroad for itself, to bul'a
up a central emmire in Africy: If the
Enellh can, by dump'ng mittions and
railitions of pounds on the West Conat
to Improve the larbers fur the ae-om~
modation ef higcer tonnage shine +
alno can find rennon for developing
Africa for the good of the Negro race
thes ss 8 the world
Are We Prepared to Do the Work?
It je a quention of whether we are
prepared ta do the work that munt be
done It Ie not a childs job, It isa
mann Joh and that ie why seme of
these fellowa mhirk the responsiblity:
Can the Race Problem Be Solved by
Art and Literature? :
T understand that James Weldon
Jobnaon spoke thin afternoon at the
YW CA and he told the $0 or 69
peop who Hatencd to him thar the
race problem in ts be rolved through
art and Wterature, that we must rtudy:
music, mtudy art and Hterature and
when that i done the white peaple
willl soften their hearte toward ux anil
wil accept un on social equality, Wel-
don Johnson syn that we munt develop
our singing because by the npiritual
fingtis ofthe rave we will wing our.
elven into thy souln of the white pet
ple Tow ill tke te see that Negro
with the rome around hin neck tevine
ta ming himself inte the suis of kon
White mene he ire a) termed te have
him dead Laughter) Lavery aeber-
minded and sen Sle man knews thet
{nat man Ie play ng with the question
There tn enty one thing that is going
to settle the question of race and “hat
ie power ‘Applause )
Power the Solution of the Problem
T do not care how much money sou
have, I do not care how much art you
know, how >ou can sing, or how much
philosophy you can quote of explain
until you get your big Runs and ex-
plosive cas the world takes no notic:
Cana pays ne attention to you Ht Is
for the want of those things that
other races are persecuted. Tt !s for
want of power that the Jew fe driven
around the world and the black man Ix
kieked around and spat upon and
spurned by everybody. {t was not for
SECRET TROUBLES !
White Mother Amorics a fifustrious A@-
eee eet SMe A
ie Stee caite Se
ies cette alg ar
Petraes eta
a a rousi if
with “in indivence and contra nme wit
cy hg!
htm eho irate toda tee
hare. everecme fear sid er enjoy
iter bealth. ti you belleve there are wn-
Seay hee i celta Fe
slow! ‘working against yeu, annoyed by
eee See geet aaa,
Efias tele tat meme, cater
te be going backward instead ef forward
Eon rah cae eae e aroee
fete mathe Se hoe
De ‘eend We money or post
wapey aan coe i gee pe oreo
See tata rein tere
te was BASE AE Raw, on
at fore sas
of Bee Cs ary ip wer a" or
rea, tay areal Sk ee
ire
ane
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
MADAM IDA B. JEFFERSON, EVANGELIST OF
10th EPISCOPAL DIST. A. M. E. CHURCH,
NORTH TEXAS
A HEALER OF GREAT POWER
Doers man and women ought to see this wonderful lady, fer sha c 7
teil sou many things that will put you te wondering Madame Jefferson
torn bring tangled braina to #9 -
hight of helptul eensiniity. sho [Ry
can cure any disenae that {id
you were not bern with, tn fart,
ane enn locate any disease in
the human bods and tell your N
complaint by sour writing te
hef when ther doctors hove _— ea
foiled, then write ner and whe F
Wi ge vou full detain we z 5
Tur Aineare Madpme setter a
tots ponaennen a Hatural-born , sty
"it fromm: Mirth “wut tone ot A a!
lho. greatent Tieeneed peevehera ace
fo the age ihe hon a nupere Sree
tural gift God hin given her +"
awer tacheal and iad he :
Vaile Mer advie in sneth i Sara NS
nore than you will ever be able 3 4
© pay, Only buninens matters a Pe PY
SUD he anawered Send ten oy Rete
entain stampa for reply Ma- nee &
sume deffegnnn hen ine ere & Pe dee
armdertul gyatr. reatnentiva, P
Seana tnien hone cea App Lae
Venta wanted si tea: hom | MOMS) alas
the art ee SOA
Fstetemneutarion coher than eee
nukes send tus dollars 132) NM
nd if vou inka treatment thin |i Si oe
Wil gaan awe bill ay ee
Pleare stata whether vou are |i ae
Minn Spt or Mes and tha date
at jour birth
BOX 648 LONGVIEW, TEX.
S300 REWARD IFT FAIL TO GROW HA
AIR ROOT HAIR GROWER
Kunes Japanese mar and the whole
world saw it then they changed their
onda about tha yellow man and the
Dost Mt de not for the want of art
and MWerature nnd culture and the res
Of Ie That we arn permeeuted an we are
Dern ane MO mere ten that James Wet
HV sty and tite sos teagues watt
Sg eet dy the Pemdont in the
Wore Uleane nnd they sould ge atte
fete Nemes af the Paited Atate
Nm te eats a an
fo tae Putiman ove ons pant a
tye ant nyt re ase
Ht warn a cettes teat am mane
Weldon dete san ran he elanped get
oe eae white oR etree
Pee yee pene Warn tee tent
Pear TU Be eat be hace ng cine
Vite an tha wont sued yet ties bate
He nee erty tee tt thn toate
Ser see THE Manns Di comy Hine
The Tee Hee sd Westone ferapants
Peper the HUN tet woudl pet +
Wetped sue tee teat ee Mats qe dott
men et Mien Gat # re preqented
Fevereiro e eet LO penton
batt estate 9b ee at 208 Panter
SEUE rm Wt mtn st 0d agagener an
Pubmsat wen tad woth about 20H vere
Benes at rae te ne adel Weave me
We wont wok ater thie Whitty peut
even at midnight (Appinure |
That im the differen e between tie
Taveraut Negru tinprovenent) Agno:
Somien and the Nougat Anages stin
for the Advamement a? Colored [tee
ble They cae talking wet said) tiers
ture and mune and we are tlkihig es
ernment atid em RUN Ayes be
Gough Hee when pated nbe ard seo
fae UrUINEE Ot ab etteRMu pe arene
Mavapnah Harbor at. mab ie about
fen milen ont In ye cauntry endervar-
Ing te Toth ean tack aman that the
Howe or the Let ning uf them will It
the med “Anes that xumehody fe tn
town | Laughter ane ayysliune ) Tht
Imation wer aie talking about When
Me amar te Prete we man in Gonton
we Hermie in Vereen Nes an Geargee or
fy Heme cau can do al! the singing
in Nee Yerk seu me, but net even
the eugely will bear yeu When they
start ty Lahm Negro In ans of those
Been ane vind Dee ehell even around
Cat fornie the whate werkt hears the
fois @ef ce ecun Tht ty sehat we
ara talking thot We tave heen si
tne art praying amd wo aro in the
sume old eondit on We are going to
fentinue alnging and praying, but wc
ire ning to da nomething cine, w-
tre going to start to be’ fier on the
Faptinent of Afriew Thin thing can
hot be dene in Ameren This thing
(an nat be dane in tho West Indies he.
taune of the disadvantages murcound
Ing un The only logical place for the
Wiark man of America and the Went
Melani ucscorgteomt
man can leeully dispute with the
Neere and that ts the effert af the
Universal Negro Improvement Asso-
ciation #t thin time,
Talking World Politice
Wo are talking world politi «we
are talking from the vision of the
ae
Ae
pe ea
BZ ‘, ar
‘ f aD
(HES.
as uo
' cs y on
3 ay
address all mai) and money orders ¢:
ROYAL CHEMICAL CO.
JAMAICA, N.Y.
mlntestnen who take the future of thetr
rare m hundied years whead We are
hot tylking for today, if so, we would
hase ne complaint Lecauaa we have
goed fumen and are natiaed but an
cv atner 00 yeatn we are Boeng (ab
im s Afferent Amer a—an Amerien
Het ak Ie In pe tog tee
eniumdute esq wel own Aimer
ists ping te hee wnat mys rane
TU ge nuston at ever beet He
Neat ane Le eben Ne nee tee remy
Foon the sete at ree nt atecane 6 tut
ee ea Mme nak pepe ete ot atanat
Deus iD ecamnte crak gene wae nit
fe mesa Cam C4 twee sHmE ALIN
fe ead ane nf one pitts ot inday a
Lote were the Gaps Fond eq i anes
br Nae fare ene tae 10
tee WANN He Malt
Pd eat even ge ae tn aes Dead
SW a eaten Mame mu it
bs Yuh os cundewd care an
Serr santennplats ve eatiditian at New
Yona att tmes tea eanpiate
Vine a te veate from new with
fn eaeinon over Bae pea ee ame
fit ne Note hon the te
Mo egatene teem? Waning ta Du
Jide ae want he me ne an
ova) Gi woes 1d aR ated
fal ped ut ont ie other cee
Pint om ae mea same we tag ane gale
fat rye aid tea fave vot cere ated the
Phere aie to tia enol Hut net al
GE tin sek em ate Bey aesamnttaty at
huey ie anoint uf se who ise tha?
Tce ant pee de of ae en ton desire aes
Wee ere ma beng as tanks creation
Leste anal thon of ug whe dee pe ta be
here as Negeors fee] our position wilt
We tunsate in Americ a cuit tinue ave
that as why we want te butt ap an
Afi un empire of sur awn
Tam nerts Ee annot go mere inte thn
mules! bat foyeait to linpress upon
Len they fet Mat we are living te
Hine at the esis het the Mette st race
ind iC the darker peoples su nat look
Out In another 200 ears wo are Reine
te hase a white wer ld 1 yom altos
Frame tv go down inte Africa ail
Wnild upon great Africin empire if
Son alow Tals 1e ga down into Africa
and bulld up mn geen Afrienn empire
find of sou allow Bnglind ta ge down
tute Atria und baild up on great
Meni Lanpie Twat uty bea
fuestion of another hundred vers when
Ati os bey whyte mma m counts
meen an Amen a ie tose und sell bee
white mana counties 1 will be only
a question of time when thy Negro will
he exterminated In Afiien even an the
North \mertoin Indiin was extermi
nated on thin North American con
MAR AREII can Were TONITE ne
The Warning Note—Be Up and Doing
Mescand women Erne seunding the
warning ' Seu from the platform of
Liberty Hall tonight If you must sur-
Vive isc tafe seu must be up and de-
tne pe ee we are game te have a
Whi WeEkd oe suuther Hundred years
to the exclusion ef Avia, becaure the
1s a gglontific vogetablo compound of
pair root and Aino Olt, together with
woveral otbor positive nerbs, therefore
making the most powerful harmless
Hair Grower unown, actually forcing
bair to grow in most obstinate cases.
Unexcelled for Dandruff, Itching, Sore
Scalp. Falling Hair. Will grow pa
tache and eyebrows ike magic. [t
must oot be put where osir is not
wanted.
Mus. Lovrerta writes: “After hav
ing ased every cnown advertised hair
grower for years with no results 2
tried Hatr Root Hair Growgr and
continued faithfully for 16 months,
now my hair ts 29 inches (it was ¢
inches when 1 started.) I belleve
@very woman can grow her hair one
halt to two inches @ month oy using
Bair Root.”
Halt Root Hair Grower ts Soc. @
feox or bottle, Shampoo, B60. Aar-*e
| ‘Wanted Everywhere Make Big Profite.
Sond stamp for partjculars. {f you wish
to try agency. werd us 81 and recelve
supply. When sold ‘us out money.
an fp \
| f i
wey Of \
ASS dh
Tr 7G |
a o~ 4 GX - |
KE i a 0
eS " : j
QO ere .
NR ft SY = =
NU NSE, :
NEAR al
CUR aie
Me ie: <F
YF eT 2,
et AO) ry 2h 24 \\ Gare,
PREETI Za SR = =——=
D ID you ever stop to think how much depends upon your looks? Tris
by looks that you attract people to you, and there 1 ne reason why
© OIRATES Co aoe NGttiny: sree tues se). pamulniones boule
tiful Complexion, plump, velvety neck and arms and soft, smooth hands
by doing as thousands dv and use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener
Preparations as directed below
ro No matter haw dark ronr complexion, it fe cnsy te cet It ‘Juat right
LIGHTEN. seing Br Peed Palmer's Bila Whitener Olatment pronounced Ur
FUE ORIN thourauiia vt men and weuen oe the most Uellgbtta, most remarkable
go most satisfactory of all skin whitener preparations—it quickly
Digacben aod ie perfectly safe Your druggist cao supply you, oF
went postpaid upon recelpt of price, 2%
von THE If :ou hare a rough, bumpy er eblng compexion, and want a ant,
vou: nineot, toltely sia, try using tbe Unearelled Dr, Fred Paliorr’s mite
SLERION Whitener Boop. and follow it with Dr. Fred Palmer's Fero Powder,
whieb sou will Oud Urlicately perfumed and adda Ufe eod lustre to
the atte” Thla laa nerer-taillug teralmeut Crt them ffom oar
Grugelst. oF ecot postpaid upoo receipt of price, 23¢ each.
CAME OF Tr Fred Palmer bas developed the roost woodertul Hair Dressiog
THE MAIN \uown to arene Meten {Ur bale straight, sett, long aad lvauriant—-
Femviven dandruft—malcs the eralp healthy and helps tho bale grow.
Qo bale ino aildf or stinky for toto Improve Gee bea of Die. red
Palmer's Hale Dressing from your drugelst, of seat postpaid upon
evis okipeicesone
AGENTH fr this Ine of exquisite beeuty alde These preparations sell
WANTED rapidly ugn taelt merit, ae everybody kaows about them Weite
tday for sue Hberal agente’ proposition
DR FRED PALMER'S LADOBATOBIES, Dept. Fé, ATLANTA, GA.
ieerseumenetd) ON OS ab rers a ePee Nir Ken tact
ITT Te rE tan re a ae
i ais: i’ “p oA Pan @
THE
A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower.
1,000 AGENTS WANTED.
Goqd Money
“ Made
We want a-
. gonte 'n every
a ‘s f olty and village
to eeld
THE
STAR HAIR
2 a CROWER.
pee Thie te @ won-
a a ear a dertu’ prepare-
Peyrnaaaai7 tion, Gan be
i a i LS s Ueod with oF
pa ie wethout
. Pest ey 4, Straightening
ne Be ecu leone and by
Lee, mei any serson.
ee Pets One 265 cente
is bo crovee ite
“jive. Any per-
7 eon thet will
use 0 280 box
: wit! be cone
vinced
‘Ho metter
. whet hse failed
o to grow vour
% ™ hair. just give
F 4 THE
i 5 STAR HAIR
. F crower
5 ba ‘% @ tria! and be
2 ay a % convinoed.
ieee 5 3 Bend 280 for
| og ener tull eize box.
rae it you wish to
Ripe Ay beceme an e-
tapes gent for thie
eee ° wonderfus
a @! and we will send ful 4 fine yous bon Gant
vend 8.00 ue beat
wort with at once: aleo agente terme. a Rees yes Sen "
end all money By money >rder to
THE STAR HAIR GROWER MF’R., |
P. O. Box 812, Greensborr, N.C.
i
Japanene ta on guard phege and white
man will have « hard time making
ceruea, It eu da not mart now 1% Ge-
Fareed ote ebared ot tod ane
PRUE pene taty tar estete any Vines
nua B vane In 1914, and I trust the
Negro will nov piny the (ool aa he dtd
In 1914, when Negroes were recruited
Indlecriminutely from whe West Indica
and Afra and alf over this countsy.
When then upheayal comes in Hurope
100 090 00" lack men will stand to-
gether inatrud of fighting under other
nar when ye will stand unitedly be-
Nd the Hed tie Black and the Green
dil vate a way ta African freedom
fed) \frwan hberation — ¢Applause )
‘That In the programs of Qin Univeral
Nein, Iinpresement Annocsition and
Poaph for tie a@ppert af ever one
Poston Dregnoses Character of Ob-
structionate
Mtew Root Borten ar tea address
beck te bank the mien she uppored the
TON PN cio ne nara teresa a
fdnteustean Mayan et yess
lneetinge cinoeed of Du Hear Janes
Weldon Toharen Dehene Rater! Tag
tall aid Moter Mbhott editar ot
Chi bge Defender, We took for hie at:
fet tight Home Conkling Sim
monn Mr Penton muds pewreh
lim analy nin of the Tif) wind steer at
Mn Simone starting from his birth
I Monaiesippt thacing Wm) Gough
Lin sureer an a newspaper man, In
whieh eam ity Ne War an) vutous
future hin love for drink at all umes
kth ng the better of him the Incident
Shih ocranioned hie beng brought
tite the limelight and heralded by: the
white newspopers throughout Une
Seuthiond an yor of the great leaders
Of the saute Howe ducing the war
when tM Noble pastor af the Cheats
nut Street C. MB. Church, @ cour-
ugeous und public-epirited Negro at a
Public meeting in Loutaville, Ky. told
the Negroes just what they should de-
mand as men, and Mr. Simmons, who
wan present at the meeting, rose and
Bot the attention uf the people and
began to lambuate and eriticize thie
great man ond call bim disloyal From
that moment he wan played up by the
white newsnupers on af the great
Jeudern of counties Leeaune he nes
Puneingted Go man whe had were and
Iaekbene Drip te hut Me Taaton
eed Mi Bimmene ore jineteal yun
heard of Drom then au he went
Through the coun) inmking epee hen
te prune ef the te man ied
Ing Negroes ta We bs lta them Mie
Menmugen, suid Mr Pomon 9 ve ale
wasn (hese of ube lure confdenme ‘a
the abIILy ef the white man te etre
Huy nrableme by and by Like Du Bois,
Ie he never shot into he apne of
Negtor su teat red-tlonded in asage
Coutinuing Mr Veaton aad the
thin, that directed him to Mateus
faves sus thie He came saving 10
the sung men that they had a right
tele die vinfled and urging there to
ryah hee shanands without any +n
promis.
IF U DON'T C
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE AND REABONABLE
Er€S EXAMINED FREE
531 LENOX AVENUE
NEW YORK
on
|
ee eee
R i
Rheumatism
‘Harst.. who fives at 508 B. OMe ice
Kady Dicer thes Sears grade
ng arte ereon io tall ail other scflrrers
cana A Ba SoA We te hee with
cena Ro Sieg a
| on eotirely free. Write Ber at once before
Tian Satine
COR NG
Pav REMOVER.» = é
DR. J. P. BAI
REGISTERED CHIROPODIS1
a
Phone: Aud. 4135 101 W 141et St
re
: ad ay
(LUCE BING al
‘ge
Wa a etree Certs
a Fes
ie Sree
oer
a EFFI SER ETSI
PS Se ee ee
| i UNLUCKY? Bcc,”
REL fines rary eri coaier.
mE Decatadange a Bo
Peace
Sees SE ee
FREE
F i T TRIAL
Fee a Ad AEROS En Tae Weet
30% Fine
STROI
TrRED-
ALO UP Se tes th eae er ye
Sirring teams tape Pees)
The Mcintosh Employment
Agency
hee Ae band end pontine oa Ing,
428 Lenox Avenue
Cone arer mer emery)
NEW YORK
Thene 1108 HARLEY
Wishing position as Train of Mleeping
Car Trters, write immediately tor tree
{ntormation’ "No experience. necesenry.
agissceesth on month glen, eany an
Jiasant employment. Write
Inter Railway, Dept. O,
Indianapolis, Ind.
AQRATR and DEALERK—Make ec
With COLORED BULLI Tes
rin Ta be eer tocen Ramdas
Company, (2h Lenox Avenue Sew
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 192
El Sacrifiio -—-||Allemanin en Estado de| ts enseflanca a 103.
SECCION EN ESPAROL
rer La Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la
Raza Negra
54-56 Oeste, Calle 135,
Ciydad de Nueva York, Ni. Y.
ROP. M. A. FIGUEROA, Editor
miento de las trascendentes empre-
sas que culminan con la liberacién
de razas y naciones, sino hasta para
la cristahzaciun de las mas cortas
aspiraciones, existe la impertosa
obligacién del sacrificio y 31 en la
actualidad es mas extenso el ou-
mero de imciativas beneficiosas que
son burladas por el fracaso que
aquellas cuyo triunfo se logra mau-
gurar, uo hay que mortihcar el en-
tendinuento buscando el origen de
la derrota de muiciativas tan micas en
altrursmo, sino atribuirlo a la falta
‘de sacrihcios
Pero, apesar de la cabalidad con
que es entendido fo ante dicho, asi
‘como una legion Mifusisuna de ge-
/nios pond cuando una vez em-
Zenden su vuelo con el propusito de
arrancarle lun triunfo al destino,
prefieren no haber nacidv antes de
verse envueltos en las redes del {ra-
caso. Asi tambren esta el universo
jacosado por una plaga de almas
mezquinas, cuya unica mision es
socavar y diligenciar a babiloniza-
cicn de todos los movinnentos que
uenden a impulsar su_prosperidad
Elementos de tanta perversidad,
“en los casos en que logran ver sus
“saivayes anhelos realszados. en vez
de levantarse ellos nusmos v ha-
‘verse duefios de los triunfas de sus
victimas, demostrando asi alguna
sivihtud en sus actos, prefieren, con
la mas satanica sonrisa de confor-
'midad, quedar adornulados sobre
las rumas de sus adversarios y yacer
san conquistar una victoria plausible,
| pues su unica doctrina se funda en
‘la sacrilega plegaria de destruct,
La muchedumbre que proiesa esa
relignin de menoscaba, ha podido
“hacer !a ereceion de uno de stts exc-
crableg temploe aqui en el cena ile la
‘patria en que escriba y los fanaticos
‘que lanzan sus zaetas al corazén de
la divisten de la Asociacion Untver-
“sal para el Adelanto de la Raza
| Negra de esta, lo han querido hacer
[can tanta obstinacien que su propia
arama dobbs dense ate ¥
|que son estos desmayos? Simple.
[Mente sun agentes que vienen a ex-
hortarles su impotencia para Iu: har
Jen contra de lo que las mas fuertes
potencias no pueden menos que
admurar.
Es sabido que en la Republica
Dominicana ¢s muy considerable el
nainyro de tos partidanios del Gar
veismo y huelga decir que solo la
ignorancra es la causante de la opo-
Jsiciun que se le hace a ciertas dh.
visiones de dicha organizacien en e!
pais. Lo pesimo es que los anate-
mas con que stelen amenazar
estas sociedades, son generalmente
capitaneados por relementos que
nada tienen de que enorgullecerse:
elementos que solo ponen en eviden:
cia lo menguado de su entendimien-
to, como mas de una vez lo ha mant-
festado desde la tribuna, el ilustre
presidente de la division de Sanchez
el sefior John Chapmann
Pero si en el seno de‘nuestra so-
ciedad somos retados con afrentas
que diligenciag nuestro desaliento
ello no hard ms que impulsarnos a
ecentuar nuestros. sacrificios, para
remover y destruir con poderosos
impulsos las estériles bovedas del
cautiverio moral de Etiopia.
Nuestros adversarios saben que
no lejano esta el dia en que los pas-
tores de la heregia antigarveista
tendran que <er tan inveterados en
la practica de su poca honradez y
a costa de Ia determinacién de los
cuatrocientos millones de Negros de!
universo, tendran que devolverle
totalmente a Etiopia lo que Dios ha
legado a todas las razas- LA LI-
RERTAD. Ella sera conquistada
no con el altruismo, sino por medio
del sacrificio.
| TEstaman VANDERHORST.
Sanchez. Republica Dominicana.
a Emancipavién Industrial y Politica de Nuestra Raza
en el Universo Entero es el Lema de Nuestra Or-
ganizacién—Les Descontentos y Enemigos de Nuestro
Movimiento No Obtendran la Oportunidad de Inter-
venir, Interceptando Nuestro Paso de Avance—Un
Nuevo Espiritu de Determinacién Nos Alienta en Is
Realizacién de Nuestros Propésites
Grandes cambios han de operarse como resultado de
la actual intranqyilidad universal, los cuales han de ser
tomados en consideracion pur afectar directamente nuestra
vida como raza, imposicién de parte de los que dominan
la situacién econdmica y politica de las diversas naciones
en el universo.
Las srandes inteligencias de las otras razas delincan
los planes v métodus por medio de lus cuales han de
dominar v gobernar Vivimos en un medio ambiente de
inconveniencias \ en condiciones extremadamente in-
feriores a nuestro modo de pensar y sentir. Estos grandes
intelectuales en cl reayuste de sus asuntos, maliciosamente
ponen un limite a nucstra raza en sus actividades, con-
virticndole en un vasayo de las circunstancias por clla
repudiadas, viendonos de ese modo sometidos a servidumbre
y esclavitud doquicra fiyemos nuestro domicilio.
Del sinnimero de millones de nuestra raza en Africa,
en la parte sur v otras regiones de este pais, en las Annilas
y en Centre v Sur America provienc el grito de emanci-
pacién ccondmxa y politica, demostrando esta zetitud
nuestra opresién en los cuatro puntos del universo. La
Asvuiacion Universal para e! Adelante de la Raza Negra
esta determinada a que los millones de nuestra raza Se
vean emancipados de las condiciones del presente. Nuestra
organizacién no esta dispuesta a tolerar por mas tiempo
la imposicidn de Ia politica que nuestra raza deba seguir
Ambicionams una libertad) que nos proporcione el
tomar parte activa cn las evoltciones de nuestra propia
/ existencia La hora sc aproxima para que los millones
" de clementos de nuestra raza se unan con cl objeto de
, concertar sus pronios destinos La organivacién es una
necesidad imperinsa en la realizacion de nuestros Ideales.
= Yo debemos permitir por mas tiempo que nuestras
actividades como pueblo se vean divididas v con un pro-
grama fundamental hemos de marchar adclante hasta
recuncrar nuestros propios derechos. °
FI vasta terriiorio, los millones de millas cuadradas
de nuestra madre patria el Africa, debe ser devuelto a sus
huos, la rava debe ser emancipada universalmente y esto
solo pucde ser adquirido por medio de un esfuerzo
cooperative de parte de todos y cada uno de sus miem-
bros, revestidas con un nuevo espiritu de determinacién.
Los diversos pueblos oprimidos tratan en todas partes
‘de aprovecharsc de las ventajas que puedan proporcionarles
el resultado de los grandes cambios que actualmente se
operan cn esta época de intrahquilidad universal. Las
conferencias v asambleas celebradas con el propésito de
Negar a un acuerdo politico han resultado infructosas y
notamos que cada raza y cada nacién se prepara con el
objeto de conservar y protejer su propia integridad.
Eupora. Asia y America pueden velar por los intereses de
sus respectivas razas v naciones: tiempo cs ya de que
nuestra raza tome una medida decisiva en pro de los
interescs generales del continente africano.
En la lucha por la realizacién de nuestro ideal hemos
de hallar oposicién, no solamente de parte de los elementos
de otras razas sino de parte de nuestros propios hermanos,
quienes por causa injustificada atacan nuestro movimiento.
Sus ataques aqui, allé y mas all4 nos prepararan a for-
talecernos con el objeto de combatirlos en franca lucha.
Por medio de nuestra determinacién, los enemigos del
Progreso del Negro. los enemigos de nuestra emancipacién
no han de adelantar un paso en su esfuerzo por destruir
cl ideal de nuestras esperanzas.
Estos elementos de nuestra raza, perniciosos para la
sociedad en que viven, no solamente han tratado de influir
prejuicio en la opinién publica en contra de nuestra
organizaci6n, sino que han Ilevado su propaganda malsana
hasta las/autoridades federales de esta nacién, denun-
ciando ante cllas, a su manera, la labor y objeto de nuestra
organizacién. La practic 4e es.a politica revela clara-
mentc el poco respeto qu ‘nen a su raza y se deben
a si mismos.
De nucvo hemos de manifestar a estos traidores de
la raza que cl Negro conciente, amante de su raza y
respetandose a si mismos, esta dispuesto no solamente a
levantar su propia raza al nivel de las demas, sino a tomar
participacién en Jos asuntos generales de la humanidad,
para gran sorpresa de los demagogos: para gran sorpresa
de los que con polgeza de espiritu, todo lo ven opaco ¢
imposible en esta era de civilizacién y adelanto. El Negro
conciente esta determinado ha convertir su patria no en
un sitio donde simplemente pueda existir, sino en una
nacién donde pueda disfrutar de todos los privilegios.
maflerechos y proteccién que todo pueblo civilizado reconoce
| » todo ser humano. :
Demanda en Contra del
Gobernador de Puerto
Rico
El licenciado Jose N Quifiones
Pe conducto de su apoderado seiior
. Rivera Zayas. ha interpuesto el
recurso de mandamus, requiriendc
se le reponga como fiscal, contra ¢
gobernador Reily. Depués de hacer
una exposicién detallada de las ra-
zones que le asisten para tal solici-
tud y Ia sinrazén de la deposiciéin
concluye con la peticién siguiente
Por todo fo cual, el peticionario
al Hon. tribunal suplica, que <¢
sitva dictar un auto condicional de
mandamus dirigido a los demanda-
dos E. Mont. Reily v Juan_B.
Hukye, gobernador de Puerto Rico
y gobernador interino de Puerto
Rico respectivamente quence
tienen la autoridad para cumplir lo
que ordene el auto cidendadsles fe
poner inmedigtamente al peticiona-
rio, en el ejercicio de su cargo 6 en
su defecto comparecer en él a
exponer las causas que tengan, &i
alguna tuviesen, para que no se ex:
plda un auto de mandamus defini-
tivo ordenandoles reponer en su
puesto al peticionario y condensn-
doles al pago de todos lox dafiox y
perjnicins <ufridoe por cl petigio-
nario v todas las costas v desembol-
$08 que este pleito origine.
Alemania en Estado
Confnsién
La incapacidad de Alemania para
leer en la mente de otras naciones,
tan amplamente comprobada antes
y durante la guerra, evidentemente
persiste El editor de “Vorwarts”
expres) su asombro por la in-
diferencia del mundo exterior para
con Io que estaba ocurriendo en el
Ruhr. Alemania, dice, babia puesto
especialmente su esperanza en los
Estados Umdos Parece haber pen-
sado que la retirada de las tropas
americanas del Rhin indicaba que
habran recibido ordenes de marchar
sobre Paris, De esa u otra manera se
‘contaba con que 1os Estados Unidos,
ast como Inglaterra, demostrarian
jun repentino y abrumador amor a
Alemania y que se resentirian y re-
[sistirian a todo desconocimento de
/su soberania de parte de Francia
Pero nada de eso ha ocurrido y el
quejoso editor de “Vorwarts” se
maravilla de que los Estados Unidos
puedan mirar con complacencia que
le joven republica alemana sea vic-
tima de la mas grande imyusticia.
Estas lamentaciones recuerdan el
tempo en que Alemama se mam-
{esto igualmente confundida por
que los Estados Unidos no volaran a
apovarla durante hh guerra mundsal
nl considero al katser come tina de-
Phe de la rasa hunana Pero es
un error representar a Tos nurte-
"amerianos como endurecidos anie
‘la suerte de Memania EI tunu de
la prensa norteameri nan es de
“una animosidad especial contra .\le-
mania suo simplemente la urge a
‘confrontar los duros hechos de la
| situacion real y que haga connoce
su determinacisn de hacer todo lo
que esié en su poder para hacer
frente a sus obhyaciones con Ian
fia Vl galuernor trances acaba de
‘reiterar su desen de entrar en trates
con Memama: Mr Pomeare ti de-
clarado que no rehusara considerar
‘cualquiera oferta prucedente de Ber:
cho St la republe « slemana se en-
cuentra en peheyn, rene ante sol
camino abierto de su seguridad
| Francia esti dispuesta a ce'ebras
un acuerdo estabie, ect disutesta a
)garantizarle una moratoria de ‘ios
aiios 6 cosa por cl esti'a, pero mn
-siste en un arregla defritse \ obh-
piaO ie 5 ABE Ae BLA
"Fn vez de maravilarse de In indite:
reneia de les extraiies, Jos alemanes
‘serian_prudentes s+ estudiaran can
atencion la actitud francesa y la
fuerza de la paste de T ranvsa,
| pactando un atreglo lo mas jaronte
neible
Curado Por Medio de Auto-
sugestion
Cou. ef famoso mage de Ly ute:
sugestion, tuvo hoy tina de las se-
<ones de mayor emociin desde su
legada a América, ET numerose
anditorio que presenciaba sits expe-
riencias con diversos pacientes, co:
menzaba ya a impacientarse en vista
del fracaso de la famosa fermula
curativa. cuya isistente repeticrn
no lograba efecto alguno en Tee tem.
blores nerviosos de Howard (.anter.
Varios espectadores comenzaron
2 sisear como signo de desagrado
menudearon los maullidos y tod:
clase de ruidos expresivus del dis-
gusto colectivo. EI ruido comenza-
ba a hacerse ensordecedor convir-
tendo en un escarren la + u'agrosa
frace, cuando el tulhdo Cito R
Kropf, de Milwaukee, que hatna
sido transportado a la clinica y co-
locado junto a Coud, desvendits de
la plataforma, por sus propios pres,
convirtiendo en un triunfo resonan-
te lo que amenazaba ser aigy mas
que un fracaso
Protectorado Civdl en
Marruecos
El ministro de estado, sefior don
Santiago Alba, hizo a los periodistas
de Madrid varias declaraciones re-
ferentes a la futura conducta que se
ha de seguir en Marruccos. Pri-
mero y principalmente, mamfesté el
ministro de estado, que la accion
muthtar quedara supeditada a la civil
Con motivo de la implantacién
del protectorado civil. dijo que se
atendera de una manera especial a
. ANUNCIOS
ULN.L A.
Sesterse te ae sigen. 8 oer 11, . U8 sate oe
Strawn, tue Go rasa, td'pw 18. th ents oes
Resstow im Mascot sorte. os GREW sen ee
Raspes Cron egg acco BREN Sage ee
State rote cored. 00° S."SRa sage es
Seteore rer ope. ens” "oR ands wwe
Fetegratan. berate 4614 Convvosion’. thie sods ess
Fosgaten ‘roibte tetera _ 480 ce ove
Pace gee rengenorglns onecngnt gen ong de
Compre los discos para fondgra-
fos de la U. N. I. A. por artistas de
la raza, a precios reducidos. En
viamos érdenes a todas partes me
diante pago por adelantado,
Agenins en los Estados Unidos,
e por docena, mas gastos de
lete.
. Agentes en el extranjero, $10.00
por docena, mas gastos de sellos.
Discos por correo, $1.00 cada unc
mas gastcs de sellos,
Precio en nuestra oficina, $0.90
“GL NCL A. REPOSITORY
56 West 138th Street
New York City, ,N. ¥.
ly ensefianza a Ie nifios indigenas,
Fi plop seesiaa era
a verd, desempefindo por Tox na
turales, bajo [a supervisién espa-
‘Gola.
En cuanto a las reformas de ca-
rhcter material, se tenderin varias
lineas férreas, se construiran cami-
nos y se fomentara intensamente la
agricultura y las riquezas naturales
asi como el comercio y la industria.
Actitud de Rusis Sobre la
Ocupacién del Ruhr
Se reciben detalles de uoa impo-
nente mantfestacién que tuvo lugar
cn Petrogrado para protestar de la
ocupacién francesa del Ruhr Se
dirigié un Hamarmento al proletaria-
do francés para que resista la accion
de su gobierno. ;
Los estudiantes rusos desiilaron
por las principales calles de Petro-
grado llevando banderas v estandar-
tes con inscripciones que revelaban
bien a las claras la mdignaci®n de
los manifestantes En una de ellas
se lea Estamos decidos a marchar
al Ruhr a la primera seital del
Soviet
El cuarto congreso nultar ruso
reumdo en Tambow envio el st
guiente mensaje a Leon | rozky, co-
“misionado de guerra de la repubitca
roja Nuestra pulvora esta seca ¥
Iintpios nuestros riftes.
ALGERIANS ARE. NE-
Gy Rev JAMES If. WEGS of Chicago
The Moroccans and Algerians arc
quoted hy The New Yor, World, “Not
Newroce Prof Kiang Gone ap ane
thoropy ommt at Columbia Universit,
consirmes ite atotement that tney were
not \cKraee, Hon Marcus Garver
feesident-geaeral of the UN TA
hows ex: unl *y in hia weekly rect:
ings in The > gro Wertd, tnnue of Jan
uary 2" why the alatement woe made
Published and confirmed wah gives
tend tne thant te the Nagin rice af
the workt
Ar fam ths cuthe 0° tons and pie-
tures on the ur gon of the tace the
Matement inveten and interestm me
The eriteneet tat ths Mor csns and
Alge- any vere na Negiume Palesy by
mying thet tae Mesa ted Alger
the e+ a ORRIN To) Puce tt
Hem the Word tat mandurdized Ne-
krevs ad the standard i put aown
Ae 6A wt om dren af Nerra Blood
Whe mts cette Fox na te
colar of tae Sto nae re teatine ay the
hor that makes a Negro
Hom ss the Gather ef the Segre
be Gh Wed four sone aemel Cush,
Misrium, Phut und Cauan, p'ronf Cush
sprang the Ethlopfana and the Baby
lun.ang (through his son Nimrod), from
Mizriam sprang tho Egyptians, from
Phut apramy the Carthagethenns, Mo-
Hesann and Alger um and | from
Canaan apeang the Canganiter Ko all
of thexe are Negroce Out of there
affayringn af Ham the fies evs ration
was perfected Fret in Vfrwa an the
Bite See ne caut on tie hae tor of
the Me Iteeranean Sea und third, on
the harder of tie Vunarates Iver
Sethe wh te man pls ed litle part in
sivitration before Che at
Way rh uid the wat) an propsiog.st
efalm the miter pare ehen hin blood
TMs reprerentet
This mettre inet arngned me to go to
New Yoru in the nar fitare tm give
some nevten of dzeturen on the Necro s
true hiirtar and rhow rome pictures 0°
the “ame The biick man and the Jew
rade three-quarters af tte bth! al hae
tory The white mon has played a
Nery ht be part init
Informacion General
REQUISITOS NECESARIOS
PARA SER MIEMBRO DE LA
“ASOCLACION UNIVERSAL
PARA EL ADELANTO DE
LA RAZA NEGRA."
Con la cantidad de sesenta centa
vos ($060) todo elemento de nues
tra raza puede ser miembro de Ia
“Asociacion Universal para el Ade
lanto 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 Constitucién, o Libro de
Leyes de la Organizacion (valor 25
centavos) v una insignia (valor 15
centavos). ©
Si hubiera en ta villa, pueblo o
ciudad donde Ud. viva una Di-
vision Autgrizada de esta Aso@ia
cién, hage su aplicacién en ella; en
caso contrario, mande su_aplicacién
al Cuerpo Directivo de Ya Asocia-
cién remitiendo la cantidad de un
dolar ee Al cate de esta
cantidad le envi por. corres
loz articulos antes meena oom
un Certificado como miembro de ta
Asociacién. Lg aplicecién debe ser
dirigida a:
Sr. Seereta rio, ict General de!
Universal Negro Improvement
Association,
56 West 135th Steet,
New York City, N. Y.
Aconsejamos # aquellos ;
vien sus cuotas al Cuerpo Directive
lo hagan anual, cost ecenl 0 cads
tres meses, EF. evitar ta constgnte
eee Ge ta. Tariets aesta off.
ineses.
Eom NS
(OVIMIENTO.
DAS LAS BPOCAS POR LA
REDENCION DE AFRICA ¥
EL ADELANTO: DEL NEGRO
EN TODAS PARTES,
Roem
G::
———. —_ s ——
| or ‘,
‘ UNIVERSAL NEGR
IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION ~.
—— SS
Without Prejudice, This Is to Inform One and
All That
MR. ELIE GARCIA
le No Longer Officially Connected with the
Universal Negro Improvement Association
«All persons to whom Mr. Garcia has issued construction
loan bonds or receipts or conversed with for the Universal Negro
Improvement Association are requested to communicate at once
with Complaint Department, Universal Negro Improvement
Association, 56 West 135th Street, New York.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC!-
Pamphlets or Writings and Speeches by
The Honorable Marcus Garvey has been prevailed upon, for tha
rood of the public, to edit in a series of pamphlets, his speeches and
a riungs as the means of setting forth the aims, objects and policy of
he Universal Negro Improvement Association, He will edit a series
of $2 pamphlets for 1923 The Girst three will be off the press in
anvther couple of weeks They will include the following subjects:
“Speeches sleli ered before International Conventions of Negro Peo-
ples of the World, 1920, 1921, 1922." 5
“Christmas messages and speeches.”
“The cause of the defeat of the Dyer \nti-Lynching Bill; The Flag
hat Leads to Liberty; Social Equality Between Black and White in
South Africa; The Statesmanshy of President Harding After His
Speech at Birmmgham “
Each panpihlet sells for 25 cent Send in your orders now, Special
| ates, 25 cents «asin with all orders. Address
BOOK DEPARTMENT
‘. 56 West 135th Street, New York City
ATTENTION!
| 8
aN
MEMBERS NEW YORK LOCAL, J
Are You Buying Your Provisions from the Universal Groceries\*
OUR GROCERIES :
The Only Negro Chain-Groceries O;
in Harlem
Grocery No. 1...........;. 47 West 138th S 7
a pn or sn a os MO Nk
eee ore Four Duty "Reap the Borahite 3
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE -YOUR OWN®
| Look Qut for the Appearance of the Greatest Negro~
| Monthly Magazine :
| 6a { aC [ k 99
— “Noe Blackman
| Edited by Marcus Ga:vey, Sir Wilham Ferris, Sir John B. Bruce
and Others
| Published by the African Communities’ Leauge for the Universal
Negro Improvement Association in the Interest of the
| 400,000,000 Negroes of the World
ANNOUNCEMENT WILL BE MADE Laren GIVING
A DEFINITE DATE FOR THE APP! icz
| OF THE FIRST ISSUE
PRICE—25 CENTS PER COPY
| SUBSCRIPTION—$3.00 PER YEAR; ORDER NOW
Agents Wanted All Over the World
ADDAges 5
Manager “THE BLACKMAN” _ ;
56 West 135th Street -
NEW YORK CITY, U.S. A. °
SO rN Ce ee a ei rs eed SN ae
LAINT DEPARTMENT =“
_ COMPLAINT DEPAR :
Universal Negro Improvement Aom.:
NOTICE! “NOTICE! = ©—_ NOTICE
The President-Genera! of the Universal Negro Improvement a
ton, on his tour of the nation, has been approached by bunérede ef Wega?
members and well wishers of the Association im complaints against the
treatment they have received from several of the various Gepartmests of
the Organisatidn at headquarters, and from tnditvdual eMewe en@ em-|
ployes at headquarters, as also against the conduct ef certaig Ruceutive
Officers whilst on the field. .
|, ‘Toe Fresident-Gensra! is grieved cf the many complatnta, and: have?
begs to announce that » Complaint Department ts new established. an4|
lattached to bis oMce All persons baving coniptatute to make agnindt. ang
Gapertment oicer or employe ot the Organtantion Wi stuns Wame.t8: \i/-
, President Generals Office, U. N. [i A. «es
56 West 135th Street, New. Yor, ae
= sy Sth oo SUA EY
Brit you love the Orgastention and: Geslte.to-'ebe- if
service to the teon, heat fou wilt et sat oe , ne
the part of eftciat, een loree of the. Organtentian ; eteteiy viet
whom ad parern bo Rec tema pea as Si ees
ert wer eae a
eet Mis spre Te Tig eR CST et Gee Ta Cogs PEERS NS RRR EEE
ee US Mo: oe fits rik eat .
ab: BEE TE Bosh ris Bat a Fis, 5 on fe “A 4 ‘ i g 5 “4
Sah ar MeN Kaen GATE ea SBP e70 OE oo SEL IED Lh ny c wee Be , : : , ~ oecounyehially
a pr baila tlananded msn al PoE a EN CIN lta Nee tne? | |e aC
THE “INFERNAL EloHT
10
FRED A TOOTE
(Rattte Net dn te fat Ih
Ase on the bm ca Voy rae
Vee te . shh
the darter dat def eat on the sae
fod ME pat ten ae wet te
Warde bo anise Heke Moe Ee
Went bot th mee Poe tna
and howe phat OM te Te
Die delight he Oe tap ae ate
frayed mms nen we hte ny
and Mie ewes came 4 rid eee tam
wopound code ting for the tee oh
Wat cau dt Nw short afte words
Vtoe ame ete dam oe tsar Me
Donmew ven be ear ee Moral
“Fine clothes may dieguise, ! to niy
Wonde w tl ' toe Re
Try This! A Gleamy Mass of
Luxuriant Hair
oa
Was. oo
‘ia i
fin, aoe re ae
' Pig iy BE
ae
ane | es
:_— Cae
Vt ones’ | JOu can traonvaform sven
Plain, dull fine hair, You can hase it
ubundant, soft, glossy and Cull of life.
wdeotret on 35 cent bottio of Mandyr-
ine" at any drugstore. Then maieten
w soft cloth with tho ‘Danderine” urd
draw this through our hair taking one
amall etrand ata time lustantls, yer
immediately, you hay ioubied ‘the
beauty of your heir It will be a mars
so soft. luatrous und so eusy te de up
All dust an’ excenatve ofl ix removed
Let “Dand. rine” jt new life, vikor
and brightness te sour haw This
stimulating ten! ow i fesher vour
scalp, check dandruff and falling bait
and help your heir te jams long thick
strong und benutiful
PATRONIZE. YOUR OWN
ACPRIGHIS PUATERE G10 Gi)
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A. RICHARDS
107 Wyckogf Street
Brooklyn, 'N. Y.
Phone Main 2664
OR DNOP MB A CARTY
FOR IMMEDIATE xERVICE
AXYWHENE
SWAMP-ROOT FOR
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There In antv one medicine that really
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Dr Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the
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thousands ‘pen thousands of dintreas-
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lckty because tte mild and immediate
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(aw gentle, healing vegetatie com
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Start treatment at once Maid at att
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However. if you wish Nret to teat
thia great preparation send ten cents
to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co Ringhamt.n NT
for a sample hottie When writing be
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ji ?
All Night?
Oy Must You Get Up Frequently wy
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1 ia 1
7 pleme Treateres Wes you can give Its
mm you te know how quiekly 1
irritation In the biadder end
. the setting sp nights to urinate every
y iw jc te very wearing anéd ao
ane Oe te enacyance If you are
‘4 jak relief, All nut the cow
ABs abana a ea
Jil bo cont you'ey mall.”
io :
3 shnap pen td weee ON fiat treat:
ee i Trout mans 494 adarees
eel
ane ae uneeaate ee |
[eet thevsershs: ‘will at eave}
pp ener. vou: by.
desea
POLES 000s senee-corseeeeeess ceseeee ee
BTC! OF RIK cesceees ceseees
FOR ove iv.esecseezereessse BBs. 00-6
INDIAN SYRUP & TONIC CO.
| EE
INDIAN es Long Life Tonic
He . |
HERB an and
MEDICINE 7 a Cough Syrup |
aaa
THE WORLD'S FAMOUS INDIAN HERB MEDICINES !
Women and men test seu fereet tie [ean Quick Hair Grower for
) growing Wut an fuld beads and bald spots, lenghthens the hair and pres
So sente ite tulling Now es per can Lang Lify Tonte for the blood and —
) pheumatiam Tc Cough Syrup for atubtorn colds and coughr wc L. &
OF Face Lotion tor clewmng the face from worms and buinps 60e AT
- mado from the purert of Indian Herbs and Barke Mail orders promptly
altended ty Suld by ull deuggiats
INDIAN SYRUP & TONIC CO.
Cumberland Street, Merrick Park, Jamaica, N. Y.
PROSE JAMNICA GoD 9 Jamaica Factory and Office
Why suffer with Rheumatism, Gout, Sciatica, Neuralgic Pain ani lis asses
Afampure bled, when sou can be releved hy using
SCHAPIRA’S ANTIDOL :
Morey iefunded fer fret tink bettle if not suttafa tory Try it-y ou
fore nothing and gain your health 1
Price, $1.00 Per Bottle; 6 Bottles, $5.00 |
Math Orders Attended to Promptly.
WILLIAM SCHAPIRA MANUFACTURING CHEMIST
182 First Avenue, Corner 11th Street, New York City :
COMING! COMING!!
BIG
BUILDING FUND BENEFIT
The Ladies of the Royal Provisional
Court—Ethiopia
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT “ASSOCIATION
The NEW LIBERTY HALL
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., 56 West 135th Street
en
Karate toe tha or & mien e
Wobagh Tew re et
Whentne cart wee al mae
| ae ge ee M
thengherts be et ose ‘co
fee pak wens
Nemes World semper aot swe
Mental decament ena oe
engeatulete d ' aes om ‘
ote tebe that te rat an
Side Chen tet qiebe t teed
ee ee Ties
will ta pemembered + :
tame det tot thee nfamy 1
the tohetest but ter de + falpehood
(rot for tien braver bat tor Oeee
fowardiees sr fer tier en one,
ewr bart othe sycophancy +
Gaenetation sot bar pleat ree apt on
Matted ten igh thom og
their herds wna Se i er
names of the ‘infernal b gat Towe
appeal ip tianue of filme ve arts
mitigated lew delineate nse
waegerition ef numors ad 8,
nclurtone Ame 4 1 mene
scummortal deume ear
Mes of in vera es ehowbe te
smnaner bat oer 4 ot
SHempe tiem oe deve ot ae
Sur wd Christ ar ett ww sot
voernumenm 6 8 poset 4
treated Thee eae mae
Pecebt cnether Cte 8 on
Pm whe Take Mk eter ee
Pree tatate det Et ape ater & Poe «
SATIS SENET EA Mr RE RY A
Le Higat
They gouge a tee
eV bemmeat Gt ten st nae
Ver ens mmetetresi Meer ane et me rats
Punning i ne meme ob 8 bebe
sone 6 Ae shee woh
Tmt amcmbere od porte mere ge
as dnprepente ute tb nt
Peat What eyse ee db have re sudte tt ”
THe premix ued ontere nese of batred
pealauey umd ens Wd omgpe tia
pedis cc oaspare ste g here
Phanes these informal eight? 1
vuthars Of US pee unten d to
Invent cm Get ge tre ere ot
eNeOUEN tea eseal te the Venere pat
Pe the demagesue Gero nd the
criminal’ tN TM bat thes
Created instead a nierer oo cnn he tney
themaeives aha Wedatd perp os
envisaged the care ature ct the te
ternal ce ght” Ae. ampie the ae
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1923
Warcanted wrsert orn, deductions avd
eines ef the appeal letus eae
ene Peragiaph oe whieh hes ne
Fee hen what or owith the pre ad
he oor pueceeding parseraph bat oe
ede ym dat by ne ot
thee abe
ee Ee
AH et tems famine and gm
Pere ement CW 6 bedian and Ames
Fo egreee Feed tweet
Ho ement 66 ce inevement an
te wet wo ut eure te
bose bop eter 8 lawyer
” ae eter wate
ee
oe eee . & hem ae
Ce
soe es cutee
Wore kame atte ete
ee: | tam Wine dene
ret gre venter
Wem hota den fo pet
ote es ee
is Frere wa
en Hae pee tate pee tee
De Dees ar RRS RaInAC ase wen
We 9 WH Woodemand efibe deter
sie ‘ nine
sO re GS flew te they
Po ee ment Wee
Tn ee Nine at Ne gree
se odek fat a haw tee
tert rapes Dome y ot
4 aw ems
steps ems
aig \
ee
1 . te tee
‘ome te tet
renee a
ook ern ate
hens fot et Dee pe
Vein se ovate un et 6
Somer 8 ee af eine
some wots a dten ga.
power pees
ee Te tye et espe wth age
sok Pore da eners oe rhe
ee ee ome tends
- Sr
erred ope at omanes ant one
ote tt fan dy he Dust tet
Per aed a uaperteg werker’ ¢
che de vote the teen Seer
Nate petite Nowra rahe ae
eb re tee epted tite pretation
eee FE feral beh tm
rat be Weed a sre nar ete
tere whet ine ne net he ake wader
Wamself va Ube ed with the Neer
Soupoet pat much miltesed marr
resture Pea er ak
The nue pre at Mores © ope othe
onde of a feqrher Det them doa
154 West 57th Street, Corner 7th Avenue and 57th Street
NEW YORK CITY .
a a a
Frida lgnt, Fe
7. 7
AT 8 O'CLOCK SHARP i
TO HEAR
PRESIDENT-GENERAL OF THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSN.
a ee ee
A WONDERFUL CONCERT PROGRAM
Wail Intersperse the Brillant Speeches to Be Delivered in Derense ot the Greatest \egte Movement ithe Woof
MR. GARVEY,
Who Ts the Greatest Graton or the Kaco Wall Deliver Probable His Greatest Speech an His Career Els Sulyect Wall Be
“THE FUTURE OF THE BLACK AND WHITE RACES—THE BUILDING UP OF AFRICA
Leading White Mev and Women Whe Hive Been Misintormed \bout VARCUS G ARV EY and tae Universal Negro linpraves
ment \ssecation Wil Be Present
a
Come and Hear This Champion of Liberty Defend the Rights of the Negro Race
Come and Hear Tiny Lapesc the Opoeation \gamst Hin MUS GABN EY os Bet Heid te \dvantage When Te Ts Attacking
the Enennes of the UNINERS VL NEGRO DIPROV ISLES LOASSOCEV EON and Defending fis PRINCIPLES
People Wall Be Coming From VIE Parts of New ferses, Penmsclvanie and New Verk to \tend this GRD VI ASSEMBLY
i ee ES
Several Bands of Music and Celebrated Singers Will Entertain
SIR WILLIAM FERRIS, M. A., K. C. O. N.
Wall Bean the Chaar
Sir Willam Sherrill, Titular Leader of \merican Negroes, Wall Speak Hear Tins Brillant Orator Who Has Just Returned
From the League of Nations \ssembly at Geneva, Switzerland
a
BIG PLATFORM DEMONSTRATION OF AFRICAN MILITARY AUXILIARIES
Something Lively and Bright for Everybody
YOU DARE NOT MISS THIS IF YOU ARE ALIVE
First Tier Boxes $2.20 Each Seat
Parquet and Second Tier 1.68 Each Seat
Dress Circle 1.10 Each Seat
Balcony -5B Each Seat
Tickets on Sale at Otfice of Universal Negro Improvement Association, 56 West 133th Street, Front Wednesday, February 14th
Procure Your Seats Early, Otherwise You Will Be Sold Out. Tickets On Sale at®Box Office,
Carnegie Hall ~
REMEMBER THE DATE AND THE PLACE
the lead And we suggest to the pencil
pushe. ‘handler Owen, “pecretary of
the sammittes,* that he arsien to each
of the «tors on thin me odrema his
particular pect, not forgetting “Portia
of Wa Vom The signers lave de-
pobad themselves an ol) phonegraph
erperaton president ath rest emate
eeperation peerident ohh chemi at
aepersten prerident oti fed eece
taste SOM LE Tats gine ter
sfobean hee ef NOV ME OM dd
Cater pete ats
Had the. ne or ged un mt tea
CCN an dist ne tena we verti
ON ae ever helimung mal rity of Ne
RE SOW Pave stars) tiem as
Port Nese eet foe mut
eo turther denied (14 a haeee
Hf othey waa detour de tas ear et
ten aprey the eviden ewe demand
shes) trap trusty fountain open
HURRE ee than atm eged ward ree
Seon or nm 8 readsnenn fo he neat
Sond Nu re seir Interns bots
Memorial—Uno Reece. a Dog.
Which Died by Asphyxiation
beteume tthow Ce a
1 de teat Perea: oe te M
ve Testa Nee 4 Pega Met ey
te Negra Weelt wt se pet de bow
6 Pekin ten om ot
meade bs aephy ates nr Wiis te
te Noto tat tee te The
Feepie Were out und tet bre et
com Me juampest oo the os yide ww te
safety a dast Mitting Qlamy ee ot teem
i Mimpoege Jiu ihe Se xe Yoo Hones
et \ me tetauene d
Feud the een Pb et geared
ted sph ate " barn t
bry EMELDA FLETCHER,
LOYAL MEMBER OF COLON
DIVISION, OSES LIFE
THROUGH AN ACCIDENT
Cr bt be dateaer 1 mete bometee
Rleteher, one of the teva members of
the 1 N TOA Nooters Utely da
Hedsen lane © out weer pag
ee ee
dane et et ae wy * Iyenngse
moose Sher tebe ath Gt bt veer
We genre gy bepris Hoyt Stews
Cr
Vevey owhe ne te and
Cc ee I me ton
Pteb te bee ow nt tenn . um
poteb bh tab pees on Mss
Woh me wre te ee
SEOTuemeet Hes 6 ge seek aN
beeen ee ot nee
hemo 5 iw i 4
woe wh . atin
addons Merde ot : -
on Hm ie
Av Hos ve the
we . oN soe Me ete ow
TS ‘ , 2 oo
' a
bo. ‘ Sa
cn oe
' ow '
() p y / :
ain)
;
us R
SAY “BAYER”? when you buy Aspirin
dent snd promoter of the BO. F A 8.
performed the last ittea, The de-
ceased wan a native of Grenada,
BWP from the Pariah of Victorin
Khe iM three children and (hres misters
to mourn her ‘ona
The sresitent Besther MoJo, pt
Kore though ok et the tine and hin
rts mpaced no pain ino making (he
insanton ane ta he long remembered
We beg (9 announce alsa that an we
wre Het vel chartered, the §7h death
Reith an phos ided by the coOMmatiiution
will ote berne by the organization
ACE OC WIL
(oval), and alter deducting the tuners!
expenses, the remuinder, If any, will bo
rent to the children
Wo mine ber ul! yes,
Hut wo muat bid her adieu,
Hut phe lives to our hearts with @
beauty anew
Reape:ttully youre,
1 J BUBRILN
(ener Mevretury Lethmian Branch,
TON TA, Victory Mad, (86 tudaon
Lane
P oN —Grenada and Trinidad papers
plearo copy f
(is snd fer man in general — Acceptoniy
Thre package which containn proper
slines tone Mandy boxe of twelvo tab.
tere cont few cents Drugglete iso neil
Hettes of fad 100. Ampirin iv the
ht mark of Raver Manufacture of
Manan ctien kdester of Balleyieactd