The Negro World
Saturday, November 29, 1924
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
The Independent Weekly
The Voice of the African-American Negro
A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Institute of the Negro Race
VOL. XVII. No. 16
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1934
GETTING READY FOR CRUISE OF THE WEST INDIES AND CENTRAL AMERICA
Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting:
This week I write especially to the Negroes of the United States, asking each and every one who can afford it to embrace the opportunity of booking passage on the S. S. Booker T. Washington for the cruise that is to be made to the West Indies and Central America. At this time of the year everybody who can afford it in America is endeavoring to get away to the warm climate either of the Bermudas, Florida, California or the beautiful tropical isles of Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica or the countries of Central America.
Seeing the Tropics
the Universal Negro Improvement Association places at the disposal of all Negroes in America this splendid opportunity to see the tropics aboard a ship of the Negro race, the first of the line of the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company. The cruise will be for thirty-one days. The good ship will touch the islands of Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica and the countries of Panama, Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica. Why not go to see these beautiful countries where the oranges, bananas, grape fruit, sugar cane, cocoa nuts and palms grow? Go there to see nature in her evergreen mood, where the grass is ever green, where the trees are ever green, where the birds sing continuously. Go to the country where the rivers flow placidly from the falls and cataracts without being frozen. Go and see the natives in their happy, cheerful mood, singing their songs of tropical bliss and extending to the
ABOARD SHIP OF THE BLACK CROSS NAVIGATION AND TRADING COMPANY
SEEING THE BEAUTIES OF THE CARIBBEAN SEA-ENJOYING LIFE AMONG THE NATIVES-SEE THE WEST INDIAN AT HOME
SAIL UP THE PANAMA CANAL AND SEE THE GLORIES OF OLD PANAMA
SEE THE BANANAS AND ORANGES RIPE ON THE TREES
stranger the hand of welcome and of cheer. Millions of white American tourists go to the tropics yearly. This is a chance for Negroes to do likewise. Go and see the Panama Canal, the great engineering feat completed through the energy of Negroes under the direction of General G. W. Goethals, after whom the Booker T. Washington was originally named the S. S. G. W. Goethals.
Opportunity for Negro Tourists
This ship has splendid accommodations for passengers. Her cabins are as spacious and accommodating as any of the big ocean liners, and the price for the thirty-one days' cruise is as low as possible. You can book a passage for the thirty-one days to and fro with all requisites supplied for $350.00. The ship will be manned by a competent group of white and colored officers. The local groups of Negroes in Cuba, Panama, Jamaica, Bocas del Toro and Costa Rica are planning receptions for those who make the cruise. This will be an exceptionally joyful
time for all those who will take advantage of the opportunity.
Pleasure and Business Trip
trip but a business trip for those who are commercially or industrially inclined. New associations can be formed with your own people, new contacts created such as the white travelers have done to their own commercial and industrial interests. If this first cruise proves successful, the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company will place at the disposal of the race in America semi-annually ships of the line to facilitate those who desire to visit the tropics. Let everybody work, therefore, to make this a success.
Book Your Passage
You can book your passage now by writing to the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company, 56 West 135th Street, New York, sending in your full payment for the passage or one half payment, with the balance paid up before the 20th of December. The ship will sail from New York, 135th Street and North River Pier, on Sunday afternoon, the 11th of January, 1925, and will return on the 7th of February, 1925. No passports are needed. No income tax will be paid for those who are making the return trip. Write in immediately and book your passage.
With very best wishes, I have the honor to be Your obedient servant,
MARCUS GARVEY,
President-General,
Universal Negro Improvement Association
New York City, November 25, 1924.
Sas Saale erties ah eine a Sabaint. Wes ae ‘ene. Mer 5 : ao ~ 35 ee 2%
ee Re a ee Sn. LD, SATURDAY. NOVEMEER on 3086... os ei ig fe ree n ets
Cinta ah ie, ad a a " a ee - inpranipempebi
% ae ‘3 i ? Pie 4 os aoe lt oa : eee “wag ens age 7
a 2h 4 a one ra: _ Hq : ay 3 Hi a a
aS , iE Ee A Be ee : 4 Oe . ok
Tr 4 are j 7... ee , ; a. too. ; F
‘ & SE 1 Wa! a ‘ . ae % au d : ie i 1
a— OR SS See: aoe 1 co.. 8 Bat Pau
ran i: Sekt Lew ‘eae \ 1. Pere y rieny : ms . PRLS werter apptring for this job”
eee CO) le eee “GL 2") yy = peel pen ly raprgs
. " Pennell ete Bahaw md 5 ON ae Sake as alg eel a ww rs ae NY STUDIED) oiocre gee wornern, the revect ara
: o P.- Jopeey-and rebation. In thane eterum : ? 10 SI nA IS REJECTED _ ae, D- . P vse, [the cebatton "ia hae, mate a
oe a. Geoneee Cepcain Pubiggs theusht : , ‘ ‘ : x We to the needs :
r. Tt eeeuess er remove ihe Nest oad bas : i ; . Egypt, Mother of Mystery | Methods Purewed im Select |cuciry and ot the woyters: it room:
: < Dione of Heeb to the British meswem | = 's seg and , Bed Ancient| ing Werkers Is Found 0) ore eee ee
= ~ s whore they may oti be found; |} ——_—_—__—_ “| Werld ‘ale Be "| Wide Gree employment stevice, te be
3 Al ” Hidden Watred inj te Ci i cep vet # ch upeeaey Corn and] ' Bg! Défective — Establish- overatpa. Ssintly by tbs Poser. Sate
a At, preseat ouch cscieticn the is ‘i a local governments, end cites the
a cent anh sone |p na rally seteadagrg rad code Modern a with Spirit} -mentof Nationwide Serv-| Mowing maser reseens for the
me Sess Great} tic Hating of Central. Africa axe by Armed ge of League of Nations _— ice Suggested of such 9 service:
a TS the Whites| oy coment amet verom| | of Other Outside Power Will Not Be Tolerated by Mere mention of the Nile conjures Up —— (2), All of the exiting. seurloyment
:: See 7 feat ai! motives are af heart bositie Beitish—Something the vest 5 agencise combined meet, onty part ef
Tilen the Blacks Awake [as cum men Weer treet tows b About the Suden: Country o\ (nya hier’ of Sere! wih te mee! REASONS FOR SERVICE |e wes, ava (oe lars te only:
ghd Bagin to Fight Under | 2 -2S. “mrt te eodtomptu- Long Drawn Out War Possible dee thaos: 5 ery =a eager | mont service demands of many impor-
eusty oo beng ther their hidden hatred ¢ ‘whee “Abram-weat down into, . a tant Sections of the country and seme
’ Pyeger Lenderthip iG whdortandable, nor have they any % ee Egy yt to eafourn there; for the taming | “4 Great Geel of quackery and veewss | important industriés entirely endevel-
ss, nee gratitude bgcaves wo, have, in: the nee cs . was grievous tm the land” ‘It recalie| on aS Socse crvennis tor om- oped.
‘ABYSEMIA 1S WAITING |. EST. foe mare? ot The meyias Coverament rept | place to any one better qualified to} the familigr story of Jesuph who was| ployment andthe greater pejt Sts ender te eagiek seamen
ives the heavy op-| Heverame Ry to| ace the country through itp étigoal-| 804 tute Meypt te Potighar, an omcer] exretimentation, scieatife and ether~ | F105; st, esse tems Bite Se
—The Beyptian Governments repiy to | neo t Sold mato Meypt to Petiphar, a9 officer | CkPeT Iman tation. eta te oe ia ne. | Dozers the maximam: sgelstance, te
fe, Port of Spain aber Leader
‘Years age, when,ihe English of the
fatend regarded all black people rome-
what contemptacusly as little better
than axtmals...whove bostles “must be
Gtitrered from the crue! iniyuities of
picturesque Arab slave traders, and
when the East. was a piace of vast
WFitery. we uaed to hear pften of the
‘Yallew Peril. Today Japan has asetm-
Sates the wars of Wextern civitiaatlon
aren though some of us deem it bat
_m thir_veneer—and China. torn by ta-
ternal strife, has become for the pes-
eat © negligible factor.
‘The Yellow Peril may-br quiescent
for the moment, but the color queation
‘There is something stirring ip the
‘Raat, a wert of tense expectancy which
fe not.ot ali easy to explain.
‘Thareiis 2 wave of unpasiness pant-
tag tnrodgh tain and Exyrt; © vot of
wating besh before the storm: Sed
rough that hush-vibrast 2% the mist-
ter of far-off mative érums, there is
a eabmerged “romething” at work In
the countries of.the colored rates actors
the length and “breadth of the world
today. . ae
Bigns from the East
Of-this submerged “Hemething™ the
yeoent troablen in Egypt and India’ are
me more than bubbles rining to the wur-
tack, thrown up from # xirong, unneen
earrent, if you will, but noncthelese
Eadications of x trend of unfathomed
Owing out of the Bart. :
‘yIndia, with but thiec iillion Chrin=
tiene in @ population of three hundred
militias, of whom two hundred and
‘are Hindisa op azother
© Real
ea
fleck men in Africa are awakening.
‘aiad those people-are « problem beyond
the present ‘comprehension of any
white administrator, be he Britlah.
French, Belgian, German ur Portus
eer. The African native ix as ine
scrutable a the Sphinx anid fur deoper
than mont sconle, who Mave never dest |
with hin: at first hand in’ hin uncivilized |
Btate.-could ever fmagin, "9
Mbatian, the last ehiet uf the Masal
fah and German Kast Aferan terrl:
tors: made many prophecies that have
ince come true, He foretold the com- |
Ing of the white peeple aid the preger=
tlon of Urenda Hallway from Mom
basse to Victoria Nyanga. He said.|
Anter alin, that the white mean would
cron the country and continue topeene:
On In the'name direction, aud that thes
eventually would meet with a, foree |
more powerful then themselves, which
would drive them back till they left the
countrs. : |
An Extravagent Theory ‘
The Masal themselves told the ex: |
travagant theory that the Pyznites will:
finally reconquer Africa fur Ethiopia. |
But tnost white men who know the
country consider that we are far tare
Mkely to" have Mouble wine the Abyss |
sininnn i
Tolthat aatior we wid revert press)
ently. {
Ihave lal stress uyinn Mbatjan'n!
pfophecy becuse iC 44 analogue 10
other clrcunintancen that snndiente the
African’a desire to have Africa for;
himself and to return'ts that hoceitele |
state of primitive savagery which ay- |
pertained before the Trek: Kiners aruwsed |
the Vaal River’ and the missiouavien
began fo open up Central Afelen
When Captain J. BT. Phils, MC.
Went up into the alnest unknown land |
&f Ruenda he discovered the existence |
Of @ terrible anti-Eurepran seeret per!
clety styling theniselves Navingt or!
“Expellere’> -!
‘The armed .band of- hie semvt-rehe-|
sows ang fanatical organization attack-|
ed impartially Rritism, Belginn ana!
German forces both hefore, during und|
Sear ihe rae war ins fe tie
bends Pygmy hunters acted ae eniten
end weovensers. . |
Ntokl-Mbl (Two Fingers). Aaheel
tng Yeader-of this society. sworn tol
rive the white man ont ef Atrien.|
was ong of the mest fumeur rigaat
ehidfs of the African Continant. rival-
tag in his activities Tippo Tib, Reteull
and the Mad Mullah. Hie goat's horn
Sqet had held the diced of more than
eae European and round hie neck,
after Capain Philippe bed killed bim.
were found wo charms the beck sights
ef the rifles of nine ecidiera he had
‘Whe Geath of the tender 414 nut put |
GO and to Jbo activities of the Kx-|
géliere. ~n his death hie gravy be-|
———$$$________ |
a ae es aS mal
n” meage WIDE OFEN. |.
et nee Se ee
pression of the slaze trager; -
The Biack Peril trem within Atrice
te te be apprehended from Abyse'nis
Here you have # people who eve prob-
ably the descendanta of ‘hove Israel-
Mes who were’ cet off from. the mals
host when Moses led the Jewish yee-
vie out of eaptivity and through th
Res Sea inte the Wilderness. Exyp
was clesed’.to them and they mad
thelr way eouth, These -peogle have
the kpen imteliect of their Jexioh
forefathers, combined with the ruth-
teas savagery? of tre natives with
whos) these Children of Promive in-
‘Menelik showed un wha: the Abys-
ainians are capable of under compe-
teat Ieédership, but In’ thoae “@ays: the
arts and. crafts of (civilization had
hardly touched the Dark Continent.
But ewppose the day comes when, a2
equal of Menelik. edecated and trained
ti Bxrope, seats himesif upon :the
throne, 1s it not them possible that fhe
Prophecy. of the off Masul Mbatian
may find’ fulliment, and the .white
men be..@riven out of Africa for 's
ume?” .
| Develop Abyssinia
Our Lent safeguard akuinat any wich
| occurrence would be tn the opering up
of Abysninin. The courty is poten-
[tally the richent in Africa, whn
climate finer than that of Californie.
te le the natural atoichonse of every-
[thing rewired by rian, from cont and
old to Mucha coffee and @heat, and
yet every roadway im closed to this
which might be the greatest center of
commerce in North Bast Africa. Great
Britain; France and Italy have agreed
to uphold the Abyssinian government,
no white man other than « gov-
Jietpeent official may som. bor.
. ah we po
< Mbesattes tie ‘Xbyéelntuas them.
eelves sit quiescent, awaiting patient-
ly the advent of a leader—and God
‘help ua when he: tw fousd—while ala-
very, rapine, torture and every abuae
It iis vilest form go on unchecked.
Discontent and lWleness,~ varied by
sporufic nave raids Into Britinn ter
Fitory, and hatred of the white races,
burn Jiko a move fire in Ethtopla to-
day. hardly wetived by the Engliah of
the Island far aff, but the bursting
out of the contiagration will startle ue
tally fa the mot very distant future,
1 taney *
In the meantime we have mide Hin-
un and Exspitans free of our homes
and have handed them ous wonmwn-
folk tn marringe, Wa have educated
them In Western Hines, nad tn conse
quienes there Is todzy a far greater
fate of unrest in Indie and Reypt
than-ever there wax in the, dasn of
the Indian Mutiny: =
Dangerous, Solon an kenge
During the yeure of the Great War
the Nesvoes of the “West Coast of
Afric fest began to gmake fortunes
by trade, and today they ave all-pow-
erful. disewitented, aud absolutely: are
rogant, Fur long enough pant reat
Newroes have intermarricd freely
With White Women In auch, pore an
Liverpwol and Cardit, and today. the!
Xegrock whe have come over frum the
Suites an performers in Jazz tainds ee
forming a dangerous tittle colony in
London, where they are apparentiy
much admired by the white girla with
whom they awanciate,
AL these heppenings are but a sign |
that’ Afries. that gle. dack monster,
in atierin: In her steep, preparing 10
wake. -
‘Today the smbmerzed “ramething”
gt Is isturtnnig the eatored peoples
Uhrouglent the “seus te he deat!
for salf-extresston, Lavkal (encom from |
cestruint. and the right ta govern thelr |
nnn countrins Inlla and Gaypt have
Wateled fae alone the toad af thelr
desirer, and that the Negro peoples
have similar aspirations in eanily asen,
Only’ a futile time age 4 solenin cone
viication of Nexroes wan held in New
Tork City, the first King of Ethiopia
crowned, and his prime réinister ape
pointed. already there Is In existence
A _Meamship Ihe swnéd entirely by:
Nextore: while yet another Dan of|
well-educated American “black men
pave gone back to Africa ‘to found a
colony: from which nilsstoniariea:of the
noped-for new regline will wndoubted-
Jy be nent out to the aneophisticated
African savagtiggr'hy ere the real Bieck
peri. ie
“Land of Warriors
1 may, this because I" Know that.
rom North to Bouth, Africa is a land
of warlike peoples, who need only the
pamer of a Aghios faith’ to cond
hem ‘fighting wad, as happened in
ho days of. tho~Mad Mullah, that
wesy, fanatical Fuler of ne more than
5 Green villages, whose words fred
feweende wen thopeands of’ natives
—aet Mohamaedene—je follow the
pack banners of bis emira inte datile.
‘We have ne right to check the emen-
tpetion of the colored | jaces, better
a ene of the oder civit-
ae own enlirewe of the Cider civiN-
watt oe M 10 EGHPT AS:
Ta SATE TU
—The Egyptian Goveramente reply
the British note in cBumection with th
‘aeeasstnation ef Major Gen. Sir ‘Le
Olver Stack, Governor Geieral ve th
Budan and Sirdar of tie Eeyptis:
Army, agreen (0 Great Beltain's dé
mand for an apology. punishment o
the assausine and an indemalty
£109,900. It'also promixes to prevent
any disturbance of the peace by
demeastrations.
‘The reply suyx the British demand
regarding the Sutlan breaks the otate
quo and ts contrary to the Conatite:
on under which King Fuad in Com-
mander in Chict of the Exgyptiar
.Ariny. It considera the demand re-
“earding. the, Gezira, Irrigation . peosect
péemature.
‘The communication further: ras: the
position of foreixn oMfctale In rege
Jated by diplomatic agreement and can-
Rot be modited without the consent of
Parliament.
Egyptian Officers Ordered Out
Held Marshal Vincount Allenby,
British High Conimixsioner, promptly
replied to the Exypttin note, whic
wan signed by Zaghioul Pasha, Egy:
Uan Premier. Gen. Allenby naid that
in view of the refumi of ‘the Bxxp-
Usnn of the British requirements Nos.
3 and 6 instructionn were being xent
co the Sudin Government'to withdeaw
from ihe Sudan Exyptian oMicern and
unitn and to effect. the specifies
changes resulting from these measures,
udding that the Sudan Government was
at Uberty to Increase the area of Ir-
rigation inthe Gerla district to an
unlimited extent.”
Gen. "Allenby requests the® payment
of the indemnity of £500,000 by noon
Monday and adda:
‘Your Excellency will learn in due
course what action le being taken In
view of your refusal of requirement
Net ing the protection of
eateien sign * oe
~ Reyet Flespaneibility
Zaghloal Pasha read ‘his. reply at
an open sevalon ‘of Parliament today,
after which the House adopted a-vote
of confidence tn the Government: with
only one dinsenting vote.
The reply again expressed sorrow
and horror at the murder of Gen.
Stack, but mald the Egyptian Gov-
ernment could not admit tt wan in
any way responsible; neither could it
admit the crime wan the natural re-
sult of the political cainpaign. Never-
theless, the Government agreed to tho
payment of the Indenynity demanded,
Continuing, the note quote Article
46 of the Conatitution tn ragerence to
the Sudan, by which the King te Com-
mander-In-Chief of the Army. It raid:
the Gezira Irrigation demand was, ta
ray the least, premature, and re
marked that Great Britain always had
promised that an” Increased entton
ayen would be arranged under an ne=
cord taking: comnizince of Exypte
agrivwibiral interests,
Tense Emotion in Parliament
The Egyptian Government, further:
mucintatiied that Law No. 2%. which|
is a diplomatic azrcement. regulated
mattern conversing foreign olficialn
and sid iat, In any cane, It could
not reply in detziil on thin paint wince
he British note did n@t specify what
moditicatione were desired.
Parliament. wax charged with tense,
cinotion wien the Premier read hie!
reply, prefaeans at with a statement]
mm owhieh he exhorted hit hearers to |
stiwa the greatest patience and peu |
dence, for. he warned. the allzhtest|
istitone mkeht bel alent the nos |
(errible catmequences. |
He then rent the formal int of
he Ekgiilan Government smid come
picts allonee. AL it¥ condlisien one:
pertlion Degtye" apwste ani ha tare!
ertend, the dovanuent as ridiewions a
qulereenien tn wrntils swfieted ea tie}
‘ouniry.. He asserted the Premier hed |
petrayed the contideues eepared In him!
Zaghlon), in reply, abd ol
MT have done my duty and have nat
netrayed the confidence of the coun-
ry Tom peepared to give unm
Ing ‘aha. tn the distant future, pre
hape destruction, for the black man's
vitallty t# enormous and hte drain-
Péwer-apprecinbly on’ the increase,
‘Today he seeks. too scon. to govern
his own land. Tomorrow that may
comie and with It the de-ire of the
Detter-educated, who will lead and
dominate the bisek millions, for world
dominion. Therein: tea the ‘real binck
Peril, fot tf the African cannot éboot
and handle big gunbtogay, there te
Re reason why he should mot do so In
the ngt Nery ditant futere, | Trained
and iol by white officers and'N. C. C's
the African already maken “a fine
colder, ne! witness the “Walle “(Weet
African’ Frontier Force) of the Wert
Coakt and the King's African Rifles
of the Rast.
“Luckily the generst pubtie aie. de-
coming daily more interested ‘tm our
relations and reeponsibitities lores
{he colores people, Dpt it is elem
the bare facts can be placed before
the pablic suMiclemtty: vivid fo op.
abt them. to jugar and to warn them
padenet conlint tnenaren,
place to any ong better qualified ts
nee the country threugh itp étiteu!-
thes
‘AC this remark ‘the Zaghloulist 16p-
ties, rising in thelr places, gavel the
Premier a great ‘ovation. Two hours
later the Secretary of the Residency
handed to Premier Zaghlout Viecount
Alleaby's reply.’ at :
‘The talk among the Oppesttios
Deputies later wan that the Egxption
reply was weak and thatthe Britieh
conditions uliimately would .be &é-
cepted.” 2. °
Small antl-British demonstrations
were renewed by students’ today. Aft-
crwerd. British troops marched
through the tity. Two airplanes from
Cairo Hew over Taalich; Wiere-aome
rentlensnesn aniong the natives “had
been observed. .
Tiuseell Pasha, Chief of Police ot
Cairo, at iby beag of 160 mounted po-
licomen wearing steal holmeta; made
a demonstration in the streets of the
capital, Althourh the thoroughfares
were crowded, the populace remained
tranquil.» a
SOMETHING ABOUT THE
SUDAN COUNTRY
| Great Britain's demand thet Egypt
| shall withdraw immediately: alter
| troupe from the Sudan ‘ta the biggest
feature of the uitlmatum delivered to
Premier Zaghloul at, Calro Saturday.
London dispatches lay stress on the
igen that Egypt te tu retain ber “in-
dependence’—with & Britis garrison
fon the spot, with British advisers in
her chiet departments and. with her
| press censored and public demonstra-
tions forbidden—but it Ie evident Lon-
Gon Intends to take over complete
control of the Sudan.
. Cader this plan “Independent”
‘meypt ocd be Wegcwithy pape 300.000
‘equaré miles of territory. af "Walch
only about 12,900 Square miles are un-
Ger cultivation, while Britain would
take more than 1,000,000 square miles
of territory—about a quarter of the
dren of Europe—ot which ‘the greater
[poidion can be made productive.
} Will Contr Niles Souree
| Britain alo would control the
sonreen of the Nile, on which the 12,-
900.000 Egyptians are dependent for
tlie water for their farm and citlen
and ba free to divert auch water for
Irrigation or Sudan lands.
““piter feeling over Reitlah designe
Jon’ the Sudan In what led to, the mur-
Ser of Sir Tee Stack, the real ruler
of the province. Gen. Stack In recent
[yearn bud heen continuing the proceng
of Angiicising the Sidun, which had
[teen under way eines the conquest By
| Gen. Kitchener tn 1898, Ostensibly the
Province was under Anglo-Pxsptian
JJoint-rule, but the Cairo Government
Chan had Iittle wm aay about the con-
duce of ttn attains. ;
When Fasnt wan given’ tie Inde-
pendence in 1922 the auestion of the
future of the Sudan was reserved for
further negotiations, Efforts. of the
British to get the Caro Government
to agron to virtua) Peitish. dgmlaton
have filled, but Prenler Zaghlout'a te-
cent visit to Temdon brought mothe
Slightoxt concession ‘on cither side,
‘An ‘attempt of Egyptian troops re-
contiy to autert the savereignty of
thele Government waa! ahaeply. up
Premed by Gen, Stuelen forces.
‘re Tiviinh are anxious to hold the
Sudan becaure of Ite promlne of ich
cetuene. enn fetation schrmen, One
fs already aniter way ar the Gorlra,
The best Egyption cotton ean be
moun thete, Ther gniatnde: ean be
made inte great grunaries sim produr=
Fah pt wicat: Waeelogmiont af (ik re
zion would tend to make Britain ine
Gependent of, American cotton and
fon,
Faare Sudan independence
Firypt is alarmed becauen it In evi
dent the British intend to: make the
Sudan independent, bs giving tan
outlet to the Red Sen=-to whien a calle
road has siresdy ‘teen bullt—inatead
Of through the dimcult Nile ane ite
alles, Also with the development of
Sirdan irrigation vhe Nile waters might
he drained to an extent. that would
make exintence precarloun Inthe
Jower valiey. °
For that resson the’ Célro Govern
ment will be compelled to- put every,
possible ‘obetacte. In the way of ac-
captance of this portion of the Britieh
ultimatum, hy
io ORR Md ay
OR, J, P. Bal
:GISTERED cHIROFODIST
Eaypi,” Moth a ee
food Siang, Bed Anions
Werld. With Corn and
Feeds Medern with Spirit
SHOTS SSE SE, SAS ANS CONTUTUS UG
the weet history of Egypt with ite long
Une of Pharacbs: it calls to memory
the time whég “Abrasn-went down inte
Egypt to eajoure there; for the taming
was grievous ia the len@” ‘It recalh
the famitigr story of Jeqeph who wa:
‘gold! mato Meypt to Petiyhar, an office
ret Pharagh. | In tmagtuation .the vas
‘Brraraids and the silent Sphinx ris
eat of the Geert waste, the temple
Pile beutiful on the banks. the
memorials of kings, gigantic witnesses
of the great past that long has beer
ehrouded In yuyntery but which meders
Fesearch is rapidly uavellisg. It brings
S vision of Cleopatra ae
“The barge she sat ‘th, lke a burnishet
(throne. :
Burnd on the water: the poop wai
deaten gold:
Purple the sails, the oars were ailver,
‘Which to the tune of fates Kept stroke
and made * ;
he water wnsaraidy wei slhion
fate”
Egypt grew corn for‘ export to feed
Reme.in ancient time. and the Nile
gave the fertility which made 'this pos-
Alble. :
Histerte am (mportant as.this river
always has been, tts soprees were for
contyrige shrouded tn mystery’: no one
knew whence ‘came its lfe-sustaining
waters. All sorts of theories were put
forth to acootnt for ita regular over-
flow, bringing its fertilizing deposite
Some said that the Nile and the Ganges
both rome in the frosen mountains of
North Asin, and other imaginative folk
Geciared that the Nile camo from the
“Mountains in the Moon.” It was not
until 1862 tbat the Brave adventurers.
Speke and Grant, located the main
source of the White Nile in what is
now called Victoria Nyanra (Lake Vic-
torla). Later the White Nile ts Joined
ny the Blue Nile and by other streams
which Bring down the drainage from
the Abyssinian hills, .
In Calro, London, and other great
business centers, men think mainly ‘of
politics and agriculture when Egypt is
mentioned. -But to those not absorbed
{a these Interests the name Egypt still
ieand the hoene of the Sphinx. a desert
rebim of ‘ctmela and white-robéd
abelks, the country where the Book of
Exodus began. .
‘Now there ls an added interest in its
past brought about by the discovery
of the rare treasures of an anclent but
very youthful king. Tourists neek
eanerly all thepe mpots: they go up to
the cataracts ce,etudy the wonders of
this anclent river and its sand-veiled
shores. Around {ta Important ports
the eager hum of business in heara in
the day, and crafts from all over the
world flaunt the flags of many nations.
‘And yet tisié’are apots where the
hush of evening Ienves upon its watern
only here and there n native boat glid-
ing to the gentla‘breeze that crowdr
ite dim nail, upon the moondicht’all-|
vered waters of this ancient of ancient
rivers.
“How beautiful this night! the balmiest
< sigh
Which vernal zephyre brelthe In aven-
“tor’s ear
Were digcord to the speAabmns auietude
That wrapa thin moveless scene.”
Cfor those .
who appreciate
the best
S—.
— :
there is the delightfully perfumed: Pluko
Hair Dressing, containing the finest hair
Rrowing oils known to science—
This wonderful preparation’ which s0
quickly straightens hair and makes it
Jong, soft, glossy and easy to arrange in
any manner is now being used by theu-
sands of our men and women, whose
beautiful hair is the admiration of all—
Argong them is Miss Gussie Williams of
the famous “Runsdn’ Wild” Company, eho
say®: “I just love to use Phuko Hair Dress-
ing: ' It has such a delightful fragrance
and makes my hair 90 soft and eésy to ar-
range in arty manner I wish.” ”
PlakeLortssine
“3c el Ee
RTPICALLY STUDIED
ing Weskers Is Found to
* Be! Defective — Establish-
-mentof. Nationwide Serv-
ae Ne
REASONS FOR SERVICE
«A great Gopi. of quackery and poeyse
ecient te being eetrcised tn the teoh-
Bique of aslecting gpplicants for. esb-
ployment. ang_the greater past of-the
‘experimentation, scientige and other-
wien, that thn bees carried on im re-
gard to the selection of workers Is
‘ll comparable tp the “home reme-
Gea” stage of medicine and surgery,
according to an exhaustive report on
“Public - Employmemt OMices—THelr
Puross, Structure, and Methods,"
which has ‘Just been issued by the
Rosell Bage Foundation. .
"ane value of the Judgment ‘regard-
tng ‘an applicant for work which {s
bared om the jook in his eye, the con~
ition of his hands, or. the condition
of his collar, is minimized in the re-
pert, ab fe also the practice of arbi-
trarily clessitying applicunts for em
Dloyment_according ‘to any standard
list of types of personalities.
“No system or method of character
anatyets has yet - proquceé results
which Justify its a¢eptiod or even sus-
geet tts trial tn a public employment
omfice,” says the Foundation's state-
meat. “This te pet to be taken as de-
crying respereh in the feld, but.as A
warning against depepding too much
upon any. schemes for rating individ~
usle which appeal to the tmagination
Decause of the greetnees of the ncect
for something of the Kind, rather than
because of thelr demonstrated suc-
“The human, mind has heen grouped
by some persovs interested in employ=
ment questions into types that are
presumatiy’ mutually exclusive, as
follows: ‘The executive type, the de-
tail type, the promotion type, the ac-
counting type, the clerical type,. the
selling type. the mechanical type, and
so on. ‘These adjectives do describe
attributes of the mind, but that people
can be no tagged and labeled fatrly ts
doubtful. The temptation to label
people is very great. but the science
and art of successfully doing it have
not as yet been discovered.”
‘The report; which is based on « five~
Year study exteriding into stmont every
State inthe Union and into Canada
and England, was prepared by Shelby
M. Haftison, director Department of
Surveys and Exhilits of the Russell
Sexe Foundation, in collaboration
with Mary LaDume. Bradley Buell,
Lesile E. Woodcock and Frederick’ A.
King, all of whom huve been closely
Identifneg with public and private em-
ployment work. Several hundred pases
in the report sire devoted to methods
of orgunising and administéring a Na~
tonal employment service.
Tn risking the revort public Me. Her~
rison said: “The solution of the em-
ployment problem depends very Gor
ly on the ability of the staif In each
local ofice—and there: would he a hun-
dred or more of auch offices in the
proponed hervice—to discover. an in=
felligently an ponsiNe, the exact reo
quirements of the foh'whleh the em-
ployer wants filled, and the expablitty:
and, adnptubiliry’ of the individual
B
MISS GUSSIE WILLIAMS
“thé RUNNIN WILD commer
worker applying for this:job.”
‘Afton reviewsng: the veytous wathods
dy which werters get jebe sad’ ain-
ployera get workers, the resect draws
[the cebciuston that these metheés are
“inadequate to the needs ‘both -ef- in-
Gusiry and af the workers; ft recom-
‘mends the establishment of = Natlen-
wide {ree employment sbrvica, to be
operated jointly by the Federal, Stay,
‘and local goveraments,, and cites the
fonowing majer reseone fer the setd
jot sueh 9 service:
(2), All of the existing. empleyment
agencise combined matt, onty part ef
the weed, and they leave the employ-
mont service demands of many tmpor-
tant Sections of the country and seme
Uaportant industriés entirely unéevel-
oped. -
(2) Iw order to reducé unempley~
‘ment, and at the came time sive em-
ploycra the inaximam’ agaietance, tn
sccuting Inbor, there ts meet. among
other things, of an wmploysent aya-
tem natieeal in gaope. None of the ex-
isting won-governmental agencies of-
fer auMicient promixe of development
along these linen: ‘nor in there at pres-
eat-any mean gf coordinating oF co-
relating the acthvities of the existing
agencies. * :
(3) It is necesrary, - particularly
during periods of xtrike or. other ac-
tive’ controversies between employer,
and employe. tv have absolute impar-
tality, and thin. cannot be sacured
through the existing agencies: meth-
ods of attaining impartiality through
a combitied Federal-State-local system
st public employment offices are
painted cut fe the resort. -
‘LOST VIGOR
IN 24 HOURS’
“Gianda Awakened in One Day” la the
Amazing Statement of = Seventy-
Lost vigor, deadencd glands and
nerves, and that weak, wora-out, de-
Diensed and half-allve feoiing need not
be dreaded any longer since the dis-
covery of a well-known chemist. Now
it te pussibie for those who feal “pre-
maturely 016" t0 become “rejuvenated”
And regain tho “vital force of youth.”
often ina day's time, with Mando For-
mula, 43 the amazing statement of one
who bas taken the treatment. This
famous dincovers im bringing “renewed
youth” and “strength to thousanun
‘where everything else bad ‘failed.
'“£ want to say that my ‘lost vigor’
/was restored and ‘slands renewed" in
twenty-four hours.” says D. B Peake
of Kansas City, Mo. “Today 1am 76,
‘dat I'don't feel a day over 40. Before i
started taking the treatment T felt [
Yas an old. “pora-out! man, but now t
am enjoying & remarkable ‘gland res-
toration” and am convinced my ‘rejuve-
nation’ 1s complete and permanent. May
God's blessing rest on the discoverer of
such a boon to humanity.”
‘This wondertul formula. prepared by
one of the largest lajoratorles in tho
Worjd and generally Wpewn as Manso,
tn candy uned at howe ang aeame (6
work ile magic in its rap. lity on peo-
Dig of all axer and sexes.
No matter how. bad our condition,
no matter What your age or occupation.
ho matter what you have tried, it you
aro lacking in “Vigor” and the “vital
force of youth’ we are 90 confident
Mando Formuti will reatore you that
we offer to nen « large $3.60 bottle for
only 1.06 on 10 days free trial. If thie
reauits are not satisfactory and you are,
not more than pleased in every way. It
costs you nothing.
‘Send no money—juat your name and
address to F. L. Carlin, 606 Baltimore
Bldg. Kansas City, Mo., and the treat:
ment will he matied at once. Use ft
according to the simple directions. If
At the end of the 10 daya you are not
showing “wonderful Improvement” and
“rejuvenation,” just send it back and
your money iil be refunded without
quention. ‘Thin offer tn fully guaranteed
no write today and give thie “remark-
able formula” « trial. *
THE PATHS OF EVERY GREAT MOVEMENT ARE STREWN WITH SURPRISES AND DISAFFPOINTMENTS NO REASON FOR DISCOURAGEMENT ON THE PART OF THE MEMBERS OF THE U. N. L. A.-THE SACRED PRINCIPLES OF THE GAUSE OF AFRICA WILL GO ON FOREVER
Dialloyal Officers of the Organization Are Bitterly Densued—They Have Made Room for Others Who Are More Capable to Lead—The Movement Goes on Without Them and Shall Continue to Live Forever
VISITOR TO LIBERTY HALL CHARACTERIZES U. N. I. A. AS GREATEST ORGANIZATION KNOWN TO MANKIND—PAYS GLOWING TRIBUTE TO LEADERSHIP OF HON. MARCUS CARVEY
LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, November 23. Speaking to a full audience in Liberty Hall tonight, Hon. Marcus Garvey, in a stirring speech on the subject of "Liberty and Patience," drew a striking parallel between the Universal Negro Improvement Association, in its fight for freedom, and the Irish, Indian and Egyptian people who are engaged in a similar struggle for complete autonomy. History nowhere, he said, records any incident where a people were able at one leap to accomplish all the things they desired and hoped for, but history records many instances where peoples, aiming at certain heights and objectives, have had to travel through roads of pleasure, happiness, disappointment and ultimately to success, and the Negro, like all other races, has to go and to travel the same way.
His talk was aimed at offsetting the possible demoralizing influence upon the minds of the membership of the organization through the recent suits brought by men who were at one time executive officers of the organization, but who recreant to their vows had either deserted the organization or were put out. After making a bitter denunciation of these backsliders who, results have shown, had entered the organization for motives purely personal and not for the good of the race, he warned the membership against reaching the conclusion that something was wrong with the organization because of these happenings. In every movement, he said, its followers have had to encounter disappointments and surprises, but these should only serve to inspire them to carry on until the objective is realized. The one and great objective was Africa's redemption and men may come and may go but the sacred principles of the cause of Africa will go on forever, and his appeal to the members was to look forward to the spirit of Africa and let nothing discourage them. "We have great hope," he concluded, "and we are going to face the future through the incoming year of 1925, as never before; and we want you to drop all your doubts and despondencies, if you ever had them in your mind, and recharge yourselves with the fire of loyalty and patriotism for Africa and let all of us put over this gigantic program as far as possible in 1925."
Hon. Rudolph Smith spoke in the same vein and so did Mr. L. S. Headon, a visitor to Liberty Hall, who paid a glowing tribute to the leadership of Hon. Marcus Garvey and characterized the Universal Negro Improvement Association as the greatest organization known to mankind.
FREQUENT COUGHS
You may not understand why you are so susceptible to coughs and colds, the truth is your resistive powers are weakened and you need a food-medicine like
SCOTT'S EMULSION
to nourish your body to build up your strength and give you the power to resist the sudden weakness. You do not need powerful drugs or stimulants but nourishment of the vital mind.
If you are troubled with coughs or colds take Scott's Emulsion everyday!
Following are the speeches:
HON. MARCUS GARVEY'S SPEECH
HON. MARCUS GARVEY'S SPEECH
My subject for tonight is "Liberty and Patiance." History is the guide post of all peoples. By it a race or a nation is directed to the goal of its hope or its ambition. The Negro, like all other peoples, like all other races, like all other nations, must profit by and through this great agency. History nowhere records any incident where a people were able at any one leap to accomplish all the things they desired or hoped for; but history records many instances where peoples aiming at certain heights and objectives, have had to travel through roads of pleasure, happiness, disappointment and ultimately success; and so the Negro, like all other races, has to go and travel the same way.
We are now engaged in a struggle as titanic as that of any other race has undertaken or indulged in at any other period. What we want most at this time is education; education that will fit us to know ourselves, education that will fit us to realize the truths of life.
There are some of us who expect that this race of ours at one leap must accomplish all that it desires—all that is set as a program. You are misguided, you are misinformed if you think that life changes that way. It is a continuous grind, it is a continuous repetition of the same thing over again. Partial, success, partial disappointment and a repetition of the same thing, until ultimately you reach the objective.
The Fight for Freedom We have the morning papers to tell us of the great trouble there is now in Egypt. The Egyptians have been fighting for independence, for complete autonomy. In doing so they
had to form themselves into national groups to express national sentiment. At one time they got a small modicum of self-government with restrictive legislative powers; at another time they got a fuller modicum of government, and ultimately the other day they were given the class of independence that they fought for for many decades. Today we find that they are in the midst of great trouble, and most likely to lose that, which they won a few years ago through the sacrifice of agos. But what has happened? The Egyptian spirit is as loyant, as determined, as warlike, in the midst of trouble, in the midst of disaster, as when they won their fullest after centuries and decades of agitation. If we were to follow the papers it would appear that the great power of England is going to smother Egypt and take away from her all the courage and all her pride. But does that really take to the Egyptian the spirit of despondency or loss of hope? No; but if engenders him with a fuller determination to go ahead and fight even for another decade, even for another century, until Egypt is really free.
The incident that I recited about Egypt is the same that Ireland has suffered from for 750 years. The Irish have been fighting and pleading their way until just a couple of years ago they got a free state government, not half what they expected. But that does not prevent the Irish from fighting to the ultimate aim, and that I complete independence. It took them 750 years; it took the Egyptians decades and decades to reach where they are today; and there are some Negroes who expect that we must jump over the fence tomorrow.
You cannot reach your objective except through the same channels, through the same avenues, through the
some pathways as other men have involved, and as history he told you, although there are some of us who believe that our way will be a different way, that the Lord is going to lead our way, out out our path and fight our battles. We are only sentimental and vain in our belief when we think that we are. History does not show where the Lord has been doing that within the last 500 years. History shows where man has carved a pathway for himself through sacrifice and through blood. And if we must travel we have to pay the same price. Some of us easily get discouraged, because something happens. It is because we are not fixed up properly. All life is a disappointment. Nobody ever entirely lived to see the accomplishment of all that the individual wants. And we are all human beings. You must not expect from the world more than the world gave before you came here and will give after you leave here. You will meet disappointments everywhere; you will meet surprises everywhere. You must be prepared for them, you must be trained for them, and not become yourselves surprised when these things do happen. Some of you, because somebody used to talk from the platform of Liberty Hall and does not continue to speak, that something is wrong. All that is natural. You will hear a lot of shun; just let it fix my mind on an object and that I have a faith, that faith is solid, that faith is firm and all that contributes toward making that faith realized concerns me; and even the devil himself can be on the band wagon, so long as he is traveling toward that same objective or faith that I have, when he wants to turn back he can just go back. I am going right on until I get where I want to go. So that when you hear men come to Liberty Hall and say a lot of stuff it is all right what they say, anybody else could have said that; whenever a person rises to say anything, just forget that person ever said that, but remember that you heard it and go right on. Nobody is going to live forever. The things that I say today I may not be able to repeat ten years from now, because I may be dead; but just remember that he said some good things that you wanted said and those things suited you at that time, and if he goes and dies because what was said was said, but because what was said was just right and fell into your regular idea of things, and fixture of things.
The Organization Intact
The Organization infect
As for argument, we have had a lot of fellows who have come up here and told us about the redemption of Africa; that is a good thing even though they did not mean it. All that you are interested in is whether Africa is redeemed and whether the devil or Jesus Chagal says it is a good thing, all that you want to know is that the thing was said. So that some of you think that because somebody is not with the organization any more something has happened to the organization. Nothing has happened to the organization. What has happened is that the organization has got rid of one more hair; that is all (Applause). But that does not affect your policy; that does not affect your idea of things, and that does not affect your objective. If you allow that to affect you then you are as much a liar as the fellow who told you; but let what has been said impure you to carry on until the objective is realized.
And so, those of us who really lead the Universal Nga improvement Association because we know what we are doing are not worried at all. But what happens? We don't know who we is going to drop out. Tomorrow morning Mr. Burrows may drop out; that is all right. Next day Lady Davis might drop out; that is all right; next day, Mr. Smith may drop out; that is all right. Because they drop out you are not going to drop out of the world, are you? The world goes on. The thing is, to get the policy and the program and carry the policy and the program out until all that you have in your mind is realized. In the great Irish movement—in the great Egyptian movement in the great Indian movement men have come and men have gone, but the principles of the movement have remained. And so in this great movement, the bigger this movement becomes, the more men will have to drop out because they have not entered into the great spiritual policy that drives the movement on. Some came in for certain things; some came in for the purpose of getting certain things and when they get what they want they drop out. Some come in to get money, and others may come in to another thing, and if things don't suit them, naturally have not entered into the great spiritual policy that drives the movement on. Some came in for certain things; some came in for the purpose of getting certain things and when they get what they want they drop out. Some come in to get money, and others may come in to another thing, and if things don't suit them, naturally have not entered into the great spiritual policy that drives the movement on. Now, we are all human beings and we do not all feel the same way. Look yourselves over and you will realize right now that you do not even feel like the other fellow next to you. All of us have different opinions, different outlook on things; and so in the leadership of a great, movement Like this you are not going to find everybody who is acting the same way. There are, some men who will come in and if they don't get a lot of money they start to get dissatisfied until they don't talk the same way any more. There are some men who will come up here tonight and make a big speech and tomorrow morning they are expecting $25; if the don't get it, the next night you will find them making a cold speech; they do not
engage the same way. You will find differences like that. Anything can disappear them because their hearts add emotions and souls are no fixed; and that is what is really called leadership.
What Leadership Ready is Leadership is never disappointed; leadership is never disoriented; leadership is the same thing in December as it was in January. Leadership can go satisfied, or it can go hungry, but it is just the same. Leadership—like men of the Mahatma Gandhi type—there is nothing in the world to change them; no comfort can change them; no sorrow can change them; no sacrifice can change them. Nothing could have changed Mohammed because Mohammed felt for the doctrine of Mohammedanism; nothing could change Mahatma Gandhi because he feels for the doctrine of the Non-co-operationist movement in India; nothing could change Zagul Pasha because he feels for the righteousness of the Nationalist movement; nothing can change Eamon DeValera because he feels the righteousness of the Irish independent cause; and those who lead the Universal Negro improvement Association must feel the same way.
Leaders Should Not Be Opportunists
Leaders—who are they? They should not be opportunists, but they should be converts to a sacred cause, and their leadership is reflected at its best when the cause is in trouble and when the cause is in need and when the cause is in danger. That is leadership. Leadership has the ability to salvage and to save, and we have not yet even presented to those who have professed to be leaders in the Universal Negro Improvement Association the cause of leadership; they have not seen anything yet. We are just in the Sabah school stage of development, and I am glad that we have been able to gradually relieve ourselves of the drowsy leadership before the real time comes. When the great day comes for the spiritual] and material salvation of our people, how could we travel with hearts that are faint? We have to travel with courage and grit and chuck and character. That is what we wagit to lead the Negro. Faint hearts cannot lead this great cause, because history, as you have read it and as you know it, does not reveal one instance where faint, hearts have ever led anywhere to victory and to opportunity and to the highest calling of men in a world democracy. So that those of us who are really conscious of our duty, and who realize the value, the policy and the objective of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, we feel happy. We are glad to lose those who really do not know what leadership is, so that we can be prepared for great leaders who can pilot this great cause to its destiny.
We have had some hard hits, but for me tell you men and women of Liberty Hall and of the Universal Negro Improvement Association all over the world, we have not started yet in the experiences that we must go through before we reach our objective. There is much more we will see, they are many more experiences we will have before we can reach the goal. Take pattern after the people I have named the great Irish people, who have suffered for 150 years; take pattern after the Indian people, who have both song-gling for the last century; take pattern after the great English people who have suffered all the way up to where they are today. You have to duplicate the same exercise you have to duplicate the same determination; you have to wade through the same avenues of the appointment and discouragement before you can reach the ultimate goal of your desire. And I say that those of us who lead and who know what we are about are satisfied that we have traveled spoonily up to this period that I spoke of last Sunday—the second period when the Universal Negro Improvement As a condition will take on new life.
The Bigger Work Still Before Us
The bigger work of the organization is still before us, and those of us who are responsible are not afraid to show the responsibility of carrying on the work. When we hold our first convention in this historic hall, the noise and the glamour and the infuriation, descend to this hall, from all parts of the country and from all parts of the world, some who thought that they were called to service, who believed that they were fitted for leadership in the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and after a year or two or three had passed by we saw how true they were to their own consciences, to their own souls. Just last Friday we closed the trial of a case in the Supreme Court of New York where a man who essayed to have been a leader of the people, who made brilliant speeches from Liberty Hall and from other platforms of our organization all over the country, who told you and told me how much he had to give in life and death to this sacred cause. I had the unfortunate duty of defending the organization for five days in the Supreme Court of this city against such a man—a man, who came in and said by his eath that "this life, his fortune, his sacred honor, his all, were given to the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and should he fall, would God fall him in the sacred purpose of life." You can remember that oath taken from this platform.
Such a man who went throughout the length and breadth of the country and received from the people large sums of money that he never even had the decency to report to the organization and give the organization credit for. After he did that, he had the "brass" - I would say - had the holdness to come back and sue that same organization, which he had
vulnerable of thousands of deaths which he never had the opportunity to prevent. For $28,000, even after the organization had notified out all its obligations to him.
You will remember at the first convention, we voted him trumpeted high salaries for everybody, believing that the men would have been able to measure up to it. But we found in our disappointment that they did not and at the 1921 convention revived our attitude. At the 1929 convention we voted large salaries to our leaders believing that it would inspire them to go forward and honestly serve the race. At the following convention we found out that we were unable to pay these big salaries and we passed a law making a minimum and maximum salary for each and every officer. We agreed that each officer was to be paid the minimum, and ever since that time the officers have been paid at the rate of the minimum salaries. Those that remained in got the minimum, but the moment they went out they started to sue for the maximum, and so it was that this individual who worked for nearly four years at the minimum and when by his conduct he ran himself out of the organization, what did he do? He came back to sue the organization for the maximum salary from the day that he came in, and they were men who went there and swore like himself that this organisation never at any time passed such a law that there was to be a minimum salary and a maximum salary and that the officers should be paid at the minimum; they swore by the gods that he that such a thing never was said, and looking into the races of the millions and the thousands that they had spoken to all over the country, and looking into the face of the myths that they took they said such things.
Now imagine how far a race can travel, how far a race can go, with leaders of that kind. It is no wonder that our race has remained stationary for so long, and it is no wonder that some of you feel as you do. We know that you are sorely disappointed. We know that it is hard for you to believe anything said by anybody from platforms now; but we cannot always live that way; we have to believe just the truth that we know to be the truth; believe what the individual says even though you do not believe the individual means it. I am put in this fix now that I didn't know whom to believe in this whole world. I just made up my mind to feel this way that anything said by anybody I just believe the words if they sound true but look upon every man as a war. We are forced to think that way, because who could have spoken more eloquently than the men and women who have spen from Liberty Hall. They have caused the roof of Liberty Hall with cheers and acclamations, and what we have found, I don't know whether I can look to the right or left to find the highest man, I don't know whether the highest man is before or behind me because all have said the same thing, and it all comes back to what the lieutenant governor said the other day about Roosevelt "Walla, Walla, Walla." It does not matter whether it is "Walla, Walla, Walla" or not; remember that there is one objective and the objective is African rebellion on. We may come and men may go to encounter the people of the cause of Africa on course, so never be weary in well doing to find an end. You are not stitting me; you are not not spitting ourselves; you are not not hurting even the people who have lied and gone out. We just the moral cause if we do not keep the spirit up and the discipline that we have had in that the man is a displacement that every people have had, is a displacement that the history records, so don't love courage because of that; it is the way that all peoples have traveled.
And so tonight I make another appeal to Lavery Hill and to the Negroes all over the world to rally around the Universal Negro Improvement Association as you never rallied before. There is not much, after all, to contend for. Look at what the Egyptians are undergoing; look at what the Irish have undergone; some have been shot down on the streets and forced into imprisonment for years, all for the purpose of preserving their ideas and objective. None of you have been shot down; none of you have been imprisoned; none of you have been killed; so you are having an easy time recalling the great objective which you are fighting for. Egypt tonight is under the brutal heel of pow-
Genuine
BAYER
ASPIRIN
military leadership, who has and has been knowledgeable and devout, and has number to subordinate the prime spirit of the Egyptian, and in the mind of all that battlement they are still determined to fight on for the sacred cause of liberty. You have no machine gun around you, you have no battalions around you, you have no armies around you; so that you realize that you have an easier time than they have in working toward the same objective, namely, liberty, freedom and democracy.
So after all we have not suffered much; the loss of a man here or there by unfaithfulness does not mean much towards a tremendously big movement like this. You are not serving individuals, you are serving yourselves to a great ideal; you are serving your sacred cause. What would it matter if Garvey goes? What would it matter if Lady Davis or Mr. Burrows, or Gaines or Sherrill or Eason goes? The great principle, the great cause is what you are interested in; because what you aim at cannot be realised in a day, cannot be completely realized in ten, fifteen, or a hundred years; it is a cause that shall go down the ages.
My message to you tonight is to look forward to the spirit of Africa. Nothing has happened yet to discourage you. From my executive knowledge I am able to tell you that everything shines buoyantly and brilliantly toward that dignity. We have great hope and we are going to face the future through the incending year, 1925, as never before, and we want you to drop all your doubts and dependences, if you ever had them in your mind, and recharge yourselves with the fire of loyalty, recharge yourselves with patriotism for Africa, and the cause Africa and let all of us put over this gigantic program as far as possible in 1925. (Applause.)
HON. RUDOLPH. $MITH $PEAK$
Hon. Rudolph Smith speaking on the Negro question, said it was being discussed more than ever at the present day. The Negro in the past has labored, for other race groups and built up their civilization. During those times he was not thought much about; the Negro was not a problem three or four decades ago because he was regarded as a creature who was sympathetic and very easily led, but since the World War in which the Negro participated and came out with flying colors, the Negro today is a far different creature than the Negro of all past. He was now talking about building up a new civilization, and entering into the commercial and industrial field like all other races and nations. Thus the Negro has become a problem, which is both economic as well as racial. Ebolombically, the Negro is in a desperate condition because he has to depend upon others for the necessities of life while, at the same time, Africa with its twelve million square miles around with teaming wealth, which the white man controls. Yet there are some Negroes who say they have lost nothing in Africa.
Africa is waiting for the intelligent Negroes to develop it, and it is the function of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to point the race to Africa with the idea of building up there a government of our own. Some people talk about the Universal Negro Improvement Association going down, but said Mr. Smith, even though all the members of the council may sue the organization, even though every member of the council may get out, even though the Hon. Marcus Garvey himself may go out, the Universal Negro Improvement Association would go on just the same. The Hon. Marcus Garvey brought into existence something to help the Negro, but the Negro was thinking about this thing all the time, and in spite of all the difficulties and in spite of all those who may want the organization, it is here to stay. Mahama Gandhi is carrying out his work in India. Zagalil Pasha is carrying out his work in Egypt, the Jew is carrying out his work in Palestine, and the black man, although left in the background, is moving onward and is moving not as individuals, but collectively. From all over the world Negroes are getting together, and when the bugle call is sampled 10,000,000 black folks will move together for the redemption of their motherland.
MR. L. 8. HEADON SPEAKS
Mr. Heaton in a brief address, authorized the University, Negro Improvement Association as the greatest organization known to mankind. The development of the organization, he said, was antiquity to the growth of a huge oak tree which, having sprung from the little acorn, had nourished the stories of time and developed into the huge tree that was styled the king of the forest. In its development the branches, which tended to impede its growth, were cut out by nature. So it was with the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Its process of development though slow was sure, and would in time accomplish the object which it had before it. He probabit the leadership of Hon. Marcus Garvey, whom he said was a born leader and a man of whom the race should be proud in the effort he is making to bring the Negro out of slavery. While Mr. Garvey might not live to see his dream come true, what he has said from the plattform of Liberty Hall will be repeated in the years to come by unborn generations, and some day in the dark remote corners of Africa, the Red, the Black and the Green will float, having been carried there by the Hon. Marcus Garvey.
WASHINGTON, D. C.-After a day of three weeks, the Student Council, the body governing student activities on the campus, was elected last week. The first meeting of the newly elected council was held Tuesday evening. The function of this organization is to develop in the student body a wise and intelligent self control; to preserve and regulate beneficial customs and traditions of the university, and to establish new ones as promise to be for the welfare of the students; to represent the students as a whole in all their relations with the officials, faculty, trustees, alumni and similar hobbies and to have charge of such extra curriculum activities as may be decided upon by the faculty and administrative officers of the university.
The Student Council is composed of a president elected at large during the spring quarter and twelve members elected as follows: Two each, chosen separately by the four academic classes; the two freshmen members not having a vote until the beginning of the spring quarter; four members elected at large two from the senior class and two from the junior class. The election at large was conducted in the chapel under the supervision of the president of the council, Arthur M. Brady, Wednesday noon, October 16. Miss Hilda Davis and C. O. Carrington were elected without opposition from the senior class, and Miss Bernice Chism and E. P. Lovett were chosen as representatives of the junior class. The winning candidates at the various class elections were: Senior class, L. McKnight and T. J. Anderson; Junior class, B. C. Baskerville and A. J. Blackburn; sophomore class, P. E. Newble and Miss Marion Thompson.
The notable feature of the election was the almost total absence of friction so common at meetings of this type. The only exception recorded was the technical objection raised by the president of the council to the two members chosen by the junior class. He declared that the election was invalid because the delegates were elected before the elections at large. The class then voted to sustain their action and leave the question of the constitutionality to the Student Council. The council on Tuesday night upheld the decision if the junior class. The officers of the Student Council for the ensuing year are Arthur M. Brally, president; C. G. Carrington, vice president; Miss Bernice Chism, corresponding secretary; Miss Marlen Thompson, recording secretary, and A. Blackburn, treasurer.
'TIS TRUE!
YOU HAVE
CORNS
BUNIONS OR CALLUSES
ON YOUR
FEET?
IF NO, AND YOU WANT TO BE
RELIEVED
USE
GETS 'EM SURE
Corn and Bunion Plasters
including postage, for $50 (fifty cents).
Money order must accompany all orders.
When ordering, write name and address
plainly.
Your treatment is ready for you now.
Do not let it get cold.
Keep a free of heat and comfort.
Write to the GETS 'EM SURE
CORN CURE CO., Dept. G. 158
West 13th Street, New York City.
E. WILLIAMS, Mgr.
and we will send you by return mail
the wonderful treatment with full in-
formation to apply it.
AGENTS WANTED
send $3.00 for supply of twelve packages.
Your profit is yours. order today and
make big returns on your investment.
THANKSGIVING
BIG PROGRAM
at Liberty Hall
120 West 138th Street
THURSDAY NIGHT
November 27, 1924
BIG VARIETY
Music, Dancing and Speeches
In aid of MORTGAGE FUND of
54-56 West 135th Street
PROPERTY of U. N. I. A.
MARCUS GARVEY
In the chair
ADMISSION, 50c
rR EGS ee
ee ea Ba) a
een) Lan med a at r.
Fi ioe Me wien pity, Vis pw Fk ber ora
Bot: ar, - Dieta ec
asenrges <2 it Bite
Mp Re Lilli: See
eA eg
ery Wowren ATEEWS - - - - - - => Destoee Manager
Res SUBSCRIPTION RATES TO THE NEGRO WORLD | t
ie Peces | ee ustaae | ‘Dee ean Ce 80
sic et Estccscerecessessscsesese a
: Mogths...cccccciliceeee TB ‘Three Monthe...----.0sa--e-+- 138
Sire Hewes eeensieeree tL ee
Katered an second clase matter Apel 16, 1919, at the Post-
5 omice at New York, N. ¥. under the Act of Marek & 1878.
Se ee a
” PRICES: Five cents'in Greater ‘New York; ten conte
elsewhere in the U.B A.:. tom cents tn foreige countries,
er ge fee eee i
* 4 Advertiging Rates at Office = |
sa cen ence
‘WOL. XVII. NEW YORK. NOVEMBER 28, 1924 Pe Ne 16
‘The Negro World does not ‘knowingly accept questionable
or fraudulent “advertising. - Readers of the Negro, World are
earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on-the
part of an edvertiser to adhere to any representation contained
ta a Negro World advertisement. *
aaa ; .
{ ~ LET'S PUT IT OVER
THE NEGRO CAN ACCOMPLISH NOTHING WITH-
.. ‘OUT AN ECONOMIC FOUNDATION
si ERE are plenty of people everywhere who are impatient
I * with the backwardness of the Negro peoplé in comprehend-
<< ing arid making the most of. their ‘econolmic~ values—by
‘which we mean the wages they earn, the business interests. they
control’and the money they save after they have spent what is
“mecessary for living account, and which in the aggregate should
constitute working capital." We'do ndt feel such impatience to be
the best way to get the race to moving in the right direction; indeed,
ois moving, but slowly, in all parts of the world. We prefer to en-
courage this awakening and moving, rather than be discouraged and
impatient with it. 7
‘We believe that-the membership of the Universal Negro Impfove-
ment Association have become thoroughly awake -to. the absolute
necessity of making the most of their-economic values. They have
the organization and they have the loyalty, and brotherly feeling
which.make most potentially for success in organized wage-earning.
in business co-opejation, buying arig selling ainong themselves, and
in bapking and insurance;'ind they should lead ‘the way-for others
op i som: na Preach it in every. Liberty
> Hall i every local, thatthe only Bite Negro people can‘achieve
economic ‘independence is to stand together and match their wits
and pennies‘in building up trade,and. banking and insurance agencies
among themselves. Get busy. Start something-in a business way.
in your locality. Others will not do it for you.
THE REPUBLIC’ OF- HAITI AND THE UNITED
QTaATrEa “a
R. DANTE BELLEGARDE, former Haitian minister to
M Paris, has furnished to the Associated Negro Press .an
. interesting account of his presentation of the case of
“The Republic of Haiti and the United States,” to the International
Union of the Association of Nations, at its «meeting in Lyons.
France, in July last, and the generous reception which was given
his presentation by the delegates.and the people of Lyons. It must
have been a great triumph for Mr. Bellegarde and the Haitians, if
we may judge from his viewpoint. He says:
“The policy practiced by the United States towards Haiti avd
the Dominican Republic interests all Latin America.’ It also raises
problems of international law and the examination of which imposes
itself upon universal attention. For.the first.time perhaps in Europe
this policy has been exposed in all its brutality at the Congress which
was held at Lyons, from the 29th of June to the 3rd of July, by
the International Union of the Associations of the Society of
Nations.
“Charged by the Haitian people to inake known ‘to the world its
sufferings and aspirations, I presented to the delegates of the thirty
States assembled in the great city of Lyons tke sincere and toyal
picture of Haiti's situation ftom-the 28th of July, 1915, date of the
armed intervention of the United States in the internal affairs of
the little republic of the Antilles. And this exposition which ‘only
possessed the merit of accuracy and sincerity gave occasion for her
most stirring manifestation which I have ever witnessed; with one
transport of emotion and one soul, this assembly, composed of men
who appeared. to be uniquely dominated by national pre-occupa-
tiona, raised itself to those s¢rene heights where Justice appears in
allits splendor. It was a beautiful and touching spectacle. And that
which contributed to increase its grandeur was that the American
delegate participated there himself with a loyalty to which T am
pleased to render homiage.” .
Mr, Bellegarde:very correctly regards his efforts as being success
“ful, the main thing aimed at being to get the Haitian- side of the
question before the Allied nations. In the absence of a vote of cen-,
sure upon the American policy: he counted upon arousing the sym-
Pathy of the delegates of the thirty nations around the table. They
did not feel thrat they could censure the United States, bit they: did
express sympathy with such enthusiasm as to surprise and gratify
Mr. Bellegarde, and: all ‘the inure because the American delegate.
“Mr:.Duniway.had, it inserted in the resolution that he sympathized
with Mr. Bellegarde’s presentation of the case:
But the Significant thing about the presentation of the case to
the Society of Nations is to be found’ im the fact that Haiti is a
‘member of the society and that Mr. Bellegarde spoke as an ‘ac-
‘estdited member of the society. He would not have been allowed
to do this if he had not been ‘a member, and he would not “have been
‘g member il’ Haiti was not a-meinber of the League of Nations.
“Phe ‘smallest member of the league has as much voicé and vote as
see largest... We'do not forget-that both Liberia and Abyssinia are
‘queeabers of the-league: fe sat oe
2 Thesequal vianding of Haiti, Giberia‘and Abyssinia in te League
Motions with the largest outions (and the United States-is not
jiaeember of the, Ieagut). gives puint and force to the contention of,
‘Universal Negro Improvement Astociatign that Africa for the
G, that aationsiity of owr own, is the only pro. ible fotce that
Oe Le ES Ra Re Balsa g fos Si a eT ci eae
TR en POD. SATURRAT, HOVE
Tr wae tage 0 team ale Ga coe gles
fas ceopich of meted gach C'ehtibald treet dens aw are
legally privileged te sit at the cuuncil tables 6f the Society off Me 10
MU-NIIE assassination of Major-General Sir Lee Stack, goyornor-
general of tik’ Sedan end Sirdar of the Egyptian army, at
. Cairo, last week, by’ Egyptian radicals who resent the
presence of British soldiers and administrators im Egypt and: the
refusal Gf Great Britain ¢o release any of its control: Of the, vast
Sudan countyy, threaten’ to bring about’ serious coasequences: in
that part of the world. The fact that the responsible government
lof Egypt is in no way’mixed up-in the assassination and has rather
yielded more to the British thari the tadicals consider good: and
safe for Egypt, does not preveat the British from holding the Egyp-
‘tian government responsible. .
Feeling ran high in England last week upon the news of the death
of General Stack. There were loud voices demanding that the gov-
ernment, should take strong measures, even threatening to depose
the Egyptian government and. re-establish the British Protectorate.
If this should be done it might kindle a flame in sympathizing
African States outside of the Egyptian zone and hedging about the
Sudan country which it would be difficult to put out as a big. fire.
There is so imich discontent among Egyptians and the natives of
British territories in all of Africa as to make a situation delicate in
the extreme should the British undertake to depose. the present
Egyptian government and to re-establish the British Protectorate.
The New York Sun, in discussing the Egyptian situation and the
assassination of General Stack, says: . é
“For the three years preceding the independence of Egypt extreme
radicals, whose-acts wre disavowed by ail the recognized political
parties, attempted to drive the British out of Egypt by a system of
]were brought to trial on the charge of a general conspiracy to murder
British officials. They were convicted of 4 number of assassina-
‘tions and political outrages and were sentenced to long terms of
imprisonment. The frequency of these acts was somewhat reduced,
but.even in the last year there were réported a number of attacks:
on British army officers and civil officials and members of their
families. Premier Zaghlul was. himself.the victim of a would-be
assassin on his return from the conference in London, because his-
assailant declared he was too friendly to British interests.
“While the British government withdrew their protectorate and
recognized Egypt as an independent sovereign State, it left open
for future discussion the questions of secyrity of communications in
Egypt, defense, the protection of foreign interests and the status of
the Sudan. The British government has especially insisted upon the
security of Suez Canal as a vital link in the empire and, there is not
the smallest likelihood that it will abandon this contention. Such
acts as the assassination of General Stack will tend to convince the
world that the British protection of this great artery of trade is
still necessary.” é mae
Here we have the doctrine of.the Christian powers in their rela-
tions with weaker Statés and subject people: the doctrine of force
to have and to hold what you desire, if ‘you have the strength to
take it and keep it over the. protest of the righftul owners. That,
is to say, it is the argument of the common bandit. The United
States has shown too much of the European way of dealing with
other peoples than its own in its cortduct of affairs in Santo Domingo
and Haiti, in Cuba and in-the Philippine Islands. We have had
regard first to our trade necessities and strategic advantages rather
than the rights of the peoples who had something we waited and
were able to take. and hold oni to it. We got the Panama Canal
rights in that way and we are safeguarding the canal in much the
way as Great Britain is trying to safeguard the Suez Canal. * |
Unrest of the mutives of Africa and Asia and the Islands of the
Ceas hay begun to worry the Christian nations. |
EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS
Anyway, the conntey te safe and we
can all xo abend and attend to the bus.
Inens of bettering, our own fortunes
und those of the , country, —Norfolk
Journal and Gusde.
‘The outline of requests t he made
upon the new admiusteation ax set
forth by the Hon, W. ©. Matthews,
organizer and director of the activities
of colored Voters in the recent m-
tional election, covers very fully the
nituation, and if it 4s lived up to all
will ind¢ed be happy and content.—
California Eagle. =
“The fellow who says it can't be
done In smually interrupted by somes
body datug ite—shrevepert Sun.
‘The faukix which ae eetnmen to US
are common te humaats. But there
‘is one gherige fenlt of the Negro which
[serves to handiean, Dine gure stn hss
fellows in the race of fife, ney ix
the besetting sin of the American Ne~
are, Te shows tt ane Lack af cu-apers
BUve effort, our uuwarranted cassailt
on the personalities af gir leaders, iM
the cheap and vatzur wonstiay wf fot
gossip and errant imer, 1 the nn:
willingness of nfany ter rovesnize su
Perior ability and trains. We emy
the success of our neightears--2rd cst
filthy axpersion “an their hives. We
envy the Seung mien And women who
Bie fitted tes take thes pares onthe
life of the city and state. With the
faundieed exe of enys we appraise one
felenda and ‘they sniter therebs. MW in
Ine that we ou:eres this purede wed
Mundering Ineptitarte, this visions and
conarily attitude, AlLat as ace struc
Blige. for pucresm—ard we come ne
nedeer the goal by andicapping our
Fellow rten—Nertuwestern Bulletin
Appeal 2 ie
In hort. here ts the ators. A well:
known colored. man and a well-known
Jewinh metrhant are going to open a
rat-cloan grocery business, where an'y
colored young men and tadien will be
employed, Thele muccess in in your
hunds. ‘The future of your hoy or girl
te MW your banda. What will you do
with thie splendid opportanity 7—
Omuha New. Era, ’
‘The Daughtern of the Contederacy
want te, atop the singing of “Marchins |
Through Georgim.” They alee want to
endow chairs in Southern colleges for’
the, teaching of the Biatery ef the
South. enbec:alty of the Confederacy.
Witiam MeKintey, @ected Presticnt
of tha Unticd Mates tn 1906, mate tho
berinning of ihe, repprescbrment to-
tween the’ North end the Bowth, swr-
Negroes had from the , Republican
party which they had helped to keep
In power, in hin wild eagerness (or the
white people to Rel together. Now
fearly a generation atternard the
Souther white women are stil! un-
econstructed. Indeed the North ts
| pasing too deur for tx whistle.—Kan-
nas City Call :
Whatever work one undertukes he
should be avtuated hy the desire and
determination to do it ti the best of
his ability. Too many people ure xat-
fied with merely “Ketting by.” ‘Those
who du this never amount to much.
| shitkert on any. Job are in reality
jetwating themselves more than they
Hare cheating their employer for they
are inflicting upon themselves not ony
H serivas Yeon. ia phywieat and ments)
eftiewniy, but alse ieresirable damaze
te thele moral efiveacter. Duing one's
ts whereter called te aerve “pays
argo dividends, Always steive te do
[Sate hestinjOmaha Monitor. *
"The tanetlon nf Revernment ik nt
tm viiive, smninh and spppress lofty
‘ambitiens. On the contrary the prow:
ler funetinn of zevernment Ix to make
Wt cay for feapte 10 dee Rood and 41th
‘eilt for them to da .evil—Naxhvilte
Cherie
Eternal vigilance is né.tese the peice
of liberty tolay than it wan hundreds
ot years aco, 1¢ wil! be exey for many
who took an independent stand in the
last election to drift hack into the old
rut, Indeed there.org many. agencien
ctleeady at work to win back the Negro
wote. Politicians are talking about
the Negro coming’ back: home. ‘The
Nero's political home in: the future
WIM he wherever the interest of bin
countey and of himself are bes! cone
verved, ‘The getting of thle (act over
to every Negra man and Nesre som-
an and the giving tp them tbe “most
Intelligent rearon=for° the ‘faith that
Ia In them: hecomen the task of exéry
enilzhtenrd citizen of our community:
S Sadlona iting Breeminas a
Viixed Marriages-and
bs Senritive “400”
From The New Verk Bulletin
The country’s “Four Ftehdred™ seem
(6 "Be ‘more shocked “over the Rhine-
“the Weitere, toben and other
foes diverre caucn. which revealed
te the pubite courts, the “Nh” which
predemtactes smrong euene.of fhe coun.
try’ “east” bee teeta
‘| wender W amenge these whe are
[TRAGEDY OF LIFE:
‘By T. Thomas Fortene
"Marriages betwees persons of
badly. The.mumber of scandals
that crop up.in the newspapers
and the. courts every dsy shows
this to be so. A famous ‘New
‘York paragrapher. once pat it .in
print that he never met but one
man who acknowledged that he
was happy in the marriage rela-
tion and that he believed him to
be a liar. That was a very cynical
way of looking at and summing
it up. It is not uncommon for
people who afe unhappy in their
family relations tp think that
everybody else is. They ~see
through a ‘glass darkly. There
are millions of happy homes, in
which the usual ups and downs of
man and wife are common, but
in the main the home life is even
amd happy. The few who- have
troubles of their own that get into
the newspapers and the courts as
compared to the many who do not
is very suggestive. se
“What fools these mortals be,”
the wise poet wrote it and his
observation justifies it in the life
of the few rather thanin the life
of the many. As it was in: his
day so'it is in ours. Perhaps it
will always be that way. We.
could wish it otherwise, but that
would not change the fact. After
all, the marriage life, with all of
its hazards, is the only natural
and satisfactory relation of the
man and the woman.. Outside
the inarriage relation there is al-
ways danger for the man and the
woman, and the danger’ fre-
quently degenerates into tragedy.
We have one such about once or
twice a month in Harlem, where
we live, or exist, as the case may
be, and living and existing are not
he same.
Last year the courts of New
York were kept busy and every-
body was‘on tiptoe about the
proceedings in which a banker
ried to prove that his pretty
roung wife was of Negro parent-
ge. and in another case in which
. New York banker tried to
rove that a young son of his wife
was the child of an indian guide.
It was nasty business, and in
hese two and another case of
ike sort the husbands got the
vorst of it. Bat their married
ives was all broken up because
he question of. different race
rossings and clandestine associa-
ions got, mixed up in, their do-
nestic relations. 7
Europe was scandalized, last)
‘ear by the murder’ of a” rich’
igyptian ‘prince in London, sup-
josediy by a young . French
voman he had” married, and
vhose ways were so different,
vhose outlook on life was sv at
ariance, that they could not get
long together. She would not
ave mrarpied him if he had not
een wealthy and she could not
ct along with him because he
vas an Egyptian. A great sen-
ation was created’ in South |
\frica recently when the authori- |
ies prevented the marriage of a
oung Scotch woman to an East
ndian doctor, but in the end it
nay prove best for the two. Dur- |
ng the past week “London has |
cen scandalized by a suit at law
chich showed that a young. East
ndian prince, whose. name the
avernment. kept out of the court
ecords. had been swindled out of |
750,000 by a bunch 6f gamblers.
ne of whom used his beautiful)
vife to entangle and compromise
he young fool, who was willing
v pty that much money to hush
p the scandal, which’ got_into
he courts in, spite of his efforts,
cause. the gamblers fell out},
ver.a division of the loot.
Yes, “what fools these mortals
e!” “And none of us has-to go
ery far to find the fools in the
toning their sleep over the “awful trag-
dy." are biue bloc (2) deacentants
of auch mén as Victor Hugo, Alexander
Hamilton, Horacé Greelex, Alexander
Duman oc Alexander Purhkin? - Jf
Renenlogy wun to be Traced the family
closets of some, of- the. country's
“cream” would reveal some gruesome
Mieicnhs. | e
‘The tacts ‘are that Mies Beatrice
Jones, now "Mra. Leonard. Kip Whine-
Iander, falled to “pass” for white, bet
cabers ave passed, and, others will
pers, and the country's whtra-sostety
lenders will not be a bit wheer, ‘al-
though they mey hereafter demand a
Dived test’ before yeu cam omer thé
Four Handred” fold.
_EASBOT CMALWILL:
$28 West 1994 ctrest.
: a apa wenms
te) ER ORS oS
A reer neenatons ase shaft welie, :
1 gaze om thes, tnyubing reasen why
‘Thou yet te Geep-veiees sanet Taleo
A tanetel harmony, of dees
Yet moter Govt lees thy-cnerey subttwee., Y
: Thom, © Deep, busy tn thy beBowed tact es
Of eervicn, let of. a crentel ‘things, -
Refage :providest huge Levigthen, © te
‘Fit monarch of thy topming. eet; .
‘Monget all the wild cattle ot -
‘Thau in the:nephyr soft Gost waft-repty:
: ‘. oj
“Man, ignorant yet of origin divine, 4 .
Regard thyvelf—thy reasoning intqlect— “|
‘Thyself upholds ty Almighty Spirit which
Is truly ‘Why’ of all crested things;
‘Of oun, of moon, of wtar, of pretty ow’, :
And so of thes, O man. ‘thy eee °
A woodreas pow'r Eixietence ever r
‘This epirit o'er my waters broodeth yet
‘As when, creation's pian complete, the Sons of God
And morning stars with points of giitt'ring light,
Moved by-the breath of God divinely, sang
Love's triymph seen tm smoothly ‘rolling spheres.”
I heard; within the spirit stirred;'I thought:
Tam: Lever shall; nothing ts lost
In God's wide universe. "et of man? *
His soul divine survives af ever must,
‘Thro’ fux of change unharmed mankind ehall pes,
Leaving the body, erstwhile instrument,
Used in the lower school of earth, we £0
To blessed reaima where the eféat Master moves ~~~
In light empyrean, directs the way .
To ever wid'ning Joys of life prepared | _ :
For souls attuned to the Almighty will
i aon
JJ thank thee, mighty ocean.” Now withia .
1 feel a pow'r divine that, clearly felt
By all who heed the spirit's inner voice. :
Leads’ on to higher planes of the sublime.
J vce Yair Phoebus by th’ eternal mind
Move, onward glorious o'er the anctent hifls—
‘Themeclves by everlasting arms upheld.
|, 88 Gainey Street. Breckiyn"N. T-
Negro Just Beginning
To Show in Science
Pesan: tke Cow Ve Bun.
‘The ‘eppearance of Dr. George W.
Carver in this city remtnds New York
of dynamic and unrecognized - posst-
bilities ih the American Negro. ‘The
raco that has produced “Hind Boone.”
Flora Batson, Paul Laurence Dunbar.
Roland Hayes and Charles Gilpin ir
often thought of as holding potentia!
gifts of an artistic kind.for the United
Btates. Dr. Carver, 2 {etlow in the
Royal Soclety of Great Britain and a
‘winner “ot the Spingara medal, forces
& coyisideration of the Negro'a xclen-
tine poraibilitien. He hus developed, 118
producin from the sweet potato, "176
from the peanut. 85 from the pecan
nid. 300 from the common clay of the
noun,
Suclygagy ix Important enough tn
itséit, Gf aukex on an udded impor
tunice because {t hun utilized products
with which the Negro farmer has #
daily acquaintance. From his lubora-
tory at Tuxkegee Institute Dr. Carver
fecms not unlikely to send out Negro
‘puplty trained to have a great. effect
‘on the Iife of millions of bis own ruce.
"Men Ike him will do more to solve
tho ‘Negro problem” than any num-
her of exelted Southern whites and tn-
dignant distranchised Negroes.” There
‘must play thelr part in the eventual
solution: ax tong as there ts unjust
dixcrimination against any race there
will be protest and propoxals for cor-
rection of abuse mnd injustice, Hut
sumMecleit number of Carvers constitute
A very perauiasive argument on the
Xexro's hehulf for privileges of which
the bux been deprived. And 1¢ the re-
null of thelr work {8 to increase the in-
tellixence und prosperity of Negro
faemers und manufacturers of farm
products their significance In the de-
yelopment of a futury America in diM-
cult to exaggerate. :
Cleveland Division
Congratulates President
‘The following correspondence ex-
plain Atnelt:
Cleveland, Ohio, “Nov. 5.
To Mis Eacellency, Calvin Cootldge.
White Hose, Washington, D. C.
| Plewge accent congratulations? from
‘the Nine Thousand Members, of the
Cleveland Division of the Universe!
‘Negra Improvement Association on
your ascendancy to the highest gift
in the Nation for term of your own.
We stand loyally. behind -your wise,
sane and just administration.
G. A. WESTON, Supervisor.
P. BE. JOHNSON, President.
ERNESTIYE WILLIAMS, Sec.
r ‘The- Witte House,
Washington, D.C. ,
es _) Novenaber.4. 1934
“My Dear Mr. Weston: The Prpsident
has been greatly pleased \to Taceive
your message of congratujations ite
asks ale to compiunicate with you an¢
Your apociates the assurance of bie
deep appreciation. Sincerely yours, -
. : cm, SLEMP,
», Secretary to the President.
To Mr. George A. ‘Westen, Buperviscr
Cleveland Division, Universal Ne-
sre. improvement . Association,
3200 Best 0th’ Strest, Cleveland,
| It sometimes happeng Chat 2’ young
ian_ pute Be foot in Kt When be aske
to pile up @ Settene for him.
A Guaneter te ofven merely a man
whe to agen of Wedecing cher mon
0 Ot ar ba eri.”
HEALTH TOPICS
By DF. B. 8. HERBEN
Of the New York Tubsroulosis Ass'n
Lack of Thought Is Dangerous
Following along the linea of din
cussion which’ we took im the las:
article, we come to the wubject ‘ot
snot thinking.” or as some peope
might may, “not worrying.”
~ 1 wae-teilingrpes. that disease 16.n0k
caused by thinking of it or feaiing
it, but may de relighted by urider-
mining the health through worry. I
many words I pointed ott that, wort
tx never thé criminal, bue it" may be
an accessory to the crime, no to xpeat:.
It doen come tn. Worry is, therefore
dangeroax and to be condemned
*Contrartwine.” ax Tweedledce, woul
xiy, not thinking Im angerous.
There ix.a difference tetween think
Ing of illness and worrying about tt
It ix a mistake to! say to one’ who
‘apeaks about certyin ayinptoms as be-
ing suMeiently alarming to nesess'-
tate sending for a doctor. tha: he
should “forget {t* and not worry. Ti
fs not “worry” to know that-the dvr
has been blown ‘off the hinges ano
to say that the carpenter should te
called. It ts a sane recognition of
fact and 4 logical suggestion. To £0
around wringing one's hands and bo.
mioan'the possthillty that the snow. is
to be blown into’ The hall and the
houxe In to be chilled while not doing
anything to correct the ‘condition —
that 1s comparable to “worry” atout
sickness.
It fs well known that many dine
canes could be cured {€ recognized in
time. while the aymptoma are vaste
and tle patient t= experiencing on!y
the distrean of “not feeling very well.”
Cancer, treated early can be eradicated.
Tuberculosix found before great dam~
age in dono can be “cured.” Anil xo
it in with many, many dixeare condi-
tions. To deny that there In some-
thing wrong. with the atte of body or
mind, to avold “neemimg to be xtck™
by refusing medical care, in to fool
one's self and nobody else. Tt Is dan
Keroun because the underlying conili-
iton may he nerioun and delay makes
the pormitalitien of cure that much
more uricertain. —” 2
Don't worry. ‘That wever helps.
Think. That always helps. Either you
are nick or you are not kick. If you
are not “sick the doctor will put the
Idea out of your mind by explainin
what the apparent difficulty actually
in." If you are slck he will give you
the ald which ts necessary to drin:
about cure, If curs fn ponaible. In any
case, you will be benefited by havin;
talsittneiene: ee
wens
“Y” 138th St. Library Nate
Free classes jo beginning Englis!
are being offered by the Board of Ed-
ucation at this Horary on Tuesday:
and Thursdays, from three to five
Leave your name and address at the
library with Mrs. Latimer, and sive
the time that te conveateat for you.” if
‘theabove days or heura are got ‘con-
venient. Several applications’ have
been’ repsived for the clases, B you
fall to make application for them you
Are thissing &-greet oppertustiy.
-Om Tecntay, December 2.00 8mm.
Miss Harriet 6. Wright, of: Gewira
Peck branch, will talk atest the mew
edfidren'’s books, and. give sugpections
parents about books for Christos
sift ‘bavins. “This dtecussion will in-
chede' books for chiltren of oll ages.
‘The chiiéren's reem ‘ste eatents, 2
condtal ‘invitation to every ome te ‘at-
cond. e
YOUR LOOKS
our famous actresses, actors, phonograph stars—25 members of the famous "Shuffle Along Company"—use Golden Brown Beauty Creations. Look at Miss Rohby Holmes of "Shuffle Along" fame—look at her skin, hair, golden Brown does it. Niners on the stage and screen depend on looks—you are judged by your looks and you can be attractive and beautiful, too.
JUST DO THIS TONIGHT. Wear up a thick, fluffy cream of GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY SOAP and rub it into the skin until it nearly disappears, then wet a wash rag with hot water and steam the face for a few seconds, dry and rub a little GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY GOLDEN Wash in the skin and wash it night. In the morning wash the face with warm water and dry. Dab on a little GOLDEN BROWN ROUGE and finish with a light layer of GOLDEN BROWN FACE POWDER—then look at yourself in the mirror.
Madam Marie Hightower
Golden Brown
FACE POWDER
It would seem at first glance that it systematic defense of the Nordic should not be necessary in a land where Nordics first laid the foundations of their social and individual well-being and prosperity and where Nordics have managed, often against considerable odds, to hang on to a large percentage of these. The superiority of those who established the premises of their own preeminence and with almost unparalleled devotion made the rules to prove it. would be accepted in any age less turbulent and logical than outs as a self-evident truth. Disorderly elements, however, are at work, now an fever—or hardly ever before.
Since Mr. Lothrop Stoddard and others started boating the Nordic race (tail and bonde, with a long head blue or gray eyes and fair skin) in opposition to the Mediterranean race (short, dark and long-headed) and the Alpine race (dark, short and skullled). I have come across numerous adverne reviews which indicate that the whole matter must be gone into again. I do not wish to impugn the motives of the younger intelligenza, who have been particularly ennipy. It is improbable that the younger intelligenza are all short and dark. Nor do I credit the report that. Burton
Wonderful Treatment Helped Faithful
Wife to Save Husband When
All Else Failed
The
Happy
Reunion
Golden
Treatment
Did It
Golden Treatment in Hibernia and Tartanica
—Any Lady Can Give It Sorryly at
Home in Tea, Coffee or Fog!
Wives, mothers, paterns. It is you that the man who drives up to you depends upon to save him from a ruined life and a drunkard's grave. He must have to do it to send your name and address and will send beautiful FREE GOLDEN TREATMENT You will be thankful as you receive it. DEE J. H. MAINNE (e., 726 Grim Ridge, Cincinnati, Ohio).
Burrowing of clogged sewers is the high wall and clogging the Nordica. We must look and dig.
Before taking on the more complicated problems institutional to a consideration of Mr. Sheldon's "Racial Resistance in Europe" (Charles Sornier's Bone), one may wonder whether this author has not poke about clarifying the Nordica in the wrong way. It is not possible that he should have concentrated more upon the main point that Nordica are tall and blonde, with a long head, blue or gray eyes, and a fair skin? Here is something regarding which a sensible man can hardly be of this mind. Any objection to the Nordica must be based upon some defect in the body of vision or a sluggish functioning of the brain or a poplary affliction which might in time respond to proper treatment. There can be little question about the highly satisfying appearance of the Nordica. They certainly put up a good front.
You can't deny that. When I think of some of the Nordics I have seen I just have to drop everything and let memory take its course. At the time I didn't notice whether they were dolichocephalic, but I suppose no. Fair they undoubtedly were. Blue or gray eyes. Hair like—but don't get started. I am not saying that Mr. Stoddard is solely responsible for this perfectly stupifying color scheme, but he deserves credit for even mentioning it. Anything bearing upon the subject seems to me to meet all the requirements of literature. Each reluctant step away is a mistake.
Take the Sweden, now. Mr. Standard gives them a send-off, emounting to a character because they are intelligent, industrious, peace-loving and expert politician. What I say in, they are bloody. What if they weren't anything else, isn't that enough? Bearing this well in mind, I have often thought of moving to Scandinavia and devoting my declining year. If I may so express it, to feats on the ford. There is something about them. Not that I wish to hurt any one's feelings. I have my Mediterranean moments and days when my motto is "Excelsior." I do not account it a great virtue to discriminate too closely among God's creatures. But by and large—well, you know how it is.
Yes, I like the Nordica—I say it right out—because I like their looks. I know nothing about other people, but it is just possible that their preferences spring from the same source as my own. They do my that our choice of races and what not is the result of fixations, some infantile, and some that you could hardly call that. What with the abundance of Nordic aureumals and the marked fairness of many of the distaff adds, it is not astonishing that scholars, be their superimposed theories never be启蒙, and imperial, sometimes speak up strongly for peaches and cream. If Freud does not uphold me in this, he gets no more free "ada" out of me.
Several other imperfections might be pointed out in Mr. Stoddard's presentation and in his opponents. Some of the critics, for instance, received but coolly his announcement that different races are different. True, this may now be regarded as a part of the usual equipment of the intellectually alert, but the others have to learn it somewhere. Of course, I knew it. It has long been the custom in our family to hand down this bit of erudition from father to child. When the oldest son arrives at his maturity he is taken aside
Graham badly assumes our author of the course of simplicity and intelligibility. When he decribes that we are intelligent or that "Italy is long and narrow in shape, its fancied resemblance to a back-boot, being a geographical commonplace," not everybody is thrilled. I am not startled myself, but that may be because my standard of starling is singularly high and going up. It infuriates certain readers to be told that Spain and Portugal "together occupy the Iberian Peninsula." There might be grounds for complaint if Mr. Steadard had gone on to deduce a peninsula, carefully distinguishing it from an archipelago or an isthmus. But he doesn't. Safety and calmly he merely bounds it, leaping his critics almost entirely surrounded by confusion.
The only flaw I can pick in the book is the idea that the Nordica, aside from their complexions, are any better than other races. I am afraid that some of the Nordic qualities that Mr. Stoddard most admires, such as high political ability, self-control, love of order, stability and polite, are just the ones which have led the lefts to regard the Nordica as such frightful bores. I know for a fact that not all Nordics are perfect. I have met some who have made little progress in the arts and crafts, whose general culture has remained at the food-gathering stage, and whose family tree seems to have contained a goodly scattering of Veddas, Andamanese Islands, Dyaks and Kubu, with maybe a couple of Newfoundland Beothuks, [extinct] Mr. Stoddard's insistence upon their universal righteousness would lead me, if I had a suspicious nature, to conclude that he has an anom to grind.
The classifying methods of Mr. Standard and those who swear by "biology—the science of race" seem open to argument. They divide us by tests, including "skull measurement, hair formation and color of eyes and skin," and this technique, while perhaps faulty, at least gives employment to a large and deserving body of skull measurements, hair testers and skin observers. I should favor arranging us, if at all, according to the distance clapping between the inside and the outside of the cranial roof, thus separating, those of moderate osseous tendencies from those for whom the Germans have coined the happy expression, "dick." This could easily be done by a house-to-house canvass, and while I should not expect it to make any difference in anything, it would be a lot of fun doing it.
"Racial Realities in Europe" provides a complete survey of all the European countries. Scandinavia and England seem to be the most Nordic of all, and therefore most likely to remain friendly to the United States. If it can stay Nordic. And "If the United States should cease to be mainly a Nordic land, our America would pass away." France and Germany are rapidly becoming Alpineized. The Balkans are so mixed up that anything may happen. As Mr. Stoddard puts it, "startling surprises may be in store." Certainly the Balkans could not behave worse if they were Nordics. They might well take up "biology—the science of race." It couldn't do them much harm. Nordics, at least, are gentlemen, intimates our author, and the rulers of Rome in her glory had the good taste to be dolichocephalic. To "think of the stern, practical unimaginative Roman participation as a typical Mediterranean," he says, "in nothing short of ludicrous." It gets funnier the more you think of it.
Egyptians First Introduced Handkerchiefs
It is difficult to assign a period and a country of origin to the handkerchief. But it seems to have been known in remote ages, and traces of it are to be found among the Egyptians. On the contrary, strange as it may seem, the Greeks appear not to have been considered very improper to blow one's nose in public or to wipe the perspiration from one's forehead or face. Parking from the Greeks to the Romans, we find that the latter had something of the kind which they called "sudarium" (sudor, sweat). It was of the finest face, and was used chiefly as an ornament and as a fan during the games in the circus; it may thus be considered as the forefather of the handkerchief. For many centuries afterwards there is no mention of handkerchiefs, and we only find traces of them about 1550. In Italy.
It appears that one day a Venetian lady of the nobility, possibly to wipe off the perspiration, cut a piece of linen in an eval shape and trimmed it with a border of the finest fronds. When the other Venetian grand ladies saw her on the public promenade, provided with this new piece of elegance, they imitated her, and the handkerchief came into existence. It passed over the frontier, was adopted abroad and became the rage at the court, of Henry II. It is curious that for many years the handkerchief was round and oval, and, it was not until the time of Louis-XVI that it became square.
THE NEW IDEA
BY CLEMENT NURSE
There is a light about to gleam,
There is a light about to beam;
There is a warmth about to glow,
There is a flower about to blow,
There is midnight changing into gray—
Men of thought, men of action, clear
the way.
Aid the dawning tongue and pen;
Aid it, Hope of honest men,
Aid it paper; aid it type.
Aid it, for the hour is ripe;
And our efforts must not slacken with
the day.
Men of thought, men of action, clear
the way.
Martford, Conn.
CHINESE ATHLETICS COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP
A Dangerous Tendency
Nationalble in Most of the
Schools of the Country
Balanced Education Best
From the Newport News Star. College activism are focussed nowadays upon new objectives. Once the foremost scholar was the enviod of all his scholomates and the hero of his clea. The faculty looked to him to defend the name of his alma mater. Upon him was laid the burden of bearing his side of mooted questions. His arguments were of necessity nophobic, but they invariably indicated the trend of his reasoning and were an arguory of his future career, as well as an evidence of the character of preparation his college emphasized. To win an intercollegiate debate or to carry off the honors in a test of excellence in a thesis or in any other competitive feat of pure scholarship was to gain a distinction that was not only valued by the victor, but usually affected those who interested themselves in his progress through the world of work and struggle. That was the old order in our highest institutions of learning, which was followed by all grades below them in those activities that keep up the spirit and morale of our schools.
But our observation is that there is now in almost all colleges, high schools and other institutions of learning a departure from the old order of giving honor to those who excel in the essentials of intellectual or mental accomplishments and a decided recognition of the physical or athletic side of school life. Leaders in mathematics, chemistry, astronomy, history, bellestetreets and other allied subjects to these essential requirements of college achievements have been replaced in popular acclaim by those who excel in such diversions, as football, baseball and other physical accomplishments, requiring, of course, some mental excellence, but which do not necessarily signify that such favorites have applied themselves to a point of distinction in the classes and the other indispensable branches of learning.
As with the schools, so with the public. There seems to be a tendency to make paramount the athlete to side of the student's life. We do not undertake to criticize this latter day attitude or to point a moral. We simply record our observation. One thing is certain: this devotion of the schools and public to the sports that are now so generally hidged in is an evidence that the love of physical contest is still an elemental instinct of the human race, and may the best team win. The Grecians were not only famous because of their Olympic games, but the eloquence of their greatest opener was said to be "unapproached forever." We plead, therefore, for an even well balanced training, developing the student physically and mentally, into a well-rounded human, fit and ready to do his share of the world's work.
WEEKLY SERMON
Psalm 11:2 TEXT SUBJECT: The Souls' Need and God's Nature
(Continued from 11:2 verse)
I it reminds us of the dignity and duty of an immortal life. It reminds this, O soul, with so many needs, remember, all but one are pressing one essential. The thought of that one emphasizes three immortality. O soul, with the one source offered for thy satisfaction, see to it that fangs of time press lightly upon an immortal spirit for they can never satisfy is only satisfaction as the living God Dwell upon the thought of God. It takes shape, it may be dwelt upon in the life, the passion, the glory of Jesus Christ. Then act as an immortal. Time can not assuage thy longing "a thirst for God." If the souls' thirst can only be allayed by Him, its real field of activity is the immortal life, which family images the eternity of God. Remember and not.
II. Remember that the thought of the Blessed Trinity teaches the value of time. It is a stimulus to self-improvement. All good things come from God. Everything beautiful in nature perfect in art, truth, grace and literature—all greatest tangent discoveries made by man this trading world he furnishes himself a god for making all come from God. Learn all you can. Be respectful towards Me. Be careful to cultivate literature if opportunity is source, remembering always that every path of knowledge may be trodden safely then and only then, when the eye is fixed unperturbed upon the living God. To the bumble heart all teaches —God.
III. From the contemplation of such truths he warned. We live in an age whose temper exposes us to a tremendous danger; an age which the soul may be drawn to ruin by a fatal attraction, the attraction of materialism. You cannot play with edged tones and not be wounded. The tendency of the human character is such that if it turn to, loiter in the path of evil, there is every danger lost that path be kept to the end. When, not many months ago, I was watching the upper reaches of the wide lake, Lawrence, I remember how the, wild waters of the river, as they neared Niagara, seemed almost like living thing, tossing themselves in helpless agony, smitten with the thought of the coming end.
There is before us all a great Niagara. There are currents of thoughts in the age in which we live not unlike
Is your BLOOD run-down, weak, tired?
Is your BLOOD poke, "pulled" thin, watery?
Is your BONE-MARROW drying up? Is your body starving,
and are you anxious with
**Are you issues WHEN? Are you always THEN cut and
KNOCKED out? Do you walk around without any COURAGE?
ABNERTION? Don't wait until you are good (improve
your skills)! Come out! Time out! Order the
opportunity! Come out! Time out! Order the
From the Birmingham Reporter
From the Birmingham Report.
Everywhere in the civilized world comes a series of reports of the shaking of governments, dethroning of officials, and scandals of various kinds. It's in parties, it's in nations, it's in international government, and the situation becomes more turbulent as the time goes on. Men of high position are found doing common and destructive things. There is an unrest, there is a wanting to know, a dangerous suspicion which puts every man and leader in a questionable state. Somewhere it is written that you may count upon the people when you may not be protected in the hands of the law. That is to say, when the people decide that administrators are too corrupt with the law, they immediately doormm and set at naught leadership of whatever nature or kind. Leaders are prepared to administer when they hold steadily, and in balance, the minds and wishes of the people.
The shaken confidence, so apparent throughout the civilized world, is not without reason, and it is not all through passion and jealousy. Some of our leadership, a great bit of it, has acted buffetrect. If not openly criminal. And, because of this, confidence is shaken, the government is weaker, and leadership threatened.
Finally, "A thirst for God." Kneel before Him, pour out your love by serving humanity and "honor the bleeding wounds whence flowed the precious blood." Find "In the 'living God' all you need for strength, courage and grace. He is sufficient. He is all in all of God he praised for such an "All-sufficiency."
Stop Asthma
Choking, Wheezing, Gasping and Short Breath
Sleep Soundly The First Night
Sleep in Comfort
If you are a sufferer from choking, wheezing, sneezing, hawking, gasping Asthma, Bay Fever or Chest pain, you will be glad to learn that your suffering and discomfort can be endod, and you can sleep soundly every night from the first night on. Regardless of your condition or previous experience with "Asthma Core," I want to send you a full list of the possible treatments for your suffering and discomfort that has been offered with ordinary free samples. Users commonly report this site for in twenty-four hours. All it is that is the trouble with this product and other痛苦 on which I believe this is the best and weeding it can have. My suggestion—send the caron below for your free treatment.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
F. H. SHEARER, 1621 Dana Gate Blvd., Kenmore City, Mo.
Please send fall's Florence Formula without cost or obligation to me.
Name
Town
predicted by the philosopher, the prophet or beer. His end can be told, or stated, by babbling children, who are not expected to think, who may not reason.
It is to be understood and demonstrated one day that the humblest people within the nation, or the people in the ranks, are not the only offisks subjected to law, and the rules of the court. But every man who violates, the law subjects himself to the court, and is answerable to some hawful tribunal, most certainly. If it's in state, it's to the state court; if it's in church, it's to church court then; if it's in society, fraternal or otherwise. It's there he must make his answer, and that under due process. If recently is not found within the circles of the body, it's then that the state may be notified, and a course of action taken there. For it is the state in which we live, and the nation, that gives rights and privileges for all bodies to exist, but they must exist lawfully. That is, they must not violate their own statutes through which, and only which, they have a right to be.
We do dangerous things to society and the future growth of humanity when we shake the confidence of the people who, make society, and who perpetuate it by the sweat of their brow. We make the most dangerous and criminal error when we misuse the trust and confidence of that group who must look to leadership, manhood and acceptable character for its protection. We may dodge the fangs of the law and escape just punishment, but we will not and cannot escape public sentiment and public condemnation.
Yes, there is a shaken confidence and a threatening of leadership, and in the mass of humanity, such as the black race, must confront the failure of one leader indulges the other and impedes his progress. How careful, then, ought every man to be when such a responsibility is placed? When confidence is slandered, when leadership is threatened, we approach a most serious plight, either faces and other people may be able to stand it, but the child race, the race just over the hill from slavery, and a few steps from barbarism, cannot afford at this hour to take any steps backward. Forward, forward, must be our traveling word. None are perfect, none are expected to be, but every leader that's worth consideration should stand about the attack of vulgar criticism. He should make his path straight and his we no plan that the most tough in the toolkit may be clearly. We are laugh while the heart is no longer after the fear we laugh no more. Our appeal is to the person in the crowd, and to the complaining members of our group, to stand steady, ever耐心 and tenderly. We will overcome. No courage is ever lost eternally. "Truth cruised in earth will rise again." We cannot fail. The institution we represent won't fail, the
SEMINOLE INDIAN
HAIR
GROWER
BEFORE 1 YEAR AFTER
APPLY TO SCALP THREE TIMES
A WEEK WITH FINGER TIPS
MASSAGE WELL INTO
THE SCALP
MME. DEZON. DETROIT M.CHU.S.A.
race that we are a part of will not go down. There is a principle: it must be sustained, it will be sustained. It may not come in many days or months, but justice will finally triumph. We won't win every battle, in all the contests we might meet; but the hope of this race, and the hope of this people, and the hope of every contender for righteousness and justice, is that in the end we will win the war.
"God, give us men! A time like this demands
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hands;
Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy;
Men who possess opinions and a will;
Men who have honor—men who will not lie.
Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
In public duty and in private thinking;
For whike the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds.
Their large professions, and their little deeds.
Wrong rules the land, and waiting Justice sleeps!"
Mingle in selfish strife, 10! freedom
weeps
NEWEST STYLE
COAT DRESS
All Sizes
22 to
54
ALL WOOL
VELOUR and
Pronach
Ooney
FUR
TRIMMED
for $3.97
only
Send No
Money
with order
Money
Bank
Garanty
Send no money
with order
from the
Brunswick Shoe
Museum.
The Brunswick Shoe
Museum is
the World Mail Order Co.
Department.
F. F. M. 6558 Chicago
Ne a eb OS Oe an Pear a ee PE ne ey ee oe i a ees
Bee See es Lt es an On oe Cons ene ed tee ¥ Es F Seer err ae r . Siem wey _ “ ne ste mooie a
BR Ee es Og eae ae mI sae cose? ie Cy aoe, PR PON Tie 5 RS, ST SN OS a, 6 RA ORE ee
Pe die call oe ge Se iy: ie dt oe. a ae i. a CSREES ee
BR ee ea 4 4 , ee se an _ [ss ne) 7 ak Ef ca Citie oe 8 bs s.
tes oh oe ie ia a: a oe? s 3 a ; nes ce a 3 oe aes ae OER ee
fe one owe e aa soy ‘i x ea ae 3 Ms oe 2 ; Pn Be a ee
a aa : bs 8 3 ed : Bs Nees cy ot i ee he < of - By et Faron", sit
es 4 Rete oo 3% ~ Bim » & RE Oe -. I a | } a oe
coe. oe Ee a, gn ee Sheth UR URE Ba ee oe Sie APR ONS UT eee Ee ae beg aU aD oy "i
Bs __ ‘3 CENTRAL AMERICA,.fHE WEST. INDIES, PANAMA AND THE SOUTH OF THE UNITED STATES: < ~~
me ee SS!" ABQARD THE PALATIAL STEAMER'OF 6300-TONS, =
ar _. «SS. GENERAL G. W. GOETHALS Rechristened io sana © we rh
, #, 8 ae . . “ » 22" ~: Rill - \ F . f : se Bc gets! ts ‘, e as 7 et .
. * ene te y “] zi ot , 4 . ie mF i " me ‘7 ' Su
. - . : : é —_ mi , ; ’ T i > . ty ‘ ? . . " 2 “ .
“ = - Ship Sails from North River and 135th Street at 4 o'clock SUNDAY, 11th JANUARY, 1928, and returns 7th February, tees . a a . aan
. Points of cgll‘on the Excursion of 31 days: Havana, Cuba; Port-au-Prince, Haiti; Kingston, Jamaica; Colon, Panama; Port Limon, Costa Rica, and Bocas-del-Toro, Panama. "First Clags Accommodation. Price for Round Trip
$350.00 and\$400.00 Berths. ~ « BP. ; * 7 . . . ” Se rr : < B
. an SEE THE BEAUTIES OF CENTRAL AMERICA, THE WEST INDIES AND PARTS OF THE SOUTH OF. THE UNITED STATES — 3
Only. limited ‘accommodation. Secure your passage now from the ticket office, Black Cross “Navigation, and Trading Company, 56 West 135th Street, New York City. Telephones Harlem 7704-2877. Every Negro who-can
afford’ it should go on this trip. . . . . fe : . . “ ee
Music and Recréation aboard. Concert, Games, ete. for 31‘days. This is not,a chartered ship, but a ship-owned by Negroes for you to sail on to visit other Negroes. Your pride of race should be enough to- have you make
- the trip on this excellent ship owned by your own. = * . : re 2 * . : ‘ a : . 1
: : : a * Ne . BOOK YOUR PASSAGE NOW a ¥ : : : cae '
. x . : . 56 WEST 135TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. . fe oF .
- oe . : . : . " : . “ * ” "s ; ° ty gy
BLACK CROSS. NAVIGATION AND TRADING: CO. Inc.
Oo : _ Incorporated Under the Laws of the State of New Jersey, U. SAS SE ee - mma, a .
e 8 “ . .TO ENABLE THE CORPORATION TO PURCHASE, CHARTER AND RUN SHIPS, AND TO'CARRY ON ITS GENERAL BUSINESS : ;
Loans are accepted only from members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and Negroes who are interested in and endorse its program. Loans are not requested or deaired
‘from any other Negro. Loans are not desired or accepted from any other person. oO, a et 4 1 ‘ .
Co, A note is issued by the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company, Inc., to cover, each loan for five or ten years :
. ; DENOMINATION OF NOTES a
You may loan in amounts of $20, $25, $50, $100, $200, $300, $400, $500, $600, $800, $900 and $1,000, bearing. interest at the rate of 5% per annum, payable
‘ , annually. / . so :
As soyh as a sufficient amount of money is loaned to the Corporation. by those interested, its first ship will be purchased and the operation of the business of the cirpération will be
commenced. x : Ok _- : . ,
: o — Loans may be forwarded to Black Cross Navigation and Trading Co., Inc., 56 West 135th Street, New York City, U. S. A.
. , _ LET'S PUT IT OVER, IF WE AREMEN- ST a
SHII Ss! SHII Ss! a: SHI Ss! ss
— FOR THE’ DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICA AND THE NEGRO RACE : a - ‘2 &
Oo THE BLACK CROSS NAVIGATION. AND TRADING COMPANY, Inc. | .-
, 4 , ¢ Incorporated Under the Laws of the State of New Jersey) , / . . a
For the purpose of building for-its own use, etuipping, furnishing, fitting, purchasing, chartering, navigating, or owning steam, iail or other boats, ships, vee-
ls or other property, to be used‘in any Jawful business, trade, commerce or navigation upon the ocean, or any seas, sounds, lakes, rivera, canals or other water-
ys, and for the carriage, transportation or storing of lading, freights, mails, property or passengers thereon.. ee an - a
To navigate the waters of the Atlantic Ocean along the entire eastern seaboard of the United States, and the Dominion ef Canada, Newfoundland, and
out Cuba, Porto Rico ard: West. Indian Islands, Central and South America, including the gulfs, bays, sounds, harbors and. roadsteads ed coasts, and
jacent thereto, and such navigable rivers as flow therein; the Pacific Ocean along the entire western seaboard of the United-States, Columbia and
aska, Lower California, Mexico, Central Americaand South America, including the gulfs, bays; sounds, harbors,. and roadeteads along. said coasts and adja-
it thereto, and such navigable rivers as flow therein; the Gulf of Mexico and Panama Canal, the-Gulf of California; Puget Sound, the. Great Lakes, and all
Be gen aces alc te MICE Tae eas ae,
56 West 135th Street, New York, U. S. A.
56 West 135th Stre wy. Be ee. ee ee. ee Oe
oe RR ee GS wert Et Te gore We foe Ft fae
ete Tage ee oe
Be ge a EB ge oe ae
ie ae ae Bw OE AS pat” OOM ott wt ot AO je. as
nti SO ee Ag set EE oy “Se ae Pog KO bude - et rete BES ge Mhpe Saas notes
mS te 7 Pot tag te. gl an US oe Spc BheS bs and ya Fa eee er a ee
idl ORS gies oO oes Satie bev Be Se gis Ban le! Oo Sy Bae!”
mok4 oe ee ey ee ee the TM none, PONE so oF aeneettiadian’™ ;
PRG OM Cg Et eves, g BS Sagenes ge crqhels Lanett DS ag! St sb
SOME BREATHS OF PERFECTION AND PERGE ON EARTH
Human Nature Must Have a New Birth Before the Lamb and the Lion Lie Down Together, Unless the Lamb Is in the Lion
composed a strange patient but such and decided investigation as to the manner of present work.
The wittness of past acts and their unconsciousness, on a mission for the future. Examination of the real principle of humanity entails more than merely the question of ability on wrong power. It goes unnoticed within this general belief at the point of the marvelled sense of the world at large. But after every allowance for the circumstances and conditions in which he now is, man has not lost, irrevocably his true nature. There are lofty and noble characters who do not hesitate to sacrifice their individual interest for that which they feel is truth. Possessing a high sense of consecentiousness, a deep and solemn veneration, the very elements of moral philanthropy compose their nature and desires; hence, they search deeply into the causes of those social efforts which are manifested about us, the disunion and disorganization which engender vice and misery with the personal and
To to Editor of The Negro World:
The only hope for the physical and mental amelioration of mankind is based upon a slow but steady intellectual progress, and this must Be the
SAVE
A
LIFE
YOUNG BLOOD
FEEL 10 TO 30 YEARS YOUNGER
If your meals don't taste good, or you don't sleep well, you are losing your pep. Yes you are, and I believe I have just the right medicine to help you back to health.
Poison blood causes pimple, bolls, liver spots and unsightly blotches to appear and spoil your, good looks.
Start in right now to get rid of the poison and become strong and healthy. Don't wait. The rich juices brewed from Bulgarian Herb Tea should make you feel 10 to 30 years younger.
So your druggist for a package today. Inalist on having it—tell him you want the genuine Bulgarian Herb Tea in the red and yellow box to improve and enrich your blood. Sold in two sizes, 75c to $1.25. In case your druggist cannot supply you I will send you my large box postpaid for $1.25.
Address me. H. H. Von Schlick, President, Marvel Products Company, Dept. No. 5, Marvel Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Note: I will send it C. O. D. Just pay your mail man.
PROSPERITY
GOOD LUCK'S LEADER
WEAR THE BUCKEYE AND RABBIT'S FOOT
Letters come in by the handmade telling us how beautiful this ring is and how proud each woman is of the symbolic charm. THE BUCKEYE AND RABBIT'S FOOT tells in their journal of the symbolic charm. THE GOOD LUCK AND SUCCESS which they bring.
Jiggle the thinnest man who are new in business. Learn how to grow business. Play day on the road of success. PROSPERITY and GOOD HAPPINESS.
GOOD LUCK FOR ALL. Wear this beautiful unisex ring-made of platinum with the richly embossed side of gemstones. Bring with the BUCKEYE AND RABBIT'S FOOT mixed and
really mounted. This ring was made for all those who would have GOOD LUCK and GOOD FORTURE at their disposal.
Special Offer: Send your name and address to your finger with string within ten days. If disqualified, it will be sent to O.D.B.
For postage; when your ring comes in trust with portman $1.50. Order Today. The Beautiful Ring. G. H. BENTLEYSON BUCKEYE AND RABBIT'S FOOT mixed and
Happy After Years of Misery Hundreds of Women Grateful for Relief from Suffering
A Woman's Thankful Message
I write in praise of your treatment, for it has done
me good. I am so fortunate until I would rather have
me dead, and for some reason I am not mothered,
I could not walk, ride, or do any
mothered, but thanks to you I am relieved
of my troubles.
If I had heard of your treatment for 4 years ago
I would have happy all those years, which have
been miracle, and would otherwise to write me
I will gladly answer.
TRAPE MARK
Don't Worry and Suffer
You can't do better than seriously consider these letters, taken from hundreds which thankful women have written us. The relief from pain and anxiety should point the way to every woman who suffers with a condition of woman-kind.
Ten Days FREE Trial—Send No Money
Test Mrs. Summer's Openine Remedy for yourself, in your own home, without the knowledge or aid of anyone. If you are benefited as thousands have been, you can continue the treatments at about 11c per week or 8c when weed is finished, it will fulven in longer, most obstinate times. Used by old and young and does not interfere with daily work. We in confidence, as your letter is opened, read and enclosed by a woman. But don't delay happiest another day.
THE SUMMERS MEDICAL CO., Women's Dept., 301, South Bend, Ind.
(NR. Summer's Remedies Are Sold at Landing River Stores)
We Want 1,000 Agents
To Sell Hobbs' Famous
Hair Grower
Hobbs' Grower will grow hair in
one month
Send 50c
For Trial Box, and Be Convinced.
We All furnishers would so
The Hobbs Manufacturing Co.
224 West 141st Street
DEPT. 8,
NEW YORK CITY
PLEASE FOLLOW
WHEN BOUNDARY AND EMPLOYMENT IS REQUIRED
C. LEON ESTWICK & BRO.
UNDERFATHERS and EMBALMERS
TO WEST 141st STREET, NEW YORK CITY
Please Be Sure to All Parties of the World
To the Editor of the Negro World:
The Harlem Hebrew Day and Night
Nursery, 88 West 11th street, New
York City, has undertaken to build
a new shelter home of 81 and 89
West 118th street, which will shelter
about five hundred little unfortunate
fatherless and motherless children,
and we appeal to you and ask you—
Did it ever occur to you that there
are in our City of New York, thousands
of children who are not living,
just merely existing? Did you ever
ask yourself how a poor widow manages
to support her unfortunate children?
Truth is a high mountain, but man will ascend the heights. All that is of an opposite nature will be subdued by the love of truth. The world will be cleansed and renovated, and then our race will stand forth in the brightness and beauty of its nature.
Our institution shelters these distressed children, providing them with clothing, food and medicine, free of charge. Orphans, little ones who but a short time ago were so happy, tenderly watched over and protected by a loving father and mother; babes all alone and helpless, their dear parents have been taken from them—poor little waltles. What will become of them? They do not understand what has happened; they do not know their loss. They just raise their tiny little hands and call for daddy and mother. Good people will find them and bring them to our new, home. But the institution is powerless to help unless you do your share, and you will, your great heart will respond to the cries of these parentless babies.
One universal good, one constituting principle, one spring of thought and action, one grand and lofty aspiration, the love and quest of perfection; all will compose but one body therein, and the organs thereof will reciprocally assist and promote the good of each other. There will be no absorbents, no excreences, no superfluous or imperfect parts, as there will be no wretchedness, individual, or general, and no distress.
Then will the race be perfect even as its prototype the man "Adam," and the earth will be one garden, the true Eden of existence, with humanity as one nation standing erect therein free from spot or blemish. Then shall the great tree concealed so long from mental view, but the whereof is eternal, assume its true form and spread its branches over the nations of the world. All interest beneath it will be one interest, all morals the glory of light and righteousness. It is the true tree of knowledge and its fruits will be the beatitude of mankind.
We have given our pledge of faith to save the babies and build a new home for them. Give them as much as your means allow and help wipe away their tears and build for them a haven of comfort and happiness. We cannot give them back their mothers and fathers but we can and must give them a home. To this sacred task we are dedicated, and in the name of the dear little ones, give what you can, and the blessings of the poor orphans that we are serving so well will be your eternal reward.
That will be the true millennium, when the united voices of the world will unite in the grand chorus, "Peace on earth, good will to men." These prophetic thoughts are based upon the principles that, as truth is positive and eternal it must subdue error, which is only temporal and artificial, and as knowledge is truth in its realization it must overcome its opposite beings—ignorance, superstition, vice and misery. The one is the root of those laws which control the universe, while the others belong to crushed and perverted understanding. The hand of truth and wisdom is omipotent and must pre-Paralex Cabal Zone Panama.
In our thirteen years of existence we have sheltered thousands of unfortunate little boys and girls, who through no fault of their own were left fatherless and motherless, without appealing to any of our people for financial help.
All donations toward our building fund will be accepted with thanks.
We thank you in advance and assure you that the mutual feelings will from now on be stronger between both people than ever before.
THE HARLEM HEBREW DAY
AND NIGHT NURSERY
Duvetun and
Silk Braid Trimmed
SERGE COAT
$398
FREE
SILK BLOUSE
FREE
Send No Money
INTERNATIONAL MAIL BRANCH CO.
Dept. X 323 Chicago
There were dirt-eaters in the hills long ago; now they are in the car behind.
GRAY HAIR
Unnecessary — New Discovery
Bent on trial. Restores original color in few
grayes, now gray or streaked, but
wonderful. Looks like furniture.
Continues. If satisfied, nothing if
not. On hairy full treatment coat
at once. Economy. Laboratories. H-8.
Alameda, Calif.
Get Them While They Last
$1
A WEEK
NO
INTEREST
$69
RADIO
COMPARTMENT
FISHEW & WALDMAN
312 W. 145th St., cor. 8th Ave.
Phone Audubon 7229
PLAYER PIANOS, RADIOS,
New Victor Records Every Week
VICTROLAS, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
EXPERT REPAIRING & TUNING
THE BOOK THAT EVERYBODY IS READING
- Now Off the Press
ORDER NOW TO SECURE YOUR COPY
"PHILOSOPHY AND OPINIONS OF MARCUS GARVEY"
EDITED BY
AMY JACQUES-GARVEY
First Edition
Published by THE UNIVERSAL PUBLISHING HOUSE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
Diplomacy
CHAPTER II.
Propaganda
History
Fiction
Exposition
Interpretation
Prologue
CHAPTER III.
Present-day Orientation
Prime Government of Earth
Universal Union in 1922
World Displacement
Cases of War
World Government
The Post of Governments
CHAPTER IV.
The History of the Negro Trade
Republican and African Governments
The Development of the Negro State
White Man's Solution for the Negro Problem
White Man's Solution for the Negro Problem
White Man's Solution for the Negro Problem
CHAPTER V.
Recommendation Speech
Approval Speech
Priest Paper Cover, $1.25; Cloth Cover, $1.75; Postpaid Sand in Your Orders Now With Cash, Certified Check or Postal Money Order or Registered Currency to
BOOK DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSAL, NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
86 WEST 130th STREET
NEW YORK, U. S. A.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR MEMBERS OF UNIVERSA! NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION
1. Be a loyal member by sticking always to the principles of the Association and defending its rights against the enemies of freedom.
2. Pay your dues and annual assessment regularly, so that the Association can have ready capital to carry on its work.
3. Read and study from cover to cover your Constitution, so that no one can take advantage of you by infringing upon your constitutional rights.
4. See to it that your local Secretary makes a monthly report of all moneys received and disbursed, and let him read the copy of his report to the Parent Body and produce receipt of acknowledgment for remittances, so that you can be sure that your Division is financial.
5. See to it that no Officer or anyone starts anything by way of raising money or doing business or creates any financial obligation on the Division without the proper consent first of the Parent Body and members of the Division at a special general meeting duly and properly called.
6. Look out always for sharpers and self-seekers, who are always anxious to promote new schemes for their own purposes.
7. Put down at all times disloyalty to the Parent Body from Officers or members.
8. Pay no money without getting a receipt.
9. Don't loan your money to individuals.
10. Don't take anything for granted. You must be shown.
11. Don't go into anything you don't understand.
12. Don't pay your money to anyone except a duly elected or credited Officer of the Association.
13. Don't entertain anyone as a representative of the Parent Body except the person can show you credentials properly signed and up to date by President-General.
14. Don't allow anyone to come in your Division and disorganize you or interfere in your local affairs, except the person has authority and proper credentials from the Parent Body.
15. Don't buy any stock from anybody claiming to be identified with the Parent Body or any Local. We are not selling any stock.
16. Don't sell your property or anything you have without first seeing and knowing that you are going to profit by it. Look out and don't allow self-seeking Officers or members to sell the Organization's property to buy others; so that they can make a commission for themselves.
17. There is no individual or Division so strong as the Parent Body, so watch out for self-seekers who speak against the Parent Body so as to be able to put over their little local schemes to the detriment of the members.
17. See that every Negro signs the Petition to the President and Congress asking for a nation in Africa for the race.
20. Always respect authority and obey the law.
22. Vote as the Association will direct for the good of our cause and the nation.
23. Don't sell your vote.
24. Support the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company, our new shipping concern.
26. Don't go to Africa without first getting the advice of the Parent Body. Don't come to New York until advised.
27. Keep your present jobs and work hard and safe all you can.
27. Be polite to your employers and bear as much as you can for a better day.
FAR SURRY ZEON gee TS a ae a. oe ee ml Oe el O eee ree ee ee weg Co
a Bo} a og eae wf ye PN ? WEP on oo Te ee ge ee ai gg ee Tne ged 2D ae,
re Wy Cree and Wri: _ Te Edited by Mrs, Amy Jacques Gacve
en Cala OoreEED Te we Dees. | amg a EEN SOT wv Ta sence gen ipenieneren meses OSE ET Ta aa
Sees. CAE O0 DTS Wee wade | FRRIROE COR DRI rg |Aemmel Weeten’s Dinner : aaieapNna EMER aNTI wemenetntines pinirsio
pine: 2 ihedisoegrsnten ater lta agers mw ee V PARENTS | At Howerd Big Event ’ gy 4 5 ie a a3 h Pe’
er vere rs, Amy-Jocquag Garvey, who edits the | Charecter Building Cencntial’ ty Goly | WAsmiaTOR, D. Coors 0 | Bie. a: oe a: fg i “an Tee d
B faec a tock cunaeed vo Kar ees on. jose of 9 wor odes: |seeieyetye meee | IG Bem E 2 ath oe.
Bpation. We are sure that the renders have missed the brilliency| yx. wang City Stag, | University om Brides evening, Mevem-.| ° Ns ) a ak # i ha
: freatment of-cditocia! subjects ‘and her unuiguel judgment in|. yorners'cnen arp se much.concerned | SF 7. for the Third Angee! Women's oe ‘ ; " 3 ie 5 bs
a — .of special and contributed matter. -You'have to have a| abowt the physiesl haath of thaie| [mnpr Tno.cumems of Ravine tee Coe . " ; Langan
a such wot ‘ge: Mra, Garvey: s:capehle.of in the conduct | ‘bildres thar thay cverioek or siteht . Zire, 090 sinew, e to on) at ?
Miia Women's Page; that is, you wust be born with the genius | 3 %tee “Conte vesies, of ecersa, m0 | S2T™, Jia unis ban come, 0 bo the eS See angus amet Saget me ‘
Pe ie. And, however. we may think of it,.genius in, any depart- | cqesatial bet slong with body butieiag | mort ‘mpectast Wamas'e function an, Seassse HS, RL |S | ine Sook ane an nee a ontvas, |
pet of human endeavor is a very rare thing. Most of ys have to|| the child shouit be trained im chaphe- ee cdieia Gisela vs Mie Shee ee ee eee |
Bl: how.to do things by long antl tiresome Intor, and then we only |) PUMICE ica ge chew ate | the, marobal marches tie toe sine | | SOCIRTY PACE! BEAUTIFIER, ©5103 oto want tesame te nea (ash Oa Oop
Be whatwe have learned in a sort of mechanical. way. Mrs. Garvey’s| iaaividuality one of the Aret phrases Sek sete one cones and giving = "oan! A + J the posting a00 shtyetes. g
gdtecia! Work just seems to come natural'to her. of Bis training which bis pareate en- cheers oid Howard. AE 00 BAST WO ADUO, WOE WT EMUE COLD CEEAN. $word sossscsssessesecseersessssersnseveesocesnecnecenyenene
ge ANl the readers of the Woman's Page, we are sure, will hope thai] countered in. ofesience. tm hn early] 7Ton MOMZ a teeta" ai tageg | ff Socabe meget. Sp tr oe se ern ae. $ tttren,eeeyenerntnennnngritssenietie
p Bie. Garvey may sunt recover her health and Tare the editorial | M%e the child shoua ferme she meet the marching students to-the echo i et sd gees ; ry sapnnsgengeeeedeceennenngeeene AL ceseenecane
, work so well.—Editor of The Negro World. the, reasoning power to know what eee iisererdinaed Sas wren oo rt CEP rns free onte sort, Anetey end wane
€ 5 : . se 5 a coe hi cache & mest unique weries of stunts by the imi ‘
‘MURDER OF A GIRL AROUSES WRATH OF | sie tesre wore cs ise, | vartoge clase “ne prise stant was —
- NATIVE AFRICAN: * As the child begins to develop and pulled of by the sophomore orches-. * = er
‘ Ss eee ee eeaan ane ice ot var. tra, under the able direction of Ellen | HOW TO KEEP HOUSE. | CMT ES lMitudle Aged Husband
2 HE murder of a young African gir! whom he had abused
vi by a young Dutch: farmer, and letting him off with im-
2 prisonment for a few weeks at hard labor, has aroused the
matives of South Africa as nothing else of late has ‘done. And, why,
“‘not?, Ifa man or a race of men cannet-be aroused to indignation,
‘wrath, and the fighting point by abuse. of their women, how are they
te'be wroused? The whites of South Africa insist, as those of our
Sewthern States do,-that we must respect their women while they
ate left free to abuse ours. It is a high-handed rule, and any lot of
‘wan who will stand for it deserve to be kicked and cuffed and
Jeered and scoffed. It is a mighty Jhealthy sign that the ‘natives of
South Africa are resenting abuse of their women by white men.
Negro men everywhere must become more alive and sensitive to
the importance of protecting their women aud girls from abuse.
They must'start with themselves. If they do not set the example
@f doing so how can they expect others to do it? They simply do
not. As a matter of fact, Negro men have lield their women and
girls too cheaply. Are they doing so now? It isto ask. ~~
. 7. H
: 4 PROVEN WAY. - |
TO STOP FALLING
HAIR and DANDRUFF |
fy, By Dandruff, falling hair,itching spalp |
ff Hay Wand baldness are enemies to scalp |
A B health and the growth of long, |f
H H lustrous hair. Scientists admit |
A f they are ‘igerm" diseases and to
B st Meure them the gérm must syrcly ff
<<
Qari . H
There's no longer ‘reason germ life, that they atteck i
for having poor, unhealthy only diseased tissues, tend
, ecalpe and dull Lifeless - to keep the ecelp free from
hair. It hee been proven dendrull end iteh, elley
that MADAN C. J. WALK- | falling heir, enrich the
ER'S WONDERFUL HAIR ecalp, stimulate growth
PREPARATIONS are di- and make for long lustrous
‘gectly opposed to harmful . hair.
K ~ ees
USE MADAM C.J, WALKERS .
y cyte.
- oe = (ane,
‘Thepe ami Bins, Co * Eee
he | sae fog ys
deme, Brag Copns ens ty mal. ER me \ A
» he Maihemn shes a cag 5
he Minding Co Mla Nip Co. Ny
HALF MILLION DOLLAR :
~ CHURCHES AND NO JOBS
‘Ze the EBttor of the Women's Page:
3 wish io draw your attention to. a
resent’ happening. A friend of mine
‘Whe was an operator at a downtown
featory, where white and colored help
‘Were employed. was informed oné
@fiernoon that all help would have to
We laid off for'a couple. of days, a8
‘Wasiness wan dull and that she would
We notified’ when there win work.
‘After’ walling for about two weekn
aad not fecelving any cull, she went
‘aan to seo thé employer. who In a
Sew. At the same time rhe nojiced
Gapt the white help were working and
Gh colored. he then inquired of hire
‘time should she return te
jeold her that he had aif the
help te needed at prenchit.: She there-
with upbraided him for deceiving her.
Whercupon he relted: =
“Don't come here to make sin argu-
ment with me. Why don't you go to
Heriem und advise your colored men
that instead of butlding Init x miltion.
dollar churches to bulld fucturies and
employ you colored women?”
Bhe felt the truthfuluess of bie
atgtement, but replied, “tet ix mat
the polit. You emptaged me before
and I Rive sou good service.” |
Bot he intercupted by asin. “hayes
Fet to employ my OWN people whe are |
ut of Werk iy thin dull xeaxons
1 pring thix to the attention of the
readers of tis vituatle yupwer, bee |
enure we Negro wanien Inve a vers
hard time getting: Werk. and wre com:
Btantly toll by our White emplosers
that all we @o with the money we
‘earn ia to support preachers who build
big churches where we go to once
week and from Monday to Saturday
‘wo go worrying white folkx for work.
‘We Negro women are tired of thf
kind of a thing and feel that our men
are exposing us to abuse and fIl-treat-
ment. We are compelled to work, for
our men can't, support’ us and our
children. Our ‘only hope t= in the
teaching of the U. N. f. A. that fe
nhaping an industrial .and economic
program. AMELIA SAYERS.
New York,
Mrs. Walker Gets Divorce
la Los Angeles Court
wee Angeles, Callf., Nov. 23.—Helore
Dept. No. 3 of the Superior Court, the
Ign, J. W. Summergetd presiding.
A'Lella Walker, whore maried name
In Wilnon, waa granted «divorce trom
her hustund, De. Wiles Wilron, aK
44, 4 physteien of 200 W, 136th atceet,
New York Chys on Nov. 7.
Mrs. Wilwon was represented by At
tonnes Willis ©. ‘Tyler and the com-
Blaine alleged the technteal gramud of
esertion. Ho Man dincloned Wy the tes:
Hime additced at tthe hearing that
ihe separation tk place during the
vene 1921 and tint the underly tnx
nuts of the separation was a serien
of fitatins WH, certant women
friends at the portihs whieh were care
rted on hy the defendant, Dr. WUson,
The doctnr wan not represented tn tha
ian
Charest Buiding essa ‘ely
‘Methers.ehep rd S9 uch, concernes
about the physteal haath of thels
children thar. thay overtook or slight
8 phase of child life fully as tmpsetant.
Wulléing ,atréag. bodies, of course. te
cqecntial het along with body baflding
the child shoul! be trained in chaghe-
ter building. } ‘ “
_After the child begins te show his
individuality one of the first phreses
of Bis training which bis parente on-
‘countered is obedience. Im his early
Ufe the child should form the habit of
obedience. He hasn't the wisdom er
the Feavoning power to know what le
dest for his health or hia enfety. It
fe necessary then that he recognize
his elders’. word as law.
As the child begins to develop and
show tratts of character, desire of par-
ents for obedience {a too frequently «
matter of vanity rather than a [ook
into the real Benefit of the child. A
foar that neighbors or relatives will
ghink ‘due reapect Is, not being gives,
them overshadows the, quention “of
why obedience should be demanded in
any particular instance. Jobnnie starts
down the front stena with his kiddie
car. He handles tt clumsily,, slowly
places it on one step, then steps
around to the next, takes it up again.
and. continues in, thin method, whieh
seems painfully’ awkward. to te
mother, wii Ie watching him from the
porch. “Let mother help you.” she
suggestn, takink the car away from
hia. Johwnye replied SIH Werekma~or
“Ne, po, I wantTo. dott mynelf.”' fol-,
lowed by kicking and more ncreaming |
and wrathful words: Of course, her
commands that he quiet down are un-
heeded. ‘The boy ataya-n the house
the rest of the morning as © punish-
ment an@ the day for him ts: utterly
ruined. f
It the mother had jovked at. the
matter thoughtfully he would have
seen that It really wan wiser to let
her non carry the kiddie car down. the
ateps by himself than: for her to do
{t for. him, Awkward though hin
movements were. he was beinging his.
Mite uxed muscles Into play and be
was gaining in motor control. Learn-
ing to do things early for oneself
means aurer muscuinr contro! in later
life. Johnnfe, of course, mhould have
been corrected for hin violent screas-
ing. ut quiet reaxoning from bls
mother would have brought better re-
sulte than her display of temper.
Four-year-old. in arriving at the age
when he dees a.dittle reasoning for
himself: :
The very: worst ‘means of bringing
About obedience tm by severe punish-
ment. Some parentn offer bribes,
Thin, too, in, x queationnble method.
tor before long the child demands
Lwibes for ‘everything he does. To
threaten Ig}eaually bad. ‘Threats that
are not fulfilled noon lose their effect.
Often when a parent corrects x child
for nome annoyiiz act he fatln to offer
him any other activity to use up his
surplun energy. Throwing a ball in the
ronin when thera Is-company dixplays,
fwd mangers, but the child Ix merely
houghtless, Tt his trainins line heen
ood ® wUbatitUtion of more quict
inugement In all that is necessary. ©
When the child first begins to reas
on the parent’ should xcize the op-
rortuntty to,appeal ta his better jude
vent, When he asks why ha rbould
o a certain thing one often hears the |
eply, “Because 1 aay no.” If thie roa. |,
on. la ood and af all comprehensible |
> thechild, this should he a time to
ive him an understanding of the]
Rhtness of things. Chitdren who are} y
UEhE principles noon learn to act] t
Iuely for, themselves. Instead of be-|
1 mera ‘machines, they are human|
sings. alive with thought and dovel- | 4
nz Sudament. They are tecinntas | 9
J lenrn to manage their ovtn lives.
That Apple a Day
oe SRAL MARTY SN Sumner Trae
re‘ gone, we moist resort to the eld
atandby, the apple.
Chiemicalts, the apple ts compuied of
vegetabln fier. albumen, aust, KUM,
mille acl4, Ime, chlorophyt nad gelltc
acid, also much “water, Furthermore:
the German analysts say ‘that the apple
containa a larger per rent of phoayhor-
ous than any other (rult or vexetable.
‘The phosphorous fe admirably adapted
for renawing the crsentia! nervous mat-
ter—lecithin—of tha brain and spinel
cord.
Tt ta, perhapa, for the raine reason.
rudely understood. that old Scandina-
vian tradition represents the apple es
the food. of the Rods, who, when they
felt’ thempelven to he growing feeble
and Infirm, retorted: to this fruit for
renewing their ‘powers of body and
ming.
Rio. the acide of thh apple are of
‘signal use for men e¢ ecdentary habits,
whoed lives are sluggish in action, thepe
acids serving to eliminate from the
bedy moxious matters which: if re-
tained. would make the brain heavy and
Aol or bring about many diseases.
Beome such an expertence must have.
Jed te eur eustom of taking appis.eawce
‘With roast pork, rich goose and the
‘(The malié acid of ripe!apples, etther’
raw or cpoked, will seutralize any ¢5-
ooes of ghalky matter engendered =
eatihg too much meat. It is also e fact
thet sueh frets as the apple, the pear
and the plom, when taken ripe and
without super, diminish acidity tn tbe
stomach rether than provoke it. Their
wapetable entbes sad, Juicys are gen-
verted inte alkalthe carbonates, whjeh
tends to counterset actaity.
ee ae!
Seon age eeagieeey pace aaa
ow °° |. .¢ .
Almost every young couple has bee:
told that the firet year is the hardest—
that ite the Gificult time of agjyst-.
ing and adapting yourselves to each
other's mays.
And so tt Is. - But much of ti
rouble coyld be avolded If the brid:
knew a Ilitle more about making U1
4 household budget or sewing of but-
tone,
The girl who knows how to run he
hhoune right from the atart hss twice
| tne chance of having « happy one than
the girl wha te Just legrning. :
“For example. there's the problem of
entertaining. It doesn’t cost much to
make a bow! of saled, some rolls and
coffer and have a few ‘flends In for
Sunday night supper." And « dozen of
auch evenings will ad@ more color and
fun to life. =
For @ group of friends in common
li one of the atrongest ties married
veople have. No matter how much in
love with each other & man and hin
wife are, (here's something lacking in
their lve If they don't_know other
couples to visit oceasionaily.
For all of ua are grown-up children.
more or lear, and the moat serious
minded man In the world needs to re-.
ux ‘and forget lls cares in an eve-
ving of one-atepping or mali-Jongging
now and then.
Home-muking in ite best sense fan't
drudgery. but art. It takes the eye
of an artist to kuow that nn, oranges
olored cushion and « bowl of yellow.
naaturtiums would brighten up the
Igomieat corner of the howme. And
hen if you can ko ahead and make
he cushion and grow the hasturtiume
n @ window-box you're not only an,
rtlat Dut an economist benides.
There'a: undoubtedty: & fot for a girl
o learn if she ts going to kérp her
1ome the place of comfort and charm
het tt can be. .
And it's Aver-s0 much better it, she)
tarts out knowing even half as much’
Pout-the-work heed of her te muse |
end knows #hoyt his job of provide |,
ng the money: to keep the house going.
We wouldn't think of letting our |
aughters marry: men who didn't have
Job or weren't able to” sunport-«
ome of some sort, would we?
‘Then why in the world don't we
hink mere seriously 6f getting. our
aughters ready for the Real Aéven-
ure, 80 well?
How to Make Others -
Love You
wit re fae ttre tie Sat oS3" Real SS
Saree
WeleSatela
a sc
tt Rowers Sg Seem
WAEINGTOR, D. C—Ore 300
‘uibores = tbe Sontag hall of Hower
Uatversity on Pridty evening, Mevem-
‘Bar1, for the ‘Third Anaeel Women's
Dinper. The custom. of having the an-
weal women's disney was ineugurated
years age. by Den Locy D.
| Rows, and this, bas come. to be the
mest impectast tames's function an.
the campos. 1
“Wemen students, 30@ strong, led by
the marehel marched tate the dining
ball singing college songs and giving
testy cheers for gued olf Howard. The
wemen faculty and atumase at places
(of homer in the dining hall applauded
the marching students to-the echo as
they: entered. . f
| ‘The Program Committes arranged
& mest unique weries of stunts by the
vartous clasecs. The prize stust was
pulled off by the sophamore orches-.
‘tre, under the able direction of Ellen
Fill, Miss Hill's betes, a brand new
‘preem with a big red bow, waved
gracefully over her players, whose in-
struments of combs tin pans ak@r
excl pumpe made music, “loud and
“efear.”
Baltimore, Washington and Piain-
field, N. J., were represented In the Hist
of graduates. Everybody voted thie
dinner the best of all.
Long Legs, Big Brains,
Seems.to Be the Rule
An American = peychelogist. . Dr.
Henry E. Garrett, axserts that the beat
brain worker In the man with long
‘arms and iége and @ Small’ body. Men
with short’ arms and -lege and bs
dodles, he declares, are more nulted for
tome manual trade, or at least a line
‘of work requiring steadiness and ac-
curacy rather than quickness of
mina. .
‘This theory was recently tested” by
Dr. Garrett.and Dr. Sante Naccaratl.
a New York snpeciulint In nervous and
mental dineaxen, on 300 students at
Columbia, untvérnity. The results tend-
ed to show that there fa a-very deft-
nit’ relationship * between bodily
structure and Intelligence.
«Dt. Garrett states that of the men
examined, 76 per cent. of the small-
bodied, long-legged men, 40 per cent.
of the normal men, and 15 per cent.
of the large-bodied, short-legced men
showed high intelligence,
Henrs Ford. John, D. Rockefeller,
General Pershing, Booth Tarkington
ané David Wark Grimth, all, outstand-
ing for their brains in thele particular
fleldn, are long-legged men with short
dodies, George Washington, Abraham
Lincoln and President Wilson were of
the same type.
U. S. Women’s Victory
Spurs German Fraus
| en iN.—Heartened by the victo-
lea of "Ma" Fergunon, recently elected
| Governor of Texag, aid Mes. Nellie C.
|| Ross, Govérnor-etect of Wyoming. the
| German Federation of Women's huts
| tas addresned & communteation 10 the
| meidquarters ofS all pailtieat parties
polnting out the growing tengency to
ignore women in notinating candidates
for the Reichstag. ‘Thafederetion con.
tends, de¥pite the equality of the sexes
In political matters, erery Relchstew
election since the revolution has shown
fewer women nominees than the pree
vious one.
“Women, have the indomitable will
to tui their mission. ax citizenn by
active particination in politics.” avers
the federation’s decigration
Tt te understood ‘Foreign Minister
Stresemann. chief of the People's Party,
Fecently retuned to give perminston foe
‘tie naming of Erau von Oheimb, who
in known as Germany's Lady Astor, to
head the Magdeburg District candi.
@aten. though she was one af the most
Populir.Agures In the 1929 Reichstag,
Says the Venus de Milo
Never Had Any Arms
eis dna ee Cana
tion to-art lovers throusheut the wort
who have wondered In what poviies
ere the missing arme of the famous
Venus de Mito simtue tn the Lomvre to
Tearn that even the ancients themselves
‘were perplexed on thie point.
Dr. ‘ade, French. paysiclon, has
Jurt'mage kndwn that €uring «recent
vist: to Egypt be came ‘into possession
of a amisil bronze statuette of the
game period ex the Venus de Milo. This
ttatuotto in an atact copy of thertes
moun “Venus, and, ike the original, tt
has no arms. . Dr. B4de, therefore, con-
oluden that the Venue’ de Mlle neve:
St any time hid arme, amd he beleves
that the sculptor, when he had carved
out of the alone much e divine form,
fave up ail iden of adding arma:
‘When the Venus de Milo was dlacov.
@red on the island of Mile a large re-
ward «ab offered to any one whe could
find the arme, bet in spite of extensive
earch nothing was discorered.
Seggestion te Housewives
If soup has been edi so maby ote
& few. slices of raw potate sng’ cook
five minutes longer. ‘The potert wil
edeord'the malt. 7 Sap,
‘The, bureau drawer may.de made to
open ‘noleclessly: and easily by rub-
Ding It with common soap.
Testead of ayrep 00 the waitlea, (17
honey: Tt te deticlone, 2
‘When baking bet: Ofeewtt for treat.
fast cook extra ones, 02 thege
= neweet fer Gepeert and
‘$0m cummed trem ouch oo
peach. aprivet, cherries et panes.
4 Ce a. te i ooh te aloe sia baat ins:
By F B F
oor eel Pai
7 ree te nen w ome. wt we 0 ht * - 2 .
unten "rpun even gta prponagrasceng sears a .
ra fe St gs eee , Sects em sew s0en ere, j
ee en ER ee
(| © socury race seaunvun a} SOE Pears oss |
Sevan oneg-seraang._ b9 Seo sate mepime so Srignice <P. f AAéren, seseqpesteceseatensenessssessgioescscoonsesonsesoas:
gee eee be NOege conse ser Sera yg ear CH ss preenneereesees Mh eeeeeeeereneeeres GEMS sreenceene,
SEUEEE tr 0 brighter con. Bow look olf, withered, resangeens . 0
SES eet mee ee ret ow cores one fF | soso, crteinn tram Cube er Sevid, Amerie cand waney
AoW To KEEP HOUSE. _. SMILES Middle Aged Husband
. AND A HAPPY. WIFE . ea : | Unsafe in Choir
By CYNTHIA GREY, Procerty ‘Facket.—The sighti en-| cincAco, Xov, 7/—"A church Guk
in the New York “Evening Sulletin™
"When a man’ asks a woman to
marry jhim, this da whatyhe's really
saying fo. her: ¢
““WiIll you love me always, and
mend my clothes, and have . my
meals on time, ‘and bring up my
children, afd live within my income,
and be cheerful through it all?"
“and the woman, who’ ie usually
young and heedless and terribly in
love, answers “Yea” as a matter of
course. Kor she's obeying a! law of
natuse when she marries.
Ok Mother -Neture, who ia ann:
corrigible match-maker, doesn’t. care
a fig whether a girl Is prepered to be
& good home-muker or not. Her. job
la finished when the minister finishes
bis—et the alter. v
Of the thoussiids of autumn Drides
thie year, not many are trained for
treir job. The bride who can beat
up.a painful of fufty biscults and brolt
an Inch-thick steak fe an rure as a
white peacock . . . and worth her
woight in platinum as well.
‘Aa a matter of fact, mothers don't
train their daughters for the work
ahead of them as wives: Girls are
tiught te dunce and play the plano, to
typowrite and teach schoo! “and &
hundred other very fine and Useful
things, tos
But mot one in fifty ever goes Into
the kitchen and the eewing room with
her.mether té leara the all-ieaportant
profeasion of housekeeping.
A girl gets: much advice about be-
tng sweet and “bagging” her man, but
not much sbout, caring for him atter-
eer :
WeTeSeSela
3een Bsn. cnegen
Sess
=.
".. -$§4 Offfer fer $1.” Doa’t Wait, Rush!
e MADAME RHODA, 130 W. 120th t., Now Yook
@ se um pean
Properly “Packed.—The sight; un-
usual nowadays. of straw laid fn a
roadway oF a_ Kensington sjrett for
the comfort O02 sick person, reminded
Jme of the ttle girl who arked her
mother, “What's all tHe straw doing
fn our ntreet?” “My dear." was the
reply, “a Hitle baby has Just come
to Mrs.“Brown’s.” "They. must hare
packed It up well,”- commented the
child,
ae 2
Fourteen Candy Factories
Feed Filipino Tooth.
Feem the Philissine Mewes” .
O “Phere are fourteen candy” Taclorien
tm the Clty of Manila. the ownership
xnd'mansgement.of which ere claeal-
Neg by nationality as follows: Fili-
pine, 4; Japanese, 3: “Chinese, 3:
American, 2; English 3; Span{sh, 1.
Besides these, there are ahout a thou-
sund Dekerles, confectioneries | and
caramsl factories. Popular muteriele
for candy making are coconuts, pill
nuts, exsoy nuts and peanuts.
' Society people make an much fuss
getting married ax theatrical people do
im getting divorced. ;
A foo! law te one that cramps your
style when It's your right to howl.
$9: CATALOG FREE. REAL BARGAINE—
Ree cee Penns, meah vege founteis
Tener aliversate? embry, eebsren ashe
Eoseicee org taied Sata cttngSSe testing
Shasta ‘eihey"soecaition "Send tue" cants
Sais fee'bestage
STANDARD PRODUCTS ‘CO.
488 Lemex Avenue, New York
$800 in 3 Hours After
Putting om Good Luck Ring
Marylinne Weber, fameus star, seys,
“1 made $888 in three hours after | put
én Chinese Goed Luck Ring.” Others
oe a oe
brings auc:
caves hope
Seed luck in
Pve This
amazing Chit
neve Good
Uuck Ring ie
made In’ g¢
sliver. finiah
hae. the, myst
Chinese G
Letters. | Any
wighes one
rings may se
brings eue-
cose," hepei-
neseand
Seed tuck'in
ive thie
amazing Chis
neve Good
Tuck Ring ie
made Inv genuine Ss
Sliver, fish and
hae ths, mydterieus
Chinese, Good Luck
Cetters. "Anyone weno
wilshee” one vel" theas
imps may send neper ff
Serle for’ -finger “sree.
State i fer man or women and the
Eines eed Luck’ nine wil be. pont
by return mally. You as not need’ to
sendvany, money, but whan it ‘arciyte
eects peste tae Th
axRfieto"roRrina: COMPANY
of Sete Reasavelt Mead, Chienger lly
have limited number. ef theet rings
Dare a ate write them tegoy
s - SE ORT AM
Pant
Wool
SERGE 5
29
ae
Ey
So
& a é
— fi re
Sree nee
care °
Peceea ers
ee Ee
nee =
é ice we. A teow
F ya 2 oak
om
‘Sys. ek Glee. on f, ane
Middle Aged Husband
Unsafe in Choir
CHICAGO, Nov. 7—"A church chotr
is the mont dangerous place in’ the
work’ for a susceptible middle-aged
busband.”
‘This was (he warning which Mre. F.
Barnhardt spoke atter twenty-eight
years of married ‘lf when she ap-
peared inthe Domestic Relations Court
te ask that her husband support her.
“We were happy until my husband
began singing: ina ‘Lake Forrest
cliuech. Hp fell in love with one ot
the singers and then brought a divorce
action against. me which wan turned
down, He says T have Rrown too old
faghioned for him.” °
It fe not, good te accept the person
of the wirked, to qvertirow the
Fghteous in Sudgment.—Prov- 48th
‘Chap., Sth Verse: : :
SE
‘The best that we can do for one
another Je to exchange oir thoughts
freely. ee ee
An engagement ring te a glil's dea
of a band of hope.
LEARN: MUSIC
New Piano and Vocal Studio
Spcete) Attention to Beatanere aed Children.
fiwna wane vou Fray
scat EVERIO
RROF. 0. M. SKINNER
B00 West 1424 Street, New York City
STRANGE- POWER!
Fi
wt
Pe
Cnbappy. undecided, in evet, worried. not
roll?” Business, domestic, eel love eftirs
rong? Write tres, trashiy and’ eoatuen
Mtally-request information and advice per
Caining thie“ beleved women's work and
tmetnede. Kav can win. De tt now. aadeens
GRACE GRAY DE LONG
Miami, Florida
HOR-TON-A_ FOR RESULTS
98 YER YAROUS BoR-Te0.A PReeUCTS
ve) Agate |
.matR mane |
on ae |
sun. Preae
eel ed La a eaeis: ne.
cceeasalaogonsineengientaser es
———
FITS tra
é +, TRIAL
Hf 799 bevy Bollever, Mita, ck nto
eee Ears
prea Bae eats
weet, OH Se Pe tye ats MA Bea ge ts areca oS
ot : Ma cy ee * A ct en
Re ee Oe oe TS ee OES Sete te eS +
J Aen —s ay fe
SE aS Se oe?
- ona Res
ema o musIC: ‘S0P , a ]
ag paper yy) + a
Ansestating ta wow aggeaiiag wo tht
aiemabors of tho ergumiuatten and mee:
Dbtce of tips ries every eters be os Rhee
best to maze the somvention ef 1824
the greatest of all ver world consiaves
‘This year the orgaaiiation ts to été
owes at fis convention alt those vita!
ptoblems that effect the rice and is
lag Géwn 0 solid base for the isdag-
titel elevation and development ‘of our
topla, This year’s convention will be
far OBtnd. tn importance of all the
ether weetings and will call fir a
great Goal of expesditure ca the, part
of the pareat body of the Univereal
Nepet haprovemest Association, hence
this appeal je mace te cach and every
gee te contribute to eur general and
convention fund. Lei every Neare
sive freely as much af be ean afford
toward tale fue so as to asetet the
Asséclation to carry out ite work. AU
members ebould collect and: send tn
to the fund Address all your dota-
tions to the Secretary General of the
Universal Necro tmprovemeat assecta-
tion. 66 West 1381 Street. New York,
U, & A All donations are ackeew!-
Werte weekty.
Brought forward ..............69,003.03
Margaret. Biggs. Bocas “dei
5. Dinimiit, iene, Boone “asi f
Tesicctcmecte, i6
SUAS Saltb, lana, Bocas ae
Wiillam ‘ikapwite, iens, Bocaa
Thomas Billa, Kiesa, Bocas dei :
Joneeh Ezcitsion, Biena, Bocas
Sto ee: (198
cS ithumnrin tae det rors Tee
Fine Stnicoim, Bocan dl
Rian Silitony Bowa-det Toro” ge
Rnirew Ashley. Wovax dal Tore se
Felix Taylor, Bocas gel Toro, “36
Gharien Samuel Bocan del
Inapector Puiice, Sibvubi, Bocas
ag tere etc, (8
Te Granam,” Elena, ibe “ei
THO | ae
John “Gilicapie. “isa, “Bocas
el Tere esecreceenestess 108
Philip, MeNeit) Pare 4 Bocas
NGG TOO cetecnsetsreseeeses 138
Fomer Davie wince Tm
BS Nicnoian 22a
E, Mowren, Guanianatne, Cue ne
Mra P. Monros Guamaname,
Caeice teen: | te
ACSympathiaer, Guantanamo
Gabe ccicceeriss | 200
Hancock,” Guwntaiamo. Cuba. 38
Dolores "Brows, Guantanamo,
Gthe ccc: |S
Ruth Dosmain,“Gusivtaname,
ii ewe eerie ecm
yire M,Aliéyme, Pauaina S21 238,
Mivesincerreatne cl
SOE pee Paname se
-A Baby In Your Home
As) my
D ee
PI,
(a oes
Ce eee
ts are i] te
Ds es ees
Pee te
Roe corse
Ree Sa
See
* SEND NO MONEY
Gifts That Last
SSE GEES ccc
oneness
Re ee
“Panama...
Rises. Pinas 1
Peeems Ls
i
lama sescnees
a Wm cesccssees
Jouisthan A. “Barker, Panama. 1
De Graves, Panama ’........:5 18
a donna Pahama 000002002 ae
Leonard Kiog, Panama sc... 8
W. H. Goal. Patama ....... 38
SY: Amante, Foname seeeeeee, s
Griggth, Panama .....---.-
Siepued Marries, Panama sc. 3b
Sime Ring. Pataca 22”. Bs
Fiorence Walton, Panama... | 3
‘Agatha Murray, Central Maca-
alverthe ere, Central Macs:
RUA. Gordon, \Ceniral ‘iMiaca-
NEG cecscaetaccssccenecse, oD
James Wyte, Central “Maca-
TEGO rerencereesecwearsaces 40
Armond’ Ricketts, Contra Ma-
Kmatvel Wilson, Genirei sa>
Albert Camipbeli, Genital Ma>
Carend oreseesscsccseccsess 250
Mabie BNrhie, Central inca:
(HNO ccenscsereresesicccce:: | aw
RM. Carnesjsier, Central
Macureno wevtececceccreees 5 SO
Hubert’ Henimings, Central ~ ,
Macarenoveterceccegeeeee 50
Matina Rule, Central siwca-
Tene. csscatsacessccsaiasean! > BO
Mesekiah “Anthony, Central
Macarene veeceeececeeeee OO
Jamen Watkin. Ceniral Saca>
J.'H. Crawford, Piaceian F.C.
AL BtRON wc eeeeeeces: 1,00
Reging Lareas. Piscetax F.C.
RBM ee ceeneeecseeee, 200
Gonzalo Figueros. Piscetas F.
CA. wUMUION eeeeeeeeee ee 208
99,08073
Howard Sends Out Fine
Group of Pharmacists
‘WABHINGTOX, D. C.—The quality
of work’ being dome in the College 0!
Pharmacy of Howard University
evidenced from the announcement F¢-
cently made by Dr. Edward A. Balloch,
Gean of the School of Medicine, of the
succens which thembera of the clans of
1924 have had in passing examinations
of the various State boards. -
‘A report from the Howard Untveraity
School of “Medicine shows that the
membera of the class of 1924 who have
euccesafully quilified to practice thele
profession are an follows: In Weat
Virginia—Robert Early Black, Greg-
ory Alexander Galvin, George Wash-
ington Robinson and Henry William
Vantiok, Me. Galvin made = genera
average of 92 per cent. In the Dis-
trict of Columbia-William Cullen Da-
vid and Wayman Mart Johnson. 11
Maryinnd—Charles W. Barnum and
Hiram H, Gtbba. In, Minsuuri—Maceo
birch, :
The following recelved certificates 3
qualified: aawiatante from the Louiniana
Board of Pharmacy: Coral Cinciatr
Christy. Leonard G. ferael and Joseph
John Deiole. of the. clans of 1925,
‘The College of Pharmacy of the
Howard Univernity School of Medicine
la thus maintaining the high atendard
eet by the other departmente of tne
University. «
Mappiness may resemble elther a
maountaln or a molehill. It depends on
the distance you are from it.
SLENDERIZE
Your Figure
ENSEMBLE ay":
COSTUME 45 7 32
SERGE. gh }.5+
‘3° ie
ee . ;
ge eae
Re =
Soe stead
ER
es
eee ex
Ree
Eten The ae Ta Wore
BOMBAY, Indie, oe. ob—lin, th
we wine goede weeey
‘Meat of thi Gangadnar Tilak,‘ wns. was
the fier te give’ medera: India _ bed
first lessen im. the dectrine of séit:
macrifice and euffering a8 the impers.
tive priee of freedom. Boga in a pe.
tied when Indien natiosaliom Woe stl
th Me nascent condition, Bal. Gangsd
har Tak had to face a. véey aiMeul
situation. Armchair politics was. the
ther Of, the Say in these far-off days
and the"tate of India hung in the bal-
ance of bureaticratze favor. ‘
History of Indian Nationallem wal
Otill im the making, and the emergence
of. Tilak into the political arena who
tf he had. chosen, might have become
& succétatul lawyer, gave a new orten-
tation te Indian affairs and staggered
the aelf-compiacent British bureauc-
racy, Te had béen the vogue among
the Bureaucrats, to descant on’ the ‘al-
teula@tic mission Of the British people
of ¢ivilising the Oriental, and ain ear-
Mer generation of Indians had quietly
accepted the bureaucrat at his own
valuation. °
Tilak, who was Inspired by & higher
Impules “than currying favors at the
hands of-an allen’ bureaucracy; i# Im-
morialized in the henits of hie loving
Qn grateful countrymen, as the pi-
oneer, who changed entirely jhe’ cur-
rete of Indian politics and ive hie
countrymen @ new outlook. It was
Tilak whe firat unfelded to hia coun:
trymen the idea that Nome -Rule wae
the Dirthright ef every Indian. muen
an 40a wae fore:gn to an eatiter gen-
eration of ndian politicians: who were
content.to accept the attainment of:a
subordinate position in the:Indian af-
fclal Risfarchy as the aunetamnnl
pti of thelr political and a0-
cltl existence and thede were not,
unnaturally, @hocked at what to
them neemed revolutionary: Idear, nro-
pounded by Tilak. There was ferce
opposition to Tilak and his doctrinas.
‘The bureaucracy loat no opportunity
in attempting .to allence Tilak, and
tried to use the “moderate” elements
to divert the popular min@ from
Tilak’s patriotic texchings. Tilak wan
mercilessly pernecuted, but hie spirit
ald not quail before ‘suffering. Every
fresh atrack Of the bureaucracy only
hélped to enhance the lustre of Tilsk,
and he emerged from successive acts
of pernecution the purer and the
nobler.
‘Tho landmarks In Tilak's lite are
alto the Iandmarkn of hin country. Hin
firat great atép associated “him fn a
plonéer movement whorn object wan
10 educate the people for a new Tift,
‘Aaulting In the fouiding of the Fer-
guason College at Poon, hin birch
place, and in the initiation of the
Kesar! newspaper, which haw increan-
ngly figured am the charncteriatic ex-
yression of | Maharanhtra—a ‘term
hich connoten all that territory
hich’ once comprised he Maratha
Empire founded by Shivasl
Tilak alno founded ihe Shivast cele-
ration a& un emblem and preparation
ft indiana for political freedom. The
Slebeation, which at firat excited the
Jorce Jealousy of the alten Dureauce
acy, and was the fruitful source of
litical prosecutions: for sedition, has
naintained its importance in the In-
fan pational calendar and continues
© be celebrated with great eclat to
pia day. -
Not leas striking was the Insugura:
jon of the Ganapat! fengval, which
alla at the Deginning of the eixth
\onth’ of the “Hindu calendar, In 40-
ag thene Tilak was actuated by the
10a of reawakening not only the no-
SPECIAL OFFER
ETHIOPIA z CO.
wits sexp rou que winw-onans
$8.50
iohnn waaiaret civ eninies oa pile
arbre ete ted cam, inten tate i
Ob ait athe Uitte skins price and ee
SiSr gies s aera te
featta 10, 190 Ser neise A iote Sor rte
Sugar Coated Cod -
:
Liver Oil Tablets.
For Thin Kids
the horrible tasting Cod Liver
Give the thin, puny, unde-
@hildret MeCoy'a doa Liver O11
if you want to give them a
| “asd put pours of stod,
om their bones. -
a) about, thets ast se
49 af Vearmmnetets, ‘for they. are
it demand, because they are not
bat show results'in « few
x “are not expensive citner—@0
sebttts 69 cents, and chiMtren take
ke, candy.
¢ skinny woman gained 9 pounds
‘Mader tebey’s, ene oripinnt ond
rma
40 Ged Liver CH oeripiemt oer
| A Colored Child Should Have a
i Colored Doll
Beoause of our firm conviction that the colored child siould have @
colored, instead of a white, doll, the ART NOVELTY, CO. is offering for
tale at the lowest possible price these beautiful colored dolle
illustrated below 2
18 YOU CHILD TO MAVE A COLORED DOLL OR I$ IT TO HAVE
A WHITE DOLL? There ln-a world of diference between them one teaches
Race Pride, Race Love, respect for one’s self and fer one's own kind. The
other teaches your child that it is-inferier and aubservient. These delle
have @ beautiful brown complexion, some walk and talk and ery; ome as
near te being unbreakable! eile possible. for’ 6 dail te ber Goantitully
dressed, life-like face, reat hair, shoes and stockings, movable hande and feet.
s e *
apenas Ox loa 6 hoes
Lemmon oe te a rae
gerald bind to-cdpnes amd ahekd way
as oka
8, the Riekette Boat. :
5 aide eveetsdied tm ooiee me
arene et tae, phadah, Me
te memnaas of
cab ensty. Congress east. jesasths. it
eduntry on the reve! reas’ ot oulléring
fea eee eee, ee sis
pis senda fey it «ts Merle!
dale; bet this pérled of ccmpuleors
Phot Wee & disssing Im dlagiilde. It rs:
‘vealed the great Grientaliet ta Tilek,
i pochage but tor thie feet in BU
reatioge Gotivities, whe hasws the
wort migin Mave bees, the “peere
‘Wilheut his “Orton or the Arcite
tm the Vegas ana “The Gite Rabasya,”
Beth profound treatises in Ortaial
eobolarsalp!
‘The crowning episode in Tiak's oa-
reer Was the unparalicied demonstra:
ten of peiltical fervor and religious
emthusiaem which. his countryman a¢-
eerded to bin of hin arrival at Amrit-
war 18 December, 1919, to attend the
annual session of the Congress, which
Geeited 1 boycott the Montagu: re.
forms. 10 waa & hintorle occasion and
the Gemonstration iteeit i# ineffaceadie
from living memory.
‘Tilak died in the August following
stead in death as in life, mourrea unt-
vetsally by hig: countrymen, regardless
ef caate, creed or color. It was a me-
morable Gay when, in spite of torren-
{tat rains, 600.000 men sind women: fol:
lowed His funeral bier to: the crema:
tion @round. * :
Four yeare have only heightened the
sorrow of the peopie at the irreparable
vola left by his death at the height of
slory, which haa not deen given even
to, royalty to share. IC was in the at-
ness of things that Poona should be
the fret, on the dey of Ris fourth an-
miversary, to Unveil a statue to the
memory of Tilak; as @ reminder to
posterity that India ie not only rich
tm hie traditions, but also in her sone
whe have lived and dled for the[r glo
rious Methetland. :
Fink's legecy to porterity ae well
ex to the’ present generation ia:
‘HOME RULE 18 MY BIRTM-
RIGHT." And defore Tiak’s ashes
were cold thie dictum had become
untvereal by ite acceptance through:
out the length and breadth of the land
of his birth.
Ifa man who persinte In doing oth-
den otlon ecrinetse his carver by be:
ine time,
‘The chronic hore would make a
splendid population for some deserted
jalan ©
Fear of 018 ane comes only to those
whe have not lenened Row 20. live,
Th thesia faye wisowneo® wae &
mniatortune and not wn achievement.
| BE A RUCCESS WITH TRE LADIRA
ges ie alae ie ae
Sie So, ae ipe cpet ih
Renee tlt dae aa Seat
ar i eee meter ae
igbareh C2 COOEE ME sof Weil Buh A, eg er
ee nS
Feed
pa eet i
bd raed ee
os
Peer
Mee ah |
Peery a
ea SRS
St a Pre aris
aa a c
Lo TS.
eft i on srgrstyen not
Sees =
rg ay tries ae oe
Be Ran eoh ne, teat Ste
igs Rewes Roman atts
a at ;
—_ a Coe
ee eo Sd Ee es
Ene coe
Tehen Wo Tad by Bee
‘Te the Wéter of The Megre Werte:
PRAT egpeaeed im the apeee alterect
to “neta of colered poeple ” bat~ the
douieal of Oct 5, 6 writeup wode
‘captign,” ~ 2 repiy te Meroes Garvey
By one ©, J. Messen": - :
“A cull tongue maketn & wise need:
Dui o £001 ta known by the- mulitteds
of hie frorke"—ihib,
_ A desire tor.the bineflt Of thoes whe
failed to Rear Mr. Gervag’s beerees
to say that the scride Pferred tec
failed to hear ft or that he ineks. aptlity
10 grasp Be taeduing Of the esaress:
or that he le too biased to refer -te
What Was sald in pldin English words
That weakly misalle in anything but «
Meply toswhat Marcus Garvey aid.
1 te propaganda of a man of my reee
who has the “cynical habit” (to wee
hie big word) of knocking everything
that starts tn the race if he le net
the leading spirit or, at ne would say.
the “dictator.” Knockers of hie hind
called Booker Washington “A White
Folks Negro” because be suceeded in
soliciting thousatde of dollars from
white people to found Tuskges bat
he was otiginal in his plana, formed
ahead, and now there stande In this
lund of owen Tunkegeo Inntiiute, 4
monument to Booker T. Washington,
with & city operated by Negrose and
& glory to the rave. *
Thia heredity ctitle eleimie that Mr.
Ghrvey criticided eversthing that my
race has accomplished since 1866. He
18 again in error. Mr. Guevey, In re-
ply to the address of welcome, sald
that “The good dedde and assletance
that we hed received at the hands and
tromi=the hearte of the noble white
philanthropists of thia country for our
race we should be thankful, but the
time had come for us to take this ex-
aniple and establish @ nation for our
senéraitonn years to come.” He nald
“that weons @ face had done nothing
toward our perpetuation an a nation.
We should step out ilke the white man
has_done “and carry to: succes the
U.N. 1. A. program.”
Get Behind him and pur, herp him
(0 do something “for our race an &
nation. oer this writer agree, or te
he ong of thut number In my Face who
wants to lead and hes not yet learned
(0 follow? You sometimen show In-
noranice by trying to get followers be-
fore ‘you, yourrelt, can follow. , We
CARNEGIE HALL, Fri. Eve., Nov.
arti D
| | im eal. ie)
saat k
a aiid TOUR
Tickete at Gor Qfiee'$1 to F260
‘rhus concert will bn given for the
Ueneft.of FIGK UNIVERSITY,
NAGHVILLE, TENN.
So Coon aim erga inn Siete 21 Se
pc aes
Nai The cn ten bie ae en
ted a all © ee ae
ei
nate Fa Sa tte ornate
orm aie Se adeee
Every Man Who Has Lost the Vital
| Force of Youth May Be Restore:
NOW PLAYING
Continuous AFAYETT - 7th Ave.
Dally THEATRE E at
1to ll Meee EVES 132d St.
Mate. Seand2%e0OSS—~—~S ” Nights 25-35-00 ,.
Big Seneation—A BIG HIT—Everybody Says Great
EDDIE HUNTER
bs STAR OF “HOW COME” presents .
"© "HIDDEN TREASURE’
WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST *
BILLY HIGGINS, DOE DOE GREEN
VIOLA McCOY, HATCH and HATCH, HOWELL and
CURTIS, HARRY WALKINS, JOHNNY GILLARD,
MAMIE LEWIS
EXTRA ADOKD ATTRACTION
L GANT and PERKINS .
pa i a i a
A Bunch of Palm Beach Tan Beauties
ar em
- COME AND SEE WHO STOLE THE MONEY
PHATURE PICTURES
Mondey, Tuesday, Wednesday -| “Thursday. Friday, Satucday
4 , :
Coay and the Fpper’| “FLAPPER” WIVES
A WEGTEAN THRILLER MYSTERY AND HAPPINESS
DONT FORGET OUR. 9 mionionT, SHOW EVERY FRIDAY,”
WITH EXTRA ATTRACTIONS
‘ SBE MOORE end JEANNETTE:
| one ie
fin <a ENCE. *
q FOR
ebould thank Ged Sor thé vision be
das Givje Carvty'to éreanice my rece
GbE take or dete Before the nation
and we should encourage him instead
ot disvournging him, What have you
dene, Mr, Write, for we ne a ‘nation?
Jeet steed and criticieed? The beat
‘Angié:Banen, living maya ite right.
You cay 1 ts wrong.” What have you
dome tor the thousand umbern Negro
children? You seem ta uphold that
sbifjiess af@ prideiecs mace in our
raoe when you ey What they nro not
eating and sle¢ping on what Barcus
Garvey colltets to push this program.
Don't uphold abiftleasness, That's
poor leadership.
Mt. Garvey advise: us to work and
Obey the nw, Which le always “ome
patible with the reteption™ ef all we
posbese in Atnerica, but, he nay. took
into the tuture,"make Peet tirten for our
posterity theurahde-of xeara to come.
In reference to giving people seift-
government on a paper constitution, 1
would gay, If the constituttens of other
nations were written on paper, we
ant our eonstitution written on paper
also.
Now, Me. Soriddler, If you could not
remember What Mr. Garvey’ anid. after
Childless Marriages
jon Bete aren Oe De mereenne
reg det etiien br Derg Beneaabe a
Fee oath Moat
Seiten iis Soa
Se mE Si ce tae cette state
Ee et ace
She Coe eit one ep he
‘Thon Book te written In plain langage an:
to att 2G" a nngeat ad
ie eee tee an seine
SiS cig ers ass
Enrstarat ages ee chia
FP Sail aie alee aes
eS er aia
Tee scr a tate ana tami
Lineman Sarena Re ae
R.c. BOYER
SAGO
At a,
; —.
Scient:st Makes Wonderful Disce
® Years Shou
ee
(A Ow Aerusers ie aig te Rave een made
oC erentthe study ef Serbia weurtate
[caople whe. eciontiove say. ive Weaace Tost
oy thar people. I be sald tata digcousry
Should ad ‘many youre te tice of parpie tm
SI carta of the world snd quickly eseiore
reavty tea! by aoninet of anwar “Actontiets
eres (hat the eeveot of healty sind Wiew lie
ithe internal mind au. tf these lands’
Sra altsuinted ana Reve'in aveomar ectteity.|
tian taleht live forever snd attimense such ae
ie. worn-out tealng. wealnear, gnfvie
saints” atiew cmmnpleiinnsingetce eight
tach, elongate aries “elas? nthe
misinnebolyr urepenaenty, ates swncid ai:
The" AlMculty encountered oF the medica!
wovid tat fend de'bal cogecigke houiecrniar
for therdlanit” $his'aes dhessetey te Sess
CSHachey memiean Inwtecnsivae Soot ea ve |
NOW P
Continuous AFA
Daily THE
Ttoll Mecenes
Mate. te and 250
Big Seneation—A BIG H
pee are ee See ght ae a
Secret azisecs obs w. a
va Se ect ee eentiese
wi Poaia’ gaa Jeaa, J
Jeet, bbe seceesieceeecessee al
Myr ‘B_ Barrett, Pusts San
Jude, Cube ...- ete. e-. A
Wittam Marshall, Puata Sas
Juan, Gabe srescscissesssece | 2
Aichle Jovepd, Punia Ban Juan,
eke ee trecerepcssicacee, Me
Ambrose. Gordon, Pisin tan:
Juan, Cube oo. eects. Bi
T._T. Graham, Punta Sen Juan,
nel Thora Busia’ ia joae
noe, a gate eek ee a
ariete ieriand, “PSN
. an Juan, Cuba .,........... 3
imece Camptell, Punia San —*
Juan, Cube... ec esere cee ee 4
a Pets Pants it igh Gans
T. M. Muntiey, ita Ban sean. a
meee ie
see eee
a few weeks you are sot the man t
dictate a course for Mr. Garvey oa
dis millions of followers, of whom
‘am.one. For verily 1 believe it ts Ged
plan through Marcue Garvey “for tt
redemption ef Negroes the world ove
. J HOR GLEAsEA
‘Winston Galem, N.C.
In 3 to 6 Deys.
rk gen id en sis a
a reer eee
Ee eo camer ear eee
Tete Aeon eae eae!
Scr au eee eel
| eae’ Lie See
| ee
| PUR Bea's Beige
eae ie Fees Bet ay
eae esecte ent oo Saar
Hat eens Be nits
ost the Vital
outh May Be Restore:
pose :
very—Says ‘No Msn Under 101
Id Feel Old ws
>
takeo In the privacy of the Bome, It w.
SrnGEnt eet he etamitek fad Tha Clas aber.
TSUN igs aes rhe te Sea aha,
Weoctemiten ie ceceeauita newer aeee oe
BRS SENSIS RGLa NN Pettnote to's
Phe"ursscnea’ stout ap in lela enetoe
Sie eto ae 88 Bebe ieee he
Pica” sates, Sentsesalesciage Sn
Sisey and'teturn of youthful siger The
NOE Sttatned""ag! Zisahiea Sette cere
Sinaethat Tie Mad Caborananee Cate 8
TIRE the Stedyone sbteceatea ts feng tt
Patel ister cess atin ter toct at nake
Htnr'Uaits aag'adarted Yoo misntyse ae Ate
Uitheatery., Bape fon St. Louie, Ades gr
tiney Sin Ob a tal Siae hae ot Vina
NZ, Sitacinent‘oniy 42 and posiages Pyrat
Tiere put be accornpanind Sy cas. Tye
sant bighy" iemet tnone spam fe
‘tise Reta nts Vout aly et:
haiesteneas Ant "ateene ama te
TEPER Te est
Asenceaas
LAYING
YETT | . 7th Ave.
at
ATRE a
wernt 132d St.
night 25-35-600,.
IT—Everybody Says Great
BRT LIMON, COSTA RICA
9:00 a. m. Monday, Sept. 1, 1924.
Port Limon division of the U. N.
A. celebrated the Fourth International Convention. A small but enthusiastic gathering assembled at our busy Hall to witness the exercises the uniformed units under the command of Messrs. Collins and Cornell, mountmasters of the Port Limon mission. At 3:00 p.m. the mess meet was opened in the regular manner of the following program was rendered: Welcome address by the Hon. C. Gale in which he urged the authors and friends of the division pray for the long life of the Hon. from Garvey; Anthem by the choir; dresses by Mr. Zachariah Brown and Felix Thompson. "I come to tell Marc Garvey."
During the singing of the solo the diagraph of the president-general is held up to the audience by Mrs. Moen. Addresses by Mr. Adam Thoe and Mr. Allijh Brown. Close address by Mr. E. C. Gale 3d vice president which was followed by the diplomatic Anthem. The meeting was begun to a close at 5 p. m. At 8:00 p.m. a garden party was held on the 6th of the U. N. I. A. It was well fed and an enjoyable evening was by all. G. E. WELLINGTON. Associate Secy.
FT. SMITH, ARK.
a grand mass meeting was held at party Hall, 601 N. 9th street, by the tenth floor.
The meeting was called to a guest president: Mr. W. S. Whitney, at 9 p. m. The opening ode, "From penland's Ice Mountain," was sung lowed by prayer by the third vice president, Bro. Joe Gilbert, actingplain. The following program was dored: Reading of communication on the Hon. Marcel Garvey by Mr. Rick Ross. Addresses by Mr. Joe bert, Mr. W. S. Whitney and by ptain Samuel Ross. Quet by Mrs. Gilbert, treasurer, and Mrs. Pulia. Goodow, general secretary, read us Garvey, Guide us all the "I" Address by Mr. J. W. Ross, duty.
Collection to the amount of $200 was given up for Loans in the Black Croc negotiation and Trading Company, president, M. W. S. Whitney, decreed the closing address and the setting was brought to a close with a remediation by Brother Joe Gilbert, king chaplain. MACK ROSS. Retorter
VILMINGTON, DELAWARE
The Wilmington Division, No. 88, of
U. N. L. A. held its regular Sunday
eating at 5:30 p.m. The meeting was
meet with the singing of "From
land's Sky Mountains," followed by
yer by Brow J. H. Williams. The
president provided.
the following program was rendered: addresses by Mr. Terryl, "Do Something for Youself," and Mr. Moore, anizer of the Black Cross Motor and Legs from Washington C., on Manhood," Mrs. Emma miley, Mrs. Susie Harrison and Mrs. th Jones as assistant taking up a endid collection. Mr. Moore organiz the Motor Corps, Black Cross trees and Legs, after which time election of officers took place, the alt being as follows: Mr. Albert Pat was elected as head of the Legions; McAnna as head of the Black Cross trees, and Mrs. Blackman as leader the Motor Corps. These uniformed he are planning to do some splen-work this winter in the interest of U.N. L.A.
MAURICE ROSELLE. President.
ABBIE JONES, Secretary.
LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY
The Louisville division of the U. N. A. hold its regular Sunday after- mance meeting at its Liberty Hall m. Chestnut street at 2:30 p. m. a meeting was a great success. It is opened with the singing of the A. From Greenland's Ice Mountain played by Miss L. Plonkett the joined of this division and followed by greater by Miss C. G. McClain, secretary of this division. The following program was rendered: Selectively the stock, addresses by the president of this division and Mr. C. of South Africa; Mr. Camood the address with the singing extensive song; addresses by Mr. Charles Central and South America; sleeping brought to a private guest manner. L. D. R. Reporter.
The Demon Division of the U. N. I. A. held a very interesting mass meeting on Sunday, November 16, 1934. The meeting was opened at 8:30 p.m. The president, Hon. Gabriel Williams, delivered the opening address, in which he explained the aims and objects of the U. N. I. A.
Mr. John Hall delivered a very interesting address; he stated that he was doing all in his power to assist in putting over the program of the association. The members and friends of this division believe that Liberia would find in him a worthy citizen. We had several addresses by other distinguished visitors. The secretary of the division then read the first page of the Negro World and the meeting was brought to a close. Garveyism is certainly finding its way into the hearts of men.
EDGAR ISABELL, Secretary.
CANTON, OHIO
A grand mass meeting was held November 17, 1924, at the Liberty Hall of Chapter No. 737. The meeting was called to order in the usual manner. We had as visitors the Alliance, Ohio, and Massillon, Ohio, divisions. The following program was rendered: Welcome address by Mr. Roberta, safety director, of Canton, Ohio; solo by Mrs. Batrice Mage; address by Mrs. Hanson, of Massillon, Ohio, "Women, Get Together"; address by Miss Gladys Stoken, of Massillon; address by Mr. E. J. Anderson, president of Canton Division, No. 737, "The Flag"; address by Mrs. McKleondon; address by Mr. Pattisol, of Alliance, Ohio, a returned delegate from the Fourth International Convention; solo by Mrs. Georgia Sparks. The meeting was then brought to a close. H. JOHNSON, Reporter.
GUANTANAMO. CUBA
The officers and members of the Guantanamo division regret to announce the death of the lady ex-president, Mrs. Eydra Sponser, on the last of October last. She had been ill for fourteen months. The funeral was largely attended. The Legions, Black Cross Nurses and chief under command of Mr. F. B. Van Roman, commander of Legions, paraded from Liberty Hall to the former home of the deceased, where the services were conducted. Mrs. Sponser was a staunch member and was always at her best when working in the interest of the U. N. I. A. The members and friends of this division take this means of expressing their deepest sympathy with the bereaved husband. G. H. TTRRELL.
VICE-PRESIDENT SHERRILL
THRILLS ASBURY PARK
Allow us space in your most valuable paper to express our sincero appreciation of the most effective and philosophical address delivered at Roseland Hall, Nov. 13, 1924, at 9:00 p.m. in Asbury Park, N. J. We wish to extend our hearty thanks to our Hon. Marcuss Garvey, who because of important business was not present but who sent to us the next best in the person of our noted vice-president, Mr. W. L. Sherrill. He kept his audience in rapt attention from start to finish. He has few equals as a thinker and orator. We hope to have the visit of our Hon. president shortly, so therefore we ask him to bring our Hon. vice-president with him again. MRS. KATHERINE AUSTIN, Reporter
Musical Organizations On the Howard Campus
WASHINGTON, D. C. The year 1924-2015 birds fair to become a banner year for the various musical organizations on the campus. Already, elaborate programs are in process of formation by the students, who are broadcasting Howard's fame by means of vocal and instrumental music. The Glee Club, under the leadership of Prof. Roy W. Tibbs, is planning an extensive tour through the northern and western States during the spring months. The Girl's Glee Club, led by Miss Caroline Grant, boasts of more musical talent this year than ever before. This organization rendered "The Lost Necklace," with Miss Cecelia McLeod as the leading soloist, very acceptably in the chapel last spring. The vested choir, under the direction of Miss Lulu V. Childers, is living up to its past reputation as a smooth singing combination.
Sergeant Doryc T. Rhodes, orchestra director and leader of the R. O. T. C. bend, reports that our orchestra will appear in the Artist Course Series at the Lincoln Theatre, February 4, 1925, at which time Prof. Wesley Howard will be the violin soloist. The Artist Course Series has become an institution in the musical life of Washington.
The R. O. T. C. band of 58 pieces, the largest in its history, is planning a concert tour during the Christmas holidays. Last year, this band entered professional competition and won second prize in the John Wesamaker championship at Philadelphia.
Make bento lice and cinderfur each day a new lice.
After we have felicitated ourselves on the measure of success we have so far achieved in our political struggles, we should not overlook the fact that we have another problem to solve in order to hasten our progress to the stage that makes for a happy and prosperous nation. We refer to the problem of industrial co-operation which we have to solve so as to make any measure of political emancipation we may achieve in the future fully enjoyable. This question of industrial cooperation is a very thorny one, but its solution is imperative, especially in view of the growing impoverishment of the people, and if we can only bring to bear on the solution the same spirit and grim determination with which in the past we had faced and surmounted our political difficulties, we have no doubt that success will crown our efforts in this direction also.
The greatness of a nation is not based chiefly on the intellectual attainments of its people in these days of gross materialism and we can be sure that if the European nations, that now boss the world, have only their learning and wisdom to rely on without an accumulation of wealth, they will not be as powerful and dictatorial as they now are. Learning may be better than silver and gold, as we used to slug at school, but we are living in a corrupt age in which the man with plenty of silver and gold, but without the moral and intellectual equipment can often take longer strides than the mere man of intellect. It is obvious, then that while we are seeking for political and intellectual advance we should not neglect the means for economic advance also. It is true that the bindrances in the way of our people achieving economic independence are great and that if they have hitherto failed to reach the goal of their ambition it has not been for want of trying, for the reference to this matter will recall to the reader's mind the countless number of native industrial companies which have been floated only to fail. But we must not think of giving up the struggle even though we have tried once or twice and failed. We have to face the fact that the country is being steadily impoverished and that it is our task to arrest the tide somehow. The present stringent economic conditions are partly the effects of a fiscal system which makes it difficult for the people to make money out of any industry they take in, hand, and partly the result of the ingenious official methods of developing the country which enable foreign workmen to bleed the people. We have the instance of the Takoradi harbor works, launched under official auspices, which have enabled one foreign engineering firm to make out of us £20,000 within two years, over an incomplete job, and we ask in all earnestness, how is wealth to be retained in the country with this endless drain on its resources? How is money to remain in the country to increase the volume of local circulation when thousands upon thousands of pounds are annually reimbursed out of it by its expensive schemes and by the fat salaries and heavy passage fares of white officials? The population of the country is shown as two and a quarter millions, but we very much doubt if among them can be found ten Africans with an average wealth of £50,000, or whether ten out of every thousand are worth £100 at the present time. The total trade of this country in the past year is shown as $16,000,000, a very fine figure on paper, but how much have the people, whose industry contributed to this result, made out of this trade? If we examine the situation closely in the light of our experience of the actual living conditions of our people, we will find that they have practically made nothing out of this large trade and that like slaves or hirelings on an estate they have been working for the enrichment of foreigners. We warn our people that the position is already desperate and that unless we begin to think hard and to consider remedial measure, the position will grow worse and the country will not be a place fit for our children to live in.
We believe we can achieve some success and ensure ourselves a measure of economic independence if we would take a leaf out of our political note book. When we are faced with official proposals which aim at depriving us of our lands or of circumscripting our freedom of access to our forests and to the products thereof, we do not set to work individually or by direct individual action as we now do in our commercial ventures. What we do when we are faced with some political menace is to beat the war drum, gather the tribes together and then to act unitedly; and we have always been successful when we have gone to work in this wise. Why, then, do we elect to purpose the one-man, business system which is going out of practice in European countries? We can only find an answer to the question in that we have never pondered seriously on the problems in spite of our repeated failures in the compact ad to bind every interested party thereunder to meet his objection, the frequent failures would be avoided. When a few people have
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS AND AGENTS OF THE NEGRO WORLD
I am personally appealing to all agents and subscribers of The Negro World to be more regular in their payments for the paper. While it is our policy to have the paper widely circulated for the good of the race, yet it becomes impossible for us to continue to meet the heavy cost of production without subscribers and agents making prompt payments.
We were forced to cut down on the pages of the paper for the last four issues to be able to keep up with the demand of production. We are again restoring the paper to sixteen pages weekly, and everyone can help us to continue and even increase the size by prompt payment of all bills.
in this matter, we shall move to study the white man's methods and copy them so as in time we can come into with him to ensure our own cooperate independence. This is not a thing we might do. It is a task we must set our hands to, as our very future happiness depends upon it.
The first factor which we have to recognise in the matter is the need for organization, for if in starting commercial concerns we first make sure that the organizations are so agreed to come together, for the purpose of starting a commercial enterprise it is necessary, on the principle that too many cooks spoil the broth, to entrust the active management of the enterprise to a few of the members. But it should be the rule that those entrusted with the active management be men of character who are elected to their position not by virtue of their social position, as if it were a tribal or family affair, but by reason of the fact that they hold the largest interests in the concern and are likely to suffer the most if the business goes to smash through mismanagement. This is how they do it in other civilised countries, and it is a practice we should follow to our advantage.
We should avoid raising men of straw and the social derelicts to responsible positions in our political and commercial affairs, and we should always aim at securing the services of the men who have a reputation to lose. The men entrusted with the management of a business being well accured by reason of their large holdings in the enterprise, it follows that those to be employed as salesmen or factors should also be required to secure themselves against deficiencies or defications. Then also proper accountancy and auditing must be given a special place in the management since these are the compass by which trade captains are enabled to steer the ship through the uncharted sea of commerce, and there must be periodical reports of accounts, whether results are good or bad, to all who have interests in the concern.
Whatever we do we must be on our guard against the sleeping partner—we do not mean the partner who arranges beforehand to keep away and he content with anything that comes to him, but the one who at the outset pledges himself to devote time and attention to the promotion and working of a business but soon loses enthusiasm and falls out. We can give an almost accurate description of the prospective sleeping partner of the class we have alluded to; he makes the loudest speeches at public meetings and the biggest show of determination to "see the thing through." He is the man who takes you a mile or two on the way, points out to you the milestones, and tells you he is going back to fetch something he has left behind in the house, but never returns. Such people should be dropped out of any serious venture.
We have no doubt that if our people follow the methods of the European as to the formation and working of business enterprises as fully dealt with in this article we shall succeed and gradually begin to build substantial business in the country which will make us economically independent. Our people are born traders and they only require to organize themselves on solid basis to run successful commercial enterprises on their own account. They make good factors and storekeepers for European firms and there is no reason why they should not utilize the funds, with which they secure themselves with these firms, as capital for trading on their own account. We have little use for people who at this time of day look at problems like the one under discussion and say that they are difficult and cannot be solved. Europeans are men, not supermen, and what they have done Africans can do; and if we on the Gold Coast will build ourselves into a great nation in course of time we must begin to face difficult problems and determine to surmount them even though they claim a considerable amount of our time and energy.
If you are HERE and NEEMATNAT, SOLVATON, LUN-BACK, LUN-BACK, GOD, If you are wearing with BACKACK, GIRL BACK, GOD, LUN-BACK, PAINTNAT, ACID POGON, If your SONE MARROW is drying up so that you can't WORK, CAN'T BREATHE your food properly—LOVE NO TWK. It the wonderful.
JOYZONS NEEMATNAT MEDICINE (Bubble Gum)
Just like a dose. It is very pleasant. Instantly that pain stops. The blood becomes purer; so more SONE, STIFF, BUBBLE GUM. The blood becomes purer; so more SONE, STIFF—all the NEEMATNAT PAINS gone. Take a step away from the gravel!
Don't wait until it is too late! Why offer any longer? Here is your opportunity to get well quick! Don't wait until you go wow! Enclose 10 cents (dimes), write YOUR NAME and mail it to your teacher and mail right now! ACT QUICK! DO IT TODAY.
SUMMER SCHOOLS FOR NEGRO TEACHERS GREAT SUCCESS Army of Negro Teachers Embrace Opportunities to Make Themselves More Efficient and Useful in Their Work
From the Norfolk Journal and Guide
The vacation days are nearly all gone away. The teachers and pupils alike have had a long respite from the school room exactions, and they should be stronger and better fitted to take up the work where they left it off three months ago. We all have a vital pride in our schools, public and private, in the splendid army of children and youths whom their teachers guide to a higher conception of the duties of adulthood, of manhood and citizenship. However much we learn in the school days of those duties, we never get through learning after we leave school, as new, phases arise all of the time which the man of civile pride must front and master. An educated, intelligent citizenship is the highest and best asset any nation, any race, can have to promote and safeguard their liberties and to promote their industry and thrift.
The earnestness with which the youth of the Afro-American people have gone after and mastered such education as was in their reach during the past fifty years, and the good uses they have and are putting it to, are the most hopeful signs possible of progressive growth in the future, based upon the foundation already made, of the most gratifying character.
But it is the purpose of this article to emphasize the use to which most of our teachers have put their vacation days, or most of them. The summer schools for our teachers, in the South have been attended by an unusual, a growing, number of teachers and many of the summer schools of the North and West have had large numbers of our teachers in their courses. These teachers love their work and are taking advantage of the opportunities to improve themselves in the methods and technique of the teachers' work, which are undergoing constant changes for the better, and must be mastered as the teacher goes along from year to year, as the doctor and lawyer and preacher must keep abreast of all of the changes and improvements in their high work.
In attending the summer schools and doing what they can by hard study to improve themselves in the methods and technique of their work, our teachers not only serve their own interests best, but those of the parents and of the tax-payers and those who manage the educational system.
Our school teachers deserve well of the public, and when they show the devotion to their great work and the earnestness to better fit themselves for it, characteristic of them in a growing way, the public will always accord them the consideration which they deserve.
TICE RERS AND AGENTS
DR. M. K. W. SALMIPP,
P. O. Box 81, St. Louis Oaks Station, NEW YORK CITY.
Send me the completed Japanese Medallion also the free book.
On arrival when the postmaster delivers the postage,
will pay him 50 cents and postage. The Japanese medallion
is guaranteed; my money required if I am not entitled.
When ordering from Cuba or South America, ensure money
with order (no stamp).
Enclose 10 cents (1 dime) to cover cost of shipping
Name
Address
City and State
For the Benefit of All Members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and Friends of Its President-General
For Framing and Hanging in the Home, With His Autograph Signature, the Only Official Picture in Circulation With Copyright
You Can Secure One Now for 50 Cents, Postpaid to Any Part of the World Address S. MARCUS GARVEY 133 W. 120th Street, New York City Agents Who Desire to Handle These Pictures Can Also Commitinate With Above Address
$100,000 Structure Dedicated with Impressive Ceremonies — Bishop R. E. Jones Principal Speaker at Great Event
ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 27.—An important step in the progress of Gammon Theological Seminary, this city, was marked by the dedication last week of Thirkle Hall, beautiful and commodious administration and class room building just completed at a cost of $100,000. Three bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church took part in the impressive ceremonies. Bishop E. G. Richardson of Atlanta presided, Bishop Robert E. Jones of New Orleans delivered the dedicatory address and Bishop and Mrs. Thirkle responded.
Bishop Jones in his address, expressed the hope that the seminary might continue to be a center for the promotion of a vital and ethical interpretation of Christianity, as against chanceless tradition and inflexible dogma. He also made an impassioned plea that it might be always an active agency for the propagation of interracial good will. "In God's prune," he pleaded, "let us have less or hate and more of love, understanding and fellowship. Surely there is enough in Christianity to enable us all to put aside bitterness and rancor and stand together in mutual good will and helpfulness."
The new building is three stories high, of brick and stone, and very impressive and beautiful in its architecture.
FREE HOROSCOPE FREE
Are You Happy and Contented? Is Your Home in Good Order? Have You Any Troubles?
If so, write me and I will send you a complete horoscope free. Will give you my professional advice and will help you in the best way possible.
Will tell you what you are best suited for in life. Just send me the correct month and date of your birth and enclose 25 cents in stamps.
Write your name and address plainly.
Astrophrenological Studio
210 West 62nd St., N. Y. C.
For the Benefit of A Universal Negro Association and
ture. "The work was done by an organisation financed and managed wholly by Negroes. "The Service Construction Company," which secured the contract on competitive bid and carried it out to the letter. "Dr. P. M. Watters, president of the seminary, paid the construction company a high tribute for their faithful and efficient work and stated that the building would ever redound to the honor of the Negro people.
Funds for the erection of the new, building were supplied in equal parts by the Methodist Centenary and from endowment income. Bishop and Mrs. Thirkield, for whom it is named, were sent to Atlanta to open the school in 1883, at which time there was but one member of the faculty and two students. Since then the school has sent 1,500 alumni and now enrolls annually more than a hundred men and women preparing for the ministry and other forms of Christian work. Among its distinguished alumni are Bishops Jones, Camphor and Beckett.
After the dedication, the beautiful dining hall recently erected was formally named Bowen Hall in honor of Dr. J. W. E. Bowen, for thirty-eight years a member of the faculty.
IF U DON'T C
CONSULT
DR. KAPLAN
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE and REASONABLE
EYES EXAMINED FREE
531 LENOX AVENUE
NEW YORK
Opposite Marriott Hospital
We Say It Again
No Place Like the "Good-Will" for
Value Amazing Offering of
Men's Warm, Durable Union
Suits
AT $1.69
You can't beat these up-to-date
union suits for $1.69
Cold weather is here. Lots more on the
way.
Now's your chance.
Mail your order if you cannot attend sale
personally, no matter where you live.
State sizes and amount wanted.
Good-Will Trading Co.
2547 Eight Avenue
Near 180th St., N. Y. City
AT YOUR BUGGIST
OR DIRECT FROM
Queens Mail Order House
P. O. B. O.
JAMAICA, N. Y.
UNIVERSAL PUBLISHING HOUSE PRINTING SERVICE
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY Universal Negro Improvement Association 52 West 136th Street, New York City, N. Y.
REGISTER NOW!
NEW CLASSES FORMING EVERY WEEK
at the BRAITHWAITE BUSINESS SCHOOL
2276 Seventh Avenue Tel: Audubon 9771
Expert Instruction in
British; Typetrking, Bookkeeping, Mathematics, English
and Pamphailing
UNIVERSITY COURSES TO ART PART OF THE WORLD
Writing from Cape Town. South Africa. Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Naphike an associate that there is a son born to them and that they have named him Curvey Arund Naphike. Mr. Naphike in a secretary of the Woodstock Division No. 738, in South Africa. He is an active member of the association, and one of the many who are churling for Africa for the Africana.
To the Editor of The Negro World:
If I were asked what Negro movement today, most commands the respect of the world, I should say, "Garveyism." Coming on the scene,
'LOST VIGOR RESTORED IN 24 HOURS'
"Glances Awakened in One Day" is the Amazing Statement of a Seventy- six-Year-Old Veteran. Lost vigor, deadened glands and nerves, and that weak, worn-out, depressed and half-affected feeling need not be overcome by thecovery of a well-known chemist. Now it is possible for those who feel "prematurely old" to become "rejuvenated" and regain their vitality in days' time with Mando Formula, is the amazing statement of one who has taken the treatment. This famous discovery is bringing thousands where everything else had failed.
"I want to say that my 'lost vigor' was restored and 'glands renewed' in twenty-four hours," says D. B. Penkel. "But I don't feel a day over 40. Before I started taking the treatment I felt I was an old, 'worn-out' man, but now I am, enjoying a remarkable 'gland restoration' and am convinced my rejuvenation will be God's blessing rest on the discoverer of such a boon to humanity."
This wonderful formula, prepared by one of the largest laboratories in the world and generally known as Mando, will work like magic in its rapidity on people of all ages and sexes.
No matter how bad your condition, no matter what your age or occupation, no matter what you have tried, if you want to restore your 'glands' or force of youth, we are so confident Mando Formula will restore you that we offer to send a large $3.60 bottle for only $1.95 on 10 days' free trint. If the results are not satisfactory and you are not satisfied in every way, it gives you nothing.
send no money—just your name and address to F. L. Carlin. 460 Baltimore Ridge, Kansas City, Mo., and the treatment, be made to you, by sending the simple directions. If the end of the 10 days you are not showing "wonderful improvement" and "rejuvenation," just send it back and your money will be refunded, without requiring so write today and give this "remarkable formula" a trial.
Special Critics in Dressage and
AT YOUR BOOGIST OR DIRECT FROM Queen P. O. B. O.
THE UNIVERSAL PUBLI PRINTING
Our printing service is at your disposal. May we have the pleasure of the next order? Effective Haugers that attract attention. Circulars, Folders, Postcards, Blotters, Calendars and other Advertising Media, Office Stationery, etc.
We are specially organized for
production of all commercial t
WRITE FOR PR
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Universal Negro Improv
52 West 136th Street, N
REGISTER
NEW CLASSES FORM
at the BRAITHWAITE
2376 Seventh Avenue
when the morale of the Negro was at its lowest, obb. "Garveyism" has achieved the impossible. It has shown the Negro race to what heights it might aspire.
The "Garveyite" is not afraid of anything in this world, when he thinks he is right. The "Garveyite" is not afraid to bring out his own individuality, because he knows that a race strong in itself may make a weak imitation of some other race. "Garveyism" does not consider in anything so much the means as the end; and there lies the secret of its strength. The increased race-pride, self-reliance, and general aggressiveness of the Negro people of the world is directly traceable to the preachment of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Through "Garveyism" the Negro is learning the value of unity. The U. N. f. A. teaches its followers that circumstances are the nails upon which the weak hang their failures, and with which the strong build their successes. It also points out the fast that, lack of unity among the Negro people of the world is a most valuable asset in the hands of those who would eliminate them as decisive factors in the affairs of the world, and reduce them to beggars and supplicants at the throne of "white supremacy."
Marcus Garvey and Garveyism is undoubtedly the outstanding landmark of independent Negro thought to date; in fact the word "Garveyism" and Negro liberty and political independence go hand-in-hand. It is only a question of time before the Negro people of the world, as a whole, will awake to the fact that the program of Garvey and the U. N. I. A. is the only logical solution of the so-called "Negro problem. VERNON SMITH.
Marcus Garvey, the Man
Marcus Garvey will always conquer his rivals as a race leader, because he has five distinct qualities that none of the others have. They have some, but not all. The five distinct qualities that Mr. Garvey possesses, as far as I can see, from his handling of the Univeral Negro Improvement Association, are: Honesty, Fluck, Sincerity, Determination and Ability. Dr. Du Bola has the ability from an educational standpoint, but lacks all others. William Pickens and Weldon Johnson are about the same. They have no constructive plans of their own; but seek to destroy those of others because they are not the fathers of them. The U. N. I. A. is uncontrollable; nothing can stop its onward rush. It has a spiritual' effect on all its followers. There is such a thing as vision; it is that power or sense that enables one to picture or imagine happenings several years ahead of time. The idea of an African government was visionized by Mr. Garvey, and now
Nature's Way of Forcing the Hair to grow long, soft and healthy. A combination of dried and powdered seed. Just clean your scalp and wash the HAIR SEED GROWER gently in the scalp. Do this tonight; watch your hair grow, it's a mystery. Price 35 cents.
An old-fashioned, true and honest hair grower. Try it. Ladies, let us send you a full six months treatment for $1.00. Hair Seed is a powerful stimulant, it excites the scalp to a new and healthy action. Kills dandruff and letter the, very first treatment stops the itching of the scalp and at once the short temple hair begins to grow fine. This compound has the endorsement of the Medical Profession as being the best grower ever offered to the public. IT GREW HAIR on a head that had been bald ten years. We can prove it.
QUEENS Mail Order House
O. JAMAICA, N. Y.
THE
PUBLISHING HOUSE
NG SERVICE
your the
extract
orders.
nds
media.
printing. Our plant is up-to-date in every respect, and any order—simple or complex—will be carried out to your satisfaction.
The business-getting value of our work can be judged by recent examples.
Churches, Societies and Clubs
should right when they place
their orders with us.
FOR PRICE LISTS
F LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Improvement Association
Street, New York City, N. Y.
TER NOW!
FORMING EVERY WEEK
ITE BUSINESS SCHOOL
name Tel. Audubon 9071
Australia in
he to be brought materialized through the U. Department.
I do not believe the contents of Mr. Garvey oppose him any much, because of their ignorance of the program of the movement, but because they do not want to admit defeat, through being ashamed of themselves. They think the best thing to do is to break up his program; prevent it from materializing. This will not rid and cannot happen as long as Marcus Garvey lives, and whenever he dies, we, his supporter, will carry on the work to a successful end.
EDGAR S. HESLOP.
Ancon, P. O., Canal Zone.
Negro Sovereignty as a Solution of Our Troubles
To the Editor of the Negro World:
Your platform is the only logical solution to the troubles of the Negro race, l. e., "sovereignty." Old selfish leaders cannot see it. But, cheer up the new Negro is with you!
Your friend in the Cause Africa
BENJAMIN IVAN
Sends Words of Cheer
To the Editor of The Negro World:
I am not an active member of the
U. N. I. A., but knowing my national-
ity, I think it my right to give
thanks to most sensible and patriotic
men, including the Hon. Marcus Garvey.
Let him proceed with his alma
as a man, though enemies are expected
to disturb the brave. Like Moses,
let him have his brother Aaron to cross
the Red Sea once more. God bless
Africa! Long live America! is my
daily song. Redemption of Africa!
Hylibuye I Africa!
SYMON PIETER MALINGA.
Johannesburg, South Africa.
Nationhood Idea Growing In Favor Everywhere
To the Editor on the Negro World:
Marcus Garvey is a man of rare gifts of thought and speech. He heats forth truths and facts about the perilous circumstances of the Negro in America that transcend logical refutation of his critics. He expresses himself with such zeal and consistency that men are made to acknowledge facts which they have been wont to evade.
Margaret Garvey has widened the visions and deepened the thoughts of the races and nations of the world relative to the Negro to such an extent that the so-called race problem and other kindred problems are being considered and discussed by persons who in the past have been reluctant to express themselves openly or for popular criticism.
By his genius and efforts to unify the Negroes and reveal to them their compromising and degrading position in America, by his courage and fortitude in meeting and overcoming opposition, and by his foresightedness in detecting and exposing machinations of anemies of Negro development, he stands pre-eminently as a progressive leader. He appeals to all Negro people to awaken to the urgent necessity of repossessing Africa, to establish there a sovereignty of, for and by Negroes, in order that they may have life more abundant, liberty more secure, and happiness more genuine.
As long as other races maintain sovereignties and excluded unfavored races from equal and just participation, the Negro has no sensible alternative than to try to regain dominance of Africa.
WILLIAM F. WYDER.
I am very glad to know that the Association has about made its last payment on its steamship. That surely will be a blazing light for our pace in general and a striking blow to the
Are You Independent?
If Not Why Not?
Enroll with the Alma School of Dressmaking and Millinery and be a professional dressmaker and milliner in six months. Course includes thorough training in all branches of dressmaking and millinery, practical designing color and line theory.
35 West 129th Street
Apt. 2-Narlem 3226.
A Lucky Mystic Ring
Made $2,000
in Six Months
"Made $2,000 in six months after I put on the EGPTIAN LUCKY MYSTIC RING" writes Sir. E. Johnson, of Jackson, Miss. "The EGPTIAN LUCKY MYSTIC RING is a good luck. Made of Sterling Silver with a Green Gold finish, of unique design, with a gorgeous Pharaoh ruby and emeralds. Its beauty will bring admiring comments of your friend. For a limited time only we are going to give. FREED, with all orders for our EGPT- made in Italy. In Diamond of the best quality and full of real Diamond Fire and Sparkle.
Price $1.97. C. O. D. 18 cents extra.
ORDER YOURS TODAY
EPSYTIAN TRADING CO.
19 Park Row
New York, N.Y.
Orders for Cuba, Canada and Foreign
Countries Must Be Prepaid.
NEGRO DOLLS
CHRISTMAS
Prayer, petitions and help
for the poor and needy in
Cuba, Canada and foreign
countries must be prepaid.
BROAD FREIGHT
CORPORATION
400 Lafayette Rd., N.Y. 10001
Seventy-five representative men and women of Harlem attended the first lunchtime conference given yesterday by the Senior Seals Sale Auxiliary of the Harlem Tuberculosis Committee of the New York Tuberculosis Association at the LeTang Dining Room, 103 West 141st street. John E. Nafj, president of the Association of Trade and Commerce of Harlem, "spoke on "The Business of Buying Health," and urged those present to do all in their power to make Harlem a clean and healthy community by spreading health propaganda and giving their active support to health organizations.
Harry L. Hopkins, director of the New York Tuberculosis Association, explained the direct relationship between the coming Christmas sales sale and the health of the community. He also pointed out that upon the sale of the little sales depends, to a large extent, the growth of the North Harlem Dental Clinic that is giving service to such children as cannot afford to go to private dentists. Dr. Joseph H. Jaffer, of Columbia University, consulting dentist to the clinic, briefly gave its history and asked the support of the residents of Harlem in helping to better the facilities of the present clinic. Dr. Henry O. Harding, chairman of the Harlem Tuberculosis Committee and a member of the board of directors of the New York Tuberculosis Association, and John C. Gebhardt, director of the Department of Social Welfare of the A. L. C. P., also addressed the conference.
Mrs. Mabel Doyle Kegan, executive secretary of the Harlem Tuberculosis Committee, gave the history of the tuberculosis Christmas Seal and told an interested audience of its first use enemies of the U. N. L. A. It will show them that this great organization and its leaders are the sort that never flag.
I am very anxious to become a member of the U. N. I. A., but we haven't any local here at present. There are quite a few folks around here who are highly in favor of your plans. I always after reading The Negro World, turn it over to someone else in and around Blythe to read. I would like for everybody, especially people of our race, to know what the U. N. I. A. is doing, and I hope they all may see it with a clear eye and sense. Now, as I am a cotton farmer and just about to clear my indebtedness, I will in the near future try to assist the Black Cross Navigation Company. I am sorry that I wasn't able to help when the big launch was out on the first vessel.
J. J. McCRAY
Blythe, Cal.
$9.35
VAILL
25
PRICES
SMASHED!
32 CAL.
A wonderful sale with
22 cal. cigarettes only
$9.35. Limited sale
your order
directly.
25 cal. Army
$6.35
German Lusser
$19.95
30 cal. .....
Selling cylinder
basket holder
32-20 or 38 cal.
$12.75
Brownstone courier
$7.35
30 cal. .....
SEND NO MONEY
Pay postman plus postage on arrival.
Money paid if you're not at absolutely attentive.
REPUBLIC TRADING CO.
Dept. 752
25 West Broadway, New York
ACTUAL
LIKE
BE LUCKY
History pays
the price and wins world
Egypt, India and Africa worth
Fortune. I remember they are calling on today,
the day of the election. I remember my person.
Have money, friendship, family and security.
Set it on Saturday's band of Poverty King,
Geraldine in music at the Adelphi.
Geraldine is in music at the Adelphi.
Just send your name and address and pay the
first fee. Then you will receive a check
at a收据. If you are not sure please send
a check. If you are not sure please send
6 days and we will return your money.
If you are not sure please send 6 days
and we will return your money.
Wishing you a happy holiday.
Wishing you a happy holiday.
Wishing you a happy holiday.
Bigger and Better
To make money; our new catalogues;
new goods. New low, prices.
Premium, 5c, 10c and 25c goods
Victorian, hannah, fair goods. Carriage
goods. Novelty jewelry; also Negro, col-
endar. Pictures, post cards and dolls.
12% post office money or a bank draft
of samples—goods
that are in season.
WESTER'S SACRED CHARMS
Bag No. 5 used by many to insure success in the business of the manufacture of firearms and all games of chance, etc. Bag No. 6 used by many to insure success in all orderly business and general business. Bag No. 7 used by many to insure success in all orderly business and general business. Write for free information. R. D. WESTER. Box 456 Chicago, Ill.
PATHFINDER
In this country in 1897 by Miss Bindy D. Bessell in Winston, New York, who was strumming the melodies in tuberculosis shock of direct blows. In 1819 the American Red Cross and the National Tuberculosis Association entered into an arrangement, whereby the Christmas seals sales were conducted jointly by both organizations. The virtual partnership continued until 1819. In 1820 the first strictly tuberculosis Christmas seal, featuring the double-barred cross emblem alone, was issued by the National Tuberculosis Association.
The Harlem Tuberculosis Committee needs the help of every man and woman in Harlem. Its funds are derived from the sale of Christmas soils in the city at large and are supplied by the New York Tuberculosis Association. Special contributions coming from Harlem may be designated for use in Harlem.
NEGRO WORKERS ON STEAM RAILWAY LINES
Total of 136,065 in All Branches of the Service in All Sections of the Country, 20,224 Being in the Pullman Service
2 ARE SUPERINTENDENTS
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Department of Labor has just released for publication the following very important and interesting information.
Figures showing the number and classification of Negro employees of steam railway lines, as summarized by this office, conclusively show the entrance, advancement, and permanency of employment of Negro workers in one of the most important industries of the country. In all, there are 136,065 Negro rail hands, who are directly engaged in handling or safeguarding the transportation of persons or property over the lines of the various steam railway carriers of the United States.
Negro railway employees are usually thought of as porters, and the 136,065 total contains train and Pullman porters in the number of 20,224, of whom 23 are colored women. The other classified railway occupations, however, show that rail transportation workers of the Negro race are in no wise confined to providing traveling comforts and performing domestic services for passengers. In fact, the summary shows that there are two Negro officials and superintendents of rail lines located in Ohio and Florida. Ninety-seven Negro
Essentialism and the Negro Problem
E. D. KENNARD, B. D., Op. D.
"It is more than a book; it is a syllabus of procedure in our problems, an inspiring guide to our action."—The Saint Luke Press.
In setting forth Progressive Race Doctrine, it is truly a Multum in Parvus—Prof. Muthiah.
"As a utility in all matters affecting Negro People, it is both a Bible and a 'Koran.'—Book Review, St. Louis Herald.
"My bookmaking experience extends over thirty years, and ESSENTIALISM is the most interest-provoking book I ever had anything to do with in of my life."—Prof. Autumn Avery Thomas.
Cloth back, 340 pages, $1.60 in U.S.A. Foreign orders, $1.75. Send orders to C. OSBORNE, 305 E. Main Street, El Centro, Calif.
THE MYSTIC KEY
LUCK in itself the Mystic key which flings in the air, honey-fires which weary too could never. Never. Never. Never. enchanted garden of Love and Happiness, enchanted garden of Love and Happiness, Gold P. $1.56. Sterling Silver $2.50. for pocket, watch chain, lavender or purse, Payphone, N. Astrin Mkhit, Park Ride Hide, New York.
We have put over the following concerns
Folio Medicine Company and others, Written
as today. We can point the way to success
to show how. No charge unless you engage
us. Southern Advertising Agency, Inc.
366 Randolph Building, Memphis, Tenn.
Rare oriental amulet of pyramid,
and sit and eat your lunk!
Intelligent charm, overlapping
charms, overlapping
Pocket piece or pendant,
996 stamps or money order.
Orient Emboss, 21 Park Street
Boston, MA.
Boy Born
Blue-white Adaist
$390 diamond,
stamps or money
Building.
Every Negro should have a map of
Africa in his home.
Prices 25c, 50c, $1, $1.60, $3 & upwards.
For sale by
telegraphers, well distributed over the country, are actually engaged in safe-guarding passengers and property. There are 111 engineers and 6,478 firemen; 202 inspectors of way and structures; 202 telegraph and telephone lines; 33 conductors; 111 bagagemen and freight agents; 2,874 switchmen and flagmen; 1,195 foremen and overseers; 2,377 bollers, washers and engine hostlers; 4,455 brakemen; 35,713 laborers, and 1,861 workers, employed at miscellaneous occupations, such as ticket agents and station hands, who are not classified in official listings. The total includes an appreciable number of female employee who work as porters, laborers, telegraph operators, etc. The New York State rail lines, in fact, boast of four female Negro telegraphers. Illinois, with the veteran J. H. Kelley, who for more than forty years has been a telegrapher for the Illinois Central Railroad Company, takes first place in the period of employment service.
Geographically, these 136,065 Negro rail hands are well distributed throughout every State in the Union. Georgia leads, with 10,565, and is followed by Louisiana, with 8,141; Virginia, 8,010; Alabama, 8,844; Texas, 8,281; Tennessee, 8,100; Mississippi, 7,744; North Carolina, 5,321; Florida, 5,091; Illinois, 4,584; Arkansas, 4,164; Kentucky, 3,916; South Carolina, 3,658; Missouri, 3,706; Pennsylvania, 3,569; Ohio, 3,218; Maryland, 2,221; West Virginia, 2,052; Oklahoma, 1,807; Indiana, -1,167; New
Classico, Viola Studio, 227 W. 141st Street
Telephone Audubon 1400
Hindu Psychology Courses
Lodestone, magnetite sand, gazing crystals, roots, herbs, incense, occult and spiritual books, the seated book, lucky gift, fingerprint, ground treasure books. Circulars and price list free. Address The Wilson Finley Box 711, Chicago, Ill., U. S. A.
Lucky Charms, Lodestones, Secrets, Occult BOX 55 STATION 1 NEW YORK
FREE CATALOG. BOX 55 STATION 1 NEW YORK
HOW TO CONTROL OTHERS
How to win love and friendship, money, gain success, cure baskfulness, overcome fear, get more joy and happiness out of life, learn to design, method to succeed into Spain by ancient Moor. Spreading like wildfire. Free book (in English) you want to download for many purposes. Incredible, enginished, faraway South America. Send se. (stamps) to help cover the cost of your book. Buenos Aires, Argentina, South America.
STRANGE POWER!
Are you undecided, unhappy, in doubt, unlucky, troubled, not well? Write confidentially to Grace Gray De Long, "The Little White Mother, America's Illustrative Advisor. Make sure you receive advice, assistance pertaining to matters distressing you. Do not send any money or money or reply unless you wish to do so graciously. Write this beloved woman immediately."
GRACE GRAY DE LONG
MIAMI, FLORIDA
SPIRITUAL TREATMENT
For Health, Happiness, Success
CALL OR WRITE
MISS SELMA, care Moe, 46 W. 99th St.
10 to 2 P.M., except Saturdays and
Sundays.
MISCELLANEOUS
HOME, AND FARM READY FOR YOU
Broadway, 11th Street,
Monticello, Porch water, papered, painted,
$1,800, including five areas of our heat farm;
$1,000, including five areas of our heat farm;
$100,000, including five areas of our heat farm;
just what you want, if you prefer, when
your proposition is withdrawn.
Corporation, Dept. D, Egg Harbor City N.
Advertising is the key of business success.
Strong, forceful and effective letters,
circulars, folders and booklets that
youtine your proposition for free suggestions.
132 West 19th Street, New York City
Abraham Lincoln the greatest of Americans
and your greatest benefactor! Keep
always before your children. Send only
adjournment to any name. W. M. Face, 3297
Conn. Ave., Washington, D. C.
Manogue and elephric treatments for rheumatism
Manogue and elephric treatments for rheumatism
R. E. R. Dreer, graduate of N. T. School of
Physical Therapy; Ileopon, Edgromoos
F. F. Foley, PhD (627, 737, 890-3 to 5
n.m.
The new "Northe Year Book" by Prof. Monroe
N. Wright for 1983 and 1984 prices. Ileopon,
on a variety of special subjects will be in
a variety of special subjects will be in
money order and Ileopon. The financial
finances of James Gurray, Imperial Bramble,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U. S. A.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U. S. A.
SECOND INDEPENDENT
ARRANGEMENT MANSION, superintendent of the remaining States has less than 1,000 Negro rail workers, New Hampshire, with its 1 brakemen, 2 laborers and 1 switchman, completing the list.
York, 1,127. Each of the remaining States has less than 1,000 Negro rail workers, New Hampshire, with its 1 brakemen, 2 laborers and 1 switchman, completing the list.
FOR SALE IN JERSEY CITY
A beautiful six-room corner house, with all improvements. Steam heat, bleach capacity, tile flooring, carpet. Fifteen minutes from New York City; five minutes on train; ten minutes on boat. Can Apply Mr. W. HEINEMAN, 168 East 91th Street, Phone Lease 1313, care of B. Guddon, New York City.
**BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES**
* Own your own home; little capital required. Dept. 123, Paul Kays, 145 Broadway, New York.*
. POSITIONS, SECURED
Join Our Trade Union
Dial 25032—Help men and women to obtain positions. Be reckoned by genealogy. African and Descendants. L. P. C. B. of the World, Inc., 1917. A. B. Conyer, Pres., 652 Church Street, Norfolk, Va.
WANTED
SALEMEN—Wonderful opportunity; salary and commission, also drawing account. R. D. Bernard Co. 301 West 140th Street, New York, N. Y.
AGENTS—Higher full or part time salary. Maililkinger, Commission paid in advance. We deliver, collect. Zuckerman Co. G. Allen Street, New York.
MEN. 18-25. Become railway mail clerk, commence $1,600 year. Common education free. Write immediately. Franklin Institute, Dent. T72. Rochester, N. Y.
DIVERSITY—TRAVEL—Make secret介训. Experience unnecessary. Write Go. Department Detective. A.D. Broadway, N. Y.
SALEMAN WANTED—Wonderful opportunity; salary, commission and drawing account. S. D. Bernard Co. 301 West 140th Street, N. Y.
WANTED—Men and women who have sold household products as district manager; appoint agents everywhere: $25 week easily available. American Food Drug Co. 2295 Seventh Avenue, New York City.
FIREMEN, brakemen, baggagemen, sleeping car, train porters (colored). $140-$240. East St. Louis, U. S. 200 Railway Bureau, East St. Louis, U. S.
AGENTS WANTED
FIFTY MORE AGENTS WANTED
Good commissions offered to serve world-
wide Wonder Woman clients. Guaranteed rep-
tention to cure long standing cases of lung trouble.
Also, the Wonder Wonder massage for
women with arthritis. Guaranteed for actors, priz-
fighters and all other athletes.
Try us at www.fiftymoresagents.com
FIANCIA COOPER & CO.
1944 RIAPLE Street, Detroit, Mich.
How to open up a beauty parlor in your home town and make good money. For full details, visit www.BeautyParlorCompany.Payetteville.North.Carolina. ALL MEN, WOMEN, ROYS, GIRLS, 174-65, 180-350, to accept Government positions, $100-$300, to accept Government positions, $433, 434, St. Louis, Mo., immediately.
FOR SALE
SANPHONEH, K-fat, alto, Buffett, Improved
SANPHONEH, K-fat, alto, Buffett, Improved
Street, New York City
TO LET
TO LET? Two private rooms, front; bed and living room; reasonable; phone service; kitchen uses. 127 W. 141th 86. Apt. 10. Snackery. 127 W. 141th 86. Apt. 10. Purchased rooms. suitable for two or three respectable men, from $7 up. Bradhurst 0178.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS—All convenient, respectable family. Street, Brooklyn. Phone Prospect 744.
NEATLY furnished rooms with convenience, respectable family. Apply 47 W. 123rd 86th Street, Apt. 23, New York City.
NEATLY furnished rooms; steam heat, with privileges; suitable for couple and working family. Avenue; phone Cumberland, 6831, 6 P.M.
Lincoln is furnished back parlor; also partly
living room. Fifth Avenue, Apt. 12, Wor-
sontown, 145th Fifth Avenue, Apt. 12, E. cor-
ner 125th Street.
ROOM TO LET—durable for meetings or
work. West 135th Street. Phone Morningstown 0314.
Rooms to let: Christian family; no object
to children. Call between 1:30 and 2 P. M.
107 W. 145th St. Apt. 53.
TO LET—Three rooms; furnished apartment,
8.99 per room. 241 East 135th Street.
One night up front.
TO LET—Furnished rooms: 2273; Seventh
Street; 3 Sight up; Spencer, Brunswick,
7347.
NEW SIX-ROOM ROUSE—All improve-
ments; 860.99 per room; 163 Worth Ave.
Jamestown, L. phone Morningstown 1657.
WANTED—Respectfully, please body to chase
in Jamestown, L. phone Morningstown 1657.
ROOM TO LET—durable for meetings or
work. West 135th Street. Phone Morningstown 0314.
Rooms to let: Christian family; no object
to children. Call between 1:30 and 2 P. M.
107 W. 145th St. Apt. 53.
TO LET—Three rooms; furnished apartment,
8.99 per room. 241 East 135th Street.
One night up front.
TO LET—Furnished rooms: 2273; Seventh
Street; 3 Sight up; Spencer, Brunswick,
7347.
NEW SIX-ROOM ROUSE—All improve-
ments; 860.99 per room; 163 Worth Ave.
Jamestown, L. phone Morningstown 1657.
WANTED—Respectfully, please body to chase
in Jamestown, L. phone Morningstown 1657.
TO SELL OR BUYLN
ABSTRACT: BANKING AND ITS "ACTION"
Columbia real estate in Lafayette, gold we
are owners of, in which we are able to
live on $500,000 per year, also bank-
ing in the same city. We are the
owners of the bank in Lafayette, pay
information, financial goods, compen-
sions with banks in New York City on Lafayette,
and American Central Avenue
last American Coliseum.