The Negro World
Saturday, November 28, 1925
New York, New York
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LET'S PUT IT OVER
The Indispensable Weekly
The Voice of the Awakened Negro
The Negro World
Reaching the Mass of Negroes
The Best Advertising Medium
A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race
VOL. XIX. No. 16
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1925
PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER. NEW YORK
SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U. S.A.
TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
WHY AND WHEREFORE OF NATION-BUILDING IN AFRICA LOOKING TO THE FUTURE, NEGROES MUST PREPARE NOW
Once again I desire to sound a warning to those of the race who still profess not to see the stark necessity for striking out along lines of nationhood for Negroes and building for themselves power and independence in our Godgiven land, Africa. Living as Negroes are in environments of studied hostility and feverish preparedness on the part of others, it is difficult to conceive what holds these super-optimists back. Be optimistic, if you must, but, in Heaven's name, prepare now against the day when your optimism shall be forced to take wings.
The programme of "Africa for the Africans those at home and those abroad," which has been outlined by the Universal Negro Improvement Association is often maliciously misinterpreted by certain writers and speakers. The object of our organization is not to dump all Negroes in Africa, but to encourage all Negroes to help in the building up of Africa as a great Negro nation, so that those who desire to go to Africa and live there under their own democracy, their own flag, will do so to their own advantage.
All intelligent students of political and domestic science will readily admit that the future of the Negro outside of Africa spells ruin and disaster. Negroes must surround themselves with the help, political, moral and otherwise, of a strong Negro government. This government must be sufficiently strong to lend protection to Negroes anywhere and to compel the respect of all races and nations of the world.
Directing the Mass
As a first step toward the realization of its great objective, a strong Negro nation, in Africa, the Universal Negro Improvement Association has organized into one great body millions of Negroes throughout the world. The association is now striving to properly advise, guide and direct this great mass of forward-looking Negroes in their march to nationhood. Numerous are the pitfalls which must be seen and avoided. With a fair measure of common sense and good judgment we will be able to pass through this very critical period with a minimum of disappointment and failure.
The masses of our people must try hard to learn how to discriminate between the true and the false. If we are not using our minds as well as our ears, it is very easy to be led off on a tangent. Listen well to those who lead, so that you may soon discover if they are saying one thing and doing another. There are some Negroes, who, because of their own personal purposes, seek to fool the race so as to be able to exploit us. This group gives no care as to
Suffering Gladly—For Africa Redeemed
HON. MARCUS GARVEY
among our leaders means nothing else but ruin to the entire race. It is for the masses to cut away from such insincere men and women. We do not want any division in the Negro race. But we must have truth. We must have honesty, and if our leaders will not give us truth and honesty, we must cut away from them and choose others to direct us.
Nation-Building a Big Task
The building of a nation is about as great a task as any race can undertake. We appeal for all to come in because all are necessary to the great programme. All are not prompted to join by the same motives. There are some members of the race who will ever do anything except defraud, rob and exploit others. It is one of the duties of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to warn the masses of our people against the grafting and designing self-seekers among us who would capitalize and utilize the innocence of those whom they are professing to uphift.
The programme of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is a practical, a live programme. No Negro can join the organization without receiving immediate benefit from the lessons which are being taught to instruct, advise and strengthen its members. The masses of Negroes are clamoring for marching orders. They are evolving their own leadership. They are insisting on honesty of purpose and true
racial integrity and they will be satisfied with nothing else.
The Universal Negro Improvement Association encourages the Negro to do anything which is for the uplift of the individual or the race. The association does not teach Negroes to discard or to throw away any opportunity which may be beneficial to them. On the contrary, we say to all Negroes everywhere, seize all opportunities that come to you. But never forget that our success educationally, industrially and politically is based upon the protection of a nation founded by ourselves on the continent of Africa. Prejudice against the Negro will only die out when the Negro himself becomes a power sufficiently strong to compel the respect of the world.
Many of our people argue that the Negro can use his industrial wealth and his ballot to force the government to recognize him. But we must understand that the government is the people and that the majority of the people dictate the policy of the government. If the majority of the people are against a measure, a thing, or a race, then the government is impotent to protect that measure, that thing, or that race. If the Negro were to live in this western world for another five hundred years, he would still find himself outnumbered by superior numbers of other races.
Depending on a Broken Stick
Because of majority rule, the government of white nations will always be against the Negro. For the Negro to depend entirely upon the ballot and his industrial progress is like depending on a broken stick which will never support him in time of need. It sounds very foolish on the part of some of our so-called leaders to speak prejudicial to the great objective of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. It is not hard for the simplest mind to see that the Negro can never hope to hold up his head until he acquires a home of his own where he may match his mind with that of other races and demonstrate his ability to govern himself as other races are doing.
The Universal Negro Improvement Association desires the help, the co-operation of every Negro. We appeal to every Negro to come in and help. Every one can find a place on this great program. The movement belongs to the entire race. The program does not mean that every Negro must go to Africa. You may remain where you are and work for the cause of Africa. All of the white people in Europe did not come over to America to lay the foundation for this great Republic. Let us not stand by with our heads filled with a lot of foolish notions and lose sight of the only thing which will ever save the Negro from continued degradation and ultimate annihilation. Let us join hands and march toward the goal of freedom, liberty and democracy.
I have the honor to be,
Your obedient servant.
Marvin Sancy
Founder and President-General, Universal Negro Improvement Association.
EDUCATION OF THE YOUNG MUST ON NO ACCOUNT BE ALLOWED TO BE TAKEN OVER BY WHITE RACE
To Do This Would Be to Surrender the Future of the Race—White Race Must Be Made to Understand It Cannot Edit the Souls and Minds of Black Men
INTERCEPTING COPIES OF THE NEGRO WORLD SENT TO AFRICA WILL NOT HELP
By KOBINA SEKYI.
In The Gold Coast Times
Government with that of the ostrich.
At only rate it must be now have become
The average white man, deliberately in the case of those either working in the crown colonies or otherwise connected with the crown colonies, and less consciously, even sometimes unconsciously, in the case of those who are not in any way connected with the crown colonies except, perhaps as members of the British Empire, regards the black man as a child in his thoughts and actions. As I stated earlier in this series, we must not attach any weight to the views of the average white man, be he in the storied form of governor or even higher officials in the civil service, or be he in the most splendid form possible in the civil service, although now and again we should attack wild official utterances and check the promulgation of dangerous measures.
The last stage of crown colony offi-
cial aggression, I fancy, is reached
when, as in the new Education Hill, we
see that the government, after due con-
sideration, proposes not only to fetter
the right of anyone who can to set up
a private school, but also to establish
a sort of index librum prohibitorum
for pupils and teachers. I stated in
Article III of this series as follows:
"The present attitude of a section of
the writing public, coupled with certain
somewhat questionable, though legally
authorized, acts of interference with
the freedom of the press, which will be
a little more fully dealt with in a later
article in this series, has made it essen-
tial that we in Africa should dissem-
sionately, and with as much care as
possible, register our own opinion on
the Garvey scare, and therewith set
down our considered views on the sub-
ject of our brethren in America." This
is, I think, the proper stage to de-
with the questionable nets referred to.
It cannot be disputed by any honest official in the service who is in a position to know of the exercise or certain new rights by certain postoffice officials and certain customs officers that a new legalized practice has now for some time been in vogue which is similar to that of the censor in the most dreadful periods of the late war. One finds now that copies of an officially unpollutional journal like The Negro World, which once used to reach some of us regularly now arrive epimaculously, although it is quite certain that by America the lessees come out regularly and one can assume that those who have been sending the copies that formerly reached the addresses regularly do regularly post such copies. If such interceptions are officially directed, it is quite possible that issues of the local papers posted for delivery in the colonies and elsewhere are subjeced to such acts. Now one would very much like to know whether, the government can honestly think that the act of preventing officially unpollutional journals
from reaching persons in this country to whom such papers have been addressed can in any way affect the formation of the development of our own views about the white man.
If the government will not recognize that even before the time of the Faniit Confederation, that is, long before any black man on the American Continent could seek to universalize his convictions about what the black man should do, our predecessors were thinking about the crafty white stranger within their gates and considering ways and means of keeping him within bounds we must classify the mentality of the
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Government with that of the ostrich. At all rate it must by now have become quite obvious to the white man who can see and think that the black man is not going to allow the white man to edit either his soul or his mind in the manner now appearing clear. With all due difference to the great white people who have been appointed to sit on committees and commissions upon the education of the Negro, we should like the white powers that he to consider that they are wasting time in an endeavor which will only serve to-embitter the feelings between the Negro race and the white races, energy which should be directed toward the improvement of the mind of the average white man, be no official or not, high or low, in order that the white man might come to be less white and more human, and thus make it possible for the black man to regard him as a safe person to co-operate with. Before the white man and the black can cooperate in the proper sense of the term they must be simply men and neither black nor white. I do not think it is disputed that in humanity the black man is a higher being than the white man.
The Training of the Young
It is certain that since we are not going to allow the white man to mould our minds and our souls after his fashion, we are not going to permit him to take into his hands the training of our children. This is a matter which we must consider very carefully. The hope of the future is in the ylding, and this is from two opposed points of view, namely, ours and the white man. The white man having failed to subdue our souls and our thoughts heretofore is now resorting to shady plans to effect his purpose, and we are bound to regard with suspicion and even hostility any scheme of education, especially if in any way intended to be rigid and statute bound, or statute fed, that the white man initiated in these days. We must at this time make an effort to set up institutions which will compel the white man to keep his schools straight as far as our children are concerned. We must let the white man know that we have the same capacity, which he wishes to monopolize, to prefer the best of two things, or the best of more than two, and we are not disposed to give him a chance now of wheddling us into leaving such matters in his hands.
Having noted this much, we must consider what the details of our educational policy should be if we are to turn out children who will be useful to us and not tools of the white man to be worn out in the damaging of our interests. I here refer to my paper on "Education With Particular Reference to a British West African University" read before the conference of Africans of British West Africa, and published recently in the "Gold Coast Leader" and to my article on "Education" also published in the same journal some years ago. We must be careful so as not to force our children's energies into channels of enterprise set up and maintained by the white man. We must in these days seek to establish industries at which we will work the children of this new period of white educational policy for Africa. There are quite a lot of things we can do, but it is not advisable to disclose them in a newspaper, for obvious reasons. Pantelini wu bun he na wonkan usem. This is a proverb we know well.
Ford Cars·African Civilizers, He·Says
The Rev. Horace A. R. Philip, more than twenty years head of a Presbyterian mission in British East Africa, arrived recently with his wife on the Anchor liner Transylvania. He came to study American Negro institutions of learning in order to adopt the latest educational systems at the Tumu-tumi institution which he has at Kenya. While missionaries and explorers have done much for Africa, Henry Ford and his flayers have done more than all others combined, said the Rev. Mr. Philip, by opening vast stretches of territory.
During his twenty years of service, the Rev. Mr. Philip and his associates have partially civilized more than 100,000 Negro natives. He said that after five years of medical practice in the bush he had finally convinced the natives that the majority of their sick could be cured in the hospital. When he first went there the custom was to carry all sick persons to the outskirts of the village and let them be consumed by wild beasts.
Why Enforces Secrecy?
WASHINGTON--The memory of King Tet-sank-sam, who died 575 years ago, has been privately X-rayed, and we've informed by press diplomatic that there is to be no publication by any newspaper in the world of any picture or photographs relating to his discovery made by the government.
Many people are wondering why these antiquities are permitted to fit up online in the Vulture of the El Niño, for one month or so, because they are allowed to withstand limited physical probabilities to those who want to know more.
CLEVELAND, O. Nov. 18—Safety Director Barry, the eminent preserver of order in this city, who recently got into trouble by arresting all the Chinese residents of this city, and union protest by the Chinese ambassador at Washington, had to apologize for his ridiculous action, has made a new decree.
A white boy will not be allowed to batter the face of a Negro boy—or vera versa. A Chinese boy will not be allowed to knock in the face of a white boy in a price fight—or vera versa. No, shee, not in the safety city of Cleveland.
If Chinese or Noco price fighters insist upon trying out their prowess, they must do it with members of their own race. White price fighters must be preserved from the infamy of getting beaten by a black or yellow boy. Let the gilts, blacks and yellows batter the faces of members of their own race. Ragial pride demands that the white race be preserved from the infinity of black eyes, bleeding noses, and knockouts administered, by a member of a "lower" race. And that's, as the safety director stafed.
"Race prejudice is the worst single thing in life today," declared Dr. George E. Grong, principal of Hampton Normal Institute, Hampton, Va., in an address on "Is the Negro an Inferior Race?" at the Old South Meeting House Forum yesterday afternoon.
"It is thine to throw overboard the notion of superiority or inferiority of any race," he said. "Where one race excels, another may show weakness and vice versa. The existence of these racial differences will always be undeniable, but let us, the white races, not think we are superior because we happen to live industrial and political control of the world at present.
"It is a small planet we live on, and it will never be any larger. We must learn to live on it all together, in decent neighborhood. There should be no toleration whatsoever among the nations of racial prejudice, but that prejudice should be explained by mutual respect and growing good will."
The speaker urged his hearers against making or listening to any hasty generalizations on the subject of the Negro's mentality in comparison with that of the white races. He asserted that the superiority or inferiority of a race cannot be determined by any kind of skull measurement, comparative size and weight of brains or other similar tests, that no significant conclusion can be drawn on the influence of white or black blood on mentality. In this latter connection he said that while he did not think the crossing of races to be biologically undesirable, he did feel that the result of such action socially, at present, was quite certain to be unhappy. Before the speech and question period, presided over by Prof. Clarence R. Skinner, chairman of the forum meetings, the Florida Justice Singers sang a number of plantation spirituals.
Rothschild Francis's Appeal to Be Heard Next January
The appeal of Rothschild Francis of the Virgini Islands from his conviction for criminal libel and contempt of court will be heard before the U.S. S. Court of Appeals at Philadelphia early in January. Francis was convicted by a local judge who was his political enemy and who tried the case without a jury. The appeal will be argued by A. A. Berle, Jr., of New York. David Wallerstein of Philadelphia appears on the brief with Mr. Berle and will assist in the case.
It is expected that the decision in the case will largely determine the rights of natives in relation to the United States naval administration of the islands, against which a constant agitation has been conducted by native leaders. Francis is a member of the Colonial Council, editor of the "Enemigator" and president of the local A. F. of L union at St. Thomas.
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PEACE IN RIFF LIKELY TO COME THIS WINTER
Abd-el-Krim Reported Ready to Make Peace with France and Spain Provided Independence of Riff Is Recognized
BY VINCENT.SHEEAN
In the New York World.
PARIS, Nov. 22—It is now possible to say, without undue optimism, there is a good chance that peace will come this winter by arrangement between France, Spain and Abd-el-Krim.
Abd-el-Krim is ready to make peace with his European enemies immediately, on terms which in general can be described as very near to the French and Spanish demands.
The Riff cliff makes only one essential condition for an aristocracy—a promise to recognize his country's identity and to grant the fullest measure of independence possible.
This is, however, an unalterable condition, and unless a definite agreement is made for the recognition of the Riff, there can be no conversation on any other point.
Any time that France and Spain are willing to recognize the complete liberty of the Riff state, Abd el-Krim and his brother, Sidi Mohammed, are ready to declare an armistice and enter into peace conversations.
There exists the initial difficulty as to the manner of bringing the belligerents into contact, but on the definitions of independence and the territory of the Riff state there is remarkably little difference between them.
Sidi Mohammed realizes this frankly.
He said to me the last time I saw him:
"This personal message I would like to send to Painjeve. I have retained a most agreeable recollection of my meeting with him in Paris and I have never surrendered my confidence in the nobility of his ideals; his complete good faith and his devotion to justice and liberty.
"If I could meet Painleve and discuss an arrangement for peace, I am confident peace would come quickly. An it is possible impossible for Painleve to come to Morocco. I would be happy to meet with any of his own collaborators—any man of the same ideas and the same generous devotion to humanitarian principles, any man possessing the complete personal confidence of Painleve. Such a meeting could take place at. Ajdir, Quezazz or even Tangier.
Plea to End War
"It seems to me that it is the duty of all of us to avoid if possible, any further waste of money and human lives in a war which none of us desire and which is leading nowhere."
This personal and informal message—which must not be regarded as official—I have delivered to the Premier. That bineful word "prestige" represents the principal enemy of peace. On account of prestige of the three leaders involved can rink ruin by taking the first step toward an armistice. Whoever did so would immediately be accused of "defeatism" and lack of patriotism by rabid nationalist groups. The only one of the three who can be considered fairly safe from opposition is Abel-el-Krim. Therefore Abel-el-Krim himself almost inevitably must make the first move toward opening conversations.
In this connection it should be said Abdel-el-Krism has sent no emissaries of any sort or description either to Rabat, Tangier or Paris. Three persons have been described as "peace emissaries from Abdel-el-Krim" by the European press within the last fortnight. Two of them are Englishmen, the third is myself.
Emissaries Are Mismomers
One of the two Englishmen is a man of distinguished family, with highly disinterested humanitarian motives, but he has not been in the Rift for a year and cannot be considered in any sense as a representative of the Rift sovereign. The other has lived in Morocco for many years and is highly regarded by all parties for his knowledge and understanding of the problems involved. There is also another Englishman of proletarian persecution, who suddenly appeared on the scene recently, but was heartily discouraged by the agents of both sides.
In fact, every cafe in Tangier is full of these amateur peacemakers, and it is hardly possible to walk out on the beach of this international city without falling over some volunteer Ambassador anxious to discuss terms of armistice.
But none of these people however noble their motives can be considered emissaries of Abd-al-Krim.
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. Nov. 16 (A. P.) - Bishop Cotton Cottage gorifies the mustache on the last distinctive badge of masculinity that women have left him.
The Egyptians 3.275 years ago made even finer alabaster lamps than are produced today, says Howard Carter, codiscoverer of *Tut-ankh-Amen*'s tomb. Mr. Criter made known in many of these lamps in the tomb the variety of how the Egyptians illuminated their homes. The lamps were executed in beautiful designs in transparent alabaster and one of them stood about three-feet in height, with a large central cup. There was no decoration on the exterior or the interior, but immediately a light was placed in the vessel there could be seen a picture of the young King and Queen in colors. This affect was produced by another vessel, with the decoration on its exterior, being fitted inside the lamp so cleverly that the jolms between the two vessels could not be seen.
GENERAL SARRAIL MAKES EXCUSES
PARIS, Nov. 18.—Senator Henry de Jouvenel, the new French High Commissioner to Syria, goes to London tomorrow to confer with Foreign Minister Austen Chamberlain on a program for Franco-British cooperation in the mandated territories of Ask Minor, where Britain holds the mandates for Palestine and Mesopotamia. It is expected here that Paris and London will pledge each other their political and moral "harm." If not military, support in handling difficulties which may arise in these mandates, with particular reference to the present French troubles in Syria.
It is significant that M. de Jouvenel goes to London as a result of suggestion made by Mr. Chamberlain to M. Brland.
Before the joint meeting of the Military and Foreign Affairs Committees of the Chamber today General Sarrell, the recalled High Commissioner, said in his explanations that from a general point of view the British had been loyal, but that certain of their agents had not helped the French. Perhaps this detail will be discussed by M. de Jouvenel and M. G. Chamberain. M. de Jouvenel is an entirely different sort of man from the preceding French Commissioners in Syria. Far from being a military man, he has been one of the League of Nations' leaders. He has taken a foremost part in picnic work since the end of the war.
Nevertheless he is not going to Syria with any program of concessions. On the contrary, one of the first things he did was to get the promise of the War Minister to send him all the reinforcements he asked for. In this connection General Sarrall said today that the 20,000 troops the French had in Syria under General Gourand were too many, but that the 20,000 he had were insufficient. The Deputies expressed the opinion that reinforcements would be sent, and, in fact, there was an important debarkation of French troops at Beirut today.
Briefly, General Sarrall's story before the committee was that he had done the best he could with the situation confronting help. In some cases he put the blame on subordinates, but he pointed out that the nationalist movement in Syria had followed that in Morocco, and was part of a general movement in the Mussulman world. He advocated closer co-operation between the British and the French in the mandated territories of Asia Minor.
Questioned closely about the bombardment of Damascus, General Sarrall said that the main idea was to shell the quarters where the rebels had taken refuge. He said that on the first day shells had been fired and on the second day 150. He said that 135 persons were killed. He was forced to admit that the firing was not done by trained artillerymen and that a good many shells fell in parts of the city not intended.
The Communist L'Huhniminte states that it has documentary evidence that General Sarrall is not telling the truth, that his bombardment killed 1,456 persons, including 117 children of less than five years and 219 women.
The Qua D'Orsay continues to have no news about Syria. Private dispatches reaching Paris say, the situation was calm today, but there is danger of the cutting of communications between Beirut and Damascus. It is believed here that the troops landed today will be used to keep this road open.
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BLACK RACES ARE LINKING UP AS
The seeds of, Rise Consciousness which have been lying dormant in the black man's makeup ever since his conquest and subsequent enslavement by the white man, are undoubtedly beginning to sprout now. The world over the black "movement" is steadily diverting itself into one river, one flood of brotherly love and unity. The South-African native is also beginning to throw his energy into this flood. They have discovered that they are not merely "working machines" of the white man, to be exploited and harassed at the behest of any Tom, Dick or Harry. With a white skin. Conversations are now extensively carried on between the South African black man and his brothers of similar hue in many parts of the universe, especially America and in other parts of Africa beyond the boundaries of the Union. This flood of exchange of views, suggestions and constructive advice will ultimately swell into an ocean of irresistible force that will have to be recognized and listened to if universal peace is to be assured. It has been the policy of the white race the world over for the past two thousand years to ruthlessly attack, conquer, subjugate and exploit native
FEDERAL BAN ON "COMMUNIST" UNION
Perry Howard Represents the Government Against the New Pullman Porter Union Because It is Alleged to Be Authorized by the Communists of Moscow
FROM the New York World
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Agents of the Federal Government have joined the Pullman Company in an effort to prevent A. Phillip Randolph, editor of the Messenger, radical Negro paper of New York, from organizing the 12,000 Pullman porters of the nation in the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Portors.
Ferry W. Howard, Negro political leader of Mississippi, now special assistant to the Attorney General, is directing the campaign to defeat the plans of Randolph and others. He said today he was not working for the Pullman Company, but in the capacity of a special labor representative of the Administration to check a movement engineered by Communists receiving instructions from Moscow. The Pullman Company employs 17,500 Negroes, 12,000 of whom are porters on sleeping cars and 5,500 in shops at Chicago. It is the largest employer of Negro men in America.
Being informed that the Randolph movement to organize the porters and other employees of the Pullman Company into a union was "inspired, fostered and promoted by the Communistic and extremist radical element of the labor world," the Department of Justice became interested.
Howard asserts that the firing of four men for cause by the Pullman Company started the agitation, which is not popular with the rank and file of porters.
The controversy over the proposed Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters has become very spirited. A brief prepared by Howard, who was a Pullman porter for years, says:
"In the opinion of older Pullman porters there is no necessity for further organization of them. They point there is already an organization of Pullman porters, as well as an agreement between the company and the porters providing for the settling of any disputes that may arise between them.
"The Pullman Porter's Benefit Association was organized in 1915. It began by the organization of zone associations. It now has more than 8,000 members. It has disbursed $524,478.88 in benefits, and has $150,000 in its treasury."
Advocates of the brotherhood assert the cry of Communism is "bunk." The fact that Randolph edits a Socialist paper and is a radical, they argue, should not serve to prohibit men from joining a union.
Henry Allen Boyd's Grandson Dead
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Special).
Irvin C. Miller, Jr., age three years eight months, died in this city at eleven fifteen Friday night, November 30. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin C. Miller of New York City and the grandson of Henry Allen Boyd of this city. He was stricken with diphtheria, which resulted in a complication of pneumonia. He will be buried in Nashville. The Sister, Irvin C. Miller, Sr. was commended by long distance telegram to Nashville from Philadelphia, Fla. and the grandmother from Louis-
colored peoples in Asia, America, Africa and Australia. This mad career of infamy and devilment received its only, check when, the Japanese (a colored race) rose in their just wrath and smite the Russians on land and sea and drove them out of Manchuria and Corea. Wherever he has gone among the black races of the universe the white man has displayed his low moral character, and he has raped, defiled and seduced, black women to such an extent that in many parts of the world we have now a huge population of orphids and hatchlings. In America the Red Indians have almost become as extinct as the doo. Unable to conquer and tame the Red Indians by fair and civilized means, these white man supposed to tactics almost too despicable to put into print. The same system of annihilation and legislative slow poisoning is being attempted in this country. But thanks to the hardihood, intelligence and inherent doolity of the African, the process of obliteration is laughably faint, and will die the death of many other unjust and unchristian acts of the white man the world over. To his eternal shame he it said that the white man has not only conquered and robbed the African race of continent, but he has exterminated whole nations in other parts of the world.
But now that race consciousness has universally awakened in the bosom of the black man, his white oppressor will meet with undreamt of opposition. In order to strengthen our position in this country, and to show the white man that two can play at his game, we advise that black organizations of other countries be invited to send delegates to our annual political, industrial or religious conferences. We in turn should reciprocate with this spirit and send strong delegations to colored conferences in other parts of the world, so as to come in close touch with our black kinemap to device ways and means to cast off the soke of slavery with which we are harnessed. We are confident of the fact, that not only will the black, races he unanimous in this matter, but we have behind us a vast army of European sympathizers. When the time comes and the white robber can no longer withhold justice and freedom, and can no longer demand his "pound of flesh from nearest the heart" then he will find himself in the wretched position of Shylock.
We had cherished the hope that as time goes on, and blacks begin to understand and view each other holier and nobler light, the spirit of "white lawlessness" would die a natural death. But we are disappointed, because we speedily discovered that from the day the Act of the Union was passed in this country, and subsequently ratified by the British Parliament, the lawless monster was revived, and the hands of the clock of goodwill and progress were moving backward. We have ample material with which to back up our statement. The statute books themselves can reveal the unjust manner in which the black man is legislated for in this country, a dominion of the British Empire, which has even now an "Ambassador of Peace" (?) touring through it. Even when brought into direct touch with the source from which they expect justice to flow, the Africans are victims of injustice. When a case in which the issue lies between white and black comes before the highest tribunals of this country, the black man has very little reason to hope that justice will be pure at the fount. We have had many concrete instances with which to support our facts. These things are easily forgotten by the class of white men who can attest a "triple-supper" in honor of an acquitted murderer. Standford, Utrecht; Cathcart, and many more are all places that remind the black man of European injustice, and these things are bitterly engraven upon the African mind and conscience. We therefore welcome this spirit of race consciousness among the natives in the African Continent.—The Workers Herald.
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U. N. I. A. HAS GAINED IN STRENGTH AND INFLUENCE DESPITE FIERCEST CRITICISM AND OPPOSITION
SO DECLARES HON. WILLIAM L. SHERRILL IN REMARKABLE SPEECH—85 NEW DIVISIONS HAVE BEEN CREATED SINCE IMPRISONMENT OF MARCUS GARVEY
U. N. I. A. Not Held Together by Mere Sentiment —Is Held Together by All—Consuming Passion of the Black Man to Claim His Rightful Place in the World—Has Given a New Leadership to the Negro Race
Membership Is Encouraged by Strides the Organization Has Made—Negroes Need to Be Thankful for Opportunities Which It Has Given Them for Achievement
LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, Nov. 22. If there was any doubt as to whether the Universal Negro Improvement Association was waning in strength and influence, such doubt was removed when Hon. William Sherrill, the Acting President General, in a wonderful speech, which thrilled the crowded audience in Liberty Hall tonight, declared that the organization in spite of the fierce opposition which it has received was steadily gaining and that since the imprisonment of Hon. Marcus Garvey eighty-five new divisions had been created. The organization, said Mr. Sherrill, was held together by something more than mere sentiment; it is held together by the all-consuming passion of the black man to claim for himself his rightful place in the world, and nobody could stop its progress toward the goal for which it was headed, namely, the redemption of Africa and the creation of a government for Negroes. To expedite, however, the progress of the organization, Mr. Sherrill said that the co-operation of the entire Negro race was desirable and he issued a call to every Negro organization throughout the country and the world to join hands with the Universal Negro Improvement Association and hasten the day when the Negro race will make of itself nation equal in importance to any other nation in the world.
The other speaker at the meeting was Mr. Wesley McD. Holder, who spoke on the subject, "Be Thankful." He said that while the Negro in America had no reason to commemorate Thanksgiving Day in the same spirit as the white American yet he had reason to be thankful for what he has achieved since the Universal Negro Improvement Association came upon the scene seven years ago. The Universal Negro Improvement Association, the speaker said, had changed the psychology of the Negro to the extent that he now possessed a new outlook on life and was striving for a place in the sun as the other races were doing.
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Sir William Sherrell, acting President-General, spoke as follows: This audience he tonight is indeed testimony to the fact that Marcus Garvey, the founder and organizer of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, did his work well. It is a testimony to the fact that, in spite of what appeared upon the face of it as failures and disappointments, the seed of race consciousness and racial self-expression found fertile soil in which to germinate and to grow. It bears witness to the fact that those things with which the Universal Negro Improvement Association deals are things basic and fundamental enabling them to withstand the storms of criticism and opposition. And were not the Universal Negro Improvement Association's membership dealing with things basic and fundamental, this great organization would have never lived for the past ten months through almost impregnable odds and oppositions to this point here tonight.
I dare say there is not another Negro organization in America that could have withstood the opposition and criticism the Universal Negro Improvement Association has withstood and still hold itself intreut', having remaining enough courage and determination to go on with its tight toward the realization of its objective. Never before has an organization been put to such a test as that to which the Universal Negro Improvement Association, has been put. Never before has an organization here in America had lined up against it forces and agencies that have been lined up against the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and survived.
Movement Continues to Spread
Let us look back just for a moment
and see through what we have come to
this place here tonight. Tonight we stand
still the great organization Marcus
Garvey left. Tonight we stand not
simply with the number of branches
organized that Marcus Garvey left but
having to our credit for the last ten months more than eighty-five new divisions in various parts of the world. (Applause.) Tonight: we stand with our great Liberty Hall having had removed from over its head the threatening sale, the threatening destruction by judgments, having been able to get our feet back on solid earth and travel on toward the realization of our aims. Tonight: we stand still holding the title to the S. S. Booker T. Washington, the ship Marchs Garvey left, and now making preparation for the actual use of that ship in the carrying and bringing of cargo, and we are hoping that the time is not for distant before it will become a revenue-producer for the great Universal Negro Improvement Association. (Applause.)
What the U. N. I. A. Had to Face
And yet little do we know what it has cost the Universal Negro Improvement Association be able to hold the ground it has gained. The Universal Negro Improvement Association has had from the very outset the whole Negro press of this country lined up against it and making every attempt to thwart every effort made by this organization to advance or progress. From the very moment Garvey organized the Universal Negro Improvement Association, when he only had thirteen members, simultaneously with the organization of this Association came the opposition of the Negro press of this country. After the incipiency of this organization we have had lined up against us the Negro pulpit, the Negro church and Negro ministry. Notwithstanding the fact that the Negro preacher is the leader in the race notwithstanding the fact that with this old religious psychology the Negro preacher has been enabled to hold the ear of the masses and shape their thinking and their movements as they desired, in spite of that opposition the C. N. I. A. has lived and thrived and advanced. (Applause.)
The Preacher's Opportunity
And I want to say that the Negro preacher has actually been the leader in the race, and is today. That is to say, the Negro preacher occupies a different position in the Negro race to what the white preacher occupies in the white race. The Negro listens to his Negro preacher. It doesn't matter whether he is living about law, medicine, politics or religion, what the Negro preacher pays the Negro masses generally believe and follow. If the white man wants to know about law he goes to his lawyers he goes to his great law firms. If the white man wants to know about politics, he goes to his Congressman, he goes to his Senator, he goes to his representatives of State. If the white man wants to know about finance and investment he goes to his banker. But if a Negro wants to know about politics or an investment or what not, he finds out what his preacher says.
And the Negro ministry of this country understand we when I say this, I don't say that the Universal Negro Improvement Association is antagonistic toward the church or the Negro ministry, but I am simply stating a face and bring before you an obstacle we have had to overcome. The Negro ministry of this country, the Negro churches of this country almost from the beginning of the association have been lined up against it, and in spite of that in no place in the world has the Universal Negro Improvement Association grown in numbers and in wealth as it has right here in America against this opposition. (Applause.)
"The Master's Voice"
We have had lined up against us the white press of the country. You know the psychology of the black man. You know when the good white folks say
a thing is not right he has been taught to understand it is not right. When the good white folks laugh at an attempt of a Negro to accomplish something, he, too, not having rid-himself of that slave psychology has been taught to laugh. But in spite of the opposition of the white press the association has lived.
Engaged on New Tasks
Engaged on New Tasks
But those are not the only things that have come about to make the sitting hard for the Universal Negro Improvement Association. In the beginning we have attempted a job the Negro has never attempted before. It is a new job. We have no patterns to follow. We have not traveled this path before. Many things we must learn by experience. We have got to fall down many times before we are able to stand and walk. We are children trying to grow into racial manhood, trying to develop racial strength. We have not had at our disposal black men and black women who knew enough about their jobs, who had enough experience and training to tackle the big and dramatic tasks of the association and put them over without slipping a foot and making a blunder. And yet in spite of all this the Universal Negro Improvement Association finds itself tonight still marching on. (Applause.)
The Stronger for Opposition
The oppression, friends have been stiff, but I am infined to believe that we are the 'stronger' for having met this opposition. I am inclined to believe that the Universal Negro Improvement Association is what it is because we have had to go up against that opposition. I am inclined to believe that the Universal Negro Improvement Association would not have reached the high place it now occupies in the world had not already established institutions opposed its rising. Just as the white races of the world have tried to keep the black man down as an individual and yet we have seen individuals of our race mount higher and higher through the opposition and claim some of the most enviable posts amidst human endeavor, so the Universal Negro Improvement Association as an organization has been enabled, by the mere fact that it was opposed, to rise higher and higher because under the opposition there has been brought out the finest and best there is in the organization.
It is in the smoothing of the ore that you get the best out of it. It is in the beating of the dirt in the diamond fields that you find the diamonds. It is when you put a man under the sternest oppression and persecution that you get out of him the very best that is in him. And so it is with a race. Likewise it is with an organization.
What Sustains the U. N. I. A.
What is responsible for the U. N. I. A. ability to withstand this opposition?
I met a gentleman today at St Mary's church who said to me after he had shaken my hand, "Mr. Sherill, I want to congratulate your association. I am not a member, but I am surprised that organization has held together as long as it has." Well, I told him "further, if you are surprised after ten months you are in for a longer surprise, for the Universal Negro Improvement Association is held together by something stronger than mere sentiment, held together by something stronger than mere wishes and desires. The Universal Negro Improvement Association is held together by an all-consuming passion of the black man to claim for himself his rightful place in the world." (Appease.)
Why has the N. L. A. been able to withstand this 'onslaught'? Why is it that after an absence of ten months of Marcus Garvey the Negro in the N. L. A. still crowds Liberty Halls all over the country, still retains his glorious desire, still goes down in his pockets, takes out his money in order to finance the movement. It is because the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association now has a knowledge of his racial powers, possibilities and responsibilities. It is because the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association has had a training, a teaching and an awakening different from any Negro had before. It is because the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association has awakened to the fact that only in his establishing racial autonomy will it be able in this world to make sure the safety of his posterity. It is because the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association for seven years has studied the race problem and has found out that every race and every nation in spite of the smiles they may have on their faces for black men is looking out for itself and for its posterity, and that if the Negro as a race is to take his place in the world and ensure his safety as a race and an a people he must make himself strong enough to protect himself and his own. And on account of this new awakening
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Negro's to Put Over Programme
There is a Negro in here tonight a member of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, who does not clearly understand that the programme of the Universal Negro Improvement Association can only be put over by black men, because white men are not interested in putting over such a programme for this race. Realizing that, that Negro also realizes that it in spite of our shortcomings as a space in spite of those who have betrayed us within our ranks, in spite of those who have failed us when we wanted them most, if we as a race are ever to take our place in the world, we ourselves must bear with our own intolerances until we develop those of sufficient intellectual and moral strength to carry us our objective. We know that the other fellow will help us just as far, but he will carry us no farther. We know enough now about the race problem. We know enough now about the attitude of the white man, whether he be in America, the West Indies or in Africa, to know that he never going to hit us to a position of political, economic and social equality with himself. He will not help us so far, he will do just so much, but he is never going to raise us from prison deprived to the halls that he himself occupies, because in his struggle for place in the world he ends the Negro a valuable asset; whether it be Negro or Aslatic, he finds the weak race a valuable asset in enabling him to reach the points of power that he deserves. And the Negro of the Universal Negro Improvement Association who has now had this rebirth, having been given this new psychology, a Negro who has made up his mind that whether he succeeds or fails he is going to make the
to achieve for himself and for his own
Welcome Bonus Discovered
Unknown Powers Discovered
Seven years has enabled the Negro to discover unknown powers. We found out ourselves in the F. N. L. A. We found we can do a lot of things we did not know before we could do. We are like the follow that was whipping Jack Johnson once. He was sitting in a restaurant having a meal when Jack Johnson came in. He had heard of Jack Johnson but had never seen him. Jack came in and sat down on a stoop near him and stepped on his foot. And this Negro stood up, smashed Jack Johnson in the mouth, knocked him down, straddled him and was about to beat him to death when a yellow camel and goat, "Look at that Negro boating Jack Johnson!" When he said that, this Negro immortally wreathed and pumped up and got his hat and out he went.
Awakening to Consciousness
Awakening to Consciousness
The Negro as a race has been in about the same condition regarding the white man. Before the coming of the Universal Negro Improvement Association we did not have an organization which was created completely in awakening the Negro to a consciousness of the powers within him. Before the coming of the U. N. L. A., in the first place, Negroes did not know there were so many of them. And you do not know if we have counted them all, because the white man has been doing the counting for us. But the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association has seen an actual demonstration of what the mere attempt to organize and get together means. Because, you know, the Negro has not started his programme yet. You have not started any real aggressive programme in Africa. You have not hurt anybody yet. You have not attempted to hurt anybody yet. You have not even shouldered a gun. You have been simply getting together, and just in your getting together, just because Negroes were getting together in New York, in Chicago, in New Orleans, in Jamaica, in Trinidad, in Barbados, in Central America and fi. Africa, the mere fact that you have been getting together has struck terror and fear into the white world. (Applause.)
Talk of Black Peril".
We have never heard, as we have heard these past keven years, so much talk about the "black pelt." We have never heard so much discussion of "this is a white man's country." We have never seen the coming into being of so many various organizations among white people to protect the culture and purity of their race. We have never seen so much maneuvering on the part of governments to keep Africa under white control. They know that when this Negro race begins to move together as one man, that when this Negro race begins to raise up the right foot and put down the left foot at, the same time, they can redeem any spot on God's green earth they want to. (Applause).
For more than four hundred years the white man has been pushing himself into all parts of the world. For more than four hundred years he has been hung entangled in getting a grip on hands, hands, because he realizes that the life of a rose, the life of
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a nation depends upon the amount of land that race or nation controls. All life is dependent upon land. When we say "land," that about covers everything, because we get land either for the land itself or its products.
Desire for Lands Cause of War
All wars can be traced to the desire or the need of more land, even though 101 excuses and causes may be brought forward to blind the eyes of an unspecting public. The great war of 1815, even though the common head were told that they were going forward to fight for democracy, bad its very basis and beginning in the land of our fathers, Africa. It was a flight for a trimer grip and more complete control of certain portions of Africa. The Energy in the University of Nigeria Improvement Association being fully awake to has needs and necessities, being fully conscious of the sufferings of his people everywhere, has stifled out shoulder to shoulder with the rest of the world fighting, too for land, for standing room.
Striking at the Root
The Universal Negro Improvement Association differs from the majority of our organizations in that we are trying to remove the Avery cause of Negro suffering, we are trying to remove the very cause of prejudice. Some people here in America say they are interested only in the American program, they are the Universal program has nothing to do with us here; they say we are too busily engaged in settling our disputes here we are too busily engaged in fighting our problems here. They say we are too busily engaged in settling our disputes here we are too busily engaged in fighting our problems here. But, ah, little do they know that the UNITA's program is one that should interest every Negro, whether he intends to live in America or to live in foreign cities, because in the solution of the Negro problem internationally lies the solution of the Negro problem internationally.
If the Negro in the Universal Negro Improvement Association proceeds in establishing economy, political and material strength, that strength will serve the interests of black men wherever they want to live. If the Universal Negro Improvement Association succeeds in establishing in Africa a great United States of Africa, the Negro in America will be protected by the black government that protects black men in Africa. If the N. L. A. makes itself strong enough on the great continent of Africa to make the great nations of the world fear and respect the governments under which Negroes happen to give well-fear and respect the Afra in government as if it is right there.
We have no obligation to motivate we
want to work any tightly the criteria of
Nurses in their minimum requirements
to solve their vital problems, but we
say to all Nurses of organization wherever
they may be seen through you
applicant with your job problems, or
your man and female support or an
organization toward the UNA which
is working for the natural beauty and
progress of the race everywhere.
Fighting for Standing Room
Fighting for Standing Room
The UNIA is bringing in a standing room. We are at them today so they meet in some little corner of the town of Europe for peace gathering now with a session of satisfaction that we have the thorn now being because the thorn under stands only other. But as it has been said from this platform many a time there will be no peace in the world. England will have no peace. France will have no peace. Germany will have no peace as long as millions of Negroes in Africa are crushed and oppressed. These races, these nations will have no peace mind they have allowed to every and every nation the standing room.
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that God Almighty intended for all His children.
The League of Nations and the recent peace meet is but an attempt on the part of those who exploit weaker people to get an understanding among themselves. The Kaiser said the other day in an interview that the greatest mistake the white races made was to jump upon the neck of Germany in 1914. They have done as all thieves do, make a serious blunder because the war of 1914 paved the way for the great birth and the tremendous activity for nationhood which is now taking place in the world. The Universal Negro Improvement Association is the organization for the Negroes, and we are calling tonight from Liberty Hall to Negroes in America, Negroes who are tired of segregation, Negroes who do not want their children to be subjected to the same cursed lunch laws, unwritten that they themselves have been subjected to. Negroes who want their children to have unlimited, unharmed, opportunity to reach the highest places in the world their ability and integrity will carry them to, to line up with the Universal Negro Improvement Association, an organization which is engaged in the workings out of the problem which faces us as a race.
Some of us are gassily discouraged. Some of us in Liberty Hall, some of us in the Association become easily discouraged. When the enemy begins to strike from the right and from the left, but remember this one thing, if you remember no more, that the Negro race in this twentieth century is giving birth to a new order; it is giving birth to a new racial culture; it is giving birth to new racial ideals; it is giving birth to national欲, to independence. And with all birth there is pain. Though you may be hurt, though you may be suffering, though the clouds may hang dark and heavy over you, remember that you are only having the accompanying pain that goes with birth, and the day will come when the race will be bound as all peoples who have suffered are proud of those times through which they perish.
Strong as Ever
The N. L. A. tonight stands the same strong, determined organization it ever was, having not taken one step backward, but come forward, keeping our eyes on the deal and listening for the opening of the door of Atlanta prison when the next leader will come back to the Belton to carry us on to another heist (Applause). None need think about the U. N. L. A. is disconnected the the Marquis Garvey is improved. When you think of the great primate of the Universal Negro integration Association, when you think of the best friend you have to travel the poor condition of Marquis Garvey is but an incident in the life of the great Universal Negro Improve-
We hope and have been hoping all
monthly that he would come
home but whether he stays a year or
whether he leaves us the mem-
norial of the University Negro Em-
pirement of West Virginia is going to stick
to the past and going to continue to
continue to work when Mar-
cus will come home, whether it be in
America or whether it be in the West
Indies, whether it be on the coast of
Virginia or whether it be at the
helm of the University Negro Empre-
sivement of West Virginia.
Truth Will Get a Hearing
The officer has tried all kinds of playful tactics to do damage to the thing from up behind. The damage could not be fixed in the case, but will kinds of things and render on behalf all kinds of things he has tried in every way to break your shoulder and heart you aport so that the instigator is not Garvey is going to use for the reprehension of AfriLen will not be here when Garvey comes back, but he has his fledgling (Applause). We see the soothing hands of the enemy and (continued on page 10).
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‘Advertising Hates at OMice a
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VOL. XIX. . NEW YORK, ‘NOVEMBER 28, 1925 No. 16
tio ar World does not knowingly accept questionable
of fraudulent advertising. Readers-of-the Negro. World are:
earnestly requested. to invite our attention to any failure on the
part of un.advertiser to adhere to any-sepresentation contained
in'a Negro World advertisement. : c
: - LET'S PUT. IT OVER .- .
ae - A WARNING. TO HYPOCRITES. .
FINHERE are some people whom you can’t uplift by any mean
< I whatever. It is recorded tai yesus, the Christ, failed, anc
(A —~“where He failed Marcug Garvey; or the U2 N2L7A;, cannot
be reasonably expected to-succeed. The Man of Nazareth, wher
all efforts at redemption failed, did notSyaste kind words upon the
hypocrites. He upbraided them in harsh terms and exclaimed, “Ye
* serpents, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?” while to ‘the
people-at-large he gave this food: for thought: “No: man can. serve
two masters, for either ‘he Will hate the: one and love the other; or
else he will hold to the one and despise the other. Ye cannot serve
, God and mammon.” A a :
We are thinking of individuals who go about with a book 6f the
Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus-Gafvey in one hand and a
_dagger for the great leader ini the other; who yell thomselves hoarsé
proclaiming Gawey as genius and scer, Moses and martyr, high:
* souled and noble, IN PUBLIC, but whe in’ secret go into committee
& ways and means debating how most expeditiously to get Garvey
ut of the way, to wring his soul and to insure his continued im-
prisonment and subsequent deportation from this country. ag
. We are referring to.individuals who, grown ambitious, a little
leafning“their most dangerous enemy, will seek to ride t@ power on
‘the crest of any wave, be it even strewn with the bodies of hapless
" human beings; who have no compunction in calling upon high heaven
to witness their deception of a’ people and. by whispering slander of
_another, hope.to turn the spotlight away from their misdeeds.
If theté is a single person for whém we have utter contempt it is
that person who behind a mask of sincerity hides a heart corrupt,
‘and who, capitalizing the fanatical zeal of satellites, employs lying
and deceit, insinuation and innuendo as his weapons.. Such a person
can have no pretentious perch in the Universal Negro Improvement.
Association. . . . :
The Negro World begs to serveHotice that it will, with all its
energy, wage merciless war upon any adventurer appearing within
the ranks who, looking to kis personal aggrandizement, seeks to
-vilify the Hon. Marcus Garvey and deceive the people. We shall
see to it that the abiding faith of Negroes the world over in a move-
~ment, founded-end-preserved,-through-seven-troublous-fears;-by-the
"Hon. Marcus Garyey is not commercialized. We shall do this,’ or
account ourselves worse than the time-servets whose sinister designs
we would confound. =.
THOSE WHO WIN.MUST FIGHT FIRE WITH FIRE
HOSE people who imaginé that. they can win anything. that
I belongs to them, or in the enjoyment of. which they haye
= an equal right, without fighting’to get it and to hold on to
it, -are so badly mistaken that they will véry géncrally have failure
for comfort: This will prove the, case very generally in dealing with
the members of the white races, who are never satisfied with their
share of the common honnty but ceaselessly are reaching: to grasp
the share of others, and who do not scruple to use diplomacy, fraud
‘ox force in doing so. . Even among themselves it is ong long relent-
less grasp after more than his share at the expense of his neighbor;
who is engaged im the same gamé of selfishness and intrigue, “It is
the way of the white world, and if we are going to get and hold our.
share. of social, civil and economic benefits we have got to fight fire
with fire in doing so, There need be no mistake abcut this phase
Of the matter. soos 3 oo é
Verylittle can be accomplished without érganization.. Mass co-
‘operation everywhere is the key that unlocks. the'-storehouse of
hings.. And.the things in the storehouse ate cetimon goods, 40 so
much. of which each is-equally entitled. But‘ unless he fights for
whit is his the other ang more aggressive person will grab and make
~off-with it, | In hig front page article in the last issu of The Négro
‘World, President-General Garvey emphasized this point im the fol-
lowing eloquetit expression: - Lt
Blighty ark int. 2 Faging. 600, sutahoning to. cholter. ti four.
, eadigd: mllliqn agregs of the world,)qnd the other Sdliew .°
Se ne cota Aisne it will be in this wicked’ world
sa vie See, Kove the cogeaiaation pad the oneness ‘of spirit,
Bar OF prmepenntiyity: dazy to ‘$68 pomemncble to expert: to-
a Hen ae wee kPa, a6 Fost phrndes ic, becease
sane Sine seer eeeticeaieets Coreey tat rs
EG Ceo emk dlr
we Bnet nae ge Oo |
CRCRREE er hee es 7 vce 1 eS
Neen At o/s
. THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1825
jority of cases this was accomplished by force of aris: Presaufe,. |, ——— —
Of gpurse, may assgtt ‘itself in| othef” forms, but, in the ‘last. | |THE NEGRO. Al
analysis, whatever ‘influence is. brought to bear against: the™. -. +. RIGHTS
Spowers Opposed to us mug contain the eigment of fotge in order, | {ow
wl eo its parposs, ty ry apmirent thai is ‘From the Dearborn In
‘thaConty glement. the world recognizes” |” . | The Nesvo tt « human
Sie : aed _ ‘cr’ the Conitibation. hi
Everywhere, in whatever we do, we find: the element of force ‘and | jrecteety hone of ny
are constrained to.fight-for what.is ours-or sérvilely accept: robbery | Ant no are ble. obligation
aiid Obpressivinsfor our portion. Full-blooded men and women d6|2% Alt: the: facta, bait. 0
TED. . tea “| portant facts,. OF wrt
not anywhere akcept tamely robbery and oppression. “It is the blood-'| the tact of race. «
less and spineless sort that, do it and are growind to powder.. Lt i5'.atood as yet: indeear
the natural disposition of the white taces'to fob and oppress. They | 2¢rwtand It are reorried an
practice it among themselves, as far as they can, and they catry it | The tact of race cannot b
ta the West Indian; the Australian Blackfellow, the Asiatic and fhe | The fact of race doen not
African, and force it upon them. “If they do not resist it, if they do | Serre, alone. AM, the, r
not fight fire with fire, they-are brought ‘into subjection and ground’ pressing the fact, not fro
to powder, becoming mere machines that are operated by their mas- | It 4s one of ‘the stranges
ters. What then? It is to fight or be étislayed and robbed of every- |Our ignorance tn these
thing worth having and living for.’ Mareus Garvey stands forfight. |e the orixin sat the
Do thoi also stand for-it and fight when necessary—and it is neces- | when renily its origin ix t
shry to, fight all of the time, to keep or to. get and enjoy our share | SoRrreeston of that reall
of the common: inheritance of mankind, in the good. things of the} function. Superiority in 1
earth, ay # . * {ot- argument but’ of ‘aehier
. ° ae sag +. 49 [Perlority ts pot decided by
os : . but by opportunity. Ran
+ PHANRSGIVING WEEK “7 [ieea.” Nagre pumpnes’
MIS is Thatiksgiving week in the United States. The twenty
sixth of November is the day. It will be celebrated her:
and there’ in other parts of the world, where thére are
English speaking people, but here in the United States, Thanksgiving
Day has become an institution, so to say. We look for the coming
of it as a matter of cdurse and enter into the spirit of it with genuine
enjoyment. We have time to look hack over the days that are dea¢
and to compare our present corfdition with that of those, days, and
we usually find a measure of satisfaction in so doing, as individuals.
It is a helpiul thing to balance the gains with the losses of life dur-
Jing the-past-year and"this is the appropriate Season in which so do so.
Let each person. balance his gains against his losses for the year and
take Stock so that he"may the more wisely’ shape his life for the
coming days. “ : ‘i
| AS a race in the United States We hate iigEh to be" thankful for,
mainly that conditions are not worse for us than they are: That. is
big gain. “We have the hard.struggle which every’ race group of the
cititenship has for.a fair administration“of the laws and for a square
deal in opportinity to earf “a crust’of bread and a place to-sfeep,”
and’we are holding our own measurably, when we consider that
we-have somewhat more handicaps ip our’strivings than miembers of
lother race groups have—and,we have some 57 varicties of such race
groups in this country, all.striving for advantage and most of them
striving with a-greater oncness of effort than «lo the Negro people,
who are Jearning to do so more'than-ever. Why? Because experi-
ence is a hard task master, and he is and has long beenour teacher.
As members of the Universal Negro ‘Improvement Association,
aur. abservance.of Thanksgiving Day will be marred by.the absence
of our great leader, President:General Garvey, and there will be fess
of enthusiasm in the enjoyment of the day in all‘of the locals on that
acgount, but we have reasonable health and prosperity and,we are
free to work and pray that another Thanksgiving"Day may-find him
free_and among us.in the flesh as he is-in the spirit in every Liberty
Hall in all parts of the World., So let us work and pray. When
we are [ree to do so there is always plenty of room for hope, and
hope, the expectation of something desired to he realized, has enabled
millions to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. It will help us
ae:
, ROBBING KING TUTS TOMB
'T is.not a small thing to ‘rob a @aves Those who do it are held
J to he the ost contemjrtible of creatures. Bit wher atom
is violated in the name of science it becomes a dignitied. busi
ness. We can’t discover any material difference between’a grave
robber and a tomb Idoter. Intelligent mankind appears to recognize
a difference grith a distinction, We shoof or imprison the grave
rubber hecattse he acts for pérsenal gain but we applaud and exalt
the tomb looter because he'acts in the name of ‘science, or claims
that hé Goes, But both sorts look closely to the money and art
treasures they: get hold of. er .
Howard Carter and the Egyptian anihorities have alast entered
the eliamber and, opened the eoflin of King ‘Tut-Ank:Amen, in the
Veley-oF the Kings; at. Luxor, in Egypt. ‘The display of gold and
Bit Objects W Sard to he one oF the richest and rarest ever uncovered
by archaeologists. The munumy was denuded of all its trappings
and wealth and the poor Pharaoh is now as naked as when he cane
inte the world, despite the Javished splendor of the housing and
claghing of him when he was dead. Science has lef him nothing
but- mummified skin and bone, But science must, be served, they
say, and they must know. But the thing does not appear to°be right
and. proper, in our opinion, We. think the dead should -be allowed
to est in peace, 0 2 .
AFRICANS TO FIGHT SEGREGATION AND
* DISFRANCHISEMENT —
7 CABLEGRAM from Cape Town, South Africa, says, that the
A President of the ATrican National Congress of the Cape of
* MA” Good Hope has issugd-a statement to the effect’ that the
Congress. will strenuously oppose the proposal policy. of Premier
Hertzog of the Union of. South. Africa for the segregation of the
natives of the cape: and the abolition of the cape native franchis€
A deputation will be sent to London to protest to_the Imperéal
Government against the proposal to incorporate Bechuanaland, Basu-
toland’and Swaziland.in the Union of South. Africa. - 2 Sie
The ‘cablegram shows that the Aftican Nitional Congress is. alive
and wide awake to.the imperiled interests of the natives and will fight
the proposed megsures-to'achnish. That is as it should be. ..Fight!
“Invitations Rab{aéranath Tagore
and pishatme Gandhi to visit the
United States and'tabo pert mm meet:
ings of the Fellewstig of Feyh tm the
Srincigal cities of Amerien, wit tb fo-
Rvered to the Minden dy ire. Vilerie
semees ty Petewtaip Siege ef Now
Tansee tee Sl cae
‘Thousntile of Kitde = -
ip Pp a Bg
PMN et al Th eae
Fagore and . Gandhi
Invited Have
Chicago Lives Too Fast—
So Does New-York, .*,
CHICARO, Kev: 15—Chienge ie itv-
tng tep fast, te working end playing
too mata. A steady incroney tm heart
diecabe ts reowting- .
nTHe Bas spares the erumiiention ot
tiem, 9 eo-eperate with the City Seaith
pa mn gy
mae Sew
‘eat teniey te 26h weep Sev
hos a Sob age
eg het ic
THE NEGRO AND. HIS
+s The Neero ‘fn a human being. Un-
Face’ the Coniunation, hin rights are
breclioly howe. of gny other citizen,
Ant no are bis. obligations... Thage.are
Jnot all. the: facte, bit: they are. im-
Tortant facte.. Of portance,” tbo, Is
the tage ‘tenes Ae under
|.ntood as-yet: ‘indeedr frapte to une,
deratand it are acorried and denounced,
nd fforts are made tp auppress It
The fact of race cannot be suppressed.
‘The {net of race doen not concern the
Nerro alone. All the, race question
that can poxsibly extst rises {rom sup-
pressing the fact, not ‘from’ facing it.
Iv fu one of the strangest aspects .of
our imnorance in these mattets that
we conceive the reallzation of race to
bo the origin .ef the race problem,
when renlly its origin is the attempted
suppreaaion of that reallzation. Races
are here, «They differ. “Each haa ite
function. Superiority in not a’ matter
‘of-argument but" of ‘achievement. In-
Terlority 1s pot decided by achievement
Dut by opportunity. Race lines are
fxea, Sure purpines transgression
with: -dexfuotion. - These are facts.
And raco rghts are also facts. Z
The turdughtch- the Négro's -prob-
tem has take¥in this country 4s In-
teresting. Formerly the plea was,
thude ‘that he wan deserving 6f agalet: |
apte: He waa regarded as a protese
who necded anf expected help. , The
collection pute and the uplifters’ pro-
grain always hovered near him.
IC Is now emphasized, however, that
tho Negro might help himself. Given
industrial: oppoftunity he becomes &
good worker. ° He is a good family mun,
though all too grequentiy: he suffers In
general esteem from the prevalence of
rowdylsm among his own race in some
of fye larger cities, At prexent he is
reetricted to thone rexldonce districts
from which white people are moving
WAYS —Notwtthstandmg the fact“ that
a highly respectable-and vahiabl@ype
of family life exists among Nesroen, it
Is too-eommonly the practice of mual-
cipal antheriticn to aceeegate alongnide
he Negro settlement any special form
of outlawry whieh police-polltics may |
condone: Wher, to encape ffém thir.
dition, Negroog - seek “respectable
wurroundings tu distri&s Inhabited -by
whites, ditrultion ensue. 7
These conditions point clearly ine |
ay for we -moxt “Ktep’ of ‘sgIE=hAp,,
namely. the establishment far them=
elves of communities where thele
amilien inay he Feared iunder the best
‘na most conxentiAl Influences and |
shore thelr-righis as citizehs may” be |"
cholly enjoyed.
“eis prqctivally Wapelewt te BURT ART
Prejudice” the rent opposition which ||
xists to mixing the races, The Negro ||
Jorn not want to crowd fn among the |!
chitex: what he dger want tx she air, ||
unlight, apace xia eanttetion which |!
re to be had in white residential ace- |
lons. Ifo should have all there things |!
n his own quarter. He can have them |!
he will intelligently construct: auch |
ommunities and render them {iluxtra-
ve of ihe virtues of hix race at thelr
ext. ei
(Editor's - Note:—Yee, indeed, the |‘
(egro isa human being. And Negroes| J
vill make ‘unnecessary asseverations | «
f this fact only when “they establish | :
ar themselves communities where their | f
smilies may be reared under the beet | 2
nd most congenial ginfluences, and | ¢
here thei Fighte gp citizens may be |c
yholly enjoyed,” ae You say. And)
nose communities, we repeat, must be| C
an Africa, governed and controlled
y Africans for Africans.)
England-South Africa
_ By Air Route Servize
(From the New York Evening Pest) ”
Cecil Wthodes? "Cape to Care” aston
fnay. be featleed by. the “establishment
Let _regulur air route in sdvance_of
the Completion of the Faflway. Alan
Cobliam, whe fately made the Mise
from London to-Rangoon and back, 1
presently to, Ay via Beindial, Gairo,
Khartum, Johannesburg and way" ato-
tions to the southern tip of Africa. The
Heitsh Ale Ministry ste putting alr-
@eomes In order, for him at ewenty
ianding places In-atelea..‘Theap. were
usedstwo years ago in a fight over the
name route, so that thé practicabiiy
of the scheme Is riot in question. . But
av occasional tour ge force ts a alf-
ferent Thatter from. everyday , traffic.
There aro. probftime of atmospheric
conditions over Africa's lake and
jungio country quite as serious as
those of, ous own mountain heights;
tale alrdrome at Abercorn, in Rhodesle;
for example, is at 5800 fest, However,
[Tiitish commercial firme and. private
Subscribers are rallying to the @upport
OF the Alr Ministry in the venture, con=
fident of an ultimate return that will
Sustity ‘the ‘cost.
“Marcas. Garvey = |
Is Great—Bat™ |
"(Feém the Richmond Planet)
Marcus Garvey 1s writing some
wonderful payctiologioal articles tn The
Negro World, and if be and his fol-
lowets.can lift thempelves out of the
‘valley. Of doubt to the mountain. top
e¢ frm belief in the principles thett
lender enunctates, syocess it bound te
¢rown their efforts. Mahetain Gandhi
Sa & greater loader and more venerated
an@ reapected since be emerged fiom
‘an Bngiih prison thist be was Before
be was iscaresreted théra Wo ey
de otvorating bie foowine.
bation, evey thong tt may sili. pines
Gtter be has guas.cRs way! of of Ge
cart wet
[Danes Net i, 0.
Picanape weeny
aaeo Wesrs BPRySR 4
rit ok capper > lane
veer ~!
eet tet, setaitg fy eR
is
aie Sees om ye
ite roe a! eee
“BY GRACE IS SUFFICENT, FOR THEE”
‘ 7 “S Welhen tor The WNogry ‘Werid * aa
ey) et BYVART-YOUNG. == -
Pe Pere See ee ee ee
us forsaken nor -his seed begging bread.
caer: : —Psalm xx
. “For thee—sufficient is My Grace!” .
This message down the ages rings: .
Not to one.tongue arthosen-race, |
. |. To'slaves, to captives, and to kings! 7
(What need to yearn-for fealms afar.
When*heaven may to.our souls descend?
When love we follow like a, star, *
& ‘And ‘Cheist we own as Guide and ‘Friend?
© Phe richest treasure earth enclaves
Is.open but to earnest men:
As shells-are-cast up by the waves |
“While pearls'sink deep beyond our ken.
Sé Chirist’s ‘sweet influence, hour by hour, .
Grows in the heart like treasure-trove,
Until it burgeons to a flower |
+ TARETAMS tie World with ‘truth and love.
3 .
The surface stream alone need close 7
Because of ivinter’s heaviest frost:
On‘the unresting river flows; *
. Till in the ocean's arms “tis lost;
So’ sin encrusts the. impatient soul...
<1, And chills qwhile its power to bless. ~-
Yet the strong Current seeks the goal
Oi. all unselfish happiness. .
As once, within an: upper room,” « ‘
The Spirit. Christ's apostles pathed, -
And ‘each fis comrade through the gloom
Saw bright with-fire, yet all unscathed, %
So pause, one glad sweet hour,with me,
Dear brother. on God's highest hill; :
Let ‘respirations fresh and free
With love and grace our bosoms fill.
“Gufficient is My Grace!” Deny *
* It- ne'er, this Love that counts no tost; |
__What-fish-may_drink_its fountain dry?
+ “What mouse‘earth’s graiary exliaust?
O, Comrade, read the message clear.”
It pulses through our brains and blood.
‘The Heaven of Love is Now and Here:
Life’s Crown is Grace—and Brotherhood!
a, Mrica. . Meg |
_. +» Editorial Opinion of the Negro Press
‘The wondertul progress made by they are elving us krfowleds
Negro in América has been made be-|mechantes, ard art—Tam
caune of hinabillty to forgive and for- —
get the-many Infuaticer heaped upon'| , Much moriex, Is wasted
him. Hud he been an other roces, the} pieasure, ‘There 18 no
Lvery-—izons"of our fate wotld have|asetx and no thought
ome main-aprings of life and) Theae gro Tings wo" gow
caurdl the Iron to come into our hearts| clave and convenion. | 7
and into our souls. ‘The results*would | futuge of the black mar
have been dinastrous to the whole ract.| will be safe and secure |
But the Nexroshan been different -4o| proft’by his own mintakes
other races and In spite of the many | of other prople—Seattle
handicapn imposed upon him he has ——
been able to emile and fight 02 —Call-| .
fornia Voice. seis HEALTH TC
sae Negro: in suffering from civit] - "By ON. B. 8. Me
nd economic strangulations, superin-| of thé New York Tubs
‘duced by busincas ‘and professional, = Health Avsggiat
Jealouries, and aggravated by -poiltical —
end not spiritual dreams of its clerry | Where “Docs the BI
Now, tf we know the cause of our suf- From?.
feringr, we are Jenn than men if wo: A :
‘are not game cnough to take big doses There in much confusion
of ‘the medicines-that will work the RAL nd maternal influer
cure. If we don't do that thing. we niain this we must take’
Gereeve to din the economle death.— | Me embrvv—-as thg Incdn
ieneree. co aie 1 | vate,
" foo
We do not charge that anyone who
accepts a politica! appointment, citi We
‘of fo xervice to hie race. But we do
Say that such a ono is greatly, hand!-
cupped. He cannot speak out against
injutices and. the many yronex for-
tered of sanctioned by the government.
The clement of self 12 408 atrchs.—St.
Loul Argus. *
Yn thexe daya when mich do Hot fies
Htate to break the Inw in order to de-
jprlve ux of the liberty which-I¥ oués
[Ender the nw. wo.nidet pay ae well
lan pray for freedom —Kansx City Call.
Ag long as ome.nation or race fects
that it 18 superior.to another, and. that
makes it bélieve that it doer riot have
46 renpéct the rights of the ether. but
it muat- be honored and worshipped,
there will be wars and rumors of wars.
—Wichita Star.’ | 3 :
The future leaderahip of the race will
be aia ‘There ts no doubt of this
And thefM educated Negroes in thet
various Melds must ‘be led bya atrons
Spiritual tore: The young Negro ts
more critital than his father, and less
charitable. He will not be fed on miere
emotionalisin—Christian Itecorder.
Journalism ts & great conatructive
force and bullder of public sentiment.
‘The newspapers are capable of making
men and unmaking them.. -Fhey- elect
Presidents and unelect thom. They are
ta finality a great force for good oF
evil—Atlania Independent.
2 see Fs
‘The deeée of our own folk are the
petate’ or sources of our tnspiraticfi
aad fortiteée; forget them and we are
Without Baste of appeal or agtion The
white races take pride im school, ta
people le tery of their berets, and
tm thet way Bend up rep contéence
acl rece puthe. This te the path sought
by the best thought of:the world; it te
tho path -for tho Hem we abonld
feare"hge state of y Porypne of
things Ser’ the world, we are SUM Go,
‘nehte cervies tn. tho. 2
fut fe Bene’ &
— Cr ‘eae
yom, Meee sR S
Soe) mee
Be tet epee a wael ty ee
oie Se ee
Sie scandy eee
ee dior peered were Be
eke. Page ee Oe
are giving us kriowledge of sclenen
mechantes, and art-—Tampe Bulletiz.
_Much moriey. is wasted in evanescent
pleasure. There Is no pyramiding of
asxets and no thought of tomorrow.
Tem Bi THM KE-VO" wore eT toe
clave and convenion. . The economle
fatuge of the black mani America
will be safe and secure if he wift but
proft by his own mintakes and by those,
of other people.—Heattle. Enterprines.”
* HEALTH TOPICS.
, By OM. B. 8. Merben
of thé New York Tuberculests ond
Health Ansgsiation
Sa 7
Where ‘Does the Blood Gome
From?.
‘There Inmuch contusion about pater-
nit ind maternal influence. To ex-
hiatn this we must take'a glimpse of
tho embryv~-as the incompleted belng
tn called,
‘The nfarvelour celle which when
united call Into existence a new bi-
_man_Iindisidual_are_catied_the_oyum
‘and the sperm cell and separate or
toxether thene-calls have,the nargeot
Eenrnhin” Gerssptesan =o eal
that It cannot be seen without the
microncope, has the power to develop
Into tM most complex of structures,
the human hody. contaifing too ® por-
Uon of. the original “germ-plaam”
which cin go on under propitious cir
“euinantances 10, waRe OTheT”TMMTET Dye
ings. This Gist which tn too much for
ux to truly understand bus been the
stcrgt of generation after gencration
of people upon this earth. You ean see
that if the germ-plasm were lont there
could be no moré-@excendantx. . -
If you think of this statement for a
fow momenta you begin to realize that
the father and-mother of a child are
Dut 'm-paltry TWO in a longline of
parents whore racial and individual
characteristics must be founé in that
child. (Tiiexe forgotten parents, gen-
eration back. account for the child
whe resembles no one known’ by the
immediate family). - >”
The confuston about maternal in-
fuence in particular; mn; be bined prl-
marily in the misconception which peo-
ple have regarding the life of the em-
bryo.
To’ begin with, the embry (che Jn-
completed human being) liven and de-
velopa in Itt seperate region, a mus-
car sign dnd further separated’ by,
belie enclosed ty membranes. which
contain fluid! “This embryo is much
Ike @ separate organ or tissue .éevel-
opment in that it must select food for
nourishment and throw ett ite waste
‘The blood of the parent dose NOT
dow into the bleed vessels ‘of theen-
th arteries chene. te’ the’ tisemed whieh .
contd thevaqgtrate arteries of the
euneyO qt tie emieyo selete the.
predigestel nourishment and ogyoen it
needs trom the poruh of the parental
Mood... This selection tabte’ place Sy
a pressed math ths abjctption and.
Gave te clostatyly no mingting of the
we Dee otmenmet fl
me ane pat re
elite” ew ah:
NS yy pay. 5 Rane.
ag. 0 > * to
pa LS ora Sle!
$e fave ae mala:
~~ pate Daal ee 3 e
a Fig Ee
Fees So oS eee
Rae pgs 8 os
Eee eR eee eS
Boy Kinnan
WHY BE UNLUCKY
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with one drop of the Beautiful Blood of Ethiopia in their veins
MUST READ
CONQUEST OF COOMASSIE
By ALPEBABAN
A shining story of a man in African culture. A wonderful description of the life of a man in Ethiopia. An inspiring video of an inspiring story.
IN FIVE SENTERS, EACH
A GOLDEN GIRL OF INSPIRATION
John Amy, Worth and Pritchard, Bishin South, Golden Stock. The Government House, New York City. All three are members of the Bishin South Community. May all three attend the event.
NO. 11, WEST 120TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
SERVICES:
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4. Fees for the event.
Seattle, Nov. 12 (A. P.)—Eskimos inhabiting northwestern Alaska are prosperously advancing into new ways of living under Uncle Sum, but the Aleuts, occupying the Aleutian chain of islands, seem downward bound to annihilation, a course into which they set before this country bought Alaska from Russia in 1867.
This report was brought by the cutter Bear of the coast guard when she renched Seattle from her thirty-seventh annual cruise into the Arctic Ocean. Indians, the other native living in Alaska, dwell in the eastern part of the Territory, where the Bear does not touch.
Eskimos of continental Alaska have taken extensively to trapping foxes and marketing the pelts. For this industry they resort to St. Lawrence Island, American ground in the Bering Sea, and to the 300 mile stretch of northwestern coast of North America on the Arctic Ocean between Point Hope and Point Barrow, the northern tip of Alaska.
But the outstanding demonstration of advancement among Eskimos noted last summer by Lieut.-Commander William P. Wishaar, executive officer of the Bear, was that of the King Islanders.
King Island, three-quarters of a mile
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long and 700 feet high, lies in the northern end of the Bering Sea, near where Behring Strait connects the Pacific and Arctic Oceans. Its population of 175 lives in huts that are built on atlantic so precipitously, do the slides rise from the shallows.
The King Islanders have long been known for the ornaments they carve from walrus ivory and which they market every summer in Nome. Last summer they found a longshoremen's strike on in Nome. They fell to at that work, and for it received $15,000. This money they spent in Nome for supplies, largely flour, tea and sugar. The Beur took the islanders home, and carrier thirty tons of their purchases, including furniture.
For other staples the King Islanders are usually well fixed. Night at their island they take the big walrus, whose tusks afford ivory; the hair seal, which affords meat, heat and light, and the urogreek, a large seal whose flesh is sweet and nourishing. Blubber-layer fat beneath the skin—taken from the hair seal is burned by using moss as a wick.
Before Russia sold the Territory the Aleuts numbered 25,000 in an archipelago extending westward 1,200 miles from the Alaska Peninsula to 5,500 miles from the Kamchatka Peninsula of Asia and dividing Bering Sea from the rest of the Pacific Ocean. But white men's vices—leading to white men's diseases—and in general white men's ways of living without white men's age old training—set the Aleuts into the path of destruction.
Villages have become few in the Aleutian Islands. In Attu, at the western end of the archipelago, Wishna counted fifteen residents, and in Atka, the next inhabited spot, 500 miles east-ward, forty.
The one place at which Wishna found Aleut prosperity was Unalaska, 150 miles from the eastern end of the archipelago. There live 150 Aleuts, many of whom work at the seal rookeries of the Government on the pribliof Islands, St. Paul and St. George, in the Bering Sea.
This incense was used in all places of worship in ancient day; it was the symbol of human plants. A book inside the box will tell how powerful it is and how to use it. In ancient Egypt, the upper Egypt, the city of Jacob.
ORIENTAL
LUCK
Incense
ASTRO PSYCHO ANALYSIS
I am going to send Free to every reader of this notice, my work, entitled "Key to Progress, Success and How Attained." Also a three-page Astro Psycho Analysis with Planetary Chart. Send me the date and month of your birth and 10c (stamps or coin), to cover cost. This work will reveal life a general affairs and treat upon matters that should interest most every one. Write your address and name plainly. Address Theo, White, Publishing Department, 8662 Monte Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. U. S. A. (Please send this paper.)
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1925
Negroes Not Communists,
Mr. Lemos Declares
In an article on Negro Communists:
published in the New York World, Mr.
Riphal B. Lemun, president of the
Grand Council of the Brotherhood of
Dialing-Car Employees, says:
CONTRIBUTORS TO BLACK CRO
RESERVE AND OPERATING
BOSTON, MA88.
Josephine Ogilvie.....$4.00
FRONT VIEW
According to press reports, the country seems much disturbed by Communist activities among colored people, and Washington has taken official notice of it. The source of alarm is the program which some sort of a gathering now in Chicago announced shall be vigorously pushed among colored Americans, particularly in the South. The chief promoter and director general is a native-born colored man, graduate of an American university, who has spent some time in Moscow (wherever that is) with the Soviets (whoever they are). He is said to be an awarded Communist (whatever that is), and his organization is called the American Negro Labor Congress.
The fact that this country may be constrained to believe the Negro masses should afford a fertile field for propagating the pernicious doctrines of the preachers of discontent speaks for itself. It is none the less true, however, that but for wide publicity given the proper official warning to the colored members of the American Federation of Labor by their President to beware of the Red Negro labor congress two-thirds of us más Negroes otherwise never would have known about the so-called American Negro labor gathering in Chicago.
The average mass colored manlays, like the average mass white manlays, knowledge of the origin and purport of Communism is closely akin to Malarkey's conception of our Federal Government's functions. And Malarkey refused to support his party nominee for re-election as President of the United States simply because his friend Lowney, a Navy Yard employee, could not get off for Downey's brother-in-law funeral: Asked about Trotzky a colored claiffeur said that he was the best detective in San Francisco, because nobody "kin steal your car round him."
We mass Negroes have been the victims of our own "professional race-problem hustlers," both directly and indirectly, until the latter-day group hasn't a chance. From forty years back, until the last seven or eight years, Boston was the El Dorado for the "solicitors" of colleges and universities in the Southern black belts which existed only in a clever brain whose possessor avoided work. These were succeeded by the crop, so familiar to Harlem until a year or so ago preaching "Socialism," anything and everything to avoid its natural elements—the truck, the docks, the shovel, the Street Cleaning Department, the Pullman car, the writer's tray, the elevator. We failed to be impressed with Socialism, and the corner advocates thereof became patent-medicine hawkers, magicians, real-estate agents—without capital or clientele—perman Communists, and what not, for anybody, against everybody, according to the wherewithal sources.
One tough old bird, who, when his game had been exposed in Boston, became a "paintable broker" galactor of others to soft pickings on commission, now is a Boardwalk chair-pusher at one of the Atlantic Coast resorts. We do not believe in emas as panopias for the many, undine our "flesh is high to." We are interested in such organizations as the Urban League, which gets us jobs where we never were previously-employed, obtains shelter when we suddenly come in great numbers, systematically teaches us how to care for our young and ourselves, impresses the necessity for thrift and economy, and recently has been successfully prevailing upon the American Federation of Labor to give us a man's chance in organized labor ranks. We support and depend upon the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, seeking and successfully so to prevent further incarceration upon our civic privileges, to get us our day in court when accused, to stop lynchings and burning of our men and women at the stake.
Frankly, the Communities have no more chance with and among us than Mr. Lester Walton and I have to get an orchestra seat at a first-class downtown theatre at Washington, the national capital, where Communists and others who come whence they do are perfectly welcome.
HENZI B. LEMUS.
Präsident Grand Council of the Brotherhood of Dining-Car Employees.
Washington, Oct. 30.
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Final refusal to specify the exact reasons for holding Countess Kisbill "personally" inadmissible to the United States has been made by Secretary Kellogg. When repeated requests from the American Civil Liberties Union and others interested had gotten only the explanation that the Countess had been barred because she was "ineligible for entry" into America, the secretary was pressed for information as to the statute under which such action was taken.
A letter from W. R. Cattle, Chief of the Division of Western Affairs of the State Department, to James F. Curtis, New York attorney representing the Countess, states that the Countess was barred both under a mandatory section prohibiting the early of communists and anarchists, and under a discretionary section giving the Department 'the right to bar anyone it please.' As the Countess is neither a communist nor anarchist, Mr. Curtis is pressing the Department for a further explanation.
France Puts Restrictions On Elephant Hunters
French Colonial Minister Daladier produced a long string of laws in answer to the elephant's call for protection against 'big game hunters' who have gone into Africa ever since the earliest explorer pierced the jungles. The right to hunt is strictly regulated and limited. The length and time of the hunting season, the kind of animals and the number permitted to be hunted are definitely prescribed. Animal refuge parks are to be established in the near future in all the various French colonies.
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation Preserved At Albany, New York
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation Preserved At Albany, New York
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 14.—The dawn of the great vault in the Education Building swam open today to give the people of the State, through the columns of their newspapers, a glimpse of the spacious historical treasures stored within.
Far-sighted New York has assembled over a period of many years a collection of American sources rivaled by that of the Library of Congress. The State has acquired, for instance, such precious manuscripts as the original draft of the Emancipation Proclamation, Washington's Farewell Address to his countrymen upon leaving the Presidency, his comments of his Geographies of the Revolution and the traitorous papers found in the books of Major Andre.
In addition to these and other items of national interest, the State is preserving for all time the foundation stories of her own history the original Charter of the Province of New York, the first laws of the Proclamation and the manuscript of its several Constitutions. In the restructured states of the manuscript section are a file of kind papers that date back to 1612, the audited accounts of the State Treasurers for the Revolutionary period, the pay records of troops in the War for Independence and an accumulation of countless other papers that record New York's career as a Province and a State.
Rarely is a visitor prompted in the chamber of stairs and concrete wheels are housed, as safe from fire and theft as man can make them, these valuable documents. The vault, with its seventon outer door and its heavy inner doors, is lined with steel boxes, the vault of a bank. In the centre of the floor stands a large steel chest, quadruply locked, that contains the rarest papers.
New York has profited by the lesson of the great Capitol, fire of 1911, when one-third of its manuscripts and archives were burned and many others so mutilated that the work of restoring them has not yet been completed.
Of all the treasures, New York prizes mostly the Emancipation Proclamation. Written in Lincoln's hand and bearing a few marginal notes and suggestions by Seward, the four yellowed but unfrayed sheets are con-
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The above is a facsimile of the medal which will be awarded to every Negro Patriot, who contributes $10 to the Black Cross Reserve and. Operating Fund within the specified period of ten weeks.
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All persons who have contributed their $10 to the Black Cross operating and reserve fund and have not received their medals are requested forward names and addresses immediately to the office of the Black Cross Navigation & Thinking Company, on West 130th street, New York city. Parent Body Headquarters...
sideder by Edward P. Bowse, curator of manuscripts in the State Library, as having hardly less value than the original Declaration of Independence and Federal Constitution, both of which are on public exhibition in the Library of Congress. The State purchased the draft in an auction several years ago for $100.
On Air Trip to Capetown
London, Nov. 16 (A. P.)-Alan J. Cobbham, British aviator, by the Croydon airborne at noon today for an attempted flight to Cape Town, South Africa, with the object of surveying prospective routes for actual services between England and the southern tip of the African continent. He is using the same plane in which he made round trip flight to India last winter.
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THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS
The Chicago Division No. 23 comes now to herald far and wide, that after having passed through a process of reorganization with pronounced and very evident improvement, we are now speeding toward our cherished goal of freedom for our president general, and ultimate African redemption.
On Saturday, November 14, we made an excursion trip to Detroit, to participate, in a monster mass meeting in behalf of the Hon. Marcus Garvey's release. Our brief visit with the Detroit division was very enjoyable. President Fred A. Johnson, with his staff of officers and members, had made ample arrangements for our coming, and proved to be most congenial hosts. The excursion was under the auspices of Chicago Divisions No. 23 and 213, accompanied by the presidents and membership representations from the Gary, Milwaukee and Indiana Harbor divisions. As a result of our visit, we have a clearer idea of how occasional visits of one division with the other would tend to create a more congenial and formidable phalanx in the defense of the principles of our beloved organization. While we were in Detroit our third vice president, Hon. Gee McCray, who remained in Chicago, held a meeting at Liberty Hill, 4559 So. State St., which was attended by a large and enthusiastic audience.
During the last several weeks, the enduring loyalty of the members of Chicago Division No. 23 has been proven beyond the shadow of doubt. Having been called to the defense of the principles of our beloved organization against the encroachments of enemies within our ranks who were concealed under the cloak of membership, we were placed in all sorts of unpleasant circumstances, and tested in the fire of deceptive schemes, malicious propaganda, extremely rank acts of barbarism and even thrown into court beesides, but we emerged triumphantly at every turn of the road.
To come out of it all, with renewed hopes and increased devotion to the fundamental principles of our organization. We are more determined than ever to see to it that Garveyism continues to thrive and flourish in the hearts of Negroes everywhere, and the ultimate establishment of a Negro nation in Africa of such magnitude as has never been viewed by the eyes of mortal man.
We wish to announce the coming of the Secretary General, Hon. G. Emonel Carter on December 6, and of Mrs. M. L. T. De Mena on December 13. E. B. KNOX, Reporter.
CENTRAL ELIA, CUBA
There was a great demonstration in Liberty Hall, Central Ella, on November 1 in honor of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Members of the race in this vicinity are much impressed with the proposed plan to send a petition to the Department of Justice and the Attorney General for the release of our leader.
The meeting opened with the usual religious service with the chaplain, Mr David Baugh, presiding. During the religious service a special prayer was offered for the safety and in appreciation of our incarcerated leader.
After the spiritual service was over the statement from the press was submitted. The officers, members and friends of Central Ella division asked that the petition be sent. We have declared our loyalty. Mr. Garvey is our leader and will ever be for we have found no fault in him. The petition was drawn up and sent to the Department of Justice and the Attorney General.
The program was as follows: Mr. J. O. Salmon, treasurer, gave a remarkable address. Anthem by the choir. Recitation by Master C. Brown. Address by Mr. A. J. Burrell. "Stand Firm on Carvocism." Recitation by Master L. Brown. Solo by lady president, Mrs. E. McNairn. Address by R. S. Robertson. His topic was "The Greatest Negro the World Has Ever Been." A song by the choir. The meeting was brought to a close by the Universal prayer and anthem. Z. TREMOIS, Reporter.
SAN GERMAN, CUBA
On October 28 a lovely welding took place in San German. The contracting parties were Mr. J. A. Johnson, executive secretary of this division of the U. N. J. A. and A. C. L. and Miss Louise Johnson of Santiago, Cubb. The marriage ceremony was performed at Holguin, and the party of which J. A. H. Thorpe was best man and Miss R. Panton chief bridemaid, boarded the train to San German, where they were awaited at the railway station by the full staff and officers of the local division and a large number of members and friends. The entire party then drove to the home, a beautiful cottage in the residential section of the town, where a fine reception was given. J. A. H. THORPE, Reporter.
All Divisions and Chapters are requested to start a campaign for the release of Hon. Marcus Garvey, our imprisoned leader. All members will kindly get a petition blank, from the president or secretary of the division and get it signed by every one with whom you come in contact, colored and white. Let us be sincere in this drive and make our organization felt. Be vigilant and forceful! Marcus Garvey should be freed! Mr. Garvey depends on you to do your bit. Do not fail him. Signed: 'The Marcus Garvey Committee on Justice.
DETROIT, MICH.
Detroit division was honored Sunday, November 16, with a visit from Indiana Harbor, Milwaukee. Gary and the two great Chicago divisions. Hundreds of these members led by their presidents, demonstrated to the people of Detroit their loyalty to the association, by plumbing through slush and snow to give a much-needed and appreciated boost to this division. A hearty breakfast awaited the visitors at Liberty Hall.
A successful mass meeting was held at Turner Hall in the afternoon and continued at Liberty Hall until 9 p.m. The meeting was formally opened by the chaplain, Rev. A. L. Harrison. Selections were rendered alternately by the Chicago and Detroit bands. President F. E. Johnson, in his opening address, welcomed our guests to the slush and snow that surprised the million and a quarter residents of Detroit Sunday morning. Miss Celeste Cole, a radio singer, rendered a lovely solo. Miss Cole is one of Detroit's most accomplished soprano singers. Hon. G. A. Taylor sang an original solo, "The Tavar Gribeade." President T. Brooks of Gary, Ind., who was the next speaker, said: "We have come to Detroit to let the world know that this association is no plaything. We have come to Detroit to demonstrate our loyalty and determination for the success of the U. N. I. A. We mean to stand as firm as Gibraltar. The spirit cannot be destroyed. March on Detroit, march on Gary, march on the whole world of the U. N. I. A."
Hon. Marcus Garvey's from, gave message in The New World. World was read
Attorney J. B. Hardy, who was the next speaker, said, "I am very glad to be in Detroit with this strong division of the association." Carryin in prison today is doing more for the association than some so-called loyal members who have their freedom." The next speaker was Rev. C. W. Crane. Upon being presented, he said: "We are, in part, returning the visit that you made us in July. We came through rain and cold to demonstrate our loyalty." The Hon. S. R. Wheat was introduced, and in a stirring address said in substance: "Four hundred million Negroes today are saying, 'Loose Marcus Garvey; let him go.' We want the white people of the North, South, East and West are treating upon you so, until you have no place to go." President F. E. Johnson, upon presenting the principal speaker, said: "It is a pleasure to present to you a true, honest and loyal representative of the association; one who has stood through ups and downs, the storms and struggles of the F. N. L. A., and yet is determined to go a little farther. I speak of the Hon. W. A. Wallace."
Mr. Wallace said, in part, "The black man has been a slave all his life. He has been with the white man and assisted him on hard, on sea, in the air and everywhere. It is now time for us to build something for ourselves. Organize your forces, get into your racial pride and racial lover. Make the Negro race the greatest race on the globe." Other speakers were presented and gave salutes, addresses of Liberty Hall immediately after the meeting at Turner Hall was over. Among the speakers were President Brown of Indiana Harbor, Mr. J. M. Webb, Mr. Farrell and Mr. Walker, each of Chicago division Rev. Riisher, son of Bishop J. D. Farber, was the final speaker.
The joy of the day was ended when the Designs took leave from the hall to board their train on their return to their respective cities.
"It was a gala day in Detroit, and
shall long he remembered. Our apprici-
ation and thaps are herewith exten-
tended to our visitors. "Long live the
U. S. J. A."
MRS. FRED E. JOHNSON,
Reporter.
VERTIENTES, CAM., CUBA
On Friday, October 23, the Vertices Division was favored with a visit from the Hon. R. H. Bachelor, Commissioner of Cuba. Mr. Bachelor, on his arrival, arranged for a special meeting. The news was immediately spread through the vienna and in spite of the short notice a large crowd gathered at Liberty Hall to hear Mr. Bachelor for the first time. At 5:00 p.m. the meeting opened in the usual way by singing the opening ode, after which the president addressed the audience and introduced Mr. Bachelor.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1925
REMEDIOS, CUBA
Garvey Day was fittingly celebrated by this Division on November 4. The members and friends of the association turned out in large numbers to pay homage to their imprisoned leader, and judging from the enthusiasm displayed, Garveyism is here to stay. Several brilliant addresses were delivered by the speakers which brought cheers from the audience again and again.
"The meeting was called to order by President Mitchell, and the opening ode, "From Greenland's key Mountains," was sung, followed by prayer, after which "God Bless Our President" was sung by the choir.
The program, which was a lengthy one, was as follows: Address by the president; song, "Nearing the Harbor"; by the choir; song composed and sung by Mr. L. B. Shaw and Mrs. R. Foster; entitled "I Love Garvey Who Is Our Leader"; address by Mr. S. Marvell, president of the Calabarion Division; song, "Blessed Are They That Endure to the End"; by the choir; address by Mr. J. Meade; song, "Africa Is My Home"; composed and sung by Mr. W. Gage; accompanied by Mrs. B. Foster; address by Mrs. E. M. Murray, lady president; song, "Take the Higher Paths to Glory"; by the choir; address by Mr. C. A. Robinson; also president; song, "It Is Better Farther On"; by choir; address by Mr. G. H. S. Reid; duet and chorus, "God Be With You as You Journey"; by choir, and song "Take the Higher Paths to Glory"; while the collection was being taken. The President gave the closing address, and the meeting was brought to a close with the singing of the Ethiopian anthem.
PORT LIMON, COSTA RICA
Garvey Day was celebrated here by the friends and members of the Port Limon Division on Sunday October 4. The attendance was exceptionally large which clearly showed the high appreciation which this community holds for our esteemed leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, who is championing the cause of his downtrodden race. The religious service was conducted by Mr. C. Higgins, chaplain of the division, who preached an instructive sermon.
The chair was next occupied by Mr. E. Hart, the vice-president, who spoke in glowing terms of our indomitable leader who is now confined for the cause. The program was as follows: The opening ode, "From Greenland's key Mountains," followed by the repeating of the 32rd psalm by the audience; anthem, "God Bless Our President"; triq, "He Will Sustain Thee" by Miss R. Hall, Mrs. Violet Prince and Mr. Ernest Sinclair; recitation; by Miss Vida Calcert, entitled "On ward, March"; the audience next engaged in silent prayer in behalf of the president-general; recitation, "A Soldier by a Juvenile; duet by Mrs. J. Brown and Miss E. Frames; anthem, "Arise Ye Garvey Nation"; by the choir, solo, by Mrs. Ethel Wilson, entitled "Garvey Bees the Cross." Mr. Hart gave the closing address. He showered congratulations on his audience for the loyalty" displayed by the large attendance. The meeting, was brought to a close by the singing of the National Anthem.
G. E. WELLINGTON, Reporter.
HATUEY. CUBA
On Sunday, November 1, the Hauway division celebrated Garvey Day and a special program of its newly chartered division. From 5:30 p. m. the people began to pack Liberty Hall and at 7 p. m. there were nother places to sit nor stand, to behold the new charter. At 7:15 p. m. the president, Mr. S. C Alexander, called the meeting to order with great greetings from the audience. One verse of the Ethiopian anthem was sung by the choir followed by the opening ode "From Greenland's Icy Mountain." after which the 3rd Psalm was recited by the chaplain. The president then explained the aims and objects of the U.N.I.A. and our happy desire to show our loyalty on Garvey Day. We are here representing our newly chartered division of which the community has long been in need. The president instructed us to stick to the program of the U.N.I.A. as there is no other salvation for the Negro.
The program was as follows: Anthem by the choir; address by lady president, Miss D. Vaughn; recitation by Mr. Empty; address by A. Pauri; general secretary, "A Charter Is a Glory to Hatney"; solo by Miss M. Duncan; first lady president; address by Mr. V. Lawrence; address by Mr. Rogers; address by first vice-president, R. Lambert; solo by lady president; address by the chapel.
The Order Has Been Issued
and I Must Obey,
So Sayeth
BISHOP
GEO. A. McGUIRE
WHO WILL SPEAK AT
LIBERTY HALL
120 West 138th St., New York City
Sunday Night, Nov. 29
MIS SUBJECT WILL BE
"ONE GOD, ONE LEADER, ONE AIM"
No one can afford to miss hearing the Bishop, who is also bringing us a special message.
THERE WILL BE A BIG MILITARY DISPLAY
ADMISSION, 80c—CHILDREN, 25c
Please be early, but always be here
Once wait and leave the grouping
BOSTON, MASS
Dr. Peters, of Release Committee, Is Chief Speaker at Special Meetings
Dr. J. J. Peters, of Chicago, a member of Marcus Garvey's release committee, was the headliner at the Sunday and Monday meetings of the U. N. L. A. held in Boston and Cambridge. In his speech he aroused the members of this organization to the necessity of presenting a united front in the demanding of the release of Garvey. "Let him go" should be the slogan of each member, he said, "Nothing," said the doctor, "would give their leader more endurance, to bear his imprisonment than the fact that the organization stood as one strong phalanx in its determination to bring about the consummation of the ideals of the propaganda."
Dr. Peters informed the large audiences that no stone would be left unturned to achieve the release of Mr. Carvey and already powerful influential and political connections were ready to excuse the cause. Coming from Mr. Carvey at Atlanta, Ga., the speaker informed his hearers of the conditions surrounding their imprisoned-leader, who, he said, was in the best health possible.
Attorney Joseph S. Mitchell, who presided, introduced the following speakers; Alex. Alcens, president of the Boston Division; Attorney Edwin C. Barringer, Messrs. William Monroe, Toney, and Eric W. Granville-Campbell, a young law student at Northwestern University, who touched upon the legal technicalities which appeared during the trial of Mr. Carvey.
BERMUDA CHAPTER
Mr. Cornelius Spencer, an active member of Bermuda Chapter, departed this life on Saturday, November 7. Although he suffered from a weak heart, Mr. Spencer's death was quite unexpected. He died after an illness of ten days.
Mr. Spencer was formerly a member of the Salvation Army. He traveled and preached for them a number of years in Canada and the United States. Upon his return to Bermuda, he became interested in the U. N. L. A. He organized a band for the organization which was known as the U. N. L. A. Silver Band. This band has received much praise throughout the colony for its excellent work in the service of the organization.
Reverend E. B. Grant, president of the Bermuda Chapter of the N. E. L. A., and Adjunct Gillham of the Salvation Army, affiliated at the funeral. It is estimated that more than 2,500 people attended. Colonel G. A. Morris of the Universal African Legion led and directed the funeral procession. Mr. Spencer was buried in the Salvation Army cemetery. The chapter is grieved over the loss of this beloved member. G. A. MORRIS, Reporter.
WASHINGTON. D. C.
Mrs. Maude Frisby, Mills, wife of William Mills and niece of Mr. Perry W. Frisby, of Washington, D.C., died recently in Philadelphia, Pa., and was buried from the Bethel A. M. E. Church on October 26. Mr. Frisby is the president of the Washington Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. His co-workers 16 the division sympathize with him in the loss of his beloved relative. Mrs. Mills was the daughter of Professor James and Mrs. Saddle Frisby, of Philadelphia. Her early education was received in the city of her birth, but at an early age she was sent to Europe, where she completed her literary and musical education in Paris and London.
Blue Whale Largest Animal
The blue whale, which reaches a length of eighty-seven feet, is the largest living animal.
KANSAS CITY, MO.
(Continued from page 6)
Johnson was followed by Dr. Cooper, a well-known resident of this community, who gave an instructive talk on the history of the black race. Mrs Brennan, lady president of the Kansas City, Kansas, division, gave an enthusiastic talk on harmony and co-operation in carrying on the work of the organization. Mrs. Looney, financial secretary, gave an address which will be long remembered by her hearers. Her talk was inspiring and she received much applause. The speaker of the evening, Honorable (J. E. Carter, was introduced by Regerend Lee, Mr. Carter spoke eloquently. He converted the Reverend Daniels of Moming Star Baptist Church, who immediately became a member of the organization. This division is in a better condition than it has been ever before. The visit of Mr. Carter has been the source of much inspiration. Most of the members were sorry that Mr. Carter's visit was so short. All expressed a desire to have him back again some time.
Sense of Taste Lost At High Altitude
At an altitude of 19,000 feet, during the climb to reach the summit of Mount Everest, the adventurers are said to have lost their sense of taste, onions and peppermint seeming practically without flavor.
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Has Been Issued
Just Obey,
ayeth
HOP
McCUIRE
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OAKLAND CALIFORNIA
The regular, mass meeting of the Oakland Division of the Universal Negro Improvement, Association was held Sunday afternoon, November 8, before a large and appreciative audience. Mr. E. Hodge, our third vice president, was presented as Master of Ceremonies.
The first number was the Juveniles with Davenport Pitts as their master of ceremonies. The program of the Juveniles was short, but very inspiring and enjoyed by all. Our faithful Lady President, Mrs. L. Perry, was next introduced, and urged all members to do their almost to assist the ladies in their rally drive, Sunday, November 15. Mrs. F. Jackson, our lady vice president, a staunch member and supporter of the organization, and recently returned from Seattle, Wash., where she visited the division there, was presented for a few remarks. Mr. H. Marshall, just back from visit to the Baton Rouge Division in Louisiana, was called on. He told some very interesting things concerning the treatment of Negroes in the Southland. He stressed the importance and necessity of all Negro becoming Garveyites, as the only way to relieve conditions.
The weekly message of the president-general was read by our secretary, G. E. Imanu. A song by the choir was next rendered, and collection called for. All members and friends contributed liberally. Current Topics by our Oakland broadcaster, Vice President Oakman A. Jordan, were next. A very interesting letter from our ex-lady president, Mrs. Lois Pittmann, now living, In Monrovia, Liberia, was dead. Much news concerning the activities of the Liberians was related. The fire of Garvysloo has enveloped all Liberia, and the voice of the people will soon be heard.
Mr. Dean of the San Francisco Division spoke very inspiringly from the subject "The Making of Men." Four important traits of a 100 per cent man were named by the speaker, i.e. Love, Truth, Honesty and Courage. Hearty applause greeted those remarks. The
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meeting was brought to a successful
piece with the singing of the National
Ethiopian Anthem.
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
The Jacksonville Division of the U. N. L. A. is progressing rapidly under the able leadership of Mr. G. W. Parker. The charter was unveiled Sunday. November 15. The principal speakers were Rev. J. M. Royster, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Jacksonville; and Mr. G. T. Williams. The program continued: Tenor solo by Mr. J. Dean; recitation by Miss Florene Butler; reading by Mrs. Anna Roberts; selection by the choir. SAMUEL T. JARKER. Reporter.
CIEGO DE AVILA, CUBA
On Sunday, November 15, the ladies of Ciego de Aya Division held a successful mass meeting. It was called to order by the President, Mr. R. T. Webley, with the singing of the opening ode, followed by the religious ceremonies. The lesson of Isahah, chapter 4, was read, and the President gave a short talk on the lesson. At this point, the acting Lady President, Miss R. Thomas, was introduced. She spoke forcefully on Garveyism and asked the Negroes both in and out of the fold to support the cause. The following was the program for the evening: Hymn, by the audience; address by Miss H. Douglas, solo by Miss Henry; address by Miss A. Sadyne; solo by Mrs. Amrane; address by Mr. Celt; recitation by Miss L. Small; address by the Lady Treasurer, Mrs. Vargo; hymn by the audience; recitation by Miss H. Douglas; address by Mr. T. H. E. Osborne; recitation by the General Secretary, Miss Sieverr; hymn from the Ritual. After the closing remarks by the President, Mr. R. T. Webley, the meeting was brought to a close with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem and beolution.
ALBERTHA SYDNEY, Reporter.
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JN and WHAT. THEY ‘THINK - baited by Mis. Amy Jacques.Garvey
WHAT. HAVE YOU.-ACCOMPISHED THIS YEAR?
Sg, cg PO ae 8 Lg ear SD NS ee eee ee grea eel Bune Rs easy A ryt ee ee = TOE on
: I ‘tation; foi the ‘Chitistmas season’ evieryavhere, which cot
a “yey Ninces wis that the°old year is dying. It is dyinge'tis trug
‘but ‘not dead, and those of tts who have allowed the preceding months
to slip: by without ‘accomplishing the many. New. Year resolutions
made in- January, still have’ time to make amends for our many acts
of omission.» ee es S Beare 3).
Let us-take ourselves to-task individually and 4nd ‘out: whether
we Have been slipping backwards of advancing with the months:
whether we havé, been merely obseryers of the accomplishments of
others,.or active ‘participants in the march ‘of human attainments.
« Lookingngurselves over, and lookingyothers over, we find that' we
Fave leit Yndone -many things that. we scuuld have. doné, and that
_as far as others are concerned, some uré'retracing evil roads, ‘éthers
are merely marking time, while maiy are forging-ghead; determined
to live up to high calling of: the Creator in the great battle of life,
To those of us who have failed, we ask the question, “Why have
J failed?” And in the!imprortal words, of the late Dr, Marden the
answer comes to us: 7 eS
|. “We grovel where we might soar. We cringe and fear and
_ fail; where we should stand efeét, go farward and conquer.
"We “don’t believe in the power: that is in us. That is why
we can't use it—can't get-at it— >, | oa
“We put the blame for our-failure; éurtiihappiness, our Trils-
* “trated. plans, our broken: hopés. and vanished dreams on every- .
thing else but the right thiig—our unbelief. -- oe
“Man lacks faith in himself, in human nature, in his God.
That is the.cause—the sole cause—of your failure, of my-failure:
of ‘every:man's failure, to be the biggest. noblest, truest, most
successful, all around human beingvit is possible for him to be.
“The cause of all the suffering and misery. all the poverty
and disease, all the'évils of the whole world is\just this—
“Marl does,not take God at His word. \ .
“We do not yet believe that the same"power that Was in’ Christ ..
is in us. We cannot realize that we are litérally éverflowing
with power which, if rightly used, would ‘make this earth a_
Paradise.” - . . ‘
‘All honor ta the mam or woman who uses the God power in him,
conquers his baser instincts,,and makes of himself'a success, and a
contribution to humanity. . =
Ere the fast remaining weeks slip quietly by. det us unearth the
olt resolutions anil immediately put them into effect. © = S|
Remember: dear iriends that.the gq@d_you do lives after’ you; 4
lie perhaps hinges on one good deed of yours—it may be a mather
eho is dying to hear from het wayward boy ; it may be a neglected |
wife who could be snatched from a suicide’s grave liy the kindly
—pinileof 2 buinhand: itmiy be a husband whose life could. be made
worthiwhile by the repentance of a careless Wife; it may be ‘a coun
try that stands in need of patriots to¥edeem it; and mabe it's a
rice ‘that stagnates forthe want of loyal men and women to lift it
out of bondage and servitude. Whoever you be and whatever it is
that stants i need of assistance NOW is the accepted hour, and
aye ‘all on you—sen, wiie, husband. patridt or race-lover, to rally
tothe call, and niake xour cuntribution of good deeds, well done ere
1925 closes. a
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SW SE CE Sear EE Bias
RRES ei cll mary spen rotors ant iO, 3
A Sere erences ee
|- sos J. DULJAJA
. “A Mohammedan Selentict whe. repentiy arrived trem
‘eau, Eoygt. ‘Specialict in Ovouitiom of Africa and
- ian ymetesy. Mystio os Sere Selonew
Sain sriserations in at Forma Alec sOrtental
Inesrons ete. te :
mee, maernen ed elim ‘feaking ts mmpoanione t
; SS ee
= ime We Want 1,000 Agents
Ste @eh newye Pumewe
_ HAIR GROWER
en oe ELE. ewe Soe
PRE SPC aS = mee me
i Zoe 5
Watch Embryo’Growth’ |
© Far the first time tn blstory, the dv:
velopment of the emdrya of a warn:
‘Dlooded animal bys been carried on
under such conditions that iC enn be
watched cantinuousiy, syst Setence
Magazine, This feat hs heen gecom-
plished by Uwe scientints at the Unt:
versity of Leyden, Drs, J. BoM. Vere:
war und’J. B, van den Boogest, whe
have placed comnom ens exes, with
the shells vemovyd. fn xniall glass
dishes in an Incutater, and have sue:
eceded in kewping the embryo attvy
and arewing for five, days, t
Hitherto the aply way in whteh auch
eminyox could te studied hax’ Veen ty
nlacieg Inrge numbers of exes dn the
incubator, and removing ant offtining
them one by one at intervals. Tey this
oldgp method It tras been posstite ty
slugy closely spaced stages 6f develop
efit, but Notte observe the prowth
as a continuous process, nea mate poss
alble by the new ways ¢
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Tennessee Gone Crazy
On “Evolution” . =
COLTEWAM, Tenn. Nav. 1 1A. PD
[= Inspired to aetlon by wermions of the
Kev, Carlsle I Caynes of New York
‘city and Profed. F. Simon of Wash.
Incton, De Cy evangetixts, Whe are
holding @ revival at Southern Junior
College here, stuctents of that institt
tion took evglution into thelr own
bands and “burned st at the sake."
At the close of chapel services the
entire stuient-hody—meu and women
nearched the dormitories, gathered al
texthookis on .the subject ayd heaped
them in one bie pile on the campus,
Not sutistied, the evangelists zee etl
fuvttier effwrts, aut betore=the «ants
pach had ended almost everthing
modern, feud gone up tn Aumee,
Lipaticle, suuge, novels, questionadile
Widtures, Jazz miusdt eigwrettes all
cont their tumes_hearenward, snd. the
canmis was declired “eleitn.”
The students, mostly frvin Seventh
Duy Aapentist homer, avowed their In
tention to “Wo hetter.” and openly de-
cIneed against bobbed hal and rolled
stovikinins. a
“The revival cloved ‘when there were
no more students to “work on."
“UIE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMPRR 38,1985 -3
"HABITS
From the days of Rome solid, allver
for the dining table has been greatly
prized. It Ix 0 fagcinating. story—this
tate. of the use’ of silver, carrying us
back to’ the banquets of ancient, Rome
and the carly-days of England,"
‘Then thé’ Anglo-Saxons. niade huge
aliver salt cellars the aiviling line be-
‘tween the, great and.nesr-groat. +,
+ eBine of the most intereuting and un-
usual pages of history ix bouhd up tn
the story of silver for the table rince
It—very naturallykept pace witli the
Uiblo ‘manners of Various! tines, We
think with delight of-the great stone
halls tn the olden, cagtieg with groun-
Ing feastive boards adown their Yengths,
piled high with venison pasties and
-meat pler—Phen-to-be a “zood trench
crmang was Fated a desirable quality.
But Sp forget mat “there were no
forks to eat with; and that meat wax
cut in huge “gobhets,” the better to be
itted out of the ple oF the divh by the
Hiande and hey with the gingers while
eaten! When forks were introduced
from the land of luxury loving Ttalienx,
the clergy of “perrle England” preach=
ea against them. andeqbe eure, were
Pwiitned “rot, te ime “tinge implements
sacretigiously” designe’ 20 take the
plact of, the finzerx which had een
provided bi an ali-wise Providence te
eatwrith ce ee
‘The chrying Falves, of those tar-oft
days were apt to be hunting kulves oF
swords of both hosts and xusits to cut
off that portion of the spitted roust, of
which they were xo-fond, >
Absolutism Is°the
Essence cf Fascism = -
The exsence of Fascism 1s Absolut.
fm, ‘The government fs supreme. DIs-
cipiine ts the kesyote, ‘The people
faust bow before it aid accept tau
‘not dure to upset it. ‘The blue must
serve it; the, Parliament must dos
Viiting aid petra (am enti ism.
Murowstint te tie High priest of allsed-
line: he ts.ehe, leader of the nathen, tt
to interpret, thbir wikhee but to trln
thelr minds te think as he dace and te
aystem, Speaking at Milan thevother
Any he sald: “The Revernment fe the
keneral hendquarters of the mation:
Ix severe hermise It dues, nist. conslder
that Its enemies have a right to cltizen-
Atinct [tremaine for the historian wf
tomerrew: to adjndge bine a phwe tn
the werk of the world."—Martyn
Hemphill.
A Costly Experiment -
‘The Frenejnnvn thks leh, seven
ath Betis fejane mad, bit raves in
[iiventen to rice up mind deal heavs
in tthe pata este mt hie
esnirg, sie rodeos tg FeSnch
‘Parhament to internesne warfare
arte. patival aactrines. phe Mp
Areagury. Naits_unter the shadow sf
fauituniepee Wier Eerie =
The Crux of the
Chinese Situation -
| “At hetten this is What the sedemn
and ssn mternapinngt sontveae
A Paka be abouts fn onute Q@ the dard
Chat Ie wecliae: te wleeme thie
TSGAGar ton Pn tse: bears
io cru SASthA evens a preg Hk
Se tovolgn iestions and welled hold
Se cide tama Mit ltraaed AR Se et)
SEbintee Sek Sai: Te. Sewn
China to be tronted an a if8e WaT HES
feepacling: people abana be treated Ae
Tee uarker pan which 14 Aunsp nonda
for’ (he, peuntary. neat -of %, Amal
number?—Joha Dewey, -
A British ‘Wail!
An indugirlal people with no ade-
auate agriedture, when Ste market
kre ones When tte redit siaxnere {ile
ruin, has nothing to expert, exceni
fumine. Does any sane man’ belleve
that there, ix Work enough in. tllere
islands to Ko around? There In not.
and probably never can be'ngain, We
Jpave now more’ than m mijiten and x
Tuarter smemployed, and there In ne
Fearonable hone of A: diminution: on
the contrary, 1¢ {8 clear that the num=
ber must incrense. ‘The Intent Blow 1
to_find that our shipbuilding Industry.
parting .to Conthiental yards. Our
herleulture is fallmg every day.—Sir
John Ross.
Women's Suffrage .
In Belgium. se
Alter chaotic. debaies a lose, ma
Jority relegates the aliftrage Dill to a
‘committee which will meet after the
vacation of: Parliament, ion “November
1s—and the provincial elections ‘are
scheduled for November 8. Women’s
provincial suffrage ta. buried for four
more yougs. Vendervelde, tries to be
esothing: : :
“1 nope: hat the next elections in
the in 1939, will mot pose
withent off legislation having’ finally
regiotered the political equality of the
{we eesen, When Qe tline'comes we
chali" energetically detend the eeiversel
cevage oC women for the slestione of
‘Tha _Approdch le Everything
“Mulls, Brows. Ave you acing rou
lawn-mewer this efternecnT
“Kes, Km etre Tomi
Dee - Then yeh° won't be
‘wanting. pest lsinle. racket—tv8
Devhgn mine!"—The Coatinest.. ° -
TEACH IE
Js uttemptliix to make movsAte -aqn:
tinued txefulness’ of, int edueatte
after the girl-has taken upon hersel
the oblixatlons of married life,
{Phe Tastieite CF TS Cyprdination oF
Women's Interests, ag Smith's new de
partment Js called, was opened wit
the Fall term, It was established tr
the bellef that the-udgent need of the
college woman 1a not only educanor
for parenthood bmi’ miss” a phtlvsophs
of life and a technique of living, whieh
shall Include ally het- malin interests
The founders of the .departinent feo
thut such ingests can ond “whould be
unified Gi "merely adjusted, rempo-
‘ravily and apelogetically. “ax ix now
usually, the cus= The work wi We
in tGe dliscovertix Gf concrete, practl-
cal methods: by. which wemer can
nehince the necessary Unity of family
and outside Interests. =
It is De, Kthel Puffer Howes whe
has ghampioned the cause of the
Gralned celloge woman who, owink
the fact that she hax assumed other
respinsttdtities than that of furtherin:
her own career, hax to some. extent
forfeited her. persnnal future. | Dr.
Itgwen han, fromm her unch enneclentr
proved that the Course she advaentes
ix feasttte. Shes herself a seaduate
wf Smith College, She studied at the
Cnisersittes of Bertin agd Pretisuce snd
taught paytholagy’ at Wellestey and
Keatellife tat whieh enllexe whe tok
her don 1 2. In adtition she re, fy, te
cinitse of the past few years. published
weveral houke, But it did nat atop
ihers, She married Henjamin A. Howes
and has'twe daughters,
The Institute Wil enable De, Hanes
PORTER TATA TT TTT
aries.» She hupes to prave that the wite
ani. avinther ean so” adjust er teu
pruiloms that ehe eaneearry on in a
profession ar a ne of emenpation
chosen Ieefuge, pearrtae, Prpinatily. she
demnyadts that tade cf “release” Ke
found for the inather ane water A vet~
tain degree of freesdom ix uutspensalia
te progress, Vir. Hower does not ror=
ommend that a wife abandon. for the
cake “at acieving a gareer. those
take whieh a®umily life’ kinpese, Gn
the other hands she does nat mappart
ie dea that the home, te a sumstont
mnitiet far all af a wiomnan's talent and
vtlity
“Unt women af abiuty are ‘given a
chance freely te prove temseven a?
ution, it fe Jrwbabde that thew wit
Fat scale the heights"! obsess Me
Howes, Many ayenner af expressien
alt yomain stored to. then sie Jett ae
fies remain walsherated fron the. M-
Noraile ranting af Nensewerk.”*
Chtler present canditiens there of,
he Aids, an eeanecws waste, The
college tht Who has pent for years:
A Preparation, syed pwensitey: Yan etl
tonal sears gy fie in practien, Laney
ime, energy and traintne. The duress
orat the twa Institute franty: believes
hat there are extensive tletite tn which
he weiletralsed mitid eqn tind a ane
Ubontion useful not ot Qe to tseit bat
e.others. “A rertain anaayt af pis
serine Will have to he done in he dis
RUsiNeRe and, Azviowstowal men yeh
ave te he pevenaded that many yabs
an be dene as well at home as at an
Mca Aesk. + *
Dr. Howes i¢ af the opinion that the
ducate) ‘morrled working” women
Would he a free Miner, She ehoutd not
ndertake all-day work, nor even the
irt=time position what of late is be
oming. popslar In .eortain quyrters.
ty Should be made possible for her 10
jo her task at home during such hours
nd under ‘such eireumstsmers ax sho
nds most suitable to her surroundings
n@ to the ather demands upon her
ime. «
Stich methods may not permit theie
ehotrating to the innermost elrcles, of
profession: but there are what sie
alla “fringes” whlch are of great
alue: xpeciaitzed reseurch, experiment
r invention, publicity. Kéaphles, sta
ation, criticism, reviews, bibliography
ail of which ean givd-eniplosment to
Omen: a.vent for thelr mental powers,
ork Dr. Howen calls “spiritual vita
in?
The olf “marringe vePus Achieve
ent” should, ahe-belleves, be changed
M0. @ partnership. Dr. Howes also
He @ possibility of: gulding”the aim-
sty to @ oucfesatal solution io the
ar¢ful selection of a husband. Mar-
age might become “an affair. of af-
ungement, keeping in view the exigen-
ee of occupations.” Thus # woman
terested in -ectence’ wedding an en-
ineer might supplement hfe srork by
oing research. ‘Bach ‘union ef inter-
Me. even were It commonly attainadie,
ould net, of course, release ‘the
easan ‘from household burdens. At
Ja point of the diecuesioh Dr. Howse
troduces one of the most popular,
prds of the day, “co-operation.” The
Rabllchment of co-operative “mur
wien, nursery: schools, hitthehs and |
mairice wily, she thinks, provide- ie)
mee measure the ivllet neoded. in
wteal acvetance she sees the -on-
rer to therpretiem,. 0.
2 » : . ¥ i '] “
are : ~ ™ ee Sige .
Pvt your WACK, iwealiow or aare. it your AMIN’ te ten ot = ceo
coils Ttfvee Beara ehirk” Fakeetowe, UT anaes Neue GMO ag cape,
pistebee i Sov cans conan ta me : :
~ RAINE Te yougfe auaiovs te BEAURUPE your cemplenion! )”, Pleage wend me. your uucitty ace Bt, oo os
MOSS. HO SEMEL Creer 6 S8F 71: Hip, th evscias price. of 3c" nly tye tractmente, ter
: Rises creme Be yoat Teast hades "abs ee
SOCIETY FACE BEAUTIFIER VERS eo? ot ete apie Raat e ge
. i 7 Fell stvenate ¢ 5 epUeAR STATE WOW MANY TREATMENTS YOU WANT
tts eave ro artux. one ex unex cou cmeaw. (| seats 2
Schima soeadyae Mas fein edie eigsaaetes : st
you wilt ve hoppy abeut the remaruabie chasse, Ratisty your AGAIEND oo se yrsrreneeeerersanstsemevetveceessewng statin,
+ Wisin tor a erigmter shin doen't feuk old, wit haredy ~Adsttee sropsusezsconecsestnatt semnvedinsbcoecmnadteteile
Satan anpezions eavereiacndl WILL ent COUPON 908 caus. yes! svar acnsendsss cece HME as onseel
(SAL, CF VORRTE . = SaNihan eiering’ Fon Eha' or'Sauib America send wewer
% . oe gcatsmenieing i seer
- e as .
fi PROVEN WAY
/'TO STOP FALLING ‘-
f HAIR and DANDRUFF
| PMB Dandiafi, falling hair, itching scalp
| Gay Wand baldness are enemies to scalp
H W health and the growth of long,
A «J lustrous hair. Scientists admit
| a :| “J they sire “gettin” diseases and to,
0 JA "iBone them the gerin must, surely
| RO: TASw be destrpyed. GY
] There'e’ne longer Feason”, germ life, that they attack |
- for having poor, unhealthy only diecased tiseuee, tend |
_walpe’ and dull feless to keep the ecalp free from’ |
hair. It hee been proven dendrull and ita, alley
that MADAM C. J. WALK- falling heir, enrich the
BR'S WONDERFUL ‘HAIR scalp, stimulate ‘growth
PREPARATIONS ace di-+ ‘and make for long lustrous
rectly opposed to. harmful hair.
we Be omen
USE, MADAM C.3. WALKERS 4X
WONDERFUL HAIR fama
> on N a
7 = tS Vey
ome oN
news igoenes wat | SY a
ten Cl W ; Oe T an,
Me Modan Co Maer Nip Co. Nt
a
Riviera Will See Women
Jockeys This Winter
PARIR—The. .niafsssional woman
Jockey igs arrived amt-winter visitars
to the Jiviera ny daub KAthavo, at
‘opportunity to see her, They wik Hot
“We innovatieme for advertising pus:
‘poxex or features for a day or a pur-
Uentar-event, ut duly licensedgskiors
not only under ihe strict regutation
of the men riders bat sume special
ones of their own, ‘They will be 1-
Iwwed (o Recent mutts and cortlily
Aeill face penalties for dlsoleadtence
vidlation ef-the rules, »
Althougi¢ the French Jogkos. ciuh
has atways refused to license women
an jorkey-—even such superl horse:
women as the peratle star, Fanny
Helly, the best feminine rider tn
France—the Societe Hillique Erancatne
hax decided to allow the fatr sox a
hanes” to win ie aitirs<npare from
othep prizes—on the Riviera dite win-
ent
_ Shedial regulntions, however, are to
ha enforced in races in which"the wom-
en will ride, Apparentiy) the organ.
feere wish to discourage the practicd
onf-aentnem@riling=nstrintessPefore
in apen raeex sidecsaddle riders. wii
hanetit by speetal and flattering weleht
Mowancex whereas no difference whi
be munte hetwiin the women and the
itn in cases where the wemen aloe
the farhion imrrowed fend Ameren
In races where the two styles af Fld=
ing clash the Wenen, whe ride astride
will be hesrvaly hamdieaed,
‘The seetete deats definitely. em:
Dhatieosine and ser tonisty actly tlie all
linportant “anisert wf drew. Nw ea:
teavagant coxtiines may Wwe worn, Hie
ruign lay down, “Attire must be de-
cont” and of dark materia. +
Atteniton ig alno pal to the halt, at
emg: atipinlated that the “hate aiust
bie etune fie avait, oper faakiue”
although exactly what they mem.
themseives.--N. Y. World. °
Proverbs Written. inan--Apart:
ment
sinalter the Wedivann,
2 °The dewérsthe thing, the etsy thet
fone .
The thine mae wall, the banter
the mast, hs
Tlie tether the tyes te tae:
the ~phnter, 7
She nmr sey the taggly upstate, she
owe tthe banter, + ;
Wflie ‘wanton thy atierne clerk, tte
sare Use mt :
‘The sialon the tits the sheaten the
spill RC, GREEN, in Judges:
ey Suggestions on-How
~ To Get Rid of a Husband
CAMDEN, Ne duces yy te Ass
ciated Nees Pyoesnde-bo go Want
get rit of yout husbagas
Records nf separation and nenexups
port eases aL the Hiiveu, of Char icies
iv this elty tiveatot a winter of ott.
test methods . ;
Sass . e
J AAVR WAR pane moti rsectes
Gene beds
Set the abiew ehh for a sterent
Whur every morning. +
Leave yeur haivpiny an all avenat
the edison
Mike hin get his wma Devatbast —
Fenget ts wake Ian fn the nierning -
TE tht dowsn’t ale the trick, sive am
up. Mes tugectes, :
Techrt showed that de biscest fe:
tors ay ment wf the Aeparation eases
were Hagking, wethghin-Laws, srunk-
emnesa, neon tlhe, cia anterter=
ing neighbors,
A. csintriburinig. cape wit thas
arisen within the bast fea sens Te the
fact.that mere weiner are belts tant
slaty independent, ty ather lass a
woman tool sie piternativ butt Gs sue
(na tr hee Musbandis ML treatinent ot
go bated tO her parents. Pouday xtra
Many ef tem Werk IM ate tat ae
‘pee aoa eta Tae
support. e co
' ere
Gentlemen Do Not Disciiss
Their Women Friends
a pbmaneeiuwen
of Denver, Colorade ”
| Dinesonstec gyi Papotsueognane seth
Renin 2 (
telomts
erik de mbsiog: ty wwe! nes seid
Sak Wee cn aire an eek
penne ian ore Deg Goan, A. to
words mGS canse het misery and’ rob
eg ae tor clesiah ye as levy
MaeNen Seinwab.
7
oF
| Peculiarities of Children
| “by the ‘
| BLACK ‘CROSS NURSES OF NEW
, Crxing In earky childheed ts the
J great manifestation of pain, The most
common paln he that known as “seipes*
ee cea Si lealatellon a
CRA the ces oA 8 allen okay
ger, wh a note of Metemper, Ta
Sie ce alanareieee planes
cma natiee. Inelder chiktren, ffowalnx:
agmmm eian of Med
Stay wo oiup ieceeuuatee
Lertiiaena weiner chor chone doatipen Nt
When the child srities, datledtes ta hor
eondizion of the ficial muscien and
one niece rst ye HE deb
Patines. heweser, whieh t lastive and
reat oe pecsiily e+ chiag OE Tee
Wal Akke ie oabel REIMeS ators
Gcutis a aetuinsin of Hrignen aimee
Me Sane de sumer ah a Be see
wehont delays
Sets uel Ga RGR RAS
iste Glink, dearione sua Sbitie af
Wate anou Gkeee veggie
Taine OU JOReiNE are
ptsonlds ii thavancte “eh be
TAS GL a pthegiie Goal sectanees
SIGS Gb Geemtanasie tee
Se arse eet rag
diseant eats eontrantians © of, the
fecal uitietes ptinlen fea thes aappentge
hood and eansins dec ines sims
Ae these of mngddle caved ora, The
esta nah Ae MER
We cee at fhe tek ar net Deep
fathawies ef the teyes dung an ate
Ce ae una tour ance hie sonatee
fRhaaaioni, We aton ue tie head de
Hl "te acco ikea oa)
Srduglty efoswes a Hes tenes crew iM,
an ae een eh eee cruel
Ue REIL ICES tour:
fone tee blibwa, fecuch it dors. pee
Pee ag ese aet aonmien
KGirsoant@liorn ela: vatclamt
1 \.. Give Your Wife
on
ecg: Real Present
a for _ Christmas
Ps °WILETART I> WEI =
A Baby In Your Home
* oe iS
‘ Bi
aN
. AS ES
i US :
“ager eaees
PEL
Oh ye -<
Poets ieee
fone
Bs ee
Re a men wom ret
= ‘Bitres or: cttigncan to .
See
ERS See
TOTS
Face Seon |
mae tre Fie =
eee
eae oe
i geen oes
U.N-1.A: IS-THEONLY REDEEMING
~ FOREE-FOR NERROES TODAY
-Makers of “Morris & Son” Playér Pianos
“ | ¥ é oe
rr says
: “IT'S: YOUR, OWN FAULT"
If You Don't Have Music With Yoar’ Thanksgiving Turkey:
NO INTEREST! NO EXTRAS! "NO DELAY!
$00
TT. Deposit |
nak .
[Inciuded ini this’ sale offering~are’ Columbia, Brunswick, Sonora
jand Kimberly —Phonographs--in_a--wide- assortment :of -mpdels:
One Year -Free Service on All Phonographs Purchased Herc,
12 RECORD SELECTIONS
LK. FREE etec sare
Ss ef Coungy,
N ;
» MORRIS MUSIC SHOP
uN ae awe erm ——— :
oo EN :
tah . 6: 7
fs ay tae SNE
aia ane (ein!
are, Was 130 E. FORDHAM RD.
Lt ON Met gt Sees Sapo
oN : \ .
Sy ‘ \ EXPERT PIANO TUNING REPAIRING
INTERNATIQNAL RALLY FOR THE FINANCIAL AID OF THE P ARENT BODY
Universal Negro —
_ Improvement _
- Association —
~ $50,000,
Every loyal Negro should donate to the Fund to help the Greatest Negro Organiza-
tion if the World. a 2 fae
Send“us a Five-Dollar ‘Contribution fgr this Fund... . %
: ) s 2
+ All donations will be “acknowledged in this ‘paper, and donations of Five Dollars
and more by letter. - - 2 7% g --
: The Parent: Body, Universal Negro Improvement ‘Association, now makes an appeal
to its members,. divisions, ‘branches, chapters’ and friends to rally to its support in help-
img to raise Fifty Thousand Dollars for liquidating urgent dentands on the. Association
for the promotion of its work. “ eo, . * +f.
The expense of running thé OrganizMion for the good of the race is tremendous.
Expansion work rust be: done and current demands nmst be taken care of. The fight
fer Africa's ‘redemption is a costly one, and must be borne by members of our race.
Fosedol for tha redemption und elvation Sf the meet” Brovbeds wees tole Af pe
e race.
cam contribute tet ie ately. These who
af . $8.00 wy have, ieee. Th 0 cam give we $10 $25 er $00
|... Persedie sending ‘us’ $23.00 or more should sendwe thier fer imoortion
“tai ilo paper. AH donations shocld be vant te, Chameeliens Usreerel Regre improte.
om, Maatation 90: West 156: Seen, Bow York Ci. Pn ges Tee,
2, © Layet ) of the Universal Negre lanpritgmant Ascocinticti should give exter-
Gebinments gunsag thelr friends at hese to’ rbive mousy Ser thio fund. Thess whe desiva
; popliagemchgs : oe eb ailoniabacttelnge
a tans Ne Gly ovary swathes is hilo. Ak ie jorcenten wor, st tome
Bex ee
1 IRF LG GRRE PRM SUR SOOM NA OE AK OR ay ee
ee Ra eae SET ME NT A
a Rar RM as EES, RE oo cay ee
“Splendid” Address Delivered: by
: Secretary “of Kansas, City
_ _ Division .
: By DAISY LOONEY ==
Hon, Sowretnagt General, dear, ee
Workers and frends, we count thin a
azfeat privilege! sind ‘bdo ing fw twine
Permitted ter hw hefe thie evenesns uned
Sto hawt Zor fon? sonlienes te group
Mf Intedlicnns lenient men san ween
She oi reer © We trnst you Will Gpn
Sie hearts Pug il tial itwllne seat
sina that Sa AIP be better alte tr
amderstienet ate ane tage we hive ts
bring to ont, yo
ETH dae SOO We ate geting ie RES
Seat atari sha PONT Ac ian ve toncact wee
that fs heen Spit ied and]
ssressts cirereparese uted It ww fe stearte |
NEEAte, in Ferre nite awd Whe
fre greeners eid Mit gHaay beeiise they
movement for Noses, We Neztaenn and}
of Negroes. Dwar Giendy, the U.N >|
Ye world-wide movetnens whiell daw
sats birth and erhsie to a longing and a
tes om the gant te Oalnkhng en
Hit the ritéel ti barome a free pewle
Hat hate race projnline, ravy lis
Ferliiutinn, face sesresaton, * ents.
[cronl, qnlities, suchal, eonitnerctal snd
Indisirgat eompetigion eave augmented
uhset demging ted @estes, t=
j, ste tds xbridhnyaind eins nf iis
Sivitte stam tundor the leadership af ite
Hen, Mules ik Canyeseciene the 1X LA
ts tae tay Ch alepiinDadot 97 rh ative
farce for the Neatw penples, Awl It
fhe Negra sung is ty de saved Som
wiser’, dednadet’on, Mavert. anninbe
Heo guuds iver esi, $F act Che be the
inion ef all thes Nese penplos Tae
iain we ef the TONE A, pledges seat
felve cote dhe ScD austin worgpater far
ley anmtestba te ssnere ot ana foo: the guttl=
nutes snmamestpaation of thee s6minnon
Neves et the werd,
We ajaweal tee all the Neve fos lant
their sersweess thea eneusies, ther day
atl thei hives inn this seeat Mtrugicte to
pan ‘any wen Cnet ete Hat cane Galt
With ie (NALA. fhe atiove the white:
Se OO RN that oe oe get SNe at a FS py v ey ae
ne pes 2 oo a ee epg Ee ey te Oe na a rte Sol
ere si ae Set ST oe Bade ody ha a PO) PN Goad | Te ee Pe Ge
i ais a aay} eae iee Ps ‘ BR eA ee oan rao Stee Pitted Soe es CBs 03 i rd ae
‘mxn’s Hmitation ang revel i the true
Joy uf blick. men's: clvlisation, Desir
[frtensis: thin aripeat 4 fur our own com-
‘mon gnod und fiecdoin, "Kor the frec-
dom and blossomliis of gur “humantty.
We hollow. we are preparing, the sol
fepin alike shull spring the freedage of
409.090.00 Nobex: thus taking sit
ponnjtle (redeem our motherland,
Afriea.” 5 :
Tn wotsineton, 1 aims thinking: of a
Shee entities “The Man Without 3
Countess” written, by Reward Everett
“tle, and if 1 were to rewrite a wittion
of that sings to aut iny faneds if wail
rend thus» pe x
pnvvithevthive i Nearo sith any xe den
Who meth wmtir iaonsett hath, si,
NA vicatigcmny aneuscoiey waive fad:
Whose Meat ath verre vithin burned,
As Rntenaed hia Woarete pe he shunt het
tee wamdariony in thin fodeian tant
Wt aueh there tie, ao mark him welt,
ost bun antoatrel raptuves sei:
Mion tana tga tite, prasad a game.
eomdtens hi feu a irish wank stain,
Inspite thine tiles, rey ani pel,
The veretih swatated alt ineaell
And evhtin nthe shalt gn deen
Te the titeadust fom tehene he aprin
aobegtnahontorea andl unaunges ern?
Scrap Submarines,
Pleads Lady Astor’:
[, PLYMOUTH. England. Lady Aster,
Higaved hy the tracey of the MeL, stink
sith satrrialt amen aft the Tewon
Cogott ll aed audience wt Mymouch
Swelniny tie “she wats “quite ready, to
kis around the Sarl toe work for the
enn ot matinarinne :
tutéevinwedt after het seoch, Lady
Aster Std she hail made no phim Gor
“Suweh a woriel” toner, nat, abies“
Wonbl sw aroyed tive weit ye tines
ver ICT thanght | combi és anything
to persia, the nations f the. ytd
toy subsndon Sintimarine® aad pots 22
Ie was thehorvr of sulnnrrine ware
fare cid the taste fate of Ue crew
ist thee Mel that gave me the thensht
hich 1 expressed at the women's
anweting.” 3
americs shit Hnstane aazrood a the
Washington ecanforenes ty awtishh the
submarine, lunt Frafioe ratised. 1 iS
frm rat gata In tabs lie
reetinn, hnsevnn, with Huss outside
the sirratmement, Russie is the ‘great
Tinvene In grertionkir wide, Russi
Tite sable tat nf pasion as,
Sie Germang. > qifers the Leazue
hinge will bo hoettor, fat with Tnwsa
outside if wand net be very prtetie=
aie for the wamen -of Eneope and
Anietiea te cath for the atgmdonment
ef nutcase ethno I
Taudy ,Aniof_xtruck the kesnate of
tier syeech with the demand, sera]
sulimarines!” She urged the women |
of all eounielos tw milte in suppet of
NEGRO DOLLS
eget eoktrs NS ste
Ee ae ee
STANDARD COMPANY
2 aan tenet Aten New ae
PEONACE WILE
TN PORTUGUESE
~~ WEST AFRICA
Correspondent Tes ot Dera
a ck
prisais Taken on Women en
Be hg Nc alld tacit
| Men Desert <
| \ (By a Correspancent)
“Peanage in Veriuguese West, Afric:
hegew about TIS, Te yas intrwduen
hy. as.administnator who spate Kingtel
Muenteand tas weil versed jn nstis
sass and manners heats he was edu
fated aind teamed in England. 1 re
member tat the first mote CaF seer
pes for inbaik_asaeytromeht tye lon. cur
feage a Banh Phin feat time chat |
had the ppriviles of Secing thin mar
was when he cine te the mieson sta:
Hon for mieidiest Sid, Me came twier
and ouch, tine rarelved prompt atten-
ti,
_ che surprise came when h& asked
for a hundred ind thirty nen. to £6
fo Chingwar (Pre, Shingeara. x ton
Javout seventy miles from our villege.
Hite sai that they were needed te
bring hy sume dmxex of provisions, and
that they swayhl he promptly returned
The men valunteored willingly, }u!
anly ta thelr fate, for tres years Nive
ase and theshave nyt returned yet
[this administration Was the most
cruel that Chive ever soon artheard af
[Mon And hove were xent away by thie
Jimmireds to San ‘Thame, Laxen,-and
many other ishaite where there were
lars eocest plantations ahd they were
never hear of agaiy, Ant ala sage
Int me that while he ‘served. fy San
Phone escape wie impystble owing
[io the fuer thar guard, wWere posted al
sround the vast gtantations armed and
Leis. te ehawebar “Kilt anyone whe
Showbl attempt tw flee, TF ane was
catht teying te eseape he would. be
tortured 30 aninereitgtly: that wthere
Soult give yp all hopes of tesings ta
ie away, aud ould rather work ont
Franitract as that avs the only way of
sean,
A Pitiful Sight :
One morning atwut mix welork | was
dalled bys native Cheiataan boy te see:
for mysele the manner “In whlel the
nour matives were treated, £ wet tei
tat village Just across the stream that
STretteseo thre reer teen beats that uf.
the xoverument, amd thers Exaw a
witseut sbght. ‘These stood three tn?
dred and twenty-nine strapping nen
and boys Uned up Uke, convicts” A
erowd af women followed crying am
they looked at thelr irstelen for the |
Jaxt thine, Old men too of to work
groaned and eursed an thes Doked on
the hoyx In whom thes Head Bald cele
future alreams, 1 can remember an
old man hy" the name of Slawen& cr¥-
ing out with tears runing down his
face, “Must my son leave me In my
wld age? And agin, “Hedin my: only
xon, oh, what am U going to do? AS
the Hine disappeared aver the, hill the
women walled, smniting their breasts
and ersinx. “Ob, my God? why dk you
aibow my mother to bring me sw that
I gave birth to such « child that he
Shinld be taken away from me ta be
f alave?” ‘This man's victims were
‘anally’ the pick of the country. He
awk men with well hullt chests, heaustl-
fil teeth, museular arms and less,
hich are the characteristies of the
unbindi telbes.. ‘These captives were
watched and gusrted Uke criminals.
Phe police were x0 rizlly instructed
hat one af them said to me, “If any
ine of these men showld dle, 1 woud
lavetto take off his head and show it
® the wdministrator or T would perish ||
w his place, ‘
The saddest thing aliout this system |
s that mont of the young_men_are| |
narvied oF engaged, ‘The agen ranke]|
ram ANteon te farty and before they: |}
fe gent away they are, examined ty")!
he “xovernment’s znedical offickals. ||
they must hate pérfect teeth, . gond |‘
exith and every physical requirement |
{a strong man. These men Nave tod!
* atrons or clxe the planters will not |
aya full’ price for the unfit, Those |‘
rho do net paxs the examination do ‘
jot escape for they are.sent to: work ,
n the public roadd’ where they toil for |'
vthing: and they: have tor feed them- |!
ives. Thig cruct system will eyentu~ ‘
ly calise complete extinetion.o£ there |
rib@e. Roverty that wax rare if now
srpant. Old -men, women and chil-|*
ren die every iy from want, of food |*
mil clothing because they are not al-
wed to work. for themselves... |
Natives are Diearmed >” |
“Why do they not Mgnt for them-|r
gives?” you would ask., T will €o myo
est to explain. the ditter usefulnens of |}
sisting, ‘The- firm thing. this man |p
Ja wan to disarm the natives and ne] y
4 this by sending ordera to the chiet |
nd elder man stating that all arms
cre to be delivered at a certain time. |i
je told ‘them that if this order was
pt complied with he would take all | +
| the. women and- chiléren and put | +
em to mek on the goverament roads. | C
nis meant certain death, to the chil- |e
on and wo they gave up all a1 a
aving themsetves practicality Gefense- |.»
ms. I abso deity that ap order was|I
eo sent to the Chekwe tribes, whe/t
re further inkind, - demanding . they |
) gtve wp all of their weapons even |i
| i + 4
1010 Sour Shasae tts apecela® cates eatery . BLOOD RED MEDICINE TONIC’
+ (2.5eer mone-acsmnue args apt" Ar veur boey arene, Mhz smemurrigh tt mtscreat age, aS. Ser!
WEAKNESS INDIGESTION Mt, NW. BAKAON. Bax 43. ‘es Si .
NERVOUSNESS.” RHEUMATISM fA Sah ae ta sr ia |
ANEMIA “cous +, f Bee sree men Lon ee wears |
» AGIRED FEELING CATARRH Af BR HE omy Gee tenet fo ths reine ono oar,
oy MINED ReeENe ee Viana ave naw wav Tacgvacw vou want
ee . * AMO oes cc esac echo necneneeeaeenssceauersneeeerenseoseneeen
KNOCKED out? Lo you walk ound witbout acy COUR Adar0Rp covcennessesesnenencagranrgasseciedeseNuasensarone: |
Pupils. of Mme. Fraser-
—Robinson in Meritorious ~
.- Music Retital
| -$ vevital was given at Mount Cal.
vary Chioreh, at Hou. Ss ant ase.
Fewnbes avenue, New York Clty, of
with Rew. cc oguin is the psasior, on
Friday evening, November 12 at 8:4
Demy hy othe pupiis af Me, Altea
FraxersRecsnson, The performances
oC the mupils were of a heh order,
many atsplaying —iimnxuist promtxe
aid reflesting syggg foul! wan Mime.
toothé forefront of Tulems. teachers
of soeal culture.
“The, proxrnnme wax ty follows:
Pidtie duet: “Pixzieath” |Delthes)—
Mrs. ‘Teotman and Miss Davis. Vert
soled “Guadhye™ CTostD—Mist Ethel
Collins... Piano sole: tin ye Gypsy
Camp tielirio—Miow Catherine Veaneis
Vor nolo: “Ave saria” (Willard)
Mira Hertha Croft, Digna sole “Metady
of Love’, (Knatemann tats Lorraine
Taney. Vocal sole: “Orn Pra Nobis”
(hixxeleininiiee Mike” Edith ftuektey.
Pune sole: “The Suga (Saint-Saens)
~Mra, Charenton Trotman,
Part Two
Soneane sulos: Gu) *Mirianies” Seng
of Trinmpii” eiencekea, tb) “Wile
Rither* — efurleighy—Misy Pauline |
Sacksen, Pane Selone any Barens
fotle™ (Oftenhachy. xb) “Ieustie ef
Spring” ¢Shndinge)~ Mise Vivlan Walth,
Vocal xuloz “Swng af the Heart (ohne
sen) Mla Meters, -Piane Trio: “The
Mix. ‘Tratinan; ard, ates. Ruby Ogle.
Vawal solos “Come Ve Mewxed eSentt)
—Mins Virginia Sratey.. Vocal sole:
“Hie That, Dwelleihv” «rom Stet Pauley,
Wy MeDermid)—Mise Carmien Haynes.
Piano xolune-Ch) Lett Hand Chords and
Leaps: «by “Minuet Waltz” (Chopin):
co) “Peelvide” tRachmaninoft)—Mine|
David. Vocal-Diset: “Hoxannah” (Gra
nier)—Int Koprano, Mme. Frasier Rob-
innan: tnd soprano. Miss Pauline Jack-
Jalavery wns abslished andthe rubbe
trade wax nut profitable, the trader
ag well ax the natives turned te farm:
ing, Wheat snon became a money:
myking product, but the need of mod
fern equipment for farniing hindered th
vite farmer from’ getting ax rich at
he wanted and the prosrest wis to
slow for him, xo he advertised fon
Iuborers it offered “xs Mitte wares
that the natives preferred farming for
himself and. selling fila produce to the
retailer, making far mere than
would have received for working.
Measures of the Tyrant
The farmers ‘then appealed to the
government asking help. xo the Admin-
isttator, who wax alzo at the head of
the police department. promised - ta
make the natives work-for the trailers
if they would pay the amount of money’
thae—he—wanted.° Thix contract wax
xladly accepted by the tiviner—there—
fire soldiers were rent around with
long ropes to te up all who refused to
obeq. Tn xome of the villages the mon
refused to Budge and even tried to
Azht.-but when they were taken thes
were horse-whipped and treated most
cruelly. Sometimes the men all would
fee and leave the women to: Nght for
themselves, then the soldiers woutd
lake the girls-and tle them up and
treat’ them,s0, that the men would have
to come back to protect thelr sisters
and thelr wiver. eee
‘Tha men were made to work In the
white man’s figids and as the contracts
were rénewed Over and over again, un
knows to the laborer. he would work
sometimes for x year. The writer has
heard ” native nay, “The white man
jas pald for me,.and 1 must work until
nis money's worth has ‘been acaulred
put of mie. I'did motawish to: work for
him.qyet Tani forced to by, the-ed-
miniatrator.” . When -somo~are asked
why they are made to work, they an-
ser, “We. are not our own.now.” -
An I raid. before some would abeo-
jutely refuse’ to work even after they
ure taken before the authorftles: others
would escape from the camp. Then
woe tb thelr ‘axcd parents or chiefs!
One of his methods for. reraining his
captive was. to wend for tha old chief
snd hold bien prisuner. agit the wum-
ver of men Wemanded wobid torn up-
if the demands were 0 sivere that
he men Tan away into’éiffcrent parts
af the cowntry, he would order the:po-
ics te capture the' women ang the beet
M the unmarried girls, forcitic them
S Htve ‘wader ‘such omburrasctng chr’
femmatdacte’ that the young min ‘wool
how up onty to Weep thely stuters or
par ‘trom tut@er-terture. . £0-
ped was to owing am titer’ Wy be
puiber. of smb: Gama sed by the men
rind. be premppy: given wp. The|
pereemaly = Cian
> Bell tte memeeiaibe yleebes
, to tte ed
aiacece mane ae eer
= eee ab Ie me
Mes bse ta, bss 2 ae
| HON, MARCUS GARVEY STARTS FUND. WITH $50: -| °
oe cae
Gers con - ve a
pekee we ‘aap waphebweie:
ad iets Deomtamy wece, keehe Goon ae Te ee
Te EB, GON, POUR. LEE GF eatisins, Sette, “WE
"FNTANKH. vMMY—
~~]S LADEN: WITH: JEWELS
Gold ‘Stalls on Fingers and
‘Toes—Body Said to Be in
Emaciated Condition _
| canto.“Hgynt, Now. 55—Thehmumms
lot Tut-ankh-Aen i Ioadeit with mie
fand pivectous Jewels, an official com-
muniqtie issued tontstt reveals, It
Jegeare xandate of Gott and has xtatts
fot Kult niall the 'finsons cud tee sila
Ire decays thyt'the body is ima much
emulated condition, +
The communtaum, which covers work
Jatgbe tomb up to Nev. 12, confirming
ihe rain Ines.of te dispatches ty the
|New York Times, says:
| ttowant Carter. commencit the, oe!
lamination of the mifnny on-ovi 11,
ate bend to be carries ang tg the
mummy in site, since 1Ceonkl met be
removed from the coffin without ‘In=
jury. The outér surfaces af ~the
mummy's wrappings, whieh were ina
mont fragtte comdltion, were fest
etrengthened by means. ef a thin Gitte
Ing of paraily wax, after whieh Pree
fesvor: Derry aetide a, lonkitwdinal ine
ciston extefiding from mnsk-te forge
The outer coverings Wohng turn,
hae, extosed the next layers wf wraps;
Piic which proved {0 be equally care
Bonited and deeaxed, In these elreun-
ftunren ny onlerly anweapnind Was:
manifestly Impossible.
“An the Wopk proceeded a hire nati
ber of Interesting and “enutifil abe!
Jects were gradually reveited, AL eel
ntage of the progeedinas photographte|
recorda were taken, > |
Among the objects, fqund were snnn-|
lets and collarett MPR stipert cold dag-
Intricate workmanship, a large number
ee roe es me
desians, some havink #ewrabs hearing
second dagger, larger an econ imge}
beautiful than dhe first, several urs
inlald pretorals, beulwark grnaments, |
gold-cirelets, ete. |
So far the work of uncuvering the}
mumimy hax proceeded to the expe)
of the lower part of the Indy imal
mbs, According’ to the apinion of)
anatcimical experts, the evidence xo far
eal that there fe ne dst hel
pouty ts Ube of gamisie, net sot aduit
The body ix mud emaciates and car-||
ponized. On the feet are seen sane}
tale and on cach toc and tinge. sre
golden. ntatis, Up to the present there’!
3 no trace of documents. Hoth thei
Hecht andslott forearms are loaded with
magnificent Jewels, The Jewelry -dis-
oVered so far on the King, wha Hes!
n the coffin: tn made St heavy sona!
old and tx far beyond anticipation.
Vork of auch delicate nature must!
ccessarily pracced slowly. The cleanse
n& and restoration of these wonderful
biects will _he continued ax_scon_as.
he examination of the mummy Is||
mnished. For this reaxon and in order]
nat they may’ be transferred to the!
‘Afro Muscum in.tho quickest fbxsihie!
ime for exhibition, visite to the tomb}
re suspended iM the work “Is com|
leted. :
T understand that’ the golt comn
celkhs so much’ that It took eleht men
9 Ife ft. - Although the communique
tater that no documenté have been
Ixcovered, I have reason to belive
Knowing trom (erribie'expertence the mut:
epine caused by Thevmatiom. drm J. We
Herat, who lives at 204 Davie Avenve, D3,
Bloomington; il, ts mo thankfal at having
cured herself that out of pure. eratitede she
ia emsions to {ell al other eatlerers Jeet how
to get rid of thelr tecture by simple wer
at Beme :
Mire Hors has nothing te.seti-_ Mgrety
cut ost this notion, mail Kt te her with yout
own mame and a&drvon. a0 phe will'gladl7
soma you this valaable Information, eatirely
Sener "aisess Eis ah ues boom pon means
Pthat a wouderént-cieeimen of the Ror
[6¢ the. Dead Hes in the comin.» They
His-hesiden every” indica tian-that anu
ber of discoveries: are stil. to he mae
in ‘chambers of the tomb not yx
opened. i :
White Housé Finished
In 1799
© "Phe White Howse wee Besun in i702,
sinh ceinetin Iee
“Ex-Bishop-I. E. Guinn, -B.M.
339 W. Walnut St.. Indinnapelle, Ind.
‘This. ball the-airleg Hxt you need
andgcU.S, Money. Orders for other
infermation-xend twa cent starep.
Hide, $1.90, 82.50, $3.50, 14.50, and
$5.50, é
‘Suse Inks, de, Ae, 50€ and $1.00
cach, 7
1.—'The. minixter help, text “book.
Brice, $105.0 * zs
Ee “Thi! tonk ff the pitgelm’s peor!
ene ith aghusined elter: Price,
fieenet se Written by John
euursam.
“ gf
Ra-Korm Ne, 1 dawn to No 3
Brice, $1.h Phys is ealled No. 8 in
fine. bow: Ist the history” @f the
Rineriean Nexto Shvary. A
Zyttow Africa should be re-
steente aes
RecKrom New t dawn to No: 9:
the Htnlupian kick Man's HIntory
inthe Hite, ‘
4. A Tariuess Taiter how Wo make
money.
he Nesta fete and futore im-
provement.
6.2 cthe Judgnient of God atthe
Last Das.
SEW TE A WT AE TO TST
me tuture tie nave tle rare,
Sic\ thessirge for all the Negtoen
ter iMecwuri, *
© 9,. Negra wie wu the aeean, You.
get ail trom Ne Pie Noo, al In
Ge bank: aloe a gemted business
Totter tur $1.33. aa
1W—A ayer book with business
letter, $10; the Tooke of Psalm
with # business, Tetter, $165.
< 11elthe part of the toll Mble not
printarswenh the old bite and aw
Insite letter. Tries, $220,
Te A took fea Ue be ue own
duetnr With a fninthers letter, Flee,
saan :
15. ‘The Iwok nf the prophet
Eewele with « buspiess Totter, Price,
Ieee oo aks wl mutes
two rutuabe of te sew ehureh of
Christ sida business letter. Pelee,
sn,
Ve A dwelt of all the great Negro
mon aia women with st MuRiness
Fetters Tete 85
Bio A tuk af Pssilms, a prayer
Towle ane business totter, #273.
Hie Anyene who wishes te know
whi@ penser that "hs krouter than A
Wortaty send ten cents iy stamps.
IN—Anyene whe Wishes a hottle
wt pure her mestictne that will re=
eve ur care all manner of sickness
and gil manner of afseases, unless
Sou have waited tein tate. to begin,
his thediuse will xurety bring. yOu
Gf medicine apd ofie we liniment.
Prive. $185. "eden" Chrough the
aheve audits, :
> y
DON’T ENVY HEALTH
Enjoy teh
Don't wish fo¥ trenath—get itt.
Bont admire Muscles have them!
Don't dream of Vitaly, possess ier
TRheanaramn can WP banished no
matter how Tong sou havernad Tt,
Gthers are enjoying by" uring: the
Pantone nt Why aot Sou We
will ship. aq-any part o€ the Goria,
‘one of our Kample gizen for $1.50. |
Seater a bottte vedas! and, nes shaw
‘paling out of the Jointsand Himbe.
INDIANAPOLIS; IND.-
Branch Factory: ° *
4705 Russell Street
. DETROIT, MICH.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1935
Spanish Section
Leo efectos de la guerra
Hase siete años que termino la guerra mundial, pero la huella de su paso en vidas de hombres, mujeres y níos y en las arcas de las nacionnesy los individuos, todavía se siente thexorablemente. Como los ejércitos nonstruosos marchaban en los campos de Europa, hoy hablan todavía las cifras de la tragedia. Europa ahora es cuan-do conienza a volver a la normalidad y probablemente en un camino más o menos que conduce a la paz permanente, como consecuencia de los tratados de Locarno.
Pro-raza—Realización del propósito de la organización—
La voicingeria no resuelve el problema de la unión—
La envidia y las ambiciones personales tienen que
desaparecer—Un solo pensamiento y nuestras huestes
disfrutarán del triunfo—Nuestros centros instructivos
Aparte de la deuda de guerra de Inglaterra, que alcuna a cuatro mil millones de dólares, a los Estados Unidos, en los siete años ha pagado por pensions tres mil millones a los heridos y sobrevivientes de la tragen.
El éxito de nuestra raza estriba principalmente en la unión y confraternidad de su elemento. Procedentes de una misma comunidad, sus intereses nos ligan con lazos indestructibles, convivamos ya en Europa, Asla, Africa, America en el extenso archipiélago oceaneán. La dirección de este movimiento reconoce la eficacia de la verdadera organización entre los elementos de un grupo, raza o pueblo y durante los últimos siete años este proceso ha laborado pos unirnos en un solo haz; con un solo objeto y un solo destino.
Francia, donde todos los años se hae una peregrinación al Arco de Triunfo, para rendir hommages a los muertos, ileva en sus hombros una carga tremenda, una deuda como de ocho mil millones surgida de la raja, más la de reclamaciones de pensions de dos millones de pesos de personas, todo lo cual sinifica un gasto de cuatro mil millones de francos.
Nuestro movimiento de adelanto es mirado con recelo por las naciones predominantes; es observado de cerca por las grandes intelectualidades de la época presente, no solo por uno o por varios de sus actos, sino porque cuando se trata de esta organización se piensa en los millones de negros, cuyas palpitaciones laten de un modo unisono sobre una cuestión del dia; negros quienes, estrechando la diestra a través del oceano, dedican sus actividades en pfo de una causa común y la oposición de los retrogados no ha de debilitarles en tal propósito. Nuestro ideal, cual arca prepotente en medio de un mar tempestuoso, permanece sereno, brindando albergue a la raza y presintiendo lo glorioso del dia en que esta arribe a la inmensa bahía del progreso y de la civilización.
Alemania tenia al terminar la guerra más de un million multilados. A mucho de los reclamantes pagó una suma redonda y estapagando al resto de diez a achenta marcos mensuales. Italia está experimentando una loa de prosperidad, con sólo sesenta millones sin empleo, de manera que en la actualidad no se queja del costo de la guerra y sus consecuencias.
El Africa del futuro
Un eminecente geografo inglés ha declarado que el desierto de Sahara vendrá a ser la mayor esclavación de fuerza del mundo, por medio de la utilización científica del calor de la arena, por lo cual conceptúa que el Africa tropical está destinada a desempenar un papel de gran importancia en el mundo del futuro. El científico manifiesta además que Francia se está anticipando, haciendo de su territorio del Sudán una Argentina en materia de ganadería y un Egipto en materia de algodón.
Pero como hemos dicho anteriormente con valeroso enfasis, mucho queda por hacer con prioridad a la arribada a esa hermosa bahía, donde el materialismo desaparezca por completo. Cada miembro de esta institución deberá esforzarse por interesar a cada miembro de la raza con quien venga en contacto, y deberá explicarle y hacerle ver con la mejor lógica a su alcance, cuales son los fines que perseguimos. En el análisis final se observará que las fuerzas opuestas al progreso del negro, no serán influenciadas en lo mas mínimo por meras protestas de nuestra parte. Ellos han realizado que tales movimientos insurgentes en nsestro todo traerian roturas forzosas, abonables estas a la condición de superioridad de que se vanaglorian las clases predominantes.
De ciencia
El doctor Blair Bell, hablando ante la Academia de Ciencias de Toronto, Canada, declaró que el plono era la substancia requerida para contrarrestar el superdarrillo de las células que produce en su concepto el cancer, pero anotando que una de las grandes dificultades es que la preparación de plono, no puede hacerse en forma estable como para administrarla por tres días seguidos. Una de las interesantes consideraciones del doctor Bell es el hecho de que entre los quinicos, plomeros y otros obreros que usan el plono, el cancer era una enfermedad raramente comida.
Celebrar paradas en contra del Lynching Act in la ciudad de New York no trae solución alguna a nuestro problema, como tampoco encontrará solución para ello, las convenciones paniaguadas que se celebran en el Sur de este país entre blancos y negros, tratando de buscar una incógnita que estabilice la proporción directa de igualdad social entre una y otra raza, tan desnivelada en la época presente. Mientras el negro gastá la suela de sus zapatos gozando de lo que el llama libertad en la Séptima Avenida de esta populosa New York, otro negro es libertado con dificultad de las garras de una turba ignara e inconciente en Mississippi, otro hombre de color es colgado de un árbol al amparo de la oscuridad de la noche en New Jersey, y aqui mismo en este New York en una corte puede verse, según la prensa diaria, lo que se dice al negro brutal e insulsamente, menospreciando su condición de raza, por la mayoría del grupo que hace, regula y esfuerza la ley. Con estandartes y protestas no vamos a ninguna parte.
El levantamiento de Siria
(De La Preusa, N. V.)
La apelación a la Liga de Naciones por el pueblo de Siria contra la furiosa represión francesa, subscuente al levantamiento de varias tribus del interior, ilumina con claridad singular este interesante capitulo de la política colonial europea. La ciudad de Damasco pague haber sido borbardeada sistémática e implacablemente por dos días, sin atencion a los centenares de victimas que caían entre las mujeres y los niños de la población. Tanques artillados, bombas incendiarias y todos los "adelantos" de la guerra moderna han entrado en acción.
Aquellos opuestos al avance del negro realizan que su éxito esta en dominar y esclavizar la porción mas oscura de la humanidad y que esto se ha llevado a cabo en todos los tiempos, por mediación de martirios y tormentos. En la mayoría de los casos esta innominiosa esclavitud ha sido impuesta por la fuerza de las armas. La presión así impuesta, desde luego, ha tenido sus variantes; pero en resumen final, cualquier influencia que tratemos de traer en contra de las fuerzas oppositoras, para nuestro desarrollo económico político social, hay que tener in menti que para obtener nuestro propósito, tenemos que estar lo convenientemente preparados.
El problema es ahora, como siempre, el mismo. Ya admitita la presencia de los europeos en suelo extranjero, y obligados a imponerse por la fuerza de las armas, qué actitud cabe a sus generales sino la resistir la violencia con la violencia, y aprovechar su superioridad marcial para dominar más rápidamente al enemigo. ? Pero, en realidad, la cuestion es muy otra.
Cuatrocientos millones de negros bien organizados y con una firme determinación a ocupar un sitio tan adecuado como el de cualquier otro hombre en el planeta que habitamos, aunando sus habilidades, será un peso de número que el universo tendrá que reconocer. Esos cuatrocientos millones organizados para un propósito común, constituyen por sí solo un poder irresistible que demanda respeto y diga atención. La organización de nuestro pueblo bajo los auspicios de la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, es inconnusurablemente influencial y absolutamente indispensable para combatir todos los elementos que se opongan al progreso de nuestra raza.
Francia ha sido identificada ante la conciencia universal con un sistema de política colonial paternalista, del que se ofreció como modelo Angela y el Marriqués francés, y que excluye radicalmente toda aplicación de fuerza a las masas de coloniales sujetas al gobierno de Paris. Según los panegiristas de este sistema y de esta política, y de Francia que la sostenia, las publicaciones africanas al tratadas venaban y también a la patria europea con rehegencia y sinceridad indiscutible.
Il levantamiento del Marriqués francés anjugado después de poner en juego todos los recursos del ministerial Potnia y la ayuda militar represión y la actua congratión represión en Siria, tímese una elección que no requiere concretización. La policía colonial de Francia
Cualquier influencia que patrocine la propaganda en contra de esta movimiento unificante, comete un error cristaimo por no haber analizado de antemano nuestro temperamento. Los elementos de color estan despiertos y proven que su futuro como raza y como pueblo, no les será negado en su marcha hacia sus nobles aspiraciones. Neu grgulleces ver el como y manera en que nuestro elemento es maneja y lucha denforadamente, para recavar un puesto que le permita vivir decente, libre y felizmente hasta el ciel de todos los humanos. Control instructivos, nosotros Liberty Halls, surgen en todas partes, de modo propriemiento y mirar guildadamente hacia las sublimidades de la alma, desprisionado la migración, la morromiento y las pilífites edifices de este mundo en que vivimos. Así se desprisiona de todos los miembros de nuestra comunidad.
cia, por lo que se ve, no asimila coria
dualmente a las poblaciones. Y
cuando estas nuestran espiritu levantiso,
el paternalismo colonial se
trueta en furiosa represión, ni mas
ni menos que ha venido hacia
Inglaterra en la India y Egipto
desde hace cincuenta años y España
en el Riff cada vez que la obligazen
a ello las circunstancias.
Nada más lamentable, por otra parte, que el implacable espiritu con que está inponiendose Francia en Siria. Está catastrofe de Damasco parece exceder en proporciones a todo lo que se ha leido modernamente en materia de guerras coloniales. Pero, en torno a la cuestion entera, que debe considerarse desde el pinto de vista de que Francia esta obligada a sostenere alli por mandato de la Liga, lo primero que se revela es que la superchería de los paternalismos, coloniales esta llegando a su fin.
Hay que concluir categoricamente que los pueblos "inferiores," como se denomina abiertamente a los sometidos a colonizaciones o "mandatidos," no aceptan de grado la imposición de la civilización superior decretada por las potencias. El mito que de las poblaciones sometidas desean y veneran al invasor es una mentira sangrienta y lo más pronto que se abandone sera mejor.
La verdadera cuestion a decision es si el tan ponderado principio del gobierno propio—"self government"—va a concederse de hecho a todos los puobls o va a ser una merced otorgada por las naciones que dirigen el mundo, según su conveniencia. Y si va a seguir este ultimo sistema, habrá que reconocer resultamente que ni Inglaterra, ni Francia, ni España, ni los Estados Unidos, ni nación "protectora" alguna podrá sostenerse en el suelo extranjerio sin apelar un jia u otro, o todos los dias, a la violencia.
Lo que presentará ampliamente en delito de hipocresia y dobla en loscritos internacionales de la actución española en el Riff.
Ratificaciones de un tratado
Ha sido verificado por este país el canje de rattificio del tranfado con la República Dominicana, el cual modifica la convención firmada en febrero de 1917. Aquella república reconoce la emisión de bonos de 1918 y la amortización de las entradas aduaneras de la emisión autorizada en 1922 como obligaciones del país. Este pais retiene el control parcial de las aduanas y permite a los dominicanos negociar un empréstito por la cantidad de veinte y cinco millones.
Bible Fight in Colorado; Liberties Union Offers Aid
Aid from New York in the light of a Colorado man to stop the reading of the King James version of the Bible in the public schools has been offered by the American Civil Liberties Union. The Union on November 12 wired Charles Vollmer of Plattsville, Col., its involvement of his stand in the suit which is now on trial, and offered him financial and legal assistance to carry on his fight. Following the ruling of the Plattsville school board that the Scriptures must be read every morning in the schools, several pupils walked out of the school. Mr. Vollmer, through his counsel, William H. Schofield, brought suit to restrain the Scriptures reading on the ground that "it forces children of the Catholic faith to subscribe to a religion which they do not believe." The school board entered a demurrer.
African Emigrant Departees Exceed Incoming Aliens
WASHINGTON—From July to September, 1925, 269 native Africans, heretofore residents of the United States, have returned to their native land, as compared with 260 African immigrants who were admitted during the same period. Practically the same ratio exists as to West Indian allens, 132 of whom abandoned the United States during the July-to-September period, as against only 118 who were duly admitted under the U. S. immigration laws. Africa's annual quota of 1,200 18 now running considerably under the quarterly proportion of 300. C. P. B.
London School Population Falls 100.000 Since 1914
LONDON, Nov. 17.—London has lost 100,000 children since 1914, according to public school attendance figures for last April. At the latter time 797,149 children were on the school registers, 3,982 less than in 1924 and 96,699 less than in 1914. The decrease is attributed almost entirely to the decline in the birth rate, but a contributing factor is the removal of families to new settlements outside the metropolitan area, with little counterbalancing inflow.
Negro Historical Society
WASHINGTON.—The Howard University Historical Society, who organized a year, age by students specializing in history, for deeper study and broader research in the field. It is the plan of the society to regard those whose research opens up the story of the early history and struggle of the Negro in America and to stimulate and encourage progeny aiming to accord knowledge to the Negro for constitutive effort.—C. P. B.
Magazine Section
DERELICTION OF DUTY IN NIGERIA, AFRICA
By J. M. STUART-YOUNG
(Continued)
"Thank the Lord, there's Port Harcourt it last," exclaimed Gomersall, pointing to the extreme left.
Through the vells of mist and water we could dimly disarm a few faint lights. As the road turned a little, we could then more clearly see the arc-lumps of a steamer.
"That quite a big passenger boat yonder," declared Gomersall. "Pity Hardacre, that it can't possibly be yours. Must be a foreign ship as the Oshogbo is the only Elder boat in P. H. just now, and she is nothing but a coaster. Most likely, by this time she will be in total darkness, with her engines stopped, no electric light, and only a watchman and an officer aboard."
"Oh, shurre-up!" groaned Hardacre. "Don't rub it in."
But I could not myself refrain from another hint about the likelihood of our finding no home for the night—for we were strangers to the town.
Gomercall answered cleverly: "We are wet enough outside, and soon we ought to wet enough inside." He shook a torrent of water from his sleeves and then took a firmer hold of the wheel. "We are not far from the wharf now, and I can make straight for the are-lamp of that foreign boat. Seems to me from her shape that she is either Dutch or German."
"By Jove!" ejaculated Hurdaere, with an inspiration: "She must be the Holder that I parleyed for, before Elders wired me about the Oshgohe. The only two reasons why I gave up the thought of a passage by her are my ignorance of Dutch, and my desire to get home as quickly as possible direct to Liverpool."
"Well, if she is the Helder, old bird, we will go on board and gannom the captain," said Gomersall. "He will be good for a gallon of ale, anyhow."
The asphalt of the wharves show like burushed steel in the radiance of electricity from the mast-head. We left the car under the shed, with the boys still inside; and then we all scuttled as fast as our cramped feet would allow us down the steps. Behind the hulk of the steamer, we paused to remove our streaming raincoats; and to smarten our appearance up a little. It was indeed the Helder out of Amsterdam, for its name was painted in huge white letters on the side. A fair-hailed seaman in white uniform stood at the top of the gangway.
We greeted him, and asked if the captain was aboard.
"He is at supper, sir," he answered respectfully.
Without more ado we mounted" to the deck, and gladly found ourselves inside the brightly lit saloon. About a dozen men were at table, and their light complexions and blue eyes proclaimed them as typical Netherlanders. Cold and hunger do not stand on ceremony, so Hardade acted as spokesman for the party. He knew that his name would be recognized on board. The optimum listened to our tale of woe with a half smile on his bearded lips. "Tat, were then is your boat, dr Oshogho?" he asked at length. "Not a pity, Mr. Hither, that you did not decide to come us. You would have given you a cholly time, I promise you!"
"Don't you know then where the Oshogho is lung?" I asked blankly. The captain shrugged his shoulders deprecatingly. "We are only here for coal; and we take on our seven passengers tomorrow. I know noting—noting at all. You can all have chop milt me first; and den you can find your boat afterwards—is it not so?
We were both delighted and relieved to have met with such a cordial reception; and very soon we were drinking white wine, and indulging in a savory bowl of curried chicken and rice with half a dozen vegetable side dishes. Our arrival had coincided with the last course of the meal, and shortly the officers went back to their own quarters. But the captain remained with us, chatting quite amably. One slew stood by in attendance. He pressed upon us a second battle of wine; and we all have a long and interesting chat about what each had "done" in the great war.
"You like, to stop on board, maybe" the captain asked suddenly. We travelers exchanged unbarrassed glances. But we recalled that Hardacre had not yet received his ticket from the agency; moreover that his baggage had to be safely stowed. The telegram demanding his presence at Port Harcourt had been sufficiently urgent to warrant the belief that the Oshogho might leave for Lagos quite early on Sunday. It was Hardacre himself who explained with emphasis, "Too sorry, captain. But we have got to find that Oshogho this very night, and get on board her. Even if we have to sleep on her bare decks, we must decline your hospitality, much as we appreciate it." He said this with such determination that Gomersall and I took the hint and rose to leave. There were cordial handshakes; and a few minutes later we were back inside our damp and war-worn car.
Pet Pig Accompanies Woman Out Shopping
Poplar Bluff, Mo., gapped when Mrs. Janie Hickman; a popular young matron, there; went on a shopping tour with a red pig following at her booth. Mrs. Hickman defended her choice of a pot and explained she had trained the little porch to follow her by bawling him at intervals with lots of food.
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THE PHILOSOPHY AND OPINIONS OF MARCUS GARVEY
Edited by AMY JACQUES GARVEY
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Box 22, Station L
NEW YORK CITY
WEEKLY SERMON
Subject: "The Supernatural Powers of the Soul"
Text: Ps. 3, 4, 5. Verses
By what means has God laid bare to man the splendid vision?
First by prophecy. I use the word in that large but accurate sense, familiar to the students of St. Paul's Epistles, employed in the 13th chapter of the Romans, and in the 15th of 1st Corinthians, and elsewhere, wherein is comprised revelation not merely of the future, but any revelation of hidden and supernatural mystery, any unveiling of it to the individual conscience of man, or the collective conscience of a people, that is the gift of unfolding and elucidating truth. It is revelation by word.
Speech has a special and very vigorous power. Speech is human thought so suitably equipped, and seated in so swift, so manageable, a vehicle as to pass most easily from mind to mind. The power of speech upon the mind depends upon the original needs and faculties of our nature. Man has a faculty of curiosity, and a need, a deep and strong desire, for intercommunication with his kind. That faculty may be satisfied, that desire may attain its rest through human speech. The spoken word may be intended to conceal the inner meaning, that is only another way of saying that the faculty of speech as every other faculty, is scared by the cruel weapons of the fall, but primarily of course, speech is intended to reveal; the essence of its dignity is that it is the secret, the inner thought of that marvellous mystery, an individual soul, a single self, and the special use of it, is to convey a meaning, that is the direction and purpose, of a single personality, and thereby to interest and impress. For human words to more than convey bare facts. They convey the tone of the mind from which they come.
What is tone? Who can say? - Few can define, but all can feel. Tone seems to be that mysterious touch essential, peculiar, reality in nature or in man, which will elong about all expression of either, and which never fails to strike the human spirit, and as word is man's thought eloquence, rabbed in splendid or in homely garments for presentation to his fellow, so word has an intrinsic power of somehow 'unwelling the soul it comes from by revealing tone.' Wherever any spiritual truth is taught, the words that teach reveal something of God.
In proportion as that word is really direct, from God, that mode of teaching sends to impress and interest the human mind, both by the overwhelming importance of the facts revealed, and by conveyance of that undefinable reality, the tone of a supernatural life. Hence the power of many false systems of religion, living for the most part not by their falsehood, but by such prophesying as they had of truth!
Hence the peculiar splendor of the Hebrew prophets; Isaiah in his indignation; Jeremiah in the sorrow; Zeckel in his mystic Insight; Zechariah in his glowing poems of eternity; Malachi in his salemn stern relish-geach revealing supernatural truth; each also conveying to the creature a portion of the tone, the essential set and temper of the mind of the Creator.
As the poet by his genius interprets so far as he is a poet—the deepest thums of human nature to the soul; so the prophet—so far as he is a prophet—interprets God.
Prophecy reveals this of supernatural mystery the essential holiness—the necessary aversion from evil; therefore the real moral government, and true personal life, which belongs to the living God. The prophecy office in the human family has ever been witnessing to a supernatural world.
Two truths I may venture to remind you in passing: God's revelations through human thought, enlisted in human speech, were the forewarnings and witnesses of the great revelation of His purposes and nature by desigthe Incarnate Word; and further there is a sacred duty of never tampering with the gift of speech, but taking care that it be in you, my brother, what God intended it to be in you, the powerful beautiful vehicle of truth.
Never Eaten in This Country Until About 1830—Belongs to the Nightshade Family—French Called, It Apple of Love
Columbus discovered tomatoes when he found America, for they are supposed to have originated in Peru, the land of the Incas, also believed to be the original home of potatoes and corn. The Spanish took tomatoes home with them, and from Spain they got into Morocco, and from there into Italy, says the Kansas City Star.
A generation or so, ago tomatoes were called "love apples," and there is an interesting story attached to that.
"Tomato is from the Mexican word 'tomatil', says James H. Collins in "The Story of Canned Foods" "The Hollanda bringing tomatoes from Morocco called the tomato pomo dal Mori, which translated means 'moor apple'. From Italy they were taken into France. The French had to have a name for the strange fruit, so they translated the strange Italian name into French, calling it pomme d'amour. That sounds like the Italian name, but in French it means something quite different—apple of love." Presumably, when tomatoes reached England the French name was translated again and so grandmother raised in her garden a queer plant called the 'love apple', upon which grew rather small red fruit which was never eaten. For people thought the tomato poisonous. They grew it in flower gardens for maybe two hundred years before they had courage enough to shut their eyes and say 'Here lies! and try the tomato.'
The tomato belongs to the night-shade family, some members of which are poisonous, and that is probably why it got such a fearful reputation. It was about 1830 that people in the United States began to eat tomatoes. Then they liked them. They could be eaten raw, fried, baked or stewed, not to mention kitchup, chill sauce and the dried paste from which the Italian housewife makes sauce for spaghetti. They grew in popularity uptil twenty years or so the new industry of canning, which had been started around Baltimore to put up oysters and sea food, made it possible to have canned tomatoes all the year round.
The rest of the story is so well known that it need not be repeated. Since 1830 the consumption of tomatoes has increased until now they are one of the "Big Three" of the canning industry, the other two being peas and corn, and are packed in half the States in the Union.
AT PARTING
By J. M. STUART-YOUNG
"Good-bye!" we say with smiles
Across Life's lonely miles—
Good-bye, Auf Wiederschen or Au
Revoir:
With new a pang at the heart's deep
core—
Good-bye!
"Good-bye!" No word but this,
As plague a casual kiss.
If he should travel to the world's far
end.
And he ours too, or the soul's true
friend—
Good-bye!
"Good-bye!" we breathe with tears,
"For days, for months, for years!"
When from our side, swift-speeding
toward the Light,
Pass there we love. In the holy night—
Good-bye!
"Good-bye!" No other word,
In Time's long silence heard—
Good-bye! Good-bye!
Good-bye, Auf Wiederschen or Au
Revoir:
Man Eats 27 Tons of Bread
The average man consumes the following amounts of vegetable foods in his lifetime. Twenty-seven tons of bread, 5,193 gallons of fluids, 183 tons of meat, six tons of fish and 15,000 eggs.
OE ie < een, Sill Sattetesl, »
sila: maaeiietiiniin “onli . wes a ui
a Sas eee a ote. mics : Samer Pi , a 4 a piensa ait
be Sond a a we E ¥ i COO PE STS eee
i : wal Z: : : Ske Di Mg Coa ye Oe UOT Se reese a ARES
Bi eg kt 5 & , a BRE ee ee eT See Bete ere a Pies Tae ROUGE oir
bn a seer Ry ed bet Pes pM aay RR aS aie oC ROR EL el 5h SI ve Fas
MO indy aR RAMEE eo Ng SINDEN on iy, Series Sea CoA) ie ies ve i
Ah ete SE nS Ses Os OP a ee NNT sa Py
THE PEOPLE'S -EORUM.
“terPursult“of “Program ~~
Retain:Faith in God ?
To the Halter of "he Negro World:
“ur dhe purautty-of ote great pte-
ram we must not forget the Gott: se
created ux anilin whose hinds “ou
gesting ee When Son Lone fal
jose: the” urge which hielpx uson te
higher and better things.” Thin. dues
Lnot thean that we anust net continue
to work diligently heeamm faith with-
‘out works Wil accomplish little. |
‘The Honorabje Maren Garvey fs
showing the way to great independence
and racial solidarity, The flrat_xten
joward accomplishing, this: grout Thing
Is to belleve IUand to believe In ett
“power to reaeli the gral, dunt bnesatine
Zomebody who knows ery little ahout
Te thinks that St exnnt he stone Ix no
“Feaxon for. tin 10 be digenuratd, Wee
tory will come if we continue to -bave
faith and will work. 7
Cg dOSERIEE, FRANCIS.
ain Bias. Pe oe: .
Thankful to Mr. Garvey
For Revealing the Light _
EAS ERE oF TT eae rerwas
SNerroes. thiamine the worl ie
thankful for the Universal Newro In
provement “Axsucintion sane Hs math
ieee. The Norra World, We foe! that
The Negro World be the ents jerper
fellas tn Shir Nesters mn expres
Ghomeciver swith eifcetity pan rack
inatiern .
Before the°vaming ot the Chivers
Norra Ininencainent Av ver attany. tte
infiiis AP Nested. gee seeatty tte:
tioned and therm agin that “thes
emgent for, Wit yee one lead ear gerne
Iv interpéeted thes Iaugtness And
Tien came Mavens Geyer with das
Afriean teiciptini becca te ain
fur exes gut te say tis things whiell
we had heen th.aking but never say?
ing. 7 .
The Negro was taken simi hic ne
five hime sind seattered all ager the
faem uf Ue rarth tm he heer nf word
sini drawers wf water for white. Howe
Tint spite cof thie: ante enhthon,
nen aa Ment evotinnesd tian it
Wowd, ‘This was anfertunate beeanse
AUham Gauight thine nf mised blow to
feof superien ti the Nezre af uunitxesd
Wood. TIX stile of mind suegended
An keeping the rave apart until the
vomahz of Marvin Gatver
We bye te thank the Atenorabe
Mmcouns Gan vex for Ifting the stad
of “tick anit renewing the prile wt
the Negro af unmixed Mowh "Wo se
AI eal caf eat beet en
read features cmd sneecltod kinky
hair, We are tanktul for the lieht
and yee will continie ta priate him for
ringing It. For hs gould we fn
thems things withont a teacher?
: ALARIO WELSH,
PGenailliegs Glare :
Opposition Strengthens
Rather Than Weakens
To, the Killtor of The Negra Worl:
“ith the pursit ef oar teats ee sotto
moet with tremendous abstaeles, We
upposition of sil Kinds, Weave met by
oypuntnie forean from within sted well
fut. The dileuttien white ssuntvnt
US KeOM. UNSHFAOONtable, At these
Limes feel hike eiving up the tient,
Mut thoxe Who hg nen sisi
these trying tnes and have. booked
Ihaek tnwan thon wlth the hese nf rite
ies gs UNSIE eaneeTeHig, “neue teseies
- .A Health Restorer—Be Able To
ew EAT Ww Bass
Toa 2 —————
Smear DRINK - ,
ae E : {
wa SLEEP = N
It you are troubled with constipation, biliousness. indigestion. gas’ belching, |
river cauile ttomth Trangia sinh cotton anerans ce baat Busceetchiog.
dere Peete. gamice Sasa sian aration cml weak bowels, ORDER x bot:
Hee de UKE AS eR CREE ED oT HT Sen Te ee
See Sra as cue armies on rl yon al a nlenennlly urpeiaed 0
caterer Sarr faa aime alter, vet rs Rie troubled eee eve emacs
pee ater eer ee MEETS BORE, SHE As Bune De. not let neaieet-of
Spee. "Sena for‘ baitg af this Geter moaicine this mute sisted tas
oes
"Price $1.50 in U. 8. A. $2.00.in Forsign Countries lasluding Postage
If you are-not-satistied with 1 returg samgand we guarantee the retuda
oe Se ae « mea 4
MONEY MOST BE SENT WITH ALL ORDERS 7
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11S West 143d Street Sat NEW YORK CITY
ull Dicwstione Haw'te: Tae: With Ezeh Wattle
#} Hair Seed Magic Wonder. Hair Grower |
a Nature's Way of. Forcing the
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. cS *. Batr Seed ts a powerful stimulant,
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oe 7 Lg totter the very first treatment stops &
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Eee the chert ote Seains te grow
2 fine, This compound Ie the om: i
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a Sb tone pute, TF GREW Sale
= 7 fast ow 0 bad cart bd beens bale tae
od € colada _ Ieee’. We cam rove @ “4
mepuitinfafaamannanenee ore ee amend
BENE ee ee repeaters
front rists ant aimppomunents bi
acdifferent Uxh!. | Orpositipn J: Indis-
peusnble.to prokrem.: 1, ould seen
tothe thoughulint epposition takes
Hs plet dnt the divine plan ag a
strengthoner, When an’ bhytiele oi
Hhunyekind freq tm, 1 elven US ayy on
portunity tw airengthen and increase
our-fulth in Ged and ourselves,
Hmérsing from a gieat, battle, men:
[tat or spiritual, we tind ourselves. pos-
xowted of nore will power and con:
fldanes. “After <f@PSieiory we shoutd
we able tw approdelt the nest trying xit-
tition with a vealnier xpieltyand a
sdunder mint. Members of the Uni-
Versi Negew nirovement Assnetatton
have sn excelent onpnrtnnity to Ae-
velop themselves slong these Maes. If
the members will take the right mented
Attitude, opposition wall help the, as-
sockston rather than hinder It “pros
cre. >
SRL MeINTOsH.
‘Negroes Must:Take Lesson
From Abd-el-Krim ~
To the Edlter of The Negre Warkt:
AbwcoleKetin, brave Within, Fe en
ef tho qnest interesting figure’ in “ihe
wut hd tulay? Mis emraize anit beavers
in ceareying on what hex seemed a
Iesing thaht is seit encemragentont te al
apiiesged jumble Whiethave Tov i eon:
Hinnedstongitie fur a herty which. they
have never edlusod.s 2
‘The longing fer frarom an divine
Janda: Just ted aever tiene his. fuer
DSGRy term theow-the Hight te serstre Ik
fAladvel!1cvin se vested a teint Thats
oe leit, He fe veteling seainet the
alvery anid eppressun' of tile peonte,
This ie ae nee thing, Ang pace ae
nation whieh ia nwt freesamh whirl
as the altenteet deueoe af nestlonal or
View pride, wante fredan, The fle
havere of Abeel-Kehin have, declated
Mat they are willing in shed Their last
Grow of Mond te kuin thie fremdom,
The worhf exnuat help, admiring their
leave ten, ;
The sMtitule sf the Mitflang aught toe
Ine moana tye American “Negpume whe
through dnorisnes, sslavaltys ar seme
Lealtions amt nee af ariabtthon wwiintel
nits bly and meekly aevoptiveg any
thine the White myn Seow ME fa hand
ont te him, ‘The Universal Neery Ine
Movement Assrlation is tying, te
stants the skein jiembere of the
Segre ries, Me war ery ie Mberty:
ant freedom, | We hope tat Nesraes
whe have not die yet sweat the Mett wit |
fae at Tevwnn fram tha rae More
eterno ee
OnAVID LK. |
Hawaina Cahn, 7
ed Should Concentrate
On Release of Leader
‘ho thatthe ern‘ stearh: Wash
Caine lenders hate: eomvecoul ene
‘They Have served ticle time ang. par
sor int printed oh THI ore bani ato
Guesisiaud Weg N monk GE ato
dha, at it Blea mea RO Be
He sis week
Seach eo becca UL hte lone
shew that it wail ge for, But we must
eubbt and direstar Whe is mare fitted
fie tilg Thani reat aides sinners
Haw thent can "we who say we lave
ile Kin asao NG He Get Milo. Bos
in Feiagln 16 penn, SHARE aailelas aie
Pe) et, Sel . * DPnay : ae oti
=a THE .NEGRO. WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER: 26, 1028
Yat effort posbivie to effect ‘hia~re-| Day: yen: but what’ fot Not-tor a1 @
wee Stree uiancrs nae sor ene sinees| SPAIN INSTALL
Negtoes have ulwayn shown a’ sreav] which we live, been able to achieve] ~~" SPA wie
wets Mai teagan tras hye tae eo ee]. OF SPAN
man wants, Te would scoma that, te | Universal’, Negro Improvement Anso- © Ste
cvoull. he willing ,to put, somo of the/clation, “7 : : :
he. cnr st furan Ip 2 -n,naamne te: biv |He is Only a
jing that he wanin. ‘There. xeeins ta ft Hetore thin "movement came on-the|” “and:
Iw nothing moe, kaw6int before ux |xetwo black men, were Wiscournzed be- id. Expecte
aa, propie,at this Unie thas the re; caupe. of ate injunticen -xiat ‘were |. Rubber, - Sta
Jeane of thin reat leader, Let us fail] wrdught agaiiine thems but this move- Santa:
In Ime and et to work. ment has’ xiven them an incenilve to .--Krim's: Way
. EUGESE GAVING, [ive That la wig wo are thankful with Rebels
Younssivivin, Ohio. * [tor at tints Uime—the-Incenjive to live] j
——a . [atid achieve in thin worlit, We are Them
ieee: = af thiinktut for thin , greg movement | ~ —_
|. which .has. sucegeded ‘after “seven “From. the New
U.N. L.A. HAS GAINED -} xrtch nse: succgrted “atter ‘sovan| “From: the New
(Continued “from page 3) “Y*
une of-incare decerinined In. #pite
Ot ins propaganda to xtlek to our poxt
aud carry on because’ we know thal
truth will not always be on the sround;
irith!will wot nlwaSe be on the seat
Ifold. We know that the day’ will ome
j when the menboershin ofsting Covenant
[Negro Jinpravement Asxociatlen —
Htivther ite tn, 2925 rs dn" 198—ths
ee ere icaen shumncsie nusenarete
‘hilt know’ thelr real fytends. ged thelr
Let me say to! yeu tonight that we
alive tried to-do lotr of things: we have
passed through ‘Tote’ uf hard pkicer:
though some of yon who we here t=
hight have wimply. eot and Is aked ae
wwe strngeled and fouede: and ‘hesked
Hint pleaded and. yon hase erlttekaod
a goa hinve feud! teult aed gor have
ene @ boi wf talking athout spines you
Gist mot know sumstisin sant he ptt
Me that we faust on and forskt on
ttit we haye begun to Ree-the Miht oF
fas, CApplainen, Phe Universal Ne=
kee Inprovement Asswekation be soins
sot atu nods can stand an the way 8¢
pregreta of this argaminations it tn
foe Fae tea far oe aie erntieienn tee
stop it, We have net atr exon ott the
stot and nyndeg us one anindé “that
whatever 11 este wee as ean to stiek
Ue cur prstm “and travel the sith vith
uinfaltermme ates until the Nera has
tenthed nis wlaces ins the wereld and
made himself sr fee and nation 02 he
respoeted alonsidte the other aves anit
nathins
Let me tell-the membership net anty
in Liberty Halt bit the tinemisershty |
meepywhere nse nf yen whe ave
watchingegss sen what we are sil to
i wn covenants,
we have Apved Liberty Hall: we have
sloot sibs wediont iy satin the, ship:
nee ete wth and ive ns at Met, an,
perhaps, x6 340 will holo, we will be |
able tvs tnore in {he next ton mnenths}
Ua wie Mave autem the Lat ten
months, cA nptKe,
MR. W. McD. HOLDER SPEAKS
Mr. ‘Wester Meth, Hubler spwke on
days, he wind, the mation will be ever
brating one wf tts greptest festivals
Vhankselving Dag. This im ain are
Saston which hive dein cwiebyated
eer aston the’ yrhie V8, whew the Pie
crim Fathers reaped thet tirst hare
vest In Ambriea, THe Pilzrim Fathers
came to thre country and amidst every
muffering they weee atte atter Wein
lere one year to emp a harvest which
ame about the fall ef 1621. On that}
thy the then Governor, whaKe name.
wat Hisddoeks sent list men Inte the,
lhe tw towk for waht tras, thse mare |
ieulak speetes of whic then common |
was The Hitkey. Sines that time Amer. |,
a Beas Ineo eolotwratinis ‘Thinnest |
fie Day. the poputar attractien toing |,
Cuirkes dinner.
Bick men at this time are asking
heinnives whether thee shawl he |
Ahawkeat an the same strat in whten |
he American white mans te eins |
hanktd. ‘The bhek man. utter beitig |;
avpresseid, aeftdr etn tenet Its |
wale vinliond with fuallots, after Dols |
pat on and spurned, owe nxt Coot tht |
Je will Te sable wffer thanks with
he cues ninwaeity ane the shied inant
Vee weill foe Uhankfut on ‘Thankaxtwinn |
was)
DR. J. P. BAILEY
148 West 13 1st Street
IGISTERED. CHIROPODIST
Seren voxene Faas twoarces—
Sores eee ae ee
Mysterlebercre
EE
eee
aS.
Seren ial or
mc ee on:
THE’ NEW *
DISCOVERY :
‘STUBBORN BLOOD -
DISEASES?
since: raitt: eters ese! ome
Sees a eee
Eigen pie
Rare ene ee a
ots Soe ee
Dayy-yen: but what! fort Not -for ;
Lturkey dinners? but stor the thing
‘which we tive, been able to. Wohi
through this great) movement—thi
Universal, Segre. Improvement “Anse
ciation :
nop ond din. Ineeative-te-bive:= a=
ftetore this "movement came om -th
Factor binex men were Wiscournked be
| ape of re." injuticen erat Wer
werdught agaiine thems, but this move
ment has aiven, them an inecnitve
ive, -That Ya. sitio wo are. thanktu
for ni thls tme—the- Incensive to live
and wehieve in this world, We are
thinktul (or thin , sreng movement
which .has. auccgeied ‘after “evar
yéars in removing from’ the mind o}
the ‘Nexro. that. inferiority: comptes
ielth whicleIt was imbued, “BiveK mer
Aid not know, their history hefores thes
Dollowed that It was w diskrace to. Be
black: bututhe Untyersal Negro. Tm-
provement. Aswuclation te telling. black
men to change that belief. and 1h
making uscknow that God. created all
ren, that fie inate-blark men,oai be:
Cutise of that, we are prom! qf Our-
welvex, We are thankful because at
Uhis time this-movement hay nucceed-
fed in making Nesratethrewahout. the
world interested not so much In shat
Patnleve’ of Francs, 18 saying, Bot #0
much hrghot ‘ine George of Enlatl
fe paying, hut gwleat Marcus, Garvey: Ie
saving, what William Sherrill te saying
for theohenefit af WaAek men the world
over, ¢\ppitse)
Tiack men shel Ne tRanktut when
they realize that this movement haw
muceceded in meting the white world
Emer to the print where (ieg are Seo
ering whgt neat will the “blavi, mie
da and en sshinm next Will white mich
Clepend tw win thelr wars. Tn the past
the white man started hie ‘wars aud
depended en thachinek man {0 stop
them. The whine werk In weed
haw sitether wien the next wat cone
the Aan will ato eGo hie
We are thenkétl for the. Universal
Shere Improvement “Amocbitinn bee
raga it ham aiveorded in fake Fame
nf The Lirdest daily newspapers in thin
rauntey spell tlie: werd Nesea: with,
rapltal “Ney Veh will eaenlt iat im
former times when the white npwspa
hers referred te Negi they spelled it
ith a tinal) n.” inet thie "movement
tan angeeenmied fol manking thie Inet
chite daily paperin tie eonntry: Ise
rere tn. fee gelltortol and rehortortal
tnt te mpell the word Nose. with) m
capital Non Werargethanktit for the
falverint Sheri Impeieement Aston
intian hecanse It Haw tameht bck
ion thole bears berate Ht Bie mre
ceded in changing the pxycholury of
ack men threvstont the world, and
eoause it hae made the white werkt
reestandt that the Wack aman ty frm
erieux mood and that he will net stop,
iit he haw found. far*himselt the
aenilil thie sua scherd he oueht tebe:
Fraxklin D. Roosevelt Cites
Faulty. Construction _
Warnings to-homie buyers to. make
sure that they get good construction
Values for thelr money, and that sub-
uirhan home developments of the col-
ony type have “too frequently heen
highdo price or very Inferior In aual-
ty. there Insupd yesterdiy. by the
American Construction Gounetl, of
whieh Franklin 1, Roosevelt fs preal-
dent, ‘The couneil for yeara has fox-
tered better” building of homes,
‘The juthlie expecially. wax warned
agalnst speculative building epera-
tipas, Th wan foufid that the eayintey’s
real housing needs have not yet heen
met In providing homes at moderate
prices, Chy apartment hotel buthliins
ts Largely: speculative, It was xald, and
city resitentlal contruction Ix con-
Unyously high priced, Generally. It
the clement, of etuttion ts treaty cur-
lling speculative operations,” and a
wax stated, there wre indications “that
sounder financing program in in sight.
=
A
Negro. - Universal
King coming
‘rule the World:
” Rev. Webb >
‘The Katser add Napoisow fated Jn war to
Negro Characters in the Bible
No. 3. “The Negro Kine Jor ond Mieigrest-
ite Mev. don, Mi Wot, 968 8. Nato Re.
carerat nalicys,Otaces Chneges Mare
Saar see or Seomeoed pore
Si (Cherm ond test
Qa ==
bd <a
. ca | (ie
= ee
‘ oJ
oe
A ry re
J } seinen.
Z :
ees
yo ar ee foes
arate
Se eee
Rieter
"OF SPANISH MOROCCO
He ia Only-a-Yooth-0f-15
‘and: Expected to ‘Be a
- Rubber. Stamp—Abd-el-
..Krim's’ Way _ of . Dealing
‘with Rebels Is to Hang
Thm - - ;
Ee ape eceastalega tars Se
The Spanish Govefnmerit, *hq
ralxed Muley “Hassan to the’ Call
phate throne of Spanish’ Morocco. Hi
fx n descendant’ of Mohammed, i ror
af EF Mehedi-den-lamact, who died tv
Youra’ ago after makings hile bent “pow
Miblo effurt to rule over Rimiand Ker
her anil the treacherous and uncertal
tribesigen who looked upon ‘Watgull a
‘unele Iquder.
‘The new Caliph, wlio ix ouly Jeiyear
old, wag, installed into office at etuan
Jong thé seat of the gmitive guvernment
The instalation was accompanied tik
Glaburaie veromonies Inthe presence
of many Moslem dignitativs, Generi
Primo de Rivera, head of the miltars
Aisrctorate, of Susting_, Alexander’ P
Moore, Ainerlean , Agibaseador at
Madrid, aiid Major, Hodzex, inilitary
Fattaetine of the embasge.
ene enuthtul: Calls went-inie oft
feo hb aevordunce withthe provisions
cof the treaty of, 1912 which aswured
the throne to his family: Rut the
principal provixion of that treaty —that
Spain should. pigity the « Moroccan
Zong assianed to her—not having brett
cartled oat makes hie position aneer=
sain iC: not perils Outside of
‘Tatan there remains 3 comparatively
anvsll portion ofSpamsh Merneen over
whieh the as authority. :
Hin father ‘miintilned a entrt at
Teton “with the cape. MAhammed
weneAzuz ag Gritid Vinier, and Whe
territory extended far imitex along the
const andinte the bizhlands ef dhe:
Interlor.* Conshterable of whi stomain
has Leen aeeupled. fy Oe RHC tntbex.
nen, and RD Mehei's offerte at sues
ernment were nullified fey the constant
deflanee of the spectuentor chieftain,
Atdeel-Kyim,
The wily HiT tanto never! suceeded
if capturing Totusn, Spanish ene
pmnsmandy imbeats sate Kept ati
put of the eit. TH imay ln.teue, ashi
won repartod, that Abdeol- Krin’s
preak witht Taaiannlh was tte te the fart
hat Kalil dhl nat take Tatuan or
follver 131 Mehul inter hile power and
hit Abdeel-Krine wan tre af the fat
WU rascals triekery, At Iwast the Rit]
ieftain sent his mon ett to Ratslls
(ronehold and wntor the very nose
smth tenner iret hin Are
Mir, the RiMan vapltal, with the Ine
ention of hanging him, He sent word
9 Tétuan that nther rlathvetignttarieg
che opnased him might sitffer the
Tho Ipsiatlation We the young Caliph
cith sich olabwrate formalities may
a a wike move wn the part of Spain.
rho Spaniarde belleva that st will
rove to the rhelllons tribesinen that
ho Spanish.Government will not oust
Lele native governments and shoe tof
io worky’ shat Spoil by endenverime to]
v6, UP to the provisions of the treaty,
Cx also thelr belief that a deacendant
F the Frmphet om, the thrane may In
jeties etumngh Atostens teihesmen to
anion Abdel-Krlm to deflate came
letely his rebellion, Hut it seems}:
ther risky to take the youn nan}
ne wn the contemplited “tour uf hie)
country.” ‘Tota appears mach the
¥ ROON'T BE
eater
LOSS Atnsns
fee Se st
e \f Under Ground
4 a “TREASURES
F-2/ a: HOW and WHERE
Poene ee
. ane Gaal
MODEL CO.
"SoM 822 COMO BLDG, Chimps, In,
: BE A WINNER
“Made $2,000 in'6 Months”
router 36, Sata ‘
ae
per Picet aatecsts alam
TUCKY RING. Mase :
an gtses nd $5 :
Fe net Seat in rasa,
FREE vite. ine *eceSeemenscine Se
SiMe Git a ts
EGYPTIAN TRADING Co.
19 Park Row York City
Saag)
TTREASURESE!
oa
ae er ee
oon eee cum
wile wu toda Address
Tee Mages Ca,
Seek 8, Leth Hie
es ar Mee
aad tee sre
a 7.8 7 ra
aed Tae | #2
PP a ae ee
Let Them Echo Your Racial Aspirations,
You can now obtain wall'cards, artistically printed of epi.
grams from the sayings of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Real -
gems of racial thought. ; >
Six different mottoes to one set. . Only $1.00
Y sper set. For hanging or framing, . .
as ‘gizeQ x 12 inches’ . ” te
Alse that masterpiece written by our great leader, entitled
“AFRICAN. FUNDAMENTALISM,” beautifully engraved,
with deop edge for-framing.. Size 15-x 2f° Price 50 cents
each, : ; :
‘Every member of the U. N.I. A. should pro-
cure the. ‘President-General’s' picture, ~
large size, for framing, price 50 cents =
|” SEND ALL ORDERS TO 4
MRS. AMY: JACQUES GARVEY -
)" . Box 22, Station L, New. York City’
. Postat Order or Express Money Order to cover cost.
|. FROM .
| . CHICAGO
TO .
". NEW.YORK |
Arrivirig Monday Eve.
November 30th - |
One of the World's Famous Oratore
Will Deliver an Oration on the
“Subject:
A.-Negro Univereal--King
Is.Coming to Rule
the’ World
__Mo will alae show plepures «if “The.
Five Manis Part ins the Tate
Bevery rlmute wl he Itoreatlnn,
+ "De Not Farget the Date
Nov. 30 at 8.30 P. M.
AT LIBERTY HAIL ~
General Admission, 25¢
Given in Aid of the Building and
Mortgeae Fund
. ROYAL GYARDS
Committers of Lerangements |
TREATMENT, It gives quick
Feliet. Swelling. and” short
Breath soon gone, All Atatrens:
ing aymptoma aldly disapnenr. Liver and
Shinaga eet uetier, Gennral imupovement ie
fantized. “tron by mall (rink. teentmment
Stiniutety RHEE, “Try it.” Never' heard of
inyting’as equal for aropey- Welle te
OR. THOMAS E. GREEN
Bank Building, Box 25, Chatsworth, Ga.
ex asthma, coughs, colt ba” the
Pee nese ehgint so Whee RANISIERE: t
Tete MER UREA taba
ead od tor ties tutes Woden Renta
Address GENORS MEDICINE, Co.,
UTR ten st see vore clan
HINDU BOOKS
—— Pree tree tens
FeO nen dit enieaeny Ue
Doctor Book and Price List Free
Witton Finley Co. hock Hox 711,.Chrage, HL
TCxou have Bpilepay, Fite, Falling sekner
seinem nee mnanter, hows wear
Sanus tor Ur PREM et reetmehes_ Coed
Aone unite it Gie nee ue explain
fine, igs c se MIMISON, Vies, Went atte
Site, Che vebaND, ONO.
conse Xmas Mone
vos’ Earn uey
Write for 59 Sets St. "Nicholas Christman
Bese Sitter loet, Wha Gola send
StMithotas, Shit Glenwood Ras Dept. ee,
Seoontrn. 8 2
inary ses
Sue vets ene:
Urin ay Sn
‘Specatioe no. ree
: ao Sirata no pale oe
SERREer ne UeoneTON WE veel EN
BOOK cont santas in plain w'ggaer” DR A
See ee ee,
AGENTS WANTED
Yat ue start you In, besiness. Hell our gen=
Lise gsted Eagle Stack Sts Sale
rasan ahivie Witte for snesice aie ‘per=
36 Rast 130d 9¢.°%. ¥. C2”
RELIABLE agents wanted in every Keare
a NER CL re a
Spree ee
ee MeN ee ne
} es = ; —
eer ae tee ae ee
ae a Soe
a a ee ie
Fae i il ‘50c ‘A-WEEK!
WEED I| so sietay—no panera
Ce : a
PIS icc ts
fl hey > oe | rete i
EELS fie
Fats whe eee ae De ee Eee
"in Barh ow Seu Yorke Depts SWE
Sanam a hes ee on tee
for tanivatone atid Mogneter natty with ea
Me eat reece eee nce
EL, GARDENS, Dts
anes wesc SAREE PS,
‘The Arresintthe Perteme Desirn d'Amear
“4 ey By
‘LOVE’S DESIRE’
Ze uymerieuty, ters
fancitaten, “Rich ane Dore
: proud ana “Womsion Siks
Benatar Te wets
UGS CoB Zand nents
siceiee thant ene
De ingertnat an tna arse
hiss Maat ue chan ee
eed be nanwy"in love ana eclel entre
Tavceaseal ot EE ata pata Pa ete,
aetred “Unde fe and nthe inate
Hane facig tai” Cinna ROSES
WAR tess hie nN, eA
Sour, melt stomach atm aroun hearts
ein Vingtind, ithe, feoteute aie Beat
Tier sinpaai’s"Waserae ratices” foe ae
tain ae MantancelnehSaatband ate Eee
Werle for"tremcnint ag tre
Ane OS Ess co.
DRE Gh, gases co.
a clean, healthy shave without using’
Sulina umpteen Saar Tee
xtamps_for_a_half pound can bsmail,-
Shaving Powder Company
Savannah, Georgia.
tn dispnee’ Of tiie nphson cing mowrtor of
ecdives shinier ecreecerrtc
Tilers If sou, will mend Ue doe To. ein AR
eae
AGENTS: Can you take. urders for & palre
ies Mei erage Hee
Eipiiat hic” ANNE een ee
imal SOP BeBe aa
co ibmeatetie thoes
Hain acy eden ts
ee aa
MALE SELF WANTED +
Soa acca mene eae
Rete, sae RNa a
Esato. Lovie ee ae
Ea. Eagacnt "Melee Be
SS
a Se
ire Mee Brecscer A em
ee ed
eth ee ed
ee hee Fee ee:
Rochestet Ne Bee ee OP TAK
eS
seat Sas eae ot cae
eg ed
Poe te eee pee
Tea eee gps a eae Se
Se eee -
rover periny CaN tom ren
Fargo voce: rn :
Sees
enert mob ke ort a Pane”