The Negro World

Wednesday, September 29, 1926

New York, New York

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"Home to Harlem," Clau Should Earn Wholesale cKay's Damaging Book, demnation of Negroes Every Negro should send his friend, mother, father, brother, sister, brother, wife, or other relatives a copy of the book that is to read that will over, "AFRICA FOR THE AFRICANS" THE PHILOSOPHY OF MARCUS GARY All bookings in the U. S. N. L. A. should have a guarantee of the greatest Negro movement with 1.00 Ft. Vol. II, with 1.00 Ft. Vol. III, combined offer, $4.50 post paid London, the University of the City of London, London, England, 1000 St. Martin's Street, London, England, 49 cents. Fellowmen of the Negro Race, Greeting: It is my duty to bring to your attention this week a grave evil that afflicts us as a people at this time. Our race, within recent years, has developed a new group of writers who have been prostituting their intelligence, under the direction of the white man, to bring out and show up the worse traits of our people. Several of these writers are American and West Indian Negroes. They have been writing books, novels and poems, under the advice of white publishers, to portray to the world the looseness, laxity and immorality that are peculiar to our group, for the purpose of these publishers circulating the libel against us among the white peoples of the world, to further hold us up to ridicule and contempt and universal prejudice. McKay'a "Home to Harlem". Several of these books have been published in America recently, the last of which in Claude McKay's "Home to Harlem," published by HarperCollins of New York. This book of Claude McKay's is a powerful label against the Negro. It is doing a great deal of harm by further creating prejudice among the white people against the Negro. I have now before me what purports to be the most horrific recipe of the book by "John O' London's Woman," and have to supplement the entire review for the book by "John O' London's Woman." I have also read the book by "John O' London's Woman," and have to supplement the entire review for the book by "John O' London's Woman." White Publishers Use Negroes The white people have these Negroes to write the kind of stuff that they desire to feed their public with so that the Negro can still be regarded as a monkey or some imbecilic creature. Whenever authors of the Negro race write good literature for publication the white publishers refuse to publish it, but wherever the Negro is sufficiently known to attract attention he is advised to write in the way that the white man wants. That is just what has happened to Claude McKay. The time has come for us to boycott such Negro authors whom we may fairly designate as "literary prostitutes." We must make them understand that we are not going to stand for their insults indulged in to suit prejudiced white people who desire to hold the Negro up to contempt and ridicule. We must encourage our own black authors who have character, who are loyal to their race, who feel proud to be black, and in every way let them feel that we appreciate their efforts to advance our race through healthy and decent literature. Writers to Fight Negro Cause We want writers who will fight the Negro's cause, as H. G. Wells of the white race fights for the cause of the Anglo-Saxon group. Let us imagine Wells prostituting his intelligence and ability as an author to suit Negro publishers, as against the morals or interest of the Anglo-Saxon race. It is impossible. Yet there are many Negro writers who have prostituted their intelligence to do the most damaging harm to the morals and reputations of the black race. The following is the review of Claude McKay's book by the white paper, "John O' London's Weekly": THINKING BLACK A Negro's Extraordinary Novel About Negroes If we may judge by the novels and plays which reach us in gay and un- European bindings, "high brow" America has "gone kit per." A few years ago there was Mr. Negro O'Neill's "Emperor Jones" (it was, alas! a dis- Every Negro should send his friend, mother AFRICA FOR All landmen in the U. Mr. McKay, who stole to have some an early acquaintance for learning, was offered the chance of an education in the United States by a friend and took it. For two years he studied scientific farming in an American college, but the call of literature was not to be resisted, and so he left college to become a wanderer, a stoker, a Pullman-car attendant, a dock hand on the quays not only of New York but of London and Marseilles. It is in Europe, indeed, that he does his writing. "Home to Harlem," which is his first novel, has already gone into three editions in America within the space of two months. A Social Document "Home to Harlem" is not so much a novel as a social document about a race that few of us have tried to understand. Its hero is a slightly sentimental gentleman of color named Jake, who deserts from the American Expeditionary Force in France, not because he is a coward but because he is impatient to be "doing something." He comes to London to work at the decks at Limehouse, but after a time there comes the irresistible call of New York's colored colony: "It was two years since he had left Harlem. Fifth Avenue, Lenox Avenue, and One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Street, with their chocolate-brown and walnut-brown girls, were calling him. 'Oh, them legt.' Jake thought. Them tantalizing brown legs!" Barron's Cabaret! Leroy's Cabaret! Oh, boy!" And so Jake goes back to Harlem, with its cabaret, "speakeasies," its gin and flashing razors, its cinemas, in which only colored actors and actresses are shown on the screen, its ronged dusky-brown girls ("rouge on brown, a warm, insidious chestnut"), its intermingled poverty and luxury—a riot of color and gaiety (mixed with equalor), at which the white man can only stand amused. And as for the morals of Harlem, we are shocked only when we begin to refget that there aren't any morals there at all. Fantasia Jake has his adventures. He falls in love with a Congo entertainer at a cabaret, who disappears from his life as quickly as she comes into it. He gets mixed up with a gin-drinking Negro and her odd assortment of friends; becomes embroiled in a strike; becomes (as did his creator) a Pullman-car attendant; meets a Negro student who opens a new world of culture to his gaze; falls ill almost to death; recovers, and, at the end, meets again the little Congo Rose who had set his heart afame at the beginning. These are some of the episodes that make up a book that, in spite of the fast that it has the most slender of plots, holds our attention till the last page. We read on, not so much because of Jake's adventures as because of the shock and surprise of being in a new and unfamiliar world; because of the extraordinary vividness with which Mr. McKay brings its scenes before us. How our instance, in how Mr. McKay describes an all-black Harlem suburb "It was a scene of blazing color. Soft, barbaric, burning, savage, clashing, plainless colors . . . all rising together in wonderful harmony. There is no human sight so rich as an assembly of Negroes ranging from laquer black through beaten green, decked out in their ceremonial finery. Negroes are like tyrants, wearing all colors naturally. And Velocity, ronged to a revishing reverence, and wearing a close-fitting, chrome-orange freck and cork-brown slippers, just melted into the scene." We learn from Mr. McKay many hitherto unexposed things about Negro life, about their cooking, their food, about their attitude to white men and to each other, about their work, and about their almost incredible night life. The full-blooded Negro, for instance, has a contempt for the half-caste that is almost as violent as the old Marylander's for the Negro. And again: "Jake was very American in spirit and share, a little of that comfortable Yankee contempt for poor foreigners. And so an American Negro he looked ashow at foreign niggers. Africa was jungle, and African bush niggers, campfires. And West Indians were mummy-chains." The Real Tragedy But the real tragedy of "Home to Harlem," in spite of his many misfortunes, is not Jake, but Kay, the Negro student. As he himself confided to Jake:— "The first is, I don't know what I'll do with my little education. I wonder sometimes if I will get rid of it and go and lose myself in some savage culture in the Jungles of Africa. I am a mind—of the doctors who do care out negroes' advice to the well-fell might care—world with my little education and constant dreaming, when I should be sitting the nightmare hotel to sing in a whole lot of dough like everybody else in this country. Would you like to be educated to be like me?" Here, one finds, in unspoenable tragedy. Broud Blood of the Nunts In the autobiography Claude McKenzie we learn that his ancestors were from Managua, and that he had to have gone on a road trip to do not believe him. If there be ancestry back to Managua, I If I am not mistaken, a friend told me that stated and suggested that he has claim to the a Royal House in East Africa. It is rather a hear these libellers of the race talking about ancestry when they represent the lowest type of Negroes of royal ancestry always want to be pro race; they do not think any race better than their DuBois called a black man an ugly man simply he was black. Those of you who remember his the "Century Magazine" in 1920 will remember positively stated that to be black was to be ugly. The black royal blood of East Africa believes in the honor and integrity of the black race. DuBois to the contrary believes that the standard of beauty is to be found in the white man Something Funny It is funny that these writers are always sugge they are from royal black blood and yet they are ing their intelligence and ability as authors and against their race for the satisfaction of white people We are calling a halt on these libelous writers so we may develop authors and poets worthy of our race who will fight for the cause of the race. With very best wishes, I have the honor to be Your Obedient Servant, President-General, Universal Negro Imp. ciation. Paris, France, Sept. 11, 1928. Address: 57 Castletown Road, W. Kensingto London, England. relatives a copy of the book that is k S 99 THE PHILOSOPHY of MARCUS CARK eon Discussion ef U. N. 1. A. Program, Declares e Great Change Has Taken Placo—The Africa low a Force to Be Reckoned With—Tells of Werk of Divisions in the South 8 ‘YY HALL, NEW YORK, Sunday Night, Sept. 23.— It was filled at an early hour tonight on the occasion of the ss meeting of the New York Local and Garvey Club. The large ho stood about the doors, viewing the proceedings and for every word which fell from the speakers’ Ios, bore tes- the incteasing popularity of the movement in the Nation’s S. labsence of Hon. E. B. Knox, personal representative of the -General, Hon. S. A. Haynes, High Commissioner for the North and South Carolina and Virginia, and President of delphia Division, delivered the principal address, whjch was preciated. Brief addresses were also delivered by Mrs. L. ey, Ist Lady Vice-President of the President-General, and oltram. -\s is sual, the meeting was in the capable hands J. H. Miller, Ist Vice-President of the New York Local. ee ee Oe eee gi | A. Haynes, High Comminaion- Jorth und South Carolina and Preaident of the I*hiladelphta apoke ax follown: “At the kind In of the Hon. FE. B. Knox, per- Presentative of the Prealdent- I have come tonight to dis- Je program of the Universal Improvement Arrociation an un by the Hon Marcus Gar- Hert of all, in my capacity of Int of the Philadelphia Division, you to know that Philadelphia ng care of Itnelf: Philndelphia fring on to nv ven. During the fonths that I have been at the ‘am pleaxed to report that the crship in Philadelphia ix rallying dehind the program. Our y afternoon meetings have 49 that we haven't Kot room t the people. Divisions in the Seuth at a few words about our Divi- in North and South Carolina Virginia. Our work in North lina fm progressing by leaps and 4s, more especially in Winston- n, where we have the largest ané progressive Division: in Spencer, ce we have recently organised « unlt; in Greensboro, the rateway he Weat, where we have a won- ul Garvey Club made up of young sand girls who are students of the sous Institutions in Greensboro. We ‘also doing fine work in Asheville 4 Kingstoa, North Carolina. In sgiale the work Sa progressing fa- ‘ably. Im Berkely, under the stal- rt ant wacompremising beaderohip the Hen. Mi. J. Wall, the Division te waiag rapid st-\ea, Out in De Witt, * few trom * “3 Mave am . - ses wt ‘Mr. White ts sending Bs - daaghter, Otetia, te Liberty ity when it opens on Wednes- ‘xt goes to show that tho apirit yeylsm fe very rampant in the suanland. U.N. 1. A. Program Now for our program. The Uni- ranl_ Negro Improvement Ansoeta- »n champions the founding of a pow- ful Negro government in Africa for e pretection of Negro life and prop- ty throughout the world. Some of people, more particularly those tw ard raven to the letter of the 14th @ 15th amendments to the United ptes Constitution, have got the tm- pasion that Garvey and the Unie; set Nexro Improvement Asvocia- | n look unkindty upon the brilliant j nlevements of the Negro up from | very and are anxfous to nullity} s brilllancy by not giving it ttn! per place in our struggle toward | | £rmer emancipation. i ¢ we look unkindly upon anything | s the Negro’s Inability to fully com- | hend what {® going on round and !, ut him. The Universal Negro Im :, vement Association necks ret = |, perpetuate they. achievements by |, Ing to the race at'large n security || t others would be bound to respect. || 8 security Hes in the establishment | ¢ 1 | To Reader. of THE We are appealing to | you at this time to tisers in this medium. As you may realize, it is the advertisers who are the main contributors to the upkeep of ovr paper, . therefore if you il help those who ad- : vertise with us by purchasing from them you will be benefiting yourselves and at the same time ex NEGRO ORLD much needed assistance. ‘Yours for co-operation, | :MAROLD Gc. satus | % | adver. Dept. an Divialons and “Chapters are Reroby, ‘sotifind that we far the proper carcying on of the works oe es Price List of Supplies U.N LA. Kin Sette ome See | FP egies seecccrcencees = seumctoreene BAB SS acresteresteceeesqecens | semvoee Ld MP ececececcccccccccnseccees WO teens meen gc ORDER DIRECT FROM Scorctery-Genewel’s Office at Headquasters 142 WEST 180th STREET MEW YORK CITY of @ government upon the shores of Africa and the creation of a flag as an emblem of national entity. Drifting Certainly such an Ideal should make the name appeal to black men as it docx to white men. Fellow men and women of the Negro race, this Is no time for singing and praying, We must look to our conscience, for there- in God dwells, and the only sign we shall have ts the response of our con- actence to these injustices being vis- {ted upon us. No sadder spectacte nppeara upon the international hor!- zon than this ship of state of 400,000,- 000 black men and women dritting for want of a compass, drifting for want of a rudder. It is appalling to know, it is tragic, that the second largest race group in the world is dependent rather than independent. Every oppressed race of people In striking out for a nationality of thelr own. We are liv- ing in an age when humanity etery- whgre in determined to safeguard those rights and privileges which are the common heritage of mankind. Alive te Its Duty In harmony with others, Africa cries out for greater freedom and@ greater recognition. For centuries the teem- ing millionn of thie vast and wesithy continent have alept indifferent to its value as a savior of nations, but today all Africa, through the instrumentality of the Universal Negro Improvement Association fis fully awakened to its eence of duty. The Hea. Marcus Gar- vey, by his undying lorexy and meichices leaderahip, the members of tho Ancaaiasion 2 ‘thetr scehmuaaed aieinnps © ee z rope. * on Germans smf Rellans, ,Beiginns ond Portuguese know new that the legiti- matc heira whom they slaughtered to mako Africa a white man’s country are really coming back to take full control of the land of thelr fathers. (Applause.) No Longer Humorous That ty why the white man in Bae ! ope has taken Mr. Garvey's viait xo stiously, Before the President-Gen- | ral went ta Europe Europeans fell for re projssinda which titered through | he American press. But four months | f Garvey and Garveyiam in Europe | ave convinced the wily feopetioite f Lenton and Parls, Brusaets and | tome that there in nothing humorous | nthe ambitfous program of the Uni- orsa! Negro Improvement Association. hey know now that America can af- || ord te Inugh at Garvey und his le- fons because America has nothing to |) se tn the realization of a free and |’ ndeomed Africa. iP Highest Ideals i; Time was when the odds were! cuinet the Negro. Not so now. The jg lds today are ugcinat the white man, nd he knows ft. The U.N. I. A. pro- | : am calls for the highest demonxten- |p on of manhood of which the Negro: } capable. It te & propram which ex-| npliticn not only the highest Ideals} civilization. tut, all in all, It ta Program which embodien our dear-| ¢ t ambitions and desires. It apeaks highest terms of human understar.d- g and racial good-will. 0 The Supreme Test t Vhe Universal Negro improvement | «, sociation ta called upon to revivo! » spirit of our forefathers, There | int be no retreat: there must be no| th sreta; there must be no apologier: | W ‘Fe must be No compromise. We munt | w forward conquering and to con-| te r. There must be no weakening, ¥! the prosecution of our holy duty to/ar ea and to the vaco. In this, the/te reme test of our lifetime, we mut | to nd unflinchingly, we must stand |ch imidated and unafratd. White men j pi lare they ahall not dle; yellow men | pe . ee MAIL, ORDER If you ore desirens of sclting te the mess and net 0 much to the particular class you should i im America’s most widely circulated and read weekly paper THE Gees to every nook and corner of the werld. Our readers buy from | our advertisers. If you doubt this, | Just piece @ test indertion with us and cheek up en results. We are now making adver- tisers a wonderful offer, so that they may be able to list their products with us Write in for Particulars. HAROLD 6. SALTUS ADVERTISING DEPT. Negro World | 142 W. 130th St., N. Y. C. declare they shall not die. In the same spirit 400,000,000 black men and women re-echo the message from pole to pole chat we, too, shall not die, (Applause) T shall close with the words of on of the poeta: Goa gave you a body, sturdy and strong, He gave you your cholce—do right or do wrong: You can make, break, cherish or an, You can be brute men or true men—it Ss as you will. God gave you a brain to play your part, Make it lead a nation of draw a cart. You can fill it with germs or stuff it with lime, Make ft live ser @ @ay or lve . for oh ime g * = ap an aw " ne se Nee i - thoughts you thtut: You can sink to the level of the sordid sod, Or climb to the mountain and talk with God. (Loud applause.) } : 'Census Shows Irish State Is a Paradise for Women | DUBLIN, Sept, 20.—treland would [seem to be an Ideal country for j Women, according to u Free State | Government report on the 1926 cen- sus Issued today. Unlike Engiand, there are fewer women than men, the numbers being 1,465,103 females to 2,971.92 males. ‘Women have found thelr way into nearly overy profession and trade. There are wamen police, veterinury surgeons, architects, cattle and sheep dealers, pig dealers, horse dealers, |auctlonecrs, valuers, lighthouse of. elals, engineers, stone cutters, dentists pand even one woman chimney sweep. | In agriculture 672,129 men and wemen are engaged, or nix times as many In proportion to population as in England. ; The Real Uses Of Tears | Tears are a salty flulé mecreted Ir the eyes to moisten them, facilitate hee motion ané keep the cyeball clean. Under normal conditions the tear glands do not secreto more flutd than can be taken off oy the duct which passes into the nose. When we cut an onion a very volatile chem- teal ts released. Small particles, in- vinible to the eye, sec on the escballs and caure frritation, Immediately the tear glands flood the eyex with tears to wash away this objectionable chemicn!. There ta belief that if a pin ia héld between the tecth while peeling onions the eyes will not be affected. * BS 7 sie : f ft shal 3 , ; 0 5 j 18,000" G ta Re- perted, Of pe of Ma- Pa May Be SAN JUAN, SURBON, opt. 23.— More than 1 ii ot tnftucriba were reported: BOE authori- thes and Re& Oni at the Island relief é meeting here today, They alve 6,000 other cases of malaria, and other diseases. * Grave concern ts ever the situa- tion, with the that there | will be an omteiiit Sq Ber nurses tf | the influensa eases: bees their ten- dency to develep ta. More Health # Bo Needed | ‘The Hed Crees ready to ns-, sist the Health it Si decides additional are needed. Because of travel and the toporraphg of the * the ie forces due to New York will bo brokes units and scaitered wherever ‘@anger exints. Reports of ‘were given by thirty-eight towns at today’s Heery M. Baker, national Feliet direc- tor of the Red yeeid that the) total is probably fate because of. failure of the ef the meet- ing to reach seme and the in- ability of many ama chapter heads to travel to ‘Mr. Baker saié tie towns re- porting give 310 det 2771 in- jured. The towe. itatives, white meee ate mine relterated that te progress- ing efficiently. a Piet Toate Gonp-Tedey ‘Tomerrow Wao ret train that has moved tm ince the dieaster will leave Suan with « load of tember for . Hit. orto all suppties gent either by moter trusk or ‘The firs: strest car ran today 08 (Bp Juss since the hurricane. 5 ‘Numerous rain easre- vated besith iy Sh was the fret bed weather @i® he storm. || With onty cer % repair te, ft appeared , , lation taoad Mr, Babsr wah Cane idtand tome: aR WES > fe o oe ‘i fo oe. Ta eer er ‘: : ’ hardest ty #6 ; ber 18, tmpvensan the timreler mest |’ strengty with the speed with which | ' the island roads have bees cleared and | | the elf suffictent energy with which | ‘ the people have erected temporary |‘ habitations. ‘ Along with the marvel of excape |! counted in every town tx the com- lete lack of definite knowledge of the | ‘ 1umber killed by the hurricane. Here, | § or Instance( Pollee Chief Rivera! ‘abrera xald that there were twenty- | { wo dead the day after the storm, ‘ith a few more bodiex found during he next two days. Five minutes later; ‘adre Luclano Martinez maid that hej f ad conducted fifty-six hurricane; © uneraln. Besides thin there was aj 1 mall number of Protestant burials. The number of Jivaros killed in | + accessible mountains and buried by -clr families or friends without bene- | 3° t of clergy, or those not buried ati % 1, will probably never be ascertain. | 1 ble The refugees are ving where ther | — in, in elty halle, churches and hools. Padre Martinez’ church here i Malaria Menace in Patillas In Patillas, where new graves have been made in unconsecrated ground. | for 8 distance of thirty kilometers only | the grass im green. Such trees as ictand are bare. | At Yabueoa, Dr. Manual B. Berrioa. in charge of the Public Health unit. has pitched a tent for an emergency eltalc on a rained platform which had been part of the publie school. Dr. Berrios said that the malaria Rad been bad before the storm and wan now worne. At no place tn the towns along the TSN-mile tour wes there any evidence of a critical food shortage nor of anv Profiteering. U. S. Salesman Sties Chinese Interest ia Cars CANTON, Sept. %2—Greater en- thuniaxm for goed reeds end motor- car tranxportation ef all kinds in Canton and throughest South China han been created by @ visit of a rep- Tenentative of tho Asperigan National Automobile Chamber ef Commerce, Walton Behmidt, of Mew York. Coming to Canton with detailed in- formation ef all kin@® @m reed build ing, metor-car manwineture operation, Mr. Scheidt a or the attention of government 2 Well os pri- vate inétvidwata, Numerous Chtnewe cugfpeccre eéu- cated im Amerie. Bow engaged in highway construction % flouth China, were eager tay of the Insost Govaiagagegn, 12 States rend baeeipy. Chen gor- cceemenh ate Cll po - = Bo eo OoO0SODO0DODaOO or se . . aD We’ .<.| Beautiful hair : @ ae SO ial means ty, , L a ad I> X er ylal! yg ad EE O . | s a a p Fo LA Md Wherever. you may 80. if 7 My ro QS) fou meat cela OSI EN S A Beauty. Not the sleek, artificial <4 _// ba XD ye effect that greasy preparations | <<< Co hiiiaiel; 43 usually Be. but the radiant, Ae f ke natural uty which results | Wie, Agr from healthy. well-cared-ior | HAl { eh hair—the use of PluKo Hair SL « “ACY Dressing! # | \ ea sa ee » rant, 1S entinc ‘ae . } wy fion stimulates the scalp. Rou ZEEE 4 AT ishes the roots and promotes C& SSS | HAgy i the growth of soft. lustrous hair. SS Zz / \ Important. too, is the fact that Fy SOO_f “ : it enables you to easily arrange i a I oe | your hair in the style which AS 00222, most enhances your loveliness. ada BZ ; So, if you want beautiful See, hair—hair that willmean SP larity for you—try Pluko today! SS; ee d 1 Kk 5s PIURO air oRESSING ALWAYS THE FINEST HAIR DRESSING Seow aie? EASY AND PLEASANT TO USE Umber 25° Pulitee'd Hewes Doctrine Stumps League “What ts the Meares DectringT” sounds ibe a shmple question. But the Counctt of the League of Natiess pondered W for an entire Gay, and de- Cited that on the whole ft was safer not te answer, nor even to ask ths Calted States, but to leave it an un- eeived international conundrum. The Covenant of tho League includes a clause expreesty recegnising the Mon- roe Dectrina, and Costa Rica, which ome years ago retired from the League and has been invited to return, politely inquired just what It wan she would be asked to Indorse, The «rave heads of Genova looked at one an- other, but none dared reply. At a secret all-day session of the Council, it Is sald, the representatives of three Latin-American nations told the Furo- pean plenipotentiaries “very intereat- ing” things, but the conclusion of thelr feliberations was that Costa Rica had been indiscreet and it wan better to jeave ft understood that the Monroe Poctrine wan just the Monroe Doc- irine. Doubtlesn that was the satent course, But we wish ths League had anked Washington to define the Mon- ow Doctrine. It would be a shock to, ome of otfr Imperial stateamen if they aver found themselves compelied to read Prealdent Monroe's modeat dec- larations and to compare them with he extravagances of our present pol- cy.—The Nation, EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS | It ia inconceivable that there can ever be an appreciable measnre of sustained prosperity in a community in which thirty-six per cent of the population {8 virtually reduced to ¢conomic sterility. Manufacturers and business firma which dirplace Negro workers where unnecessary are ac- tually cutting off an economic arm, or thelr own. for good wages and adequate opportunity to work among ‘Negroes is a positive stimulant to good -dusiness.—Norfolk Journal ané Guide. | An ideal citizen is the one who sees clearly and ever something good in the city and never loses the oppor- ‘tunity to spread that good news ‘abroad that others might derive the benefits therefrom, whowe unselfish- ness prompts him toe want others to ebsre opportunities, health and pleasure which his heme city effers. Leyaity is the first requisite fer the Séeal citisen. The leve for the place and his meighbers which dismiss the thought of self \eterest or policy and resctves Siselt into the knowledge of @uty when Be docs all in bis power to Mbp Ge city « better place in which te Repellent Basic. r — be Smith could “ e gan” and be the ee mee am te epee then the parte which bho Yepresenta, that every American olti- men should have “equality of opper- tunity.” Arguments to the contrary will serve as 2 smoke screen only to the uninformed minority of white and colored citizens, for there are many offices of trust, at this very moment, in the State of New York that are being Milled by qualified Negrocs, men and women and there Is no probability: of thin number being decreaged, | whether Governor Smith tm slovated to | he Presidency, or not.—Shreveport Sun. | To please a white man many Ne-} sroes can always he depended upon to | reak evil of other members of the ace. Wherever this haa happened, he advantage gained has been small, rhether permonal and elfich or tor | he party. At no time has the end uatified the means. We make foolx f ourselves before the world and get ot even a clown's wages for {t— ansas City Cail. 7, a I wi Ww é FRANCE N. FINSTQN 9° 4 Hormtten Grange P. 0. BRAITHWAITE BUSINESS SCHOOL New Classes Starting October Ist Stenography (Pitman or Gregg). Typewriting. Bookkeeping, Business English, Arithmetic DAY and EVENING CLASSES CALL on wasrn von catatoe 2376 Seventh Ave. Avdebon 9971 ate, . , > ame, worst, mers, crass ‘Ne Can Mahe Prot My ~N SELLING / THE-NEGRO WORLD The Race’s Outstanding Weekly Newspaper Everybody that is somebody will buy and read auch a wonderful medium filled with national and international news of race interest A Good Seller—Once a Buyer Always a Buyer Agshts Wanted in Every Community Hf you are interested wie in for agents’ terms today. 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Address your letter te the population. Ordinarily the Ukraine ts one of Russia's best granaricn and in good years produces a surplus of wheat for exportation. The Moscow Government has ap- Propriated 31,000,000 rubles and the Ukraintan Government 10,000.060 rubles toward the cost of the food supplies needed. The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are earnestly requested to invite our attention, to any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained in a Negro World advertisement. BEN·DAVIS WAXES WROTH A FEW weeks ago a number of Negroes of Valdosta, Ga., got together and formed an "Al Smith for President League." This information was conveyed to us in the following news paragraph which appeared in numerous newspapers throughout the nation: "Valdosta, Ga., Sept. 7.—The race voters of this city have formed an 'Al Smith for President League.' The League, it is said, adopted resolutions condemning the Republican attitude toward the Negro and commending Smith's views on prohibition and other issues. "The Negro Democrat league is headed by Dr. L. W. Williams, prominent local physician and leader." In common with many newspapers, we became much interested in this news item. The American people, and the Negro group in particular, North, South, East and West, have for so long and so assiduously been taught to believe that it is heresy for a black man or woman to think politically along any other but Republican lines, that we rubbed our eyes as we read this epochal and welcome announcement. We were glad that Republican trickery and hypocrisy, deception and broken faith had been at last so fully revealed to the Negro that even below the Mason and Dixon line to sad Negro hearts revulsion had come. We rejoiced that in Georgia, as in other Southern communities, the new light had shone and that in the emergence of that great liberal, Alfred E. Smith, of New York, as the leader of the Nation's Democracy black men and women seemed to see a new ray of hope. We were inclined to applaud their action in breaking away from the fetters of a not unreasonable prejudice, to essay a change, to court the new phenomenon, and to take counsel of what might well prove to be Opportunity. We so felt because we are persuaded that the political status of the Negro in the South will be beaten by a malish attitude toward the Democratic party, and that any more than by a slavish obsequious We have days later we came across an editorial in the Atlanta Independent, which, commenting on the Valdosta Smith for President League, almost took our breath away. In the course of this editorial, which is reprinted in full on this page, the Atlanta Independent worked itself into a frenzy, styled the Valdosta League as "three cheap Negroes bidding for cheap notoriety," and made a bid for deathless fame by proclaiming that "A Democratic Negro is the only Negro that wants social equality." Recalling with deep pain that only a few brief months ago Ben Davis, as Republican National Committeeman for Georgia, was accounted one of the leaders of the people, and still amazed at the meticulous exemplification of the turn-the-other-check attitude which this victim of shameless Republicanism, under Hoover, has so carefully persevered in toward the Republican party, we gave vent to our grief and dismay. Predicating our editorial upon his vitriolic and, as we thought and still think, unwarranted attack upon his Valdosta kinsmen, we took him to task. In the September 15 issue of The Negro World we ventured to suggest that his nauseating embrace of the Republican party in the face of its treasonable dealing with him and his was considerably more funny to Negroes at large than Valdosta Negro Democrats ever could be to him, and we wondered what had the Negro race done to Ben Davis to cause him to conceive that "a Democratic Negro is the only Negro that wants social equality." We so mused and were prepared to forget the episode; but Ben Davis is not disposed to let us forget. In an editorial printed on the front page of the September 20 issue of the Atlanta Independent he comes back. He shuns the Valdosta affair and his mirtful pronunciamento about social equality (the cause of all the trouble) and, tearing his hair, seeks to castigate The Negro World, talks about Marcus Garvey and regales his readers with his reasons for "going along with the Republicans," who, every one but he knows, have long since ceased to go along with him. Says Ben Davis, editor of the Atlanta Independent: "The Independent is one hundred per cent. Republican because it cannot be bought by the democratic money or be bulldozed out of the party by ill white bastard Republicans and commercialized Negro graffers, who would sell their wives and daughters into political slavery and economical ruin, for pelf and plunder. We will enter into no endless quarrel with the World, but will content ourselves to give reasons for the faith that is in us. We have no quarrel with the Republican party, and if we have been mistreated as alleged by the World, it is a family affair within the Party, and it is no alien's business. "Party differences must be settled inside, not outside the Party. "We are Republicans and offer no apology for our Faith. The Independent has the same right to go along with the Republicans inside the organization that the World has to trail the Democratic Party outside of the ranks, with the hope of receiving a few crumbs from the hands of Heflin, Blease, and Pat Harrison. We are not going to get out of the ship into the sea. We are Republicans and no man inside the party, black or white, can make us forge its principles, because of real or imaginary grievances. Let come what may, our houses and we are going to fight it out aboard the Republican ship." If this is not the product of a disordered mind, then we do not know what is. If the Republican party, says our contemporary, in effect, is recreant to its trust; if it has practiced a damnable deceit with the Negro; if the more effectively to abdicate its professions and promises it singles out me, faithful soul, Negro Republican extraordinary, as the never-to-be forgotten example of what its heartlessness and treachery is capable, I will not complain; nor should you Negro complain. This is all a little family affair. Attend, ye offens, to your knitting! "Party differences must be settled inside." Who knows what the future has in store for me in rebus Republiquia? When the many palpable misstatements and inaccuracies, set down within Atlanta Independent with the guile of an infant, we shall not concern ourselves. It is quite possible that the Republican party did enfranchise the Negro world that 'ere we ring down the curtain on this disastrous situation, to take this opportunity to make our position clear. The Negro World has never and never will be controlled by money, Democratic or otherwise. We are as insecure as Marcus Garvey. The Negro World has never received a nine-year existence a penny, or the promise of a pension, any individual or party for political service, or any other means. The Negro World, under the guidance of Marcus Garvey, always espoused men and measures, realizing that there is an interest in a party name. The Negro World has not been promised a share and will not accept a penny from the Democratic party for electing the election of Alfred E. Smith in November. As the organ of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, the greatest Negro organization in the world, as the mouthpiece of the New Negro, we are above despicable bartering. The Negro World controls support of the Democratic party in the coming election, but it is not unmindful of the age-long hostility of the white man of the Southland toward the Negro. The Negro World knows, too, that the "white supremacy" spirit animates and has always animated and will always animate white men, the majority group in America, whether Socialist, Republican or Democratic, and that a frank exhibition of this spirit is to be preferred to the dark, deceiving ways of the hypocrite. The Negro World believes, as it stated in these columns on August 4, that "with Smith as President of the United States it is fair to assume that the status of the Negro the world over will be bettered by such influence as this Republic may choose and is able to exert," and that, "with Hoover in the White House you may be sure of a swift descent, nationally and internationally." When a few misguided Negro newspapers, now sorry for their sins, and penitent, indulged in an orgy of misrepresentation of Marcus Garvey and his organization, the Atlanta Independent at times, with reservations, did say a good word in his behalf. But we can see no reason why, because Ben Davis two years ago chose to give some true reflection of public opinion about Marcus Garvey. The Negro World today should be silent in the face of as ridiculous a pose as a Negro leader ever struck. The editor of the Atlanta Independent says, "We cannot be bought by Democratic money nor bulldozed by Lily White Republicans." The Negro World cannot be bought by Democratic money nor be bulldozed by any sort of a Republican, Lily White or otherwise. AID PORTO RICO RICO, America's adopted child, in and malaria have arrived to add to the fit by the storm. Porto Rico has help and the Red Cross, America has stretched across the water with many sufferers. The American people fraction dollars as soon as possible to the appeal will in due course reach the ones, and although American Missions give away, it is to be hoped that the real comes that thousands of Porto Rico and, therefore, the blood may gift, however small, must be used for its prompt assistance to be given all possible aid. Problem of assistance for Porto Rico means that international and provincial organizations of the international community are "frood" from the hand of its Spells have guided Porto Rican affairs. Protection never has been particularly held by the United States has consistently stay destiny of this small group. All of the best. We wondering if the United States will protection a bit further and in the near a appropriation which would materialization of this little country which most native-born Americans are size. We are told that the damage, fire destruction of the crops which a likelihood for thousands of natives durals a hundred million dollars. It is no must mean to a people who had stasis has swept away. The Red Cross is. But what are five million dollars one hundred million stood before. Poison from the United States to assist this economic legs. The United States has readily disposed toward Porto Rico and steps to relieve the condition of its hapless progress convenes. PORTO RICO, America's adopted child, is in dire distress. In influenza and malaria have arrived to add to the horror and despair left by the storm. Porto Rico has appealed to its foster parent for help and the Red Cross, American hand of mercy, has immediately stretched across the water with her over-present aid for any and all sufferers. The American people have been asked to give five million dollars as soon as possible to assist this distressed group. This appeal will in due course reach Black Americans as well as white ones, and although American Minnes, en masse, have very little to give away, it is to be hoped that they will remember when the appeal comes that thousands of Porto Ricans are of Negroid extraction and, therefore, the blood brothers of American Negroes. Any gift, however small, must be The Red Cross is to be commended for its prompt assistance in an unfortunate group and ought to be given all possible aid. But the problem of assistance for Porto Ricans far beyond the present help that international and governmental organizations are now addressing is that the American people have been under the wing of the national government since 1800, when Porto Rico was "freed" from the hand of its Spanish oppressor, American hands have guided Porto Rican affairs. It is said that the economic situation never has been particularly healthy there, but, good or bad, the United States has consistently stayed on the job of directing the destiny of this small group. All of which may have been for the best. Now we are wondering if the United States will not carry this benevolent protection a bit further and in the near future take steps to establish an appropriation which would materially assist in the economic rehabilitation of this little country which is now facing a condition which most native-born Americans are unable to adequately visualize. We are told that the damage, which includes almost the entire destruction of the crops which would have furnished the livelihood for thousands of natives during the coming months, exceeds a hundred million dollars. It is not hard to understand what this must mean to a people who had staked their all on what the storm has swept away. The Red Cross is asking for five million dollars. But what are five million dollars when they are placed where one hundred million stood before. Porto Rico needs an appropriation from the United States to assist this stricken people to regain its economic legs. The United States has always declared itself to be kindly disposed toward Porto Rico and we believe that it will take steps to relieve the condition of its hapless ward as soon as the next Congress convenes. SAFEGUARD YOUR IDEAS days ago a New York paper gave a patent suit of a Negro inventor who pointed man because he had too rnistey and good will. The case cited Robinson of Chicago, Illinois, who Chicago Surface Lines for patent infringe SEVERAL days ago a New York paper gave a white man's version of the patent suit of a Negro inventor who died a broken and disappointed man because he had too much faith in a white man's honesty and good-will. The case cited was that of the late Elbert R. Robinson of Chicago, Illinois, whose damage suit against the Chicago Surface Lines for patent infringement has been in the American courts for more than twenty-five years. Thousands of Negroes in the middle west are familiar with the case and personally knew Mr. Robinson, to whom they gave money to assist him in prosecuting his case. It seems that since his death, in 1925, his heirs have continued to press this case, which is an outstanding example of the wells of despair into which any uninformed and misused Negro may fall. Elbert Robinson perfected a patent which was of great value to the street car company in Chicago. While the patent yet was pending he made the mistake of revealing his secret to an official of the company, with the hope of obtaining a market for his invention. This tricky company official immediately put to good use the knowledge gained by the information given by Robinson in regard to his invention. When the patent rights were acquired by Robinson he learned to his dismay that the railway company was already using his idea. He instituted suit against the company without success. And for twenty-five years to the day of his death he fought and begged for justice. This is just the story of a Negro who did not understand. Elbert Robinson lived in another day and we may well condone his error. But the Negro of today with inventive genius can hardly be forgiven if he permits himself to be tricked out of his just reward. The Negro with an inventive turn of mind can hardly be too careful with his little toy before he takes the proper steps to protect himself from theft. Even the simplest inventions often have been worth a fortune to the inventor. Negroes who have new ideas along mechanical lines can do with them what the white man does, if that Negro knows how to safeguard that idea well becomes irrevocably his property for as long as patent rights are granted. News of the type of the Robinson case can furnish a great helpful lesson to the thoughtless or too-trusting Negro who has jewels to sell, but who is not to give them away. NEGRO WORLD STAFF To the Batter of the Hero World. Miri-I am delighted to commend you on the conduct (or perhaps I should say your conduct) of the Negro World, and your devotion to the affairs of the U. N. I. A. The World seems to be recovering its former health. Your articles, were never better written and the principles of the organization better enumerated. Of course, everybody expects the front page subjects (by the Chief) to be well treated, but the intelligent look for good work throughout the journal, and, as I see it, they are not disappointed. The editorials, articles by Monsieur E. A. Haynes and articles by Madame A. Jacques Garvey are classical and full of goodness. JEAN H. OLIVIER. 60 E. 32nd St. Chicago, Ill. Sept. 16, 1928. THE VERY WORDS The following is the editorial which appeared in The Atlanta Independent on September 6 and which drew a reply from The Negro World a week later: Much Ado About Nothing The Democrats are making a mighty noise because three Negroes got together at Valdosta a few days ago and constituted themselves an Al Smith Club for President by electing one of the three chairmen, and the other two secretary and treasurer. Others importing to be present were neither present nor authorized the use of their names and didn't hesitate to repudiate the maligued trio who heard about Raskob's Democratic slush fund. The Valdosta Times, a country daily, that has been having fits because Ben Davis had to do with the distribution of Federal patronage in the state, is falling over itself promulgating to the world that the Democrats have a few Negro baby Democrats in Lowndes county. Senator Harris is running over the state denouncing the Republican Party for permitting Negroes to vote, while his party is organizing Negro Al Smith Clubs throughout the country. It has not been many moons since the editor of the Valdosta Times was denouncing the Republicans because it recognised Negroes in politics, and now he takes up a whole column on the editorial page of this paper to announce to the world that the Democrats of Georgia have an Al Smith Club of three cheap Negroes bidding for cheap notoriously. A Democratic Negro is the only Negro that wants social equality. The little Al Smith's Negro's Club at Valdosta does not rise to the dignity of a decent joke. No self-respecting Negro can be a Democrat so long as the party adheres to its policy; how hatred and political intolerance Democrat so long as Bobby G. C. Brandy and his party conduct a white primary and refuse to let any Negro vote in it? How can a self-respecting Negro vote the Democratic ticket while the Democrats in Florida and Texas go into court and sue out injunctions, enjoining and restraining all Negroes from voting in white primaries? There is no need of worrying about the Negro Democratic babies at Valdosta, they will die abnormally. Let the Atlanta Constitution and the Macon Telegraph join the chorus in spreading the good news and glad tidings that Georgia has a Nigger Smith for President Club; let the New York World herald the tidings, too. Let Senator Harris herald the message far and wide that the Democrats have opened wide their political church and are taking Negroes into full membership. Virginia Anti-Lynching Law Praised by Church Organ Virginia Anti-Lynching Law Praised by Church Organ NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 21.—In a corpsecopic editor's entitled "Prevention of Lynchings," the Nashville Christian Advocate official general organ of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, highly commends the recently-enacted Virginia anti-lynching law which empowers the State to search for, arrest and punish lynchers "County officials may object to such a show of State authority," the Advocate says, "but the law is good. Something must be done in the name of the whole country when communities are found where juries refuse to convict lynchers, where grand jurors will not bring indictments, where protests through the pulpit and the press are the only deterrents, notoriously ineffective. There is no defense of lynching and no excuse for communities where are lynchers are allowed to go unguarded and are gummie from testimony and from conviction when testimony proves their guilty." The editor expresses the opinion that if all the people in a community were as much opposed to mobs as are the better class, there would be no more lynching. But so long as there are buseless men who release their fury upon a victim there must be restraint upon them fixed by the strong arm of the government." THE CHILD Children need plenty of sleep—from 9 to 12 hours every night—in order to grow and develop as a healthy children should. Take your health problems to the Harlem Tuberculosis and Health Committee's office, 292 West 138th street, New York City. Bradhurst 2006. Persons living outside of New York City are urged to take their health questions to their local tuberculosis associations, which will be glad to give helpful information. England and Africa A political upheaval of immeasurable magnitude is pennant are sharply drawn and each racial unit is clamped tight larger recognition. The lid of conspiracy is clamped tight battle penetrates beyond the veltds just the same. One reports, revealing once again the strange working of the Aki been released. Following closely upon the visit of the Prima brother, South Africans are now talking about a king to destiny. However strange the suggestion may seem to the surging racial currents which are now running wild in emphasise the fact that the British lion is not lord of all he to the Cape. The Philadelphia Public Record discusses following editorial fashion: "By declaration of the Imperial Conference two years of South Africa was recognized as a free nation, self-go its domestic and foreign affairs—a member of its own association of nations in the so-called British Empire, but only by allegiance to the crown. Only by this recognition dependence was the menace of a secession movement a "Yet today these potential rebels are gravely discuss ability of electing a member of the House of Windsor a "Ons Waterland," a Beer periodical, it is seriously suggest George, Duke of Gloucester, new visiting Africa with Wales, should be appointed the next Governor General with a view to his coronation later. "This extraordinary proposal, however, by no more bending of the Beer neck to the British yoke. On the designed as a move towards secession. The idea is that would thus become not a British Dominion, but a whole monarchy, the only imperial tie being the blood relation Windsor King. Such a scheme, it is argued, would satisfy while permitting South Africa to develop complete independence untrammeled democracy." A political upheaval of immeasurable magnitude is pending in Africa are sharply drawn and each racial unit is uncompromising in its larger recognition. The lid of censorship is clamped tight, but the battle penetrates beyond the voids just the same. One of the most reports, revealing once again the strange working of the African man been released. Following closely upon the visit of the Prince of Wibrother, South Africans are now talking about a king to preside destiny. However strange the suggestion may seem to those unaccented the surging racial currents which are now running wild in Africa, it emphasize the fact that the British lion is not lord of all his surveys to the Cape. The Philadelphia Public Record discusses the prob following editorial fashion: "By declaration of the Imperial Conference two years ago the of South Africa was recognized as a free nation, self-governing its domestic and foreign affairs—a member of its own choice a association of nations in the so-called British Empire, but bound only by allegiance to the crown. Only by this recognition of subjec dependence was the manage of acession movement established." "Vet today these potential rebels are gravely discussing their ability of electing a member of the House of Windsor as their king, 'Ons Vaterland,' a Boer periodical, it is seriously suggested that K George, Duke of Gloucester, new visiting Africa with his brethren Wales, should be appointed the next Governor General of the Union with a view to his coronation later. "This extraordinary proposal, however, by no means signifies bending of the Boer neck to the British yoke. On the contrary, designed as a move towards secession. The idea is that the would thus become not a British Dominion, but a wholly independent monarchy, the only imperial tie being the blood relationship of Windsor King. Such a scheme, it is argued, would satisfy British while permitting South Africa to develop complete independence and untrammeled democracy." The Foundation of Happiness Discussing "Wisdom—the Foundation of Happiness," B. gives out the following philosophy, which brings a polignant a respective of race or creed: "Only the wise man truly lives. "Only the man and woman of energy and character, higher and nobler things, and who strive to learn from life along, really live. "Such people develop their minds and bodies. They power to work. "These are the people who advance civilization a little who make the world a better place to live in. "Ignorance is no sin. Man is born in ignorance. "But to remain in ignorance is one of the greatest. "And many are content to remain in ignorance. "Wake up, you brain-lazy angel." Discussing "Wisdom—the Foundation of Happiness," Bernarr Macgives out the following philosophy, which brings a polignant message to respective of race or creed: "Such people develop their minds and bodies. They put their in powers to work. "These are the people who advance civilization a little higher a who make the world a better place to live in. "Areuses your latent forces." "Dust away the cobwebs from your unused facilities and all the machinery of your mind with the desires to understand." "Put your mind into your life." "Make your experiences teach you the ways of life." "Experience is a great teacher—be not of the foolish class who do not learn of her." "Experience is a great teacher—be not of the foolish or not learn of her." The individual who hopes to get anywhere in this world of these truths. The race which intends to win recognition must situations to diffuse this philosophy to its members. Black men stand it is no sin to be down, but it is a crime to stay down solves to be content with conditions imposed upon us by a set the attitude of cowards. We are at the bottom of the racial cause we are weak, but because we are not ready to pay or wear powerful, another, we have had the supply of power to mind as mind as the enemy. It is the trainee who satisfies the job they who lay the foundation of civilizations. To think well, to actively and judiciously for the peace and comfort of ourselves and men must hold fast to the reigion of Christ, live wholesome healthy bodies, respect the laws of nature and keep pressing The individual who hopes to get anywhere in this world must hearken these truths. The race which intends to win recognition must maintain situations to diffuse this philosophy to its members. Black men must understand it is no sin to be down, but it is a crime to stay down. Forcing ourselves to be content with conditions imposed upon us by a stronger race the attitude of cowards. We are at the bottom of the racial indoor not because we are weak, but because we are not ready to pay the price to be powerful. Another, we have heard the superiority of our nation cried as against the other. It is the tainthose who fashion the problems they who lay the foundation of civilizations. To think well, to think actively and judiciously for the peace and comfort of ourselves and Africans men must hold fast to the religion of Christ, live wholesome lives, healthy bodies, respect the laws of nature and keep pressing forward. After the Parade—What? Thousands of men and women Hurrying to and fro. Thousands of stars above them Beckoning as they go. Where, oh, where are they going. These busy human souls? What, oh, what are they seeking. How far apart the goals? Happiness, peace or trouble. Mother, husband, or friends; Is it any empty bubble There where the rainbow ends? Thousands of smiles and wrinkles, Laughter and muffled screams, Ring mid a flow of tinsels, Ring in their world of dreams. Where will they be tomorrow. After tonight's parade? Will they find joy or sorrow. Blossom, or droop or fade? How to Avert the Clash Nothing would bolster up the waning confidence of native Africans justice at this time better than the presence of Marcus Garvey. Here is something that the statesmen of France and Great Britain sider to their advantage. The teeming millions of natives are the spectant at the new philosophy of Garvey. They have heard from missionaries of the great organization he founded. They have methods by which he hopes to keep Africa for the Africans. Africa in Europe have relied his weekly messages to their brethren in land in tribal languages and all Africa waits to greet the apocalypse. Of whom they have heard and read so much about political stroke Great Britain, France, Italy, Portugal and Belgium at this time when their prestige hangs in the balance in Africa. Garvey free access to the land of his fathers; permit him to ungram to the reigning chiefs and tribal leaders, and through their convey to Africans at home the desire of Africans abroad for a mental and physical energies for the preservation of African ch Nothing would bolster up the waning confidence of native Africans in British justice at this time better than the presence of Marcus Garvey in Africa. Here is something that the statesmen of France and Great Britain should consider to their advantage. The seeming millions of natives are thrilled and expectant at the new philosophy of Garvey. They have heard from travellers and missionaries of the great organization he founded. They have heard of the methods by which he hopes to keep Africa for the Africans. African students in Europe have relayed his weekly messages to their brethren in the hinterland in tribal languages and all Africa waits to greet the apostle of African Ledemption, of whom they have heard and read so much about. The wisest political stroke Great Britain, France, Italy, Portugal and Belgium could make at this time when their prestige hangs in the balance in Africa, is to give Mr. Garvey free access to the land of his fathers; permit him to unravel his program to the reigning chiefs and tribal leaders, and through their interpreters, convey to Africans at home the desire of Africans abroad for a pooling of our mental and physical energies for the preservation of African civilization. Statesman. Not Satan There is nothing to be feared in granting Mr. Garvey this paper, knows him as a man of peace, imbued only with the apt to Africa and the race. What he seeks is a reasonable understanding powers looking towards the preservation of the liberty of black independence of their fatherland. There is only one living man can hold the mighty hordes of dissatisfied Africans in check, only prevent the inevitable clash between the races in Africa—the Garvey. And his place is no; in Europe, not in America, not Indies, but in Africa, where the explosion is imminent. What can the Africans at home in Garvey? How far does his influence pose a haunt? There is only one way to find out. Permit the President General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and speak freely to his followers in Africa. Surround him with place, place at his disposal such privileges as become his position him with the rest. This is the intelligent thing to do if race war is in Africa. But the quickest and surest way to light the torch is to treat Mr. Garvey and his organization with impunity—attracts There is nothing to be feared in granting Mr. Garvey this privilege. This writer knows him as a man of peace, imbued only with the spirit of loyalty to Africa and the race. What he seeks is a reasonable understanding with the powers looking towards the preservation of the liberty of black men and the independence of their fatherland. There is only one living ambassador that can hold the mighty hordes of dissatisfied Africans in check, only one that can prevent the inevitable clash between the races in Africa—the Mon. Marcel Garvey. And his place is no. in Europe, not in America, not in the West Indies, but in Africa, where the explosion is imminent. What confidence have the Africans at home in Garvey? How far does his influence prevail in their native haunt? There is only one way to find out. Permit the founder and President General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to travel and speak freely to his fellowmen in Africa. Norround him with every protection, place at his disposal such privileges as become his position, and threat him with the rest. This is the intelligent thing to do if race war is to be avoided in Africa. But the quickest and surest way to light the torch is to confront and treat Mr. Garvey and his organization with impunity—attacking both Africa and Africans will only serve to heighten the chaos and confusion with new reign. All Africans agree with Mr. Garvey mentally and spiritually, for reasons best known to the African mind they have given the people who would keep Africa for the white people of the world a very different impulse. The white people of the world have lost the respect and confidence of Negro people. If there's any leader with the ability to repair the disarmament that leader in Marcel Garvey; if there's any institution that can build the nation in the Universal Negro Improvement Association. NEWBERRY U.S. SENATOR MRS. KNAPP SECY OF STATE (N.Y) DENDY SECY OF NAVY ED. JACKSON GOV. OF INDIANA HARRY SIMCLAN MG BILL THOMPSON MAYOR OF CHICAGO SMITH OF ILLINOIS U.S. SENATOR STEPHENSON POLITICAL INDIANA LEN SMALL GOV. OF ILLINOIS YARE OF PENN. U.S. SENATOR FALL SECY OF INTERIOR BURBERT U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL owe their wants to their boots and their pants. Hoover has been pampered by the monopolist class; he is himself a millionaire; he can only see American politics and American power from the capitalist point of view. You must have read of the great rubber combine in America. Hoover was ne of the men responsible for sending me to prison because it was to America's interest, and, not only that, but to the interest of certain American capitalists, to have me imprisoned so that Hoover could back Firestone in Liberia in connection with the rubber lands, land which have been disposed of to us by agreement with the Liberian Government. When Firestone found there was a possibility of a shortage of rubber in America and there was nowhere where America could obtain rubber other than from England, they sent their commercial investigators all over the world and they found that it was possible for rubber to be grown in Liberia. Then Hoover backed up Firestone to get the President of Liberia to give up the contract he had entered into with me so that the American No- LONDON, Sept. 20. Sir John Blisen and his colleagues of the Indian Ministry Commission will return to India on Thursday of next week to complete their inquiry into that country's thirst for further autonomy. Their arrival in India last Winter was greeted by riots which led in some places to loss of life. Since then the situation has greatly improved and the commission will repeat its visit with much brighter hopes of obtaining the co-operation of the Indiaz themselves. In February a vigorous agitation in favor of boycotting the commission was being conducted, the boycotting being popular as a political expedient in India so it is in China. The Council of State, which in India is the Senate or House of Lords, passed a resolution invoking co-operation, but the Legislative Assembly, which is the popular branch of performance, rejected it in any form. Since then the biggest agitation, has raged frequently, but it has failed to manage all Indian political opinion. an Benjamin of Cambridge not only to American men, but to take away from the Negro a concession that had been given to them and to give it to Firestone so that the natives of Kewin could be exploited for the benefit of American capital. Two years after Firestone went there he reduced the natives to virtual slavery; he got the government to use the natives to build roads to give access to his plantations; they had to work without proper provision for food and without any pay. Hoover represents in American life people like that. "Through my organization it is my duty, before God and before man, to see to it that a man like that, if possible, is not returned as President of the United States, such a great country with such a great power can do so much good or ill. That is why I am for Smith, a man who would not tolerate such a method in politics; a man who has been fair and square in all his denials as Governor of New York State. The Negroes of America can put their trust in him, and I hope he will be returned as President of the United States of America at the next election." Composition by Negro To Be Played by Noted Philadelphia Orchestra Mr. Aaron Harrison submitted his latest composition, "Spiritual Fantasia," to the Symphony Club of Philadelphia, and received the following reply: "We shall be pleased to have the orchestra play your number, and furthermore we will permit you to conduct the rehearsal. This is the first time a member of our race has been granted such an opportunity. "Spiritual Fantasia" contains 13 Negro spirituals so arranged harmonically and contrapuntally to obtain a classing setting plus a modern treatment. One movement contains a double censor in double counterpoint. Mr. Harrison is the director of the Harrison Musical Studio, composers and publishers, 622-35 S. Broad St., Philadelphia. price on the boycotts by requesting the Indian Government to complete the committee representing both House of All-Indian Legislature by calling on the Council of State to elect its quota and by Nakil committing additional members to stop the Syndicate, or Indian State Union, who also are the support party, and have bitterly protested against what they describe as an offence against the stability of Parliament. At a recent gathering at Lucknow they proclaimed an alternative objection known as the "Mughal revolt" for an Indian governmentally repressive government, for lecting grant from philanthropists. They are almost as well informed as the bureaucracy, we still believe that the Democracy is the party of Jefferson Davis and that the Republicans are the party of Gen. Sherman and the carpet-baggers. The second class of those who are uninformed consists of men and women who are the bigoted. When they say Tammany they really mean the newer immigrant steals organised politically by Roman Catholics from Ireland. The word Tammany for them is simply a safer form of Ku Kluckery. Among those who know the facts about Tammany today and about Gov. Smith's career and shout "Tammany" there are also two classes: the snobs and the deliberate falsifiers. The snobs are those who do not think that Gov. Smith and Mrs..Smith have the social graces which their elegant tastes call for. Much more important are the deliberate falsifiers. We mean those New York Republicans who know the facts and continue to misrepresent them. They profess to fear Tammany's control of the Federal Government. Yet they know that Tammany has not controlled the Government at Albany during Gov. Smith's four terms. The proof of this is overwhelming. Tammany has not controlled his State appointments. Tammany has had the patronage of local offices in the City of New York exactly as Sam Koenig has had the Republican Federal patronage in the City of New York. But in the State Government Tammany has not had even its proportionate share of the desirable offices. Tammany has not controlled Gov. Smith's legislative policy. The great measures of Gov. Smith's regime have been the reorganizing of the State Government along the lines laid down by Republicans like Mr. Root, Mr. Hughes, Mr. Stimson. The whole purpose of that reorganization has been to destroy invisible government. No honest student of politics can examine Gov. Smith's legislative record and fail to see that it embodies the best known principles for eliminating boss and machine rule which American experience has thus far suggested. Tammany has not controlled his administrative action. At no time in his four terms has he had a Democratic majority in both houses of the legislature. Every dollar spent has been passed upon first by Republicans. Every important appointment has been confirmed by Republicans. No appointment has ever failed of confirmation. No veto has ever been overridden. No scandal has ever been proved against his Administration. No scandals are even charged by Republicans against his Administration. That is why this newspaper, which severely criticized Alfred E. Smith in his younger days, which is wholly independent of Tammany Hall and persistently critical of the Tammany Administration in the City of New York, is prepared to say and prove that the Administration of Gov. Smith is the ablest, purest and most constructive period in the history of the Government of the State of New York. The statements made here are known to all well informed New Yorkers. They have won him tributes of admiration from Republicans and Democrats which are without parallel in our political life. Therefore, we say that when leading Republican politicians from New York sally forth crying that the election of Smith means "Tammany" they are not describing the facts they know, but are appealing to the lowest and most vulgar prejudices. "TAMMANY! TAMMANY!" (Editorial in The Negro World, Aug. 11) IT IS becoming increasingly apparent that "Tammany" will be the chief battle-cry of those who are seeking to defeat Governor Smith in the coming election. If the white galelemen of Teapot Dome, after casting about for a weak spot in the democratic nominee's armor, and finding none, have the effrontery to cite Tammany's ancient sins as a reason for sweet forgetfulness of their recent own, Christian charity and tolerance will not deter them the pleasure. But what moves us to mirth is the sight of certain Negroes, as the quadruple harvest of shekels approaches, telling themselves and then telling others that the Negro's desire is sealed the moment Smith, a TAMMANYITE, enters the White House. For our part, we do not very much care what happen and Tweed did fifty years ago. Nor do the malfections of the Ohio gang give us sleepiness. Decayers in public office we have always had, and, no doubt, there always will be. When the moment comes to us is that Governor Alfred E. Smith, a man of proven honesty and ability, has the superior force of character, given this same Tammany a new rating in the Nation. We are more inclined to reflect upon the fact that Alfred E. Smith cannot be swayed by the Hammess and the Whites for their toughnesss and the Dembya, or the Blones and the Hammess. way I would probably have quiet, but I am not by nature a quiet man. (Laughter.) I have never kept anything to myself, I have talked it out; and I feel that I owe it not only to the party but I sincerely believe that I owe it to the country itself to drag this un-American propaganda out into the open, because this country, to my way of thinking, cannot be successful if it ever divides on sectarian lines. (Applause.) "It never can be successful if any considerable number of people are going to listen to appeals to their passions and to their prejudices, their bigotry and intolerance; and if the sister vices that go with it are to succeed it is dangerous for the future life of the Republic; and the best way to kill anything un-American is to drag it out in the open, because anything un-American cannot live in the sunlight. (Applause.) "Where does all this propaganda come from? Who is paying for its distribution? One of the women leaders of North Carolina was talking to me about two weeks ago and she said, 'Governor, I have some notion about the cost of distributing election material.' She said. The amount of it that has come into our State couldn't be printed and distributed for less than $1,000,000. Where is the money coming from?" "I think we got the answer the other day when the woman went into the National Committee in Washington and meekly walked up to the man in charge and said, 'I want some literature on Governor Smith. I want the nonpolitical kind'; and he brought her down- Mr. Castle's Denials Re Rape of Liberia Liberia's rubber plantations, far away on the tropic coast of Africa, dominated the closing days of the Williamatown Institute of Politics. Raymond Leelle Buell, research director of the Foreign Policy Association, repeated the story which he told in The Nation for May 2. Following Mr. Hoover's screams about the British rubber monopoly, he said, Harvey Firestone and his associates planned a rubber empire in the little Negro republic, and the State Department supported his dream. William R. Chelsea, Jr., Acting Secretary of State, promptly came forward with a "dominion" which abundantly sustenanced Mr. Buell's essential changes. Liberia is today an American colony. The revolution of the Government can be expanded only in accordance with a budget drawn up by a financial advisor designated by the President of the United States; the Liberian transverse cannot write a check until it has been provided by an American nation. The currency is collected by "Prior to the convention the Grand Dragon of the Realm of Arkansas, the Grand Dragon Comea, he wrote to one of the delegates from Arkansas, and in the letter he advised the delegate that he not vote for me in the National Convention, and he did it on the ground of upholding American ideals and institutions as established by our forefathers. Now, you can think of any man or group of men gathered together in what they call the Ku Klux Klan that professes to be 100 per cent Americans, and forget the great principles that Jefferson stood for, the equality of man, and forget that our forefathers in their wisdom, foreseeing probably such a sight as we look at today, that at no time was religion to be regarded as a qualification for public office. "Just think of a man breathing the spirit of hatred against millions of his fellow citizens proclaiming himself to be an American and subscribing himself to the doctrine of Jefferson, of Lincoln, of Roosevelt and of Wilson. "There is no greater modesty in this world today than the burning of the cross, the emblem of Christ, the emblem of salvation, the place upon which Christ Himself made the great sacrifice for all mankind, and at the same time breathing hatred (cries from audience), while the Christ that they preach to adore, love and venerate, during all of His lifetime on earth taught the holy sacred creed of brotherly love." Americans, at a cost of 94.3 per cent as compared with 4.5 per cent in the neighboring British colony of St. Lucie. Firestone has taken over a million acres of land—4 per cent of the entire territory of this jungle usability—for his plantations, and is responsible a labor army on terms which, when comparing favorably with those used on some other African colonies, he constitutes, as Mr. Boell says, "those slave labor." While enlightened British and French colonial administrations are seeking to build up a native sugar farm system, the United States does its influence in behalf of the numerous plantation system which ruined the Congo. We have found rotary Castle will learn more easily"; they advertise billion dollars. The Nation. Nil tt cd «a _— DN cen mee tie To ct Te ae: ee oe ibs Saglich People Some Striking Truths That the Statesmen Withheld From _ Fhem—Black Africa is in Rebellion Againet Oppressors i. TO MENTION THE (Continecd from page 2) tnt they cnn sign = bit of paper ani Gh thee bine poopie will remain quiet (ae eternity. They are orasy. Mepressating Bleck Reso 1 aan bere representing 400,000,006 Neuss men whe are eerious—praceadls mprtvas; fe that we intend to adopt (Gituvert wrens te achieve our ents Ben you Dave atepied, You have etagted abet and shell—brute force— te attate all that you have accom- Wituhed; and when 0 summary is to be (hen sad when 0 jucament te to be gaanls, Bagtichmen. 1 ope you will so ‘em fm Geo twentioth coutury thet the (lee of the past will not stand against ‘Feu believe tn a God and you Sop ams ts wo te toe teal! ote of a ie sen secre reer Got to tes Vy your brete force, by your shot tg Gail, by your batticsbips and your end by your ecrzplanes, ond Wee eats yes have committed, ‘a Gy Ge Kinttinaes of your sowie? You mAPOR we eden the God that wo wor- aang. We bad a dittereat notion "ef tn Che cartier conturiee: it wes ie Stee Being caly wo worchipped ity Ghreugh cbjects we selected; ond i (@eme end you said: Ha you epee mie im oot one i fa Imave aosapted voor phil- ARGS-ot Gel; we believe m Heim: we tee ty the Ged of love, of meray, inal We bave ataptes tet fine ae ‘im ent oft a: Wromerty ane ieee 3 get 8 ome iiss paved be gees ; a oy heme at als : 90 Go pees a2 te Che menegeiats, wh the re- : ‘amd wentth that they neod. ir, Kelloggs From America Mr, Kage cane from America to baad te bia saggestion aicout outlaw- tag war. Yet America today ls doing what? America is doing the vary ‘thing thet foments war. What America would mat Gare do to a powerful em- ‘Pip Like Britain, what America would ‘met Gare Go to a powerful nation like Franca, what America would not dare @e te & powerful nation Jike Itzly— partners in signing this Peace Pact— Ameria, without any reserve, dors to ‘Misaragus and does to Hayt!. How pre- pesterous, therefore, for intelligent men to think that there can be any sarioumens in dlecusslg peace. One ef the principal agents for bringing about peace ta doing the very thing that lg the principal agency for pro- veking war. That lx net only no of Gearon 3 ike a0. of ait the great powers. enduct of Empire I need net bring to you any informa- tem abet the conduct of our own canpire because as Englishmen you meow as mech as I do, and probably mers than I do, about the attitude of the whele Government towards the pubfect peoples tn Africa end in India. We are et af asieep. it is not be- uma we have mot stateamen as able yo yours. You have net read our sentl- youmts in pour @elly papers; and we fave wet vemshed the pent yet where wee @emne im dally contact with oumtiment and with that expres- mea; Dut the future will bring it to pee. We wat it to come to you with- ye OY DUrpTteD, and ft is becaure of ERE We ane endeavoring to pre- pe mew Se realize that tc whole Ms Ret 20 feetiah, met 20 ignorant, a (2 Goeth asicep as to think oe fa Well ané will remain Rigi in sect tne mrwer number | be fe etreggiing, stroyaing | 3 immewiedge, in a terrible Stel sensition that you would not a nae ar pigs to be in. bt Sf Ueemptoyment ’ Hine © erent bo! in Enciane| BE direc: and about the 7 Pil ee If yeu want to Sean Uy tries: it you want | AMGEEnatY te India, ge vo the | ' Fea Gpcthere sistas |: . awe seco are) Ae ‘their bodies || et ate tomy a in ong: |! P Op who} t nd or tol EBs ‘ eee OES ‘ »- The Point ot Va few capitalists cam continue to grind the last bit of sweat and the last drop of blocd out of other human beings Do you think that that contributes to aa order whereby we can all feel mappy? Impossible. And I reprevent this afternoon a large group of un- happy people whe have not spoken you. 1 tved tm America for 14 years amd became the head of the Universal Negro Improvement Associa tion, which seeire for the higher Gevel- epment of the Diack race untrersally. Because 1 was elected to the position T had to A tt. 1 hed to speak not caly my sentiments bet the sentiments st: che ecpnaieation, ie centimenss of ‘the people behind the organtaation. As Tepeke 1 in America, so Tam apeak- ‘tag tt here this afternoon. ‘Speaking for 2 Diceatiafied People | have persenal views of my ewn—views of fellowship, views f Carletian brotherbeod with every- ene, and I have me enemy in the werkt, Whether a man be white, yellow, brown or binck. © I know mothing abovt him to the contrary 1 thine of him as @ Christian Brother and I treat him as much. I theretere do mot want you to think thet I am expressing my own per- even! opinion: I am expressing the quinion of 11000000 aggrievea Ne- green, I beng caty one of the 11 liens, The 31 miliicas represent 460 wiiiens. When I tam I om net talk- tog for myedf, I am talking tor thoes Wiltens of diesatieted pospta Thea peuple whe are ground Gown te ove, gust an) cuny section of the world. HS you gp to the West Indies you wi wee then: f yeu go te Contenl Amer~ 8 eS ee our he of the Guy; © yes Bo t GQemh. Amertes you wl Ge Gem mie we beeten ieageend apen. Wem Mf pou we to Mast istes | eee et & ae? Saas Otero Aen ca Tan Se 2 ¥ <a gb to Aaertes pet Wii ass tem ge t Apertes pea wit ono them tynsbet and burst by whites with prapeticn eal vielence, But, unée the akfiful Giplemeny of these whe 6 net dazire to see them realty free mes and whose motives and efforts are di: rected towards Keeping them serfa and slaves rather than seeing them de. velop and becoming a free and inde- pendent people ax they ought to be they are being miarepreacnted. ‘Those are the peorle I renrexent ‘Those are the people who give me ar expremsion, and so long as these peo- ple remain in such @ terrible condt- tion as human belngs so long will I find cause to fo throughout the length jand breadth of the world, whether It ‘be In America or in Great Britain or any part of the European Continent, to Tet humanity know the truth. Sooke Truth in America T apoke this truth tn Amcrica for 14 years, as T have maid, and all those yho were inimical to the interests of Negro progres could do was to un- dermine me and frame me up and {m- prison me for nearly two yearn azd 10 months, thinking that that would bo & deterrent not only to my expreroions on bebalt of the Negroes but that it would be « means of scaring Negroes from continulng the agitation for freedom. Fools that they are, who know mot thit prison bars cannot deaden or kill the soul and minds of men; fools that they are, who do not realize that there ia no power on earth to suppress the hopes of men. They may imprison men by the mil- on, they may execute them by the thousand—aa they did te you before you became a free people, as they pave done to the Continental nations which have risen through stages of parbarism to what they are; but they phall never atop the machine of prox- pene because that fs evolutionary. The plack man in fn a state similar to yours when you were slaves of an- ather people. You know your history, 4s Englishmen, too weil not to aprre- tate the stand we take today in work- ng towarta the freedom of our coun- ry, Africa. The Hitery of Slavery In & previous speech at the Albert Hall I tried to Impress you with the latory of slavery: bew your people ook mine from thelr bomen in Africa @ the otrangs lands of the western rorid and kept them as slaves for 250 ears, kept net emly our bodies tn tavery but kept our woule im slavery. mittens of wi Threogh the geod races of others of your own rece whe ad more human lore and aympathy han Your proecessers, notably Vie- aria of Ragland and Abvaham Lincoia ( Ameriea—we were emeseipated and samme free men. But even under yeaGam we ore being robbed and ox- trtted ank deviated the world over oon aidaing extras emi degre rasan bo Wiel to Binghomd 2 Seow you WED this that | ees | © Magiend to apenk |. Highlights ef Marcus In of Hace Coe ‘To the thoughtful miné, to the seber tmedilont, (tbe Kal legs pence pact) appears oo hypeorttion! and ‘wonder realty what le coming to the world... . How te (Be sesol- gent men who claim to be leaders of great eat they can, just by signing a bit of paper and pet to Test the hopes of millions of Sown-treséom poopien, “te something marvellous, eee i ‘The black man in in a stete similar to youre were staves of another people, You know your history. aa too well not to appreciate the stand we take today ia working the freedom of our country, Africa. net oe i Some coloniat Interested in Africa hed the ime the other day that if It were not for the white people thee would have died | yeara ago In Africa. Today we have at east fa Atrioa? ‘Who preserved th-— until tho white man came t diptomacy la played out and looks foolish to-the mew Dermestes the te ee I believe in God the Father, God the Som, andl Moly Greet: 1 endorse the Nicene Creed: 1 belleve that Jeras tne; T believe that God Hives for me as for all mem; and no comCtiea’ tenpece co me by decolving me about Christianity will esses Joos Curtat and to doubt God. eee q ‘We want you English men and Eugtish women. that the people of India have souls like you: we want yeu to Gat the people of Africa bave souls lke you; they have passions (hey are bomen delngs who must live like you. eee ka ‘You have made me by computation « Britt (eben by stection I would be an African citiswn, I bope to (government in a abort while to lay before them certala facts Tam coteaver- ing to enlighten you. I have not appronched Twam to teat out your sentiment: because I know the WH de nothing except ft ts with your approval, 5 eee Do net forget that the Negre ts the greatest werkd bas over even. Find ft net been for car diplomacy wo have vervived, Det should have died Hike the North Amertaam of eee Minck men are not going te cringe Dafere any Bak mee have learet the value of Mite, the value of wette men ‘We realise you are men be cucsives and WS you We te tend to give you & masts share end we Gomemt nm ‘ eee : God intended us to beve Gitterent = end pabitdent pointe of view; that te why guagraghteniiy Barepe ant eutted me for Atsten. ee pms te ite ote a sort sontaten Wenpee ee | peti pie. Fat: oo Sine gs! ieee Ale amie | cca. ‘path saat. min Se aan de wuntty, men wih couts. Met af 4 ‘your representatives ave hearthem: some of your mor knows im public Bt ‘sympathise with the cendities of binc# men im Africa, the West Indies and Americe. ‘Those are the mem. Wh really ane your cfvitzation: thoee ar the men who really make history bet: ter for those of you who have [hearts and those of you who will no |think, Because those of you who wil not think are equaily responsible with those of you who have no beart and act without a heart, because By that setlon other people are impelled think unkindly of you, for when yo% Go not instruct your representative to think and act in the way they should we think unkindly, not only of them, but also of you. So we are glad there tna softening of fccling when wwe can find men and women in Eng- Land who are sympathetic and reepon- sive to the call of others of the human family for help #0 that they: also may enjoy the benefita of the creation which wax Riven to us by God in com- mon, Otherwise your history ia con- fact with other peoples would be terrible one. ‘The Inevitable Cycle Do not you ever make the mistake, nelishmen and women, that. you are always to have the last word in civilisation and. in the world. There were other peoples before you. There were black people, Who gave the frst civilization? ‘The black people of Africa. They came before you. They had a wonderful ctvila- tloa on the banks of the Nile. When the Biue Nile and the Waite Nile were dotted by untversi‘ieg by the highest development fm art, when Africa right ncroee to Timbuctoo. reprecwated the Aneet culture the world ever saw, your unceators were Living im caves, were ving In holes, were savages, were rnalag. wid in Continental Earope Fhe black man passed out of power, rviag ie to tne browns race: the brows ‘nce, the Indians, passed it to the Per- inne ‘and the Chimcer, and. they in| ura, through the mame procens of e¥2-| ution, passed It on to you. The same| ycle In going on, and, whether you wil: it or not with your battleships ind your dresdnoughta, It will evolve eck to another condition. You camact op it: it te the feree of mature; it te he force of (ed, You omile and say “Ged.” and yet you tench me about jod: you say “Oed” when you battove a sconce, We betteve tn Him: ond whem that Ged tn His prophecy says, ‘Princes shall coms owt of Mgypt: ithiepia shall soon stretch out ber iad unto God,” we Go net tame Kae mockery mor aso joke, mer that He nade a mistake, He pheced ce here md we are bare. Wo believe tm thet jog. That God has brouaht as out tavery withewt any machine guna egress in Afrtes Seay Cotentet interested tm Atria ed the marve te tol me the other): oy that © & were not Sor the white}! ’ ten Wate: SEPRO e — cs Sle. See ie ba. ae pale ie oo ea ie ce ee eg eS Paes Lo Ret me joxwma Gam ae Ge white mas amet, Fs Se tates we es cm zenghe eagnet Bre fa Reet Airis withent the peepia, That kind of dtplomecy & payed out and looks fection to the new thought that per- meatea the Wegre. There ta nothing you can tell the black man that he Goren't know. Bt te true we have to stem to what you say, but it doce not mean that we aatirely believe tt. Tou fare capable of making any statements you ke; your statesmen can make them; but & éees met follow that we are to accept them. I le true that we have mo medium for expressing ourselves, Decamee your pres does not express our featings and opinions in the matter. B expreses yours, That Jn why you are tm such & pecullar state, because you are bearing only your opinion, ome side onty—you are knowing only your side; you are not hearing the epiaten of the people on the other side and you do not know what they are thinking about. Thinking Abeut Human Rights | 1am bere te tel you what we are thinking about. We ere thinking About our rights ae humar. being, and we are ibeal im doing that. We realise that all Rumen beings are on- Utled to corti rights, and there are no rights peculiar to the white man which we desire te invade. We fool that the white man has certain rights that are materal that are moral, that are legal. and We would be as rea¢y and as quick ag Bimastf to defend him and theese rightp ap be weelé. If you doubt ma, I being up the histecy of the wars tx whi we have tought for you. Did yeu @ik you coaid buy us to fight for you tm the Mineteenth and Twentisth Centuries? Do you think you coud pay ua te fight for you No, you e0mid not. But when you made year datemest and your ap- Heal for hey when yeu based that statement aad Ghaappeal on the larger democracy ané Mimsanity, as Weotroy Witecn <i te Uyeiet wer, the protec. jon ot the wediibe peamine that an- peal toecmed @ and, without Any conse: thet any bexsiag us to help we CUMtertty came te your aid im the Inet Sh Owe milions of us, nd we Gee becchennds ta Mocopoenaate, Gly the mea dogs mn Rect Abii, We feaght the remaied mngp WWD various bettie rents tm ‘Wisedera, end wo er heads SUEEEESe the Germans evens the brought task i. Fat voor evimies- | jon. Wo COURT'S oeking | “4 i 4 oad net you ed wesegiet be ~— Sa a ts rigs < : oe ont at] ne = a Cf f SH mo saree ahi ° Pi i r By on thas of the Aroused Neg yeu werk, but we may sive Fon o With |dcto tor @ chert whiie—en which ye capmet live—tut we wil mabe sur [Feu will get no permancet emptarmew fend so after a while you will dis, s diecveragument for every blast ma to come to Bngiand and tho Britia totes.” You cad to we im Continents Rarepe, “There ts ne reom ta Buren: for the binck man emvept continual to wee him as a seidier in the Rhine land te protect Franen” Aecweed bn Germany ‘When I was scoused ta Germany 0 heiping to defeat Germany and there- fore encouraged the enmity of Germany towards the blacks, I felt ashamed that ‘the German should accuse me ° bear- tng my home in the West Indies and Africa and America to come inte Burope to kill him when he did not Interfere with me as far ae that was concerned. I felt ashamed, and I had to hang my beed. But I was doing the beat I could to help some one whom Jt trasted—the Allies, And while the German now hates me Deonuse I heiped to defect him, the friend for whom I fought, causing me te offend the Ger- mana, leaves toe in the cold, and there- fore I am still more friendiens; I have two enemies new tnetend of a friend. Ie it wot o peculiar state to be in? Mngiichmen. that te the position, We fool very waplensamt about it, and we 2 not foot happy having tt all pent up tm our minds. That is why wo want you to know about —quite ineffene- ively. I hope you will net tabe aay- thing T have sald this afternesn a2 an jeftence. Ged forbid. The treth showld jottend no man csovpt the villain and ‘the vagabond. You are all Christen peuple and cannot be offended by what T have ond. Thovld a Foreign Fee tevede? New, you Eagiieh poopie, bow would you feol if a foreign reca, not lie yours, chouid come tn bere and tabo everthing you have—tahe away your Partlement. tebe away your Won- minster Abbey, take away your Uni- ‘versity of Londen, your St. Pasi's, your muoveme, your ert galleries, tabe away jel your great tnfustrien, tabe away pour land, tabe charge of you, take Four cbees eff your feet, tak= your 0rd stetbes ect your backs and sire you rege to wear and pince beary tendo wpen your cheulgere by way of every-day labor vo thet yeu enn work (hem? Mow would you Mee that? {Wecdd you le Mat? I went on anawer yaereedd you Mie thei? Rem attag yea 0 que eed ‘Yensaes 9s agree that came Jone cline ehecSl Go that, But 1 Ge not] Dekleve that your silence menne agree. ment. You coal not ogres with a con- dition Uke that. But that fe what you are dolng to we tm Africa. You have come into our homes, deceived us in every way under the Rulse of Chriatianity-—dut do not you ever beileve that Iam not a Chris- an. I belleve in God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost; T cndorno the Nicene Creed; I believe that Jesus died for me; I believe that God lives for me as for all men; and no condition you can fmpose on me by decelving me about Christianity will cause me to doubt Jeaus Christ and to doubt God. I shall never hold Christ of God responsible for the commercial- ization cf Christianity by the heartless men who adopt it as the easiest means of fooling and robbing other people out of thelr land and country. If 1 indicted Chrigtianlty your bishops would stand aghast. If told you the nistory of the London Missionary So- slety which 1s followed by the com- mercial agent and the soldier, youl ould really try to ask God for pardon, for the thingn that have been done to he poor, defenseless heathens In the name- of Christianity. Record ef Christianity Among the | Blacks Have you stopped, Englishmen, to] ead the record of your Christian pene-| ration of the East and the reeuit of it?| want te set you thinking, you mgiishmen and women, because I be-| | jeve the majority of you are good at eart and you do not know, and that|' s why you smile complaisantly on hings as they happen today. Go to|’ war Ubrarien and rend the history of|3 ristianity in the lands of the eathens, and compare those lands to-|§ ay and the condition of the peopiea|' mae inthe twentieth comtary te | ne period prior to the advent of Chrie-|? janity. Practically every African will ofl you today that prior to the advent |? ¢ Christianity he had hie own land, e ewnsd ft, he tre on tt but teaay,t! ecanee of Christianity, it fa not hia. it|* the Lord's. (Laughter). What a|!! wrible Lord that is, to adopt such |* wtheds to take away the property off ier peoples. New, you knew, there| ae Seed Wie Cink. Ake Geen et eee = Ged Is the God of All and for Al—There Could Be No Hell Mere Fearfal Than the Hell the Black Man Dwell in on Earth Today tate type or race and group of people and without them there is ne consid- eration for the rest of humanity. Thai fs not fal. Yet we have the Pope and we have the Arehblahop of Can- tecbary, the two primary representa- tives of Christianity. Hlow 40 they think they have impressed us whe have learnt to think? How do they think we compare their philosophy with human reason? (A voles: They are ta the swim.) It ta illogical: it t ridiculous, And because they have spoken of themeclves and we have not spoken, they think ® ie all right. Now we have started te peak, and I am only the forerunner of an awakened ‘Africa that shall sever ge back to sleep. Met Speaking for Seif Remember, I am net speaking for myoetl. If I were to opeak for my- self I believe I would be @ preacher; T woeld be a devout man after the fashion of Jewus Christ. That is how I would like to move about the world, because I have a Jeep fouling for humanity in my soul. But I cannot be myself just now beoasse T have bern elected by 11,000,000 people to ex- prose their thoughts, an4 I would be & trahor to my cath of service if T aid mot opeak to you as they command me and as they demand of me. I speak se that you may kiew the truth. The ‘treth will oot you free and set them free. We want an everiasting peace, et an hypecritioal peace that a few aged men, who have been trained tn the scbeol of commercial graft, think et; theip interests are so cluesty altied with their brothers and fellows im atmiler pecustary positions lite them- estves that they camast sve justice cvtzide of thelr tmmotinte nects and dectren, They do not suffer Nhe com- men men, therefore thay cannot tn- terpret the fuchings of somenes men. When Mr. Kellogg eames to veyronsat tao Ametteas pant castty to Gus ort amprmmnt Gh dovetoen pumpia, be Pe. Ss) ake toe 2 lien, one ef the risked, nem te the world, with hun@reds of milfans of Gollars to pro- tect: cosh a man wants peace—be would be a foot if bi Wd not want peace when there are millicm of | own countrymen who cannot fat beead for the next day. Those tafser are the people who are dismiledied, and these men who represent these reat commercial intereats aay, “We have to get together, all we whe have so much at stake, because these fel- lows will get unruly, 90 we, must have birger armies and blagcr navies, 20 when theae other fellows want to atve vent to thelr grievances we will let joose theso armies and navies for the preservation of the State. But it in not for the preservation of the State put for the protection of these few men with hoarded calllions, Lett alone, we would not require auch a tre- mendour overhead expense for navies and armies, but Mt ia the desire of those who have #0 much more than hey should have why we have to pay | hese high rater for armies and navien fo keep In subjugation people about hom we do not know anything. No Fomenter of Trouble Tam appealing to you for @ larger! yympathy, Do not misunderstand me, Englishmen and Engllshwomen; Tam not a fomenter of trouble: I lore jumanity too much to advocate any inturbance that would make human- | ty unhappy. am the head of a great | ceanisation, and, knowin, what order || s: sometimes I am in “he midet of | W000 people tru convention, and as] be heed of @ strong organization 1) nust have order and discipline. Do! ot interpegt anything I say as a sux- || sation of any kind of disorder among || lack or white, Tt ta only an effort to cesent the truth, because 1t ix only by |, nia truth that we can have everlasting | nd sternal peace. We want you |, ngiishmen and Engiishwomen to | now that the people of India have |? pula Ike you: we want you to know |; pat the people ef Africa have souls! , ke you: they have passions like you: | , ney are human beings who must He |, ke 7ou: they must have the name a tion like you; they must live ta! pod homes to be able to preserve wir bodice in 0 sanitary state; they uat have goed feed in order te mate ’ im thelr phyaival strengeh; they |‘ wast have advantages aad eppertant- . es so that Iie ean be made plessnmt. | . That te life with eternal misery t—and |» ct ie what yeu, by the power of your’ , mpire, impose upon we—sternel meie- | , 7. Good Ged! What a day & will be! pen tock, brown, yoflow ang whtte| » eet before thet grent Threne which } eas ‘yeagmunt! Good 4 r yeu te pass st coal wo ae to Soot Ba 2 be dm nent G Sot 8 gous we te) tes} eR ay in . Sustion To Guster Ciaytes 2 oo eee ay 9 Cty eRe 4 ot Mngtistmon and women oo thet these whe are inmocent and know net What te being Gone tn their mame may saderstend and reach the pelt where {they wit we their inftvence to exe that uation te done te the darker pesples ot the world. T have net yet approached your gor ernment and my government, because you have made me by computston 6 ritioh subject. when by election I would be an African cltisen—your g6v- Jenment is my government—I hope te lappeeach our government ta a shert Wille to My before them certain fasts ‘spo which T am endeavaring te ca- Ughten you, Ihave net approached thean [ret because I want to test out your sentiment; because T know the gov- jecmament will do nothing except M te wih your approval. Therefers, it to Detter Sedement and good sence to fad ject how you feel first before going te your executivgs, who represent you tn, leovermment, 20 as to know what will be the future of the blacks of Atrios, [There ta no future for uo in the West- Jorn world. You Austo-Samies whe hare [become the Americane of today serese the Atlantic, took us into olavery after R was imtrodeced by the Portuguese ender the inftwence of Pope Nichole V, amd tock wa to America and kept there as slaves; though you worked ws to Gonth 4.000,090 survived and to }% years we have grown te 15,000,000; jad mew in America white stetamman- hip ta devising way: and meane by ‘which they can, by economic starva- tion, starve out the Negroes im 0 yesre so that they wi have no mere Negro problem. Im the nat sixty years ter have bed cnowgh immigration teat the Burepesn countries to De able to do withens the bineke whe dere brought > © whee he ta todeg. a owtnin ‘vase ta, after ving ws - as = eee oe Pepetiettometoe 1 Se Ses poten = east of Bving, nin ef toe . wee the Negra, by means ot starvation, will 4ie out im fuueriea and there will be no mere Negre problem to confront the white man who wants to make America a white man's country. That is the al- kat method of men Uke Kcilogg; men without souls where struggting hu- manity t" concerned; men who ihink they have the last word in intelli- gence and can fool everyone. The Negro A Diplomat Do not forket that the Negro ts the greatest diplomat the world has ex ‘r meen. It may be immodest for me to say 0, Dut if {t had not been for our Jiplomacy we should not have sur- rived, but should have dled lke the North American Indian. You are deal- ing with a people who were the first (cachern of diplomacy, because we were tho first teachers of civilization, We have not foat all our virtues, al- rough we have alept on them for @ ong while; but that doen not meau deth—we were only resting. Today ur Intellect fu virile and strong: and hat in why Tsay you cannot pull the cx of & half-dend cow with impunity, t may develop into a healthy heifer ater If It getx the right Kind of pas- urige; and altiough you may look ‘pon the black man as insignificant, ou do not know what te in the Ne- o's mind. Why, we have the same laysround for science as any ether act, Do you know that we can alse 9 a2 aclentific as any other race? Do ou Know that there are mysteries iden im Africa that have net been pearthed for the last 2000 years be- suse the time has not come yet? You are been digging mp seme of the mings we have dome in Africa. Tou are been to Lazer te dig up Tut- nhahmen's tamb, and so on. When OU find these signe cf tviliention you re artful enough to say they “be- nred to a diferent branch of the tru- san race.” Yet yeu have mot been Mat enomgh, when yen say that t2 rove ft. The features of the Phareahe ake them nothing cle bat binck — Right te Write Mistery : Yoo amvume. 0 right to write ue xy within the iat 660 youre, and ply docu you have teen atte ) damp so many tons of your biters | the world and etity poeple Reve; *t maid sorting by way of come’ = . one your " fee hae eaid we Wegroqs bs hk he j wtimeten fer the. bones ™ nie Gassen ero, Tit Chas nde % the fant ches 12 cates to top 3 a Py mains fo eee aes How @> Mahe Gur Contribution | AAT; RACY TES] |S WeMS [os Uf ll “The nnd question,” stated the famous repert of thy Beuth African Naty goumirse, seamen aed perveaes orery Sener quakions' 1 se bores ef the natives proqeat renemic position and largely affects bis social system.’ Just aa I eald 0 few weeks age. the coonomis, yea, the whole social life of th mative Afriean ‘and alf Negross In general depends on the hold they have ot the ool! of Africa. A few Nesrose here and there may. will progrves under thé present conditions of the western world, but the salvation of the race live f™ Africa, How can any of us In these parts hope to give anything criginal te the world? Do we Intend to play the part of the tmitative ape ail the time? eee Let us for a moment cast our eyes about us and ask ourselves the question: What bave we, ax a race, contributed to the present civilization? Drop the whole Ilterary output of the Negro through the American continent, and t' ¢ work’, practically speaking, sball bave lost nothing. Of course, we bear in mind that our advint on the continent was not accompanied by circumstances that made for social and intellectual advancement. Yet we have shows, and continue to show, that given the proper environment we could produce our originals aleo. eee It 18 my contention that our proper place {s Africa. Even gentus needs the niven opportunity to assert iteelt. It in a historical fact that cannot be con- teadicted that there is much a thing an the arrented development of am individual, or even of a people. Intellectually, we are not auMciently thrown upon our- selves, All the knowledge we get ix drawn from white sources. We are not looked upon to supply anything. and we do not supply anything. In the final reckoning, it would not be the quantity of doctor that we produce that will count, but the quality. * When Kelly Miller penned his lst of eminent Nearoes, he had this to any: “It Ie true that no one of them reaches the frat, of even the second degree oC luster In the xalaxy of the world's wreatncan.” And feeling that something more ahould be sald, ine offers thin exptanation: “The competing number har cen so (nsignificant and the social atmosphere has been 40 repressive to their budding aspirations that It Would be little ahort of a miraclo of geniux if any member of thin race had reached the highest degree of glory.” I aay, let the Atmonphere he never #0 conducive to our intellectual detelopment, we cannot sive to the world an Aftican Culture from the American continent. be etn act aos eg eka Aor events All ot oar conceptions are Judged by the standard thats lald down for ye BF white people. To use a xchool boy's expreasion, “We are tired of cribbing.” It Mt ta true that hiatory repeats Itnelf, some part of Africa may one day again become the center of learning. And thin time ft may be wholly under Nesro rule. With an intelligent nocia! Kovernment, there will be a class devoted | to the promotion of the artn and actences. Then we will be able to boost of an African culture, Living then under our own vine and fig tree, our own | political bomen, evolving 4 Democracy that haw not been seen since the | Jays of Grecee, Rexpecting the equal rights of the individual before our courts, | knowing nothing about the dintinction of color. creed or nationality. Buttding | a civilization on the principle of equal opportunity to all. With one standard | of morality for man and woman. Leaving the individual free to worship in / tls own fashion. according to the dictates of his reason. And Inst, but not | jeent, (rovernment ownership and distribution nf public utilities. Sounds lke pociallam? Well, what then? | Let us not be footed. ‘The lands of Africa are not easily cotten. Let un see how Africa is divided amongst the powers of Europe. This continent | egross of the western world despise, “I have lost nothing in Africa.” says | sn American Negro. This statement, coming as It does from a Negro, not only | hows a profound {gnorance of the spirit of the age, but it carries with ft the rery hall-mark of the inferiority compiex also. All the oppressed peoples of by world today are saying: “It fs better to rele In hell than serve in heaven.” /| Fut we will legve this lone Negro, aatinfied within himecif. that he, too, may, ete for a Republican or Democrat as he fs told. In the meantime Belsium, | no-rate pover in Europe with ® population of T% millions, is reaponelble for erritcfiy in Africa 96 times lirger than herself! France is responsible for « rit Jy In Africa vne-third as large as Europe! Our true history reopens, + park, ony. reopens, when we restore a kingdom im Africa. (3 | hoe |BRUSSELS.—At\'the present rate S tncreaso in the diamond produc- on of Belgian Conko, the South Afrt- tn dlamond fietts may soon tore their | songpoly of the world market. + peigian Congo, expecially the 0A atsrict, han become, wince the war, a moat serloun competitor. In 1913 the output of the Kast miner hardly totaled 15,000 carate Ten yearn later the output reached 415,000 cnrate, In 1928 the production | totaled 545,000 carats; In 1925, $86,000, parsed with an output of 1,108,000 carats. Thin ntready represents one-nfth of Special Notice to Readers and Agents ' | Yoav hah informed that ot dvi | 4 agents who have failed to make regular ; ‘ukly payments for the Negro World each ! ‘x since December 1, 1927, and who are rears, therefore, will not be supplied sore pas unless your remittance yid tet later than 12 o’clesk | ate | oli he! " ~ XRT aPerT Ts my Nt ; i Las | Uys veel 1914, Ce Vi Eee See Sepa aE __ oe EE RETEST anronttioneing ce whrrntrare of m7 aeeibers Hyranhry Brown il pines mally a Ww. A. GaSe ee 5 matily ty qene-st On OEE tion of the planta. The pick and other pPenerere instrements are gracuaity, ethodientty being fupereeded by Levesvarees” sweets ccteule! abd eaiee cuales menue ae Oi sone oa ie one nthe Outlined Aad eile-ae oa vate Hee ot 400 meee toate paren eerry cae: cre fe Sees rian to i eee he eee ae ee De ee eee ee enn | Lunt year 23.838 workers produced oot ee eee Ba gece peters Brles ree ees ee ee nS sian asisians malian! a AE el aped rs sees eee Senet ee ee oe et cen ial ala Fe ee A a eee ee PU ROY aa sccae ocezsy eee re ee Ono of the biggest stones dug up re- so he asec ee ee Soe Seen en Bo a Ne ial ete ae fe 8 Boe cet caren, aye (ore slerieg rors Crue 8 ee eee Sr Geren, eee ali, sae ee marie ens, rae et We st ea chit e uiskeers See ee aurect onisr 2 eter whe Bt ting it. When ft comes back on the, Be te ee ee ee ae ee eee ) Te i sand mtoaeiare worked In width and so far no shaft | or underground gallery has been ak | a heer ee" Pe woatp. WHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISEMENT e. ~ ‘ a . c : e ‘ ” i ! a’, eens? AATERAGY TEST WOW REQUIRED OF NEW YORK VOTERS Sa. eee ee Most residents of this state ar aware of the fact that a literacy tes te required of voters, but it # no generally realleed that no mano ‘woman (except those who were quali fled to vote before January 1, 1922) car legally have their namen inscribed upor the regiatration booke unless they hav shown the election officiala a recog. nized certificate establishing the fac that they are literate. The state accepts, an constituting proof that a prospective voter can read and write English, “a certificate ot diploma showing that he has completed the work of an approved eliith grade elementary school or of a higher school im which English fs the Ianguxge of Instruction.” But if the would-be new Voter cannot produce such a paper he must, in theory at any rate. reaott to fone of the public schools where the Mteracy exanitnations are held and ve- cure the certificute of Iteracy’ granted upen quatitieation hy the Regents of the Univeraity of the State of New York. Establishing the voters’ teyey quallileation wan uriginally a function of the boards of election; that method, however, was found not to work satis- fnctorlly and tha duty has been en- trusted to the school syatem under the rulen and regulations of the Regents, Examinations Held in Schools ‘The examinations are held between 6:30 and 9:30 p. m. on the aix regular rekistration days in October in the public achools, The schools in which the New York City examinations will be aeld thi year wlrendy have been designated. New voters who can show che examinern valld credentials of any sort proving that they have completed | he aixth grade tn a public or Private school are granted the certificate at nce without test. | Those who have nothing of the King 0 nhow are required to tke a written amination. They are given a paper | containing firt a paragraph of simple English and then eight questions, with | jotted lines upon which the annrers | Fe to be written, The answers must) me taken from the paragraph fret] riven. The completed paper Indicates | hat the candidate han been able to! ead the paragraph and can write at! rant well enough to put down his an- | wers, | John D. Moffet, director of evening nd continuation schoole of the Board f Education. who haw immediate harge of the literacy teste in this city, xplained yesterday that they really mount to a kind of simple intelligence net. South Grade Pupite Pass Tet | a ot the bend of te: eee are OES teh pee, ani then tried out upen sche! uiiren im order te svlect the para- ‘ uphs which = forth grade pepft can| ad and understand. The questions | © similarly tried out until ft ts as- | rtained how many of the eight can/|/ cee anne oy 2 i | de pupil. Ie an otherwise qualified person de- | rows of exercining the voting fran- re in the State of New York can > ad the paragraph and annwer as] any of the questions a3 a pupil in the urth grade of a public school, he ta:! anted hin certifieate of Mteraey. tf)! fall to do fo, he may try a sec-|* M1 thme on a rubsequent registration | y. He will not, however, receive the! ° mo examination, In all, twelve of| Y eno tests ure prepare! each year; ® 4 two are used upon each of thej ° Text of Questions ¥ As un example, one of tho examina: | ¢ in papers used before the 1926 elce-| P n ts given as follows: y New, tone stare ti arckits WthAey tree rad then ten wre the anewrrs, Tend | & men vyear many” people have 'e 12a) which | & he we prevented. "Cotde are spread trom | o ‘en you cough the mouth and nose sheaid bs cred “with a coun hendusrenicn, Golde are iy wpread tn‘crowaea piacea: Washing (he win "ation. heiga, to preeeni hon apres ot ir “Eeryene “atv be" earevat Mo nent | 2 Wha ald Shih secs ME pn tar wan hip to cave whee prone | hens ena pert is si be fom | er ataerteac gen ceoeite etre in arevestie oprend am otek easte to in vein obtend from olex pega €0 | Chen” yaa couch, with shat ehocid the | gt mouth and. ncaeshe envernt mowhne kind of incre’ are colds sone of Brent 2 nein, prevent the apceading of colds what nou'a te wamnet vient ju hse shnuld ‘Ue Kept covered? ‘rem, what dees enretsrneee in these weys | th cig ty envy ther people’ he nat te thins dena person cone when eis ace * Certinente “Conciosiver | whe election lawn upecify that the! in ‘The election laws xpecify that the Regents certifcate shall be received by election omicinis a2 “conctusive” of the fact of literacy. But the question of the genuineness of the certificate und the identity of the voter te left to the Boards of Election of inapectors to decide. And if the would-be voter la unable to write his name upon the register or poi! Look it is to be re- garded as concliwive prof of hin illit- erazy, no matter what certificates he produces. If, however, a person ta anable to write because of some merely physical dieabiitty, sueh a2 blindness of the leas of his hands, and so on, this latter section doses mot apply. The election eMicials have been known, however, lo use the test of writing the name sgainet persons who might net be mriatty {iterate. There te nothing to the election laws te bar, for emampis, mn fetegionted person, mo matter how proteund the totenteation, from voting. provided tho te property registered and mn got to fhe pelle without being er- rented She erodes. Bet tn me cay at ‘Teoh Re WM hove te! ° . of tte tae- Seo Ge desk. | c wee 6) [prone i to be | j black be nothin leo in et a bled! | acm. cole ‘Rehomed Of. 1 nave BI be ashamed of Burely 1 SAEERO cohamed of m) | dod whe ‘what Lam. 1 i aaid thet Gag T represent looking fer QUEM Gymaitty. We a not want en equality excer ie Toon for noc freedom we and we will jreturn it te But we do not ise to take Wipe of your nocial life and to @UMe you in your 20- flat tte © eG) Wo being amore i yourselves. WIRED tee proud to em- darrase anyend Gl oureeives, Xo wo want you to wil that the time has come for black and white, to be more fm our thoughts xhout cach nome of you white mea ‘re animals: they have given to look at to make us lock MMB Wild animals: they xive you ef we with rings as or big mouths. and ‘unly features, Gal they say, “That ls © black man” gp that when a child acee a black magi fe @ subway station he shouts: Mamma. look, black man” (1 ). Caughter). But that te the Kind of educa tion; because Sto" have the fu-| ture in "thet Land when your krow up with WypRg motionn and dean you may get yegpisives into the iste of atterapting with biack men Ike brutes ef ike men. An evidence ef &, Yee wend out to the Colontea seune colonial admin- | Intrators, mee you have = in your schools @ think that the black nan is met te Re considered; and when they ‘com® out in thelr khak! uritorma they aa cockith an Maharajehe of Shere —cincntees| and when we them they want wa'to tobe Uf our hate and to now and cringe Before them. ‘That kind of attitede @ ef the part. Rinck nen are bat US 0 crinre before | anyone but GQ, Riack men have! jearnt the value Of If, the valus of | sit reapect, Meh @itte men. We real- | ne that you ke ourseiven and we are mawWile yeu, We intend jo give you & abare, ond we! temand the rem you. Tt ie «| 0-50 propesttios, here is nothing in Ensiand thet Wi Binek people want mit to eee you peonle prosper | nd contin, God calle you. 5 eppy people the British Ielen: | nd we want te Be.teft alone in our’ wn country, to develop an | sod and we see best. That |! <All we are ‘fer. If we tive |) ike that there, ‘be any trouble, || ‘What We Wind ip Eagiond b Ir we want eayiifing Pagina we | her sund over gg gm % or come | var and get it, Boe cums ever to tes |, ad, nat, ¥ m. waa S708, at ven bete wat om mn, ond. bet , ave you to expect me to come across | 1e atreet to your home or to your |? nop and buy milk and butter and |? am and bacon and fat and oll and | read, and pay you two sovereigns, hereas {f you want oloth and coal you | sme in my’ backyard and steal it. Do 7a know ‘what will happen to you? | ou will be cavght one day. That is |S hut happens to a thief who ateals in |S @ dark; and we are only saying to|® ¢ white peaple of Europe: Do not be , sentim: ntal aa to Imagine that the her people are atl #0 blind ax not to | J able to see thet they are being | fairly dealt with. You are very |™ itiful; you adopt pecullar methods nen you find nativa peoples aavanced the extent that they have represen- ve men who ean express the oushts of the masees; yoa have a cullar method of diplomacy whereby u weave certiin things around then frame them up, to get them tnerlm- | oe master eee cel something to them and say, “He fn criminal; he hea teen to prison; he nnot represent you.” A Game That Bid Net Work You tried that wame with me, but tt! | not work with the Negroes, I went priton because of the cunning and alink propensities of lown down ticiane who wouM pat Jesu Chiat Jail for two votes, Tean talk ahout nerican politice beemuse I have lived | ity midat for fourteen years and| died it from A te Teen tell you! | the damnable metheds of American tte politicians, the methods they wit! | | )t0 Ect into offios. An American poll- | lan Would well bée own family, he! | uld nell the whole Btate, he would | | the name of Jewws Christ scrosn! ballot box ee that he could get | | 0 ofice. Because represented an | jorable moral mewement where I} } nid not per rotietetems to keep may 5 the head, they were able to im-| 1 ne head, they wore, able to im: | asa 7 a VT an ce Pe wan A, most fe heer te all parts of th world; and though an Kngiishmas ma. | treat my words with Mberty and Unie }] 1 am @ fool, as newspapers like th “Daily Buetch” tried to make out, yo will find tem yeure from now, or 1 | yeara from now, Garvey wax not it fale buffoon but wax representing th new vision of the Negro, whe wa looking forwurd to great xecompliah mente in the future, 1 bless you, mt God would have me bives you, with ood will; no enmity or malice, only wlth a denire for you tw know the truth. You have heard the one side from your own men: you must heat the other side from the other people. You muat hear India’s side, you must hear Africa's aide. and fortunately: it tm my Kood fortune nw to peak for Africn, and I feel that at some other UUme you will hear from India. Lat um have a better underetunding to know each other better and I think we will have a better world. Not Englishman by Reco Tam gulng to clise in five minutes with Une applicution, {am not an Englishman by race: Tam n Hritisher by nationality. Just an you ars true to your Anklo-Saxon race and type— and you would be unworthy if Jou were not—no am Ttrue to my African Face and African type. Before you be- came” Englishmen. you wera neo Saxona by race. Refure a man ts born to & nation he ix conerived ta race: no Win nationality in only accident, whtist hie race tx poxitive. Cam poste | tively a Nexro: there in no untatake | about it. Naf one drow at anybody | else's hood In-my veinn. If there were | L would try to ket rid of it by drawing Ik out an quickly am porsible xo that 1 | could br a 100 per cent, African, ax! you are 100 per cent, Anglo-Saxon, 1 rexpect yon {or your purity of blood and YOU OUKht to renpect me for iy | purity of blood. God intended un to! nave different outlooks from the aocial ! and politicul point of view: that in why z20graphically he sulted you for | Europe and sulted me for Africa. Conditions in America ' If you go te America you can hardly‘ ell who In a Negro and who tw not: |! cane you have Halt white Nerroee | hree-quartern whit Negroex, one-fitth || Segvocs, one-eighth Negroes, one: |! enth Negroer—you hive a mixture | Here, all caused by the advantages ou have taken of us by bringing us! thin the pale of your clviitxation. |! ou eall us “colored people.” Indeed, | care colored. The great trouble inj! merica Ia to find out who ta white. ;§ hat ia why the white Americans want | ° ) et rid oF the black man ro that it j} MN not be a question of whether the |? merican nation will be a mulatte ation or a black nation. America ta | 4 > Detter than France; these twe/* ations have got into trouble and can- |* mM grt out of It Tou were senalbie |! vough net to bring trouble home ts |* msiand: that is why vou are met ta. |® rreted, that le why you are not bere | the number af 10806 thie aftermeass | Y I wore tm Ameria I would be at- |* Bae beeqmse there F ‘wis Prastdat” Unteed | ston of wecicu: and debgung Uy te |™ y the Nerrroes are running an inde- ndent ticket and acting against )™ sro President in America.|™ But in cus the Negroca are unable ; P¢ elect a President of thelr own, 1)¥¢ 1 throwing my support for Alfred | 49 th. Do you know why Tam for | (L ith againat Hoover? It is because th ina man from the people; Smith | & man who has sprung from the t nmon people, he knows their wants : 4 thelr heart beats and their pulne. | 4! over has been panipered by the |= monoliat clase: he iahimacit’a. mite th s A Baby in Your Home Te Ps een mene en Dee Se een es ete ae You Can Try it Free Op. — Bd Ci ‘ ~ be: mW 5 oi) ! 7 SS, , 7 ——_ [ore tena ee ba iain pi pero Hunde: @ of married women, ehiid- Jena for sears. auddeniy: find theinsel es ina state of the mont hlinsful antict- pation due to the influence of a doc- fara mont wonderful. prescription. Mea, Annie 3!.. Middleton, Glencove. Nov. werlton: "I know junt what Dr. Hiaers "prescription can do, us I had Jonred for. baby, and two’ Yenrn 4K I touk a six weeks treatment and now we have a fine baby boy. ite Ia sigh een months old. J haven't words. to express how much this medicine has done for me.” very married couple who really want children should at once write to the doctor und get » {ree trinl ef thin. prescription, - tometer with his invaluable. book of instruc: Wen. “For your. convenleace, fil out the coupon and mail it today. FRSSCRIPTiox cocren Wie Koders SCi-F maliager Biae., M, Jeeeyn, 0 Pansy aged me 8 thee trial of yom eeatnc sat for Siqritity and inettection on Soe tows Ne 'T enclose ee for poet jmet pesnine BAB soseeereeeesgicistersenenney SELLING ASPIRIN \Q>, 3 INTHE “119. S< St. Joseph's ASPIRIN AS Puue AS MONEY CAN BUY | SEPTEMBER 26, 1928! SEPTEMBER 26, 1928! , . UNIVERSAL LIBERTY NIVERSITY (Formerly Smallwoed-Corey Industrial Institute) Claremont, Surrey County, Virginia, U. S. A. Situated Upon the Banks of the Historic James River A Negro Slave Pen in 1662, Now a Cultural Training Ground for Negroes ‘An Institution Where Negro Boys and Girls Are Trained for Real Race Leadership | | Slogan for 1928: “Every Division a Student” Officers and Members of Divisions Should See te It That Their Divisions Are Represented by Sending at Least One Student The Courses of Study Cover a Wide Range, Among Which Are Collegiate, Academic, Grammar Grade fer Children of the Practice School, Industrial, Scientific Agricultural, Business, Domestic Science, Music, Nermal, Bible Training, Sewing, Typewriting, Stenegraphy, Beokieoping Opening Date, September 26, 1928 Registration, Sept. 24 and 25, 1928 For Details as to Terme, cte., Write to Clarement, Surrey County, Vieginia, U.S m& jeanne: he can only see Americar Polltigs ond American power from the [eapiiniist point of view. You mus have read of the great rubber combine In America. Moover wax one of the men reaponalhle for ending me to prison because It wan to America's In- terest, und, not only that, but to the Interest of certain Amerlean cupitallnt, to have me Imprisoned no that Hoover could hack Firestone in Liberia In con- nection with the rubber lands, Iand which should have been dispuaed of to un by agreement with the Liberlan Government. When Firestone found there wan a poxalbllity of uw shortage of rubber In America and there wan nowhere where Amerlea could obtain rabber other than fran Bakland, they sent thelr commercial Invextisatorn nil over the world and they found that it was posalblo for rubber to be Krown In Liberts. Then Hoover backed up Hirentone to get the President of Liberia to «ive up the contract he had entered Into with me so that the Amer- ican Negrors could repatriate them: eclven and help dulld up Liveria 10 have = permanent and peaceful home of thelr own—Hoover ured his power v4 Secretary of Commerce not only to imprison me, but to take away from the Nexrors a concession that had | meen given to them and to xive It to. Firestone so that the natives of Liberia ‘ould be exploited for the beneft of | American capital. Two years after | “Ireatone went there he reduced the! ativen to virtual alavery: he got the Sovernment to use the natives to bulld onde to give access to his plantations: hey had to work without proper pro- alon for food and without any pay. fcover representa in American fe eople like that. Through my organization it te my ity. before God and before man, to ee to it that a man like that, If pos ible, to mot returned ax President of pe United States, auch a great country th ouch a great power that cin do 0 rach good or il. "That is why Tam | wr Smith, a mag who would not erate cosh a mdurog tw potttica: “a { man whe has been fair and square tal M hip dcslingn o Geverner of [ Gute. or y te rworene ap Saale off te reureee oe United Bates of Amerion af xt ebortiom oe In conclusion, Ged bless you English- en and women. I trust that you will t take any offense at anything I have fa to-day, What I have anid has en sald ao that you may adopt a!, icy and attitude to us Negroce be- | nt what is being done for them to. |* y. JF thank you, and God bless you, jf oud applause), ta Tf movies cause all the wickednors today, what caused {t In the old days When there were no moviex? —In- dianapolia Recorder. Prohibition Not Good For Chimese People, Says General Chisag | BHANGHAL—General Chiang Kat- sink, the boyish-leokiae wena led the southern forces from Cantem 1 meuat fod on te. Petings Gr Sacer tities eatinloniet He clon hae siewe on, prohibition of nlcnbonie afin, Tw aa nteretew wit Inc hesioulted Pipes be diactered’ eo Uncapected tumiliory hth the leven sence aid anata ot te Wore hn hate ucen eccing: diate, ee into Chinese life. He nfimits thet Snlue and power, but clings unwavers May tothe Uonlome and arte oe Nia awn Geant and in seine taaeanore tes sents the Ketrusion of Westera toons, 3 teelotaler and nou-tivebers Gens tral Chiang: in repelled. by the Ameria can institution of prohibition. Indul< cence or abstinence in regard to aleo= Rel or tobacco ls'a question fer such man to decide for himeelf, General Chiang believes. Personally, be has decided for abstinence. But, he added, mT rant be eutsusteatie shows eee American peohibttion, becawee it doce bl eect: te me thet ibe: Bist: com vatlale every pases of, the pivate ite of an individuals “We are a nation of individuaMets, and «ie not easily gove up our personal nclinations.” He aleo indicated « feol- ne 2hat such Interference, ie beneatts he dignity of government. “There ts 9 much for ws te do that te elemental n the reconstruction of the country hat we cannet afford time fer what ne must yeward as secondary ques- co Conditions bere are in a pretty bad mate whes a ition, 9 tax parer~ mot fool safe om the strests of th | toc tear that be will be arres' | aay aind of pretext, and tee | abueed, Joched up, ané beaten: | to thie the mettermnt | mma dems ont esate, Fer Mrs. Burten Advises Wemen on Motherhooé and Companionship “For eeverat yearn 1 was denied the dines tng of mutteriood™ ‘writes Wea. Markee ecroum ‘nds subject te pecioda’ et teint, suofing ana ‘meluncnoiite Airy tae tne. Soa's true coveparion and Inepiration We Ey Rseend.* T'°Ssliers “wewersee va ether Pitotn would sike te'xnow the secret of sty. Rappinern ana’! will ginaly roveat te any frerried woman. sho “wit efter maa” Mee, charge “ste_ par ectting tarmny Eaers Sneuld be adcrorsed to Mia Margaret Bere dna 26k” Sesvachuotta anaes "Chey, eo fon, 268, Mesrachusctta, Kansas City, Ma, «THE NEWS AND VIEWS$OF U.N. 1 A. DIVISIONS WQRRPMRS ARE REQUESTED TO MENTION THE NEGS ‘ WORLD WHY an ae NEWARK, NJ. Toesday evening, Reptember 16, will fang be remembered ir the history of Ge Universal Negro Improvement Ae- sertation of this clly. Long before 2 P.M. there was hardly atanding room mm Liberty Hall, 135 Broome street. file meeting wae staged in honor of the Men. FR. Knox, personal repre- evatative of the President General Bre news all through the day were Sithing hike lishtning and che ale war Geared with Garvesiom, AUS PM. Se meeting win called to orien to the firaine of "Rhine wn Terma Light.” The Universal African Lesions, hen ta by Major James, ted the procession: Band behind them cume the cholr Fee musical program win welleren- feeed' by, the Choir, Mian Teuvy Green drought down the noure when whe Fe- ied 32 versen of a poem written DY the Mon Marcun Garvey, entitled, ying and Ktealing Inthe White Man's Gare.” followed by a xalo. by Mire Madeline Amos, whe eeeelved freat_apolaure. A Tenesentative of She Democratic parts, Mr. Seandlor, enw next introduce. Tre President, Hon Chaclen Le amen, made the welcwine auldrest, Wels moming the Hon J I. Kowx to the Shy of Newark. Ant. Proweeutor Boe feck of Essex County siake with fers oe of the work of the Honorable Mar~ tus Garves, in uplift and in alonk political linea, ‘The prenident then in= Fedweed Hon. #1 Knox, the per= tous! representative of the greatent Meare in the worll, Mr. Knox Tone teiaet roaring applause und Kept hin tedience apelibound Cor fully 35 min five with hin famour subject, “What ( ellove.” He tn m worthy renresenta~ five of the Honorahie Marcun Garvey. Weeting case to x clone with the Ethio~ pian Anthem The attention of the members of thy Daivereal Nearo Improvement Anso- tiation and the public in general is tatled to the inct that one of the Shiest statesmen of America, firm ad- gecate of Negro Nattonsilsm, will ad frase the Newark Division on Hunday shermeon, September 39, at 3 o'clock. ‘Feere in no question about Judge Rita's teterent in the ansocliticn. He ene ever failed to help in any way Neacinie the cause that has been 30 e0ty expounded by the Han. Marcus Garvey. Judge Nicholas Klein ts able exponent of justice and ee ef the most helpful agents “madera. society, which ia opposed ystems alon oppreceors of ker peopien of the worlt. Whom | “Set Atma loc Dahind th qeue- Garay, 1 was Judes ‘we weteed bis protest alas sat epeatattionrs ie white 2 "tap mptens ot Negroes SE tab wet Ghat fereed the oon we (Qrecenting him to the en- of Mewarx and nearby ‘ail reads on Runday, Sep-| 9, lead to Liberty Hall, 135) ‘treet, Newark, N. J. | "Thie doctrine must be preached the porld over. | SUNNIE BLAND. . ieoneie COLUMBUS, OHIO A very Interesting ard onthe stasrte Sunday aftcrnoun sss meeting wos Rela at Liberty Hall, Ctumtors, Obie Funday, September 16. Music wan ren fered by the Juntor Cuctr of the Di- vision. The front pase nuvvoxe of The Negro World wan read by Mrs. Lotte Holmer, followed by the ninsing of the “President's Hymn.” Short addrenses: were delivered by Rev. Krenshaw and Rev. Draper. The Indies of the divi- lon, xponxored by the lady President. Bra, Nettle Perry, were very auc= eeastul tn thelr pew rally on that tay. Dr. C. Deflontesto nf Indinnapolts was a visitor at our meeting and made the principal nédrrax touching upon the welfare of the arvoclation. Atter the principal addrean wan delivered. the Chaplain, Kes. Draper, braurht the meeting to 4 close with singing the “Ethiopian Anthem.” and henedie tion. MES. FRED FE. JOUNSON. Keporter. The most fraviring mass meeting of the Garvey Club tovk place on Sun- fay afternoon, September 16. The apie ft of the members and visiting fricadn @s sunt wonderful, Much of thir Jub!- lant spirit was due to the addressen of the Hon, EB. Knox delivered in New York on September 2 und The information carried in these wo addreaven stirred the members to wuch fan extent that they ruterribed and pent off $44 to Hon, Marcus Garvey to~ wade the “Hackinan” ond atirted reining fundn to send their president te Toronto, Canuda, when Mr. Garvey expects to lay plans for the reat In- ternatio@il Convention in 1929. Surely te was wonderful to be in such a xroup ef wing workers. Mra. Frances Wil ama gave the fest $5 towards the qupence of the deleeste's trip in Oc- tuber. (Owe meeting wan culled to order at he ween! hour. The devotional ex- greiess were carrini) throuh und SPed Bless Our Hrewident™ wax lustily gang. The opening uddrees was de- fiveres by the president. He dealt “Pee alge of the Times” and how unrag the wiite world Desembe the Nesro, through the Yagre Improvement Ansocia- 2 ptirring bimeelt and demanding mearece Our club te work- ent day 00 thet K may ad- y. Bitrving obéremees were the coverel speakers and tergetion mevting closed Poe commsriax. reporter. TORONTO, CAN. Sunday, Sept. 16, was the informal ‘opening of the spacious community Rall of the U.N. 1. A. ‘The hall was tilled with the members, friends and well-wishers from far and near who came with one accord to celebrate the coming of Nexroes to the City of To- ronto, The hand wf the Buffalo Divt- non, C. A. Le. wan in attendance and rendered the musle for the oerunion Processional hymn, “Onward, Chels- tian Soldiers” wan led by the been of the Juventie department. followed by the cholr and the wfficora tw thelr re spective phices On the rostrum, were neuted the president and Luly frest dent of the Buffate Divinton, lusty prone Wert of the Montreal Division, Rev- erenda Jackson and Merenry, Captaln Mundy. D. 8. 0., managing editor Can- Ada'n Weekly Minin Journal, After dedication and prayer by the Reverend dackson, the president, 4. M. Halley. Introduced the mnster nf cere. montes, Mr. J. Be Stencer Pt. Ta le Bs whe eondueted the program an follows Hymn, “How Flea a foundation," Feeltation, Mise Mildred Jnckron. 5 ection, by tie band: reeitntion, Miss Rana Halley: chorus, ty the choir: Welcome address. hy: the president: se. Ieetion, by: the tand: short address on behalf of the chucches, Heverent Jnck = hon: Went xaos, Ms. Dwure, aveont= Ranied by Mrs. Erna Gabourel: ail rene, hy the Indy prentilent ty hehalt of the Inaten: chorus, by the Canndian Giri ip Trulning: brief remarks, ley Cantain Mundy, which were very ine teresting: relection, by! the band: mhort address, hy Mr. Dennin presl= dent, Tuffalo Division: vocal sole, Mx. unto Hunt, necompanted by Mra. Fron Gabourel; ahort addrene. by Men. E.R. Hodge. M,N. G., Household of Ruth. tn behalf of all the women's or- kanizations in the city: nelection. by the band: recitation, Mtn Bina Bailey. “Give Un Practice Now:" hymn, “All Praise to Thine Adoring Lord:" paper, by little Jean Fonter: vote of thanks, by Mr. B. J. Rpencer Pitt. ‘The meet- ing clored with the singing of the na- onal anthem, “O. Canada.” and ‘Ethiopia. Thou Land of Our Fathers.” The afternoon wax a pleasant one and will be remembered by all At $:45 p.m, the meeting opene? with the singing of the ode, “From Greenland's Icy Mountains.” followed by prayer and scripture lesson by the chaplain. ‘The program was conducted by Mr. Pitt. ‘The opening remarks were given by the peaaident, who spoke briefly on ‘Choose Whom Ye Will xerve: na for, Me and My Hover, I will Serve the WN. 1 As" recilation Miss Ruby Braithwaite; brief remarks, Mr. Georne Creckendale: hymn, “O Ged Our Help m Agee Past:” address, Mr. A. 2. Hel- ter; anthem, by the chor: s/dreen, nS Scott; vidtin sola, by Mester Ivaw Bralthwelte, scosmpantd..., Mica Myrtle Braithwaite: address, Mrs, Jullan, lady president, Montreal Divinion: vocal soto, Mra, West, ac- companied by Mra. Erna Gabourel; prief remarks, Sr. Oxborna M. Silko: vocal nolo, Mrs, Deore, accompanied ny Mrs. EL Gabouret, ‘The snnaunee- | nents for fie coming week ween given | raul the moctlig closed with the sng ne of the National Anthex. j SOMICHARL, Kemates. | CLEVELAND, OHIO The Cleveland Division hel tne ree Hive aase meeting at Liwets 1a na Last Fortleri street, Sanday, September 1, ‘The meeting enened promptly at p.m. The pracesstonal wan led by the Unifermed Ranks, nd the Universal Chole, whore voices swelled to the notes of “Shire on Kier ral Light.” The epening ode was runs and the Lords’ Prayer was repeated. The opening addreaa wan delivered by our vlee-president, Mr. Ren Harzison and the meeting wan turned over to the president, Mr. SV. Robertson. Firat on the program wax the read- Ing of the President-General’s mesxoK Dy Miny Josephine Merri, “God Bless Our Tresiitent" wan sung by the audl- ence, Jed by the choir, Me, Roberteon was master of ccremonies and Intro: duecd for the frat apouker of the eve. ning Mr. Nun, of Miles Helchta Vit- Inge; hin aubsect was “Unity.” Miles Melgtas tsa small village recently wet up by the Hon, 8 V. Robertson and tx atiil doing splendid under the lender~ ship of Mr. Nun, thelr president. Ad= dren by Rev, Buber, from Virginis who made an enthusinatle talk, The Universal Chole rendered meveral bray Uful aelections, Their voices are im- proving much under the Instructions of Professor Wiliams and thete able preaident, Mra, Luin Towngelt. The principal address was delivered by the president of the Cleveland Diver, Mr. Robertaan He atntned every nerve within him to get Iie add chee, which wan partly mixed with white visitors, to understand that we, the black face, have but one goal be- fore ur, and that is a homeiand for four hundred million Negroes the world over. He cloned amidst loud ap- pluune. Mr. Robertson just recovered from a local operation of the throat, but fs now doing fine and fn back on the trail of “Africa for the Africans at Home and Abroad.” ‘Attorney Peter Boult wax then ine troduced and after a few remarks In troduced Mr. Peter Witt, an ex- councilman, Mr. Witt's whole subject wan “What the White Man Thinks of the Negro,” and he pointed out to the audience that he would would be free must strike the firat blow, He made t piaia that the average white man te not going to fight the Nexro's battle. Mr. Witt ts a very broad and plain- soeaking gentioman. ‘The meeting came ton close with the singing of the national anthem, “Kuhtupia.” LOUIE EDWARDS, Reporter. CIEGO DE AVILA, CUBA A red letter night was apent in the Clego de Aviia division of the U. S. 1. A. on Sunday, Beptember 19, when the Indien of the division took charae of the program, The proceedings for the night were much to the credit of the ludien It ahowa a new tide of Improvement. Tha xcene in the hall wenn A Deautiful one, nince It WAR R spectat night net apart (o help the Hon, Mareun Garvey tm carry an core tan werk In Kurone, The townnhty turned ont ty nee the tallest gestae netivities, The meethue starter) in tts intial way. The well-knawn hymn, “Shine On, Kternsl Light.” wie munMR Hhile the oflcers and the different Dultx in thelr ruben af affiee marched te their different poxta. The Chaplain, Mi. Laither Turke, conducted the des Votional exerciser, Subteatient to thin the Preaident gave explination af the Meeting nnd inteadsiced the misters of Seremnnlen in the person sf Mine M. Te A Ssdnev, In her metest way she gave mich for thomght, ‘The pre- Ream wae ie fallwa: Some Wy the hal: adress hey Mien Wo owes ade dress he Mew A. Hurke: mildronn by Minx Marie Robertx; recitation by Master David Dimestsle: note toy Mn Ethet Cohen: address fey Minw Wy Harty; address by Men. N. Onborne: | ilo nnd nddrers Wey Mien RM Thennas: niddrenn by Mrs. FE. Vino, “Teennure; none be the whole: l= arern by Mem M. Linton: awtdrenn bs Mine RR, Virgo, Secretary of Wom- en's Department: recitation by Mis Lulu Linton. ‘The Iadien were much to he thanked, The mintrens of cere manten envn a forceful nddrena th her cloning, and asked the Indien to con- tinue with the same spirit. xo that in time to come thes will be able to eave their footpgints Dehind. The Prenident, Mr. T. TH. %. Onborne, gave the notices for the week. The suc- renaful mane meeting came to Itw close with benediction and our National anthem ALRERTHA RYDNEY. Reporter. OAKLAND, CAL. Santas paprember rence a FG aay tor the spread ‘of the doctrine cance The bender eat ceecting ae bad at Wonderiand Gare Gene, tiat Avenue and E.ldth treet tm the Desutlfut, dance. ball. at. the ‘above named park owned and coa- Gotied by Mr. Carter, m consclentious ruce man, ‘The purpose of the mevt- ing. ar elated ny the Preaident. Mev- qesad CA. Davin, of the Oakland Sivtlen, was to asqeatet the, Newre voters with issues im the coming Presidentia] campaign which affect OUT 4f@, fo wate enable them te fatetigentiy cart hele vote in tho November election. “AN whe slirnara tin sheeting are steed thet 10 ald ou fat) of tee pore Sie: A Riers ietrerst an qnboned Ag manifested by the many expressions Chenoa she see Rin, age Mon, © Gitte, Lake Preanbints soa promis hctp Soa Te ea An. tepereantsuenion oii ee ie aul ducing the Mteeteetnat Qowt Br, SE St Hats ha topeoeraten the Deincctatle Paige im te arboter wae neat ts penis Se sees porno Inn sory bacltay wear sehe the Heart mould vote tee Ste AY Emit te bes Einnlna bie Sette Uhr hone Wits He tpstienet (HE sates for: Hecoldent Ie Tice, ile te We Rear inst ie soe Ine tee Geen ya omen dee sats fvom the Geoutliegnite Goo Pemes wiatie Euagy Aad tie Ghep anLeg me Accorlne te the hearre mrptvuee and reafonne given Sie. Hatch. he seemed to have impressed his hearers, nad cir, Hatch: roe teteconiiog Ketee the aehatere hd fubshed Sime, Aa, Robertson, lecturer’ and. oreaniaee ef tie Cone has eye lewoseny ine Hraherteon'e Wil couchidedl he tres gram, Shc made sIccne appeal to the meh to get: tonetheg Si Rl | protection tie shy amen at tae sake ax the white man hax done for hin! waren: "Stor, Robsatnon in oie ot the grentert ames Iestursrs tial Mi coor come to the Pacife Count, re scot (wo weeks WN the Gablond Dieter, After. her oildrean the meeting, ne | jocrned.” Man @iendn’ cromaed to maak banda with hee end to bid her] eodcnnn anv Onion the i co to the Hakersnesd Divina of the 1, A. and shen to Low Anerion Cine. BATEEA Cre ee ST. ANN BAY, JAM. The Bt. Annin Ray Disirlon of the Universal Negro Improvement Assos ciation, under the presidency. of % H Beecher: Hobo. test vice-prent dent; B. Huy, chairman of the hoard of trustees. "Toncher Johnnon. Metin secretary. Althount the enenen {rem within and withont. try. thelr nee to hamper is, tepecialy mon whe Pro: fean that they Tove Marcon Garvey, we are progresting. Tut in spite of that we are carrying on.” We are. not cowards. ‘We have monte, and nothing can break the opitit of our maniinees We are presared. to. Tani. the pond fant. 7. i. MECH Tenure. KGL. fa oeaiae Meath: tae poonoae after Prestdeut hed discussed Kinston’s latest eylrage—committed agninst a Negro wean, whem Police- man Fvane wnaneretfulty beat—he conducted the opening exerciaes. The front page of The Wegre World was read, atter which “Ged Bisse Our Preei- dent” wan joyfully gung. Then Mr. Rebert Mitchell started the proxrum with @ great address on the mibject, “Chagteg at Home Spreads Atwoad." When geterences had been male to the egtrage above micn- Moned, Analatamt Geeretary David Warren recommended to the divinion that an Investigation Into the affair oo made. The merting wae turned over to the Luly prenident, whe gave some prac- Heal suxgentions te members, and slis ano presented @ woman's day pro- Krum an follows: Address, “Women un Sponsors of Orgamdgatton.” by Mex. E. J. Wade; addrems, “Be Not Dismayed.” by Mrs, Lulu samltm; gong, led by: Mex, Mansy Pope, whe presented rome of woman's accomplistments: nolo by Mra. LJ. Bryant; @ Seriptural reading hy Mex. Mary” Shepherd: xdivess, “The Prophesy.” Wy Mra. Sorsh Sut~ ton: voral munie, a trie, led by Mex Surah Solomon, ‘Tl@n the lady peext~ dent nade m peoatlgg arrahsement of cvery male person! prasent. It fol- lowed that whew mate person was ned up ina t Ine, he wan anked to aay at long “wo words” rein tive to women. Xen chose a Qe peoxram se. Hntert FR. Haye charge of the meeting. parsed into a discussion Drought forth numerous sumwestioes With the usual cloning exerclese & vas adjourned. If uretul aumKestionm, ga given to the or- rantzation, are this division | In well on the way € advancement. DAVID PRABREN, Reporter. NUEVERSS, CUBA The Nueviqas Division held tts weekly masa meuiing at Liberty Hall on Sunday, Septangfer . A very larae qathering was goupent. The meeting was a twofold ome “During the meet Ing the offeers WMMM were elected on Wednesday. Seggaagier Sth. to direct the destiny ef @ip division for the next twelve were being in- stalled. Tho was called to ‘order at 8:30 eur venerable choirmaster, Min Gh M. Stephenson, whe took as Me $fit the werds te be found im the jet Juagen, 11, 35, 1 theve mouth ato the Lord and 3 wm beck” The a wet tn te sacred meres to. take ‘ot the Brent conareantion, @ hymn the tn- atallatin of eflibers wae begun. -The [omcera were eetorind'to the restrom ‘by the major, eaptain and private of ‘the legtonz to fake thelr, oaths, which were adminitered by Me. 8. 3 Stephenson sad Mr. R. Kins. ex-preut- dent of the Vertlentex Division. ‘The pamen of the elected oMlecrs ure an folluwn: ME, W. HL Holton, president: Mr. Ta I. MeKenale, first vice-prest= Hentz Mr. B. Caxcoe, 2nd vlea-presl= ent; Mes, M. dames, lady president: Mr. J.C. Pitter, exeeutlva wecretary: Mr. G. Meturh, general xeerotary: Mrs, Th. AMithwood. treasurer; Mise M. Vurrows, assietant treanurer: Mr. It Henry, chateman ef trustee board: My. \) Lawrence, seeretary of trustes Hee Movers, Sinphenton and Kine al all In thei power to make thin Instatla- ton a very impressive one which heais much presure on the community at trae. The ringing of a hynin browche the rellstown aide af the yen Bram toa clase, ‘The paecterted prest= dent, Ms. W, Tf. Bolton, was vailed to wecupy the char, He then, ina verd eter nedrese, thanked the menihers for tate qust support and promised to Five hie best In the future, A song sas then rendered by the choir, Afties, Awaketa"” after whieh the front page of The Negro Warkt wax reat lay the executive secretary. Mr. J. C. Vitter, followed by a nang by the choir. “Our Mission Today." The lady president, Mra M. James, war the next mpeaker, She promincd toy stand with the captain te help stesr the noble flip through the storm, Thin wan followed by an ad@rean by Mr. P| Henry, ehatrman of the truntee bes, whe determined to take as many pas eenern aboard the xteat whip which we have floated and guarantes that they will be Ianded gafe at Port Suc- | The executive meeretary, Mr. J.C.’ Pitter, promised to be true to him: | Reif, his people amd iis Ginx. Zur. C. Meltugh, general eeeretary, will not | fall to eatlter in laberers into the vine: | yard. The same determination was exprenaed by Mr. A. Lawrence. The solr rendered a figa anthem’ “Sing- ng and Pratsing.” feblowed by an ad- arean by Me. PF. : sone by choir, “We Blom Day by Day:” address, Mr. Re ox-peenident, Vertientes Di ‘Tle marked the rmination of the sAfter the | receipts of thy ‘were announced the last verse of ibe Ethiopian Na- Jonal Anthem @ well-spont mecting to & om menecter LOOK! @t LOVE RING Gogred Ber, So he eee at po ar} mares ope oe Kaxn mo = ian. a + eee we NEW ORLEANS, LA. New Orleans Division, U. N. 1 A. opened and dedicated ite Free Com- munity Medical Clinte on Sunday, September 14, at 2:30 p.m. Croman thronged. Liberty Hall” to view the splendid and well equinped office and operating room prepared by the Black Crom Nursen under the aupervision of Dr J. J. Detern, Dr. Horton and. the lomcini staff, ‘The promram war an followa: Processional by the U.N I ‘A. Chole: opening ede by the anseme tiv eltuutiatic exerelgen hy the chan: [taln, Mr, damen Reeds welcome adrens "hy Dr. dy de Deters: election hy the LOrtental Wt Choir; ‘addvess by Me {Wines, “Phyalral Director of the Y. M.'G. Av; sole by: Mw Bren Carpen [ter: brief addrenn by Mr. Cornetlux [Sharn: chorun by, Fitth B.C. Cholrt [addreen by rot. C. M, Colladny: per= Hrentation of Pr. Horton: presentation fof the key to. Dr Morton by Dr Peters’? annauncementa: mala sddrern by ev, Willlum Jehnmn. The meeting cloned with the winging of the Ethieptan National Anthem snd benediction. by The, chplatn M"Newe Ortenna Divinlon, 12. No. As fave A monleal Bromram durin the fia meeting on Sunda: night, See tember 8, whitch way am fllaner: Selon Un by the Runner Orchestral. eelees Uon tye the chete: violin relectian by Me. Wittinin Re! reudline af the men: are of Hon. Marcum Carvey. hy. Me TC. Cooper: nolo by Slaw Hazel Fe Hawking: recitation by Miss Lucite E Hawkina: selection by the chotr: relec= tlon by the Banner, Orchestra: violtn neiection by. Mr. William Rae. Carter, which Broweht the prosram to an end. The mecting continued with m very Ine spicing address by Dr. J.J. Petern, He Kent the audience apeilbound we he ex: pounded the historical happenings of the pant and compared therm with the work that Hon, Mercue Garver tr now doing. Hin address. contained. much food for thought. Rriet address. by Prof. Joshua Buttler waa followed hy the offering: announcementa: sinRin of the Eihlopian National anther, led by Rev. Ru D. Hawking, Wa are pleased to announce that on Monday night, October 1, « grand cow yeme dance ‘and. barbecue will. bo riven in the garden of Liberty Hall Ail nelghboring divivion, membere. and wellcwishers are cordially invited, Thore will be lots of food and lots of fun for every one, #0 don't mise the reat. = LUCILLE B. HAWKIXS, Bacerioks SAVANNAH, GA. Bie vee ate yes aia, 2 ‘TDeMeoe Epimber ‘® great treat Sar et eee eee Georgia. She arrived in the city a Sco aten, The bis mass mertine wan staged denkina, View Preadent: auet, Mra. Brown ont Mra Wilson: seietion, A. | ey emo er Le eae te ters on es ey i he Stew seen Se at tation mt cas ee eles sv eos oo meeting. The A. C. L. Quartette ren- nang ree ae] Sina Cima oma oe Moser = Se usar mam con, al For Those Who Know Paes ee Sa eS be = . SPECIAL NOTICE! !. ‘ Scare Sra Fund of the Benorable Marcus ‘apgeeeie*” + serviess and snerifices for Regre ‘All members and friends tlens to Birthday Fund to cotative of ho Senet | - ew York City. ee ee ject ound your . company ome Bi = Z 3 a a ‘The eficers, members and friends of the Beene Del Tere Division No. 4 Kot together and celebrate the forty- first aniversary of the great leader on the 17th night of August. It was done Im the form of a. plenle-dance beautifally arranged for the occasion and was enjoyed with great satiatac- Hon. ‘The Sunday night masse meeting on August 19 waa well attended, ‘The regular proxram of surge, addresses, nulow util duets was nicely rendered, and the Presitent General's messare from the front page of The Negro World was listened to with rant atten: tim, all looking forward with eaxers news to hear shout the work of the reat leuler in Europe, Wa regret very much to report the death of Mr. William D, Porter, one of our newly-clected trunters, who was wounded hy dvnamite on the 20th day Of August, He waa taken to the United Fruit Company's hoapltal at Almirante, and an Angust 28,21 p.m. hie peansed airy, suid was elven a fine TNUL A. funeral by the Boean Del Tore Division Mr. Porter waa 4 rall- rouler, carpenter and farmer. — He Wan ine ie military man. He xerved in the Rritiah West tia Regiment for 12 years, He same from Wert= morefand, Jamates. Bo Woo The Bocas Del Tore Division begs tie ten- ter ite sleopesteympathy to the hen reaved family xt home and abrad, ARCHIBALD LAIDLEY, Reporter, | NEW HAVEN, CONN. ee eck a er Se ve ee sie fete ree Tees Sree a rere oy at sce phe alee Se” said eet Te eos asseee woe ree him to speak at length. However, the memagn be brought to ue sank tate the hearts of ‘eval Garveyites, who we Nae ore Serer see fare eh reertet oe reg etre gly ES ceaee , eate knchem. “Einlopia” The Souths Haltmore Chapter cele- trated Woman's Day on September 16, We opened by marching in atnsing Shine On, Eternal Light" Thea we went through our pening exereines. The ex-View Lady Preaident of the Mahetelnila Division read he front Bigs wf The Negeo World, The water ig nldrese wae dettvered by Mra. Tdlenman, The program was as follows: Paper ly Mra. Sleipplo; sie by Moss Cures TM: anieotion by the duvesiie Chote, Mra dobrson gave a Veey enesuractiue speech. Mea, Hattle Johnsen, the Lady Prewent ef the Haltinore Pyvision, save us a very on- cawacing tlk, Mrs, Whitaker wan Hoe promipal speaker of tie evening, We allentesed her rerarie, ge hid a solo by My, Hh Smuith, fallowed by two interesting papers by Mrs. Couch and Mis, Sith. After « recttation by Mrs, illi-a Turner, we elosed* by marehins aut sining “God Bless Our Pevstde nt.” A. SMITH. fteporter, gpa) eyes AT 44 a mh Caan ae QE ee cry ate ea a TS PN ee a rine 3 la’ Bs Sofas GLA” ES EIS : Stag ee 12 ie Seat ee Pears, Gon Fourrpaae becrasoe Seb ee iy ieee, tarts soe ae Stell pt fat riotls Ee (ing mennite DRAW Gon LEC QUICK) sion hy aswhtaty SO 321 preety” Dont a nee Verte. WARD LUCK? ONT wen ictn. 5 wast 1 oo wavs yon’ nae wiki 80, e chet Lage cas zen tare Soa, ine ae yt chee gate Ses Bors, REP MERT TALE atts” Caisces, Moris, DAT 346 Indiana 0 BROOKLYN, LY. ‘The East Brooklyn Cha;‘er, Me. 64 of the U. N. 1. A, has won fer itedtf se ae ray Brooklynites, who, on Sunday, Sept. 16, stood admiringly viewing with Ne pee freclions tion and parade as it moved through claiming to the worki that the spirit ching her nt at Sea 3 line Semen are in mao impression. The weather waa fair and Build” . wi gin mad er aaron a my ating eam i oh eae Ingram arnt a cui tr" hv at mr ahem rm es sone Go Ont Ge Ser eam tn ea ewe Renee mnie coke adie sree pwn oy fae tao pentation of chairman, Ma. Mile I remarks by the chairman. Mr. cai i tre of our constitution by Mr. BH. Dal Mise Honorable or) ro ‘Eleteath “ Assembty Set eee See Borougt of Brooklyn, by Mr. Ec Sue Be Beare Cum nse ited to fr ge tna ee is eeeenemloe orate Oriental Magic Loadstone Uy BES : Mite Pe, Fhe fo jut Bi We what yoo want s Cae & Z Ee ery nine SG chet hank s gas and nace Bow fe feae Tour pockets Kooi” SPS Teenie Betis 1 to have ther power of ariling away seit tai"chmvrnline mavanec tthe oposite Sot Hse Wheel tue SPeet leg that are acon LoS Ein tet “Grewal State: nations air BS Farr raat. se aot funretiatay, CREO STN va tor Four money returned, With your etder we TAIT site''Sond you cur free Book af lucky urntore, tacky Saye nnd uncteds of esctete tevBceans Wenthy and, iggninea. When Bbotinany datlvere this” big Tee goctan™ Eres Aetatiaattee UEydar te Sia ° SC REEVES Co. mops, pasee Wali Timeadee Aver Pobre For WOMEN Oaly why morey atom Delayed Portada rom FEMINTES' tiguie.Sitsat Reuse Unga OF Boctorn soves stars ieee neerdea.” Poawse Ex Datea "mate seereteness. teatmncee Sdliataction Otaaatesd” 8290, Cua oe Postage entre 1G. Onb. iterates P Pecan erect, Regn poe Womens Dept sn. Wee " NECESITAN HOMBRES Y MUJERES QUE PRES- TEN SERVICIOS ALTRUISTAS A LA CAUSA DE AFRICA Murcos Garvey dice que despares de diez años de prepara- clón, la U. N. L. A. se propone a ejecutar sus planes El famoso leader tiene gran fé en el éxito final del programa Se acerca el tiempo cuando nos comprometamos en el esfuerzo determinado de hacer resaltar y hacer una realidad el programa de la Asociación Universal para el Mejoramiento de la Raza Negra. For espacio e más de diez años hemos estado ocupados con la tarea de la preparación y hoy estamos totalmente despiertos y vivos y seguros de la responsabilidad en el ejecución de las cosas que hemos decididos hacer como el objeto de nuestro deseo. Se necesitan fuertes mentes y grandes sorazones Mi turné europea está al terminarse, y regreso hacia vosotros, a ustros cuarteles generales, para ejecutar los planes que deben seguir a nuestros actividades preparatorias. Nosotros necesitamos hombres y majeres para que lleven a cabo todos los planes que tenemos delante de si. Este el tiempo cuando necesitamos el enlistamiento de hombres y mujeres efectivos baio el bendener de la U. N. L. A. Yo me uno en oración con L. hombres traicioneros, hombres deshonestos; hombres de peques corazones. No necesitamos de ellos en la hora presente ni en el futuro. Necesitamos solamente aquellos en quiens podamos depender, quellos que serán nuestros pilotos en la tormenta de la vida; hombres que no flaqueen; hombros que no teman morir. La causa del Africainiebera llevarse a las cuatro esquinas del globo. Todo puede llevarse a cabo a esperanza grande de ver casi todas un tiempo razonable si todos trabajan de Africa, las Indias Occidentales, Si s juntos en este programa de nosotros damos presentar al mundo, no sola se respete a simismo, una raza capa quir esto. Hemos puestos los cimientos seguramente vamos a eregir una e un placer para cada uno do nosotros causa. Ha sido el places de otros hor isas para ayudar en la edificacion de me que los inste a que os dediqueis a s al fin y a la postre redunde en benefic questro nombre sino también al nombre amorirá, pero vivirá eternamente en e Yo abrigo la esperanza grande de ver casi todas las cosas terminadas dentro de un tiempo razonable si todos trabajamos juntos. Si los hombres negros de Africa, las Indias Occidentales, Sur y Centro America trabajesemos juntos en este programa de nosotros, no veo la razon el porque no podamos presentarles al mundo, no solamente una Nación sino una raza que se respete a simismo, una raza capaz. Vamos a trabajar por conseguir esto. Hemos puestos los cimientos para diez años de edificación, y seguramente vamos a eregir una estructura que sea duradera. Seria un placer para cada uno de nosotros cumplir con nuestro deber con esta causa. Ha sido el places de otros hombres y mujeres el hacer grandes cosas para ayudar en la edificación de grandes naciones suyas. Permitidme que los inste a que os dediqueis a servir sin egoismo, que ese servicio al fin y a la postre redunde en beneficio y añada lustre, no solamente a vuestro nombre sino también al nombre de la raza, servicio que jamás morirá, perc vivirá eternamente en el marmol y en al bronce. Gran monumento a los ilustres muertes A medida que pasaamios por toda la Europa, vimos los monmentos por toda la Europa, vimos los monumentos de marmol y bronce erregidos a los grandes hombres y mujeres' que han servido y caido en la poderosa cruzada de hacer nacones. Podemos duplicar estos monmentos con los servicios que hegamos a nuestro pais y a nuestra raza. El negro no tiene Panteon donde el puede nostrar el astranjero y al visitante los restos de sus muertos consagrados. Lo italianos, los alemanes y los franceses pueden hacerlo. Con nuevo valor y determinacion nosotros podemos hacer lo propio en el futuro. Ello queda en ustedes el hacerlo. En cualquier parte del mundo donde es encontrte podeis prestar vuestro servicio. No hay nada que haya hecho el otro hombre, puede podrais no hacer. Que las vidas de los otros hombres os recuerde que podeis hacer vuestras vidar sublime, de manera que vosotros alnorir podais dejar huellas en las arenas del tiempo. De la misma manera Napoleon ha dejado sus huellas para los franceses; Bismarck, para los alemanes; Gladstone, para los ingleses; y Lincoln, y Washington para las americanos; por consiguiente vosotros podeis dejar vuestras huellas para los africanos. Hombres negros, vosotros debeis levantaros a la altura de la ocasion Dios es ha dado al mundo para algo, no solamente para ser cortadores de árboles y cargarlos de agua; no solo para ser síervos y esclavos, sino como hombres y no como hombres comunes. Algunos de los hombres que se han levantado en las épocas pasodas han sido hombres que han comen durante el ditimotramo de la caesara; hombres que viven en hombres humildes, pero hombres cuyas ambiciones fueron muy grandes que contribuyen el valor para seguir adelante y conquistar. Si sus hombres han sido grandes cosen por su rama y sus pañales, permitid me puns que ocurre en dirección. Yo tengo la seguridad y la esperanza que vosotros han tener lo mismo que han hecho los otros hombres. Os comino dicho desde adelante en el nombre de la U. N. I. A. y conquistar. Soy racista y no lo migo, al a esta tímulo se, le da su verdadera aceptación y no la que, por error 6 meidad, lo can. Mi racismo tiene la magestad de las cosas grandes y bellas y la santidad de lo noble sentido por el humano y practicado con gentileza. Los negros debemos sentir orgullo de nuestro color; debemos sentir orgullo y amor por nuestra raza y, todo lo grande, todo lo noble, ha de ser nuestra inspiración, para honrarla y acrecentar su valor. La creación de un estado negro independiente y ponderoso, debe ser la aspiración de todo hombre negro que, con juicio sereno, sin puerrier temores e inspirado en altos ideales, se estime como tal y sepa aquilatar lo que ello, para nosotros representa. Pero, seria conveniente aclarar, que, si su aspiración gira alrededor de posibles represalias o de pesimismos indociles, no valdria la pena algun esfuerzo, por cuanto que, para perpetuar la injusticia del humano contra el humano, para no aportar una esperanza de tregua en la implacable lucha de la doliente humanidad, nada debe intentarse, nada debe conmovemos. Jadean por audefnarse del corazón de la humanidad, ideas varias que la agitan y que, como los fenómenos seismicos, la convulsionan violentamente, por etapas. Los latidos de los corazones, ais- Expert to Study Trees at Clearing for Firestone Rubber Grove NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 20.—Yale University, through a representative of its Forestry School, is to co-operate with the Firestone Plantations Company in an extended scientific investigation of the woods and forests of Liberia. G. Froctor Cooper, field assistant in tropical forestry at Yale, has left New Haven for Liberia to handle part of the work there. Present plans call for an investigation to cover a period of several months or a year. The work is to be done under the supervision and direction of Professor James W. Eiberd, head of tropics for the Woods at Fahn, but his water the whole field暮暮. room for rubber mats will be easy to store, being made of the woods, together with specimens of leaves, flowers and fruits that will be necessary for the identification of the trees. It is planned to place this botanical material in special presses and to dry it over portable stoves so that it can be shipped to this country without being destroyed by the mold and decay of the moist tropics. Since there is no one in America who is familiar enough with African plants, Professor Record, who recently returned from England, made arrangements with the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew to have the specimens identified by experts. WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—The Radio Corporation of America received short wave band privileges to open communication with Liberia following a hearing today before the Federal Radio Commission, at which it was stated that President King, of Liberia, had asked the State Department for improved radio facilities between the two countries. Colonel Manton Davia, appearing for the Radio Corporation, pointed out that Liberia was seeking a clearing house for its international message traffic and that unless the United States acted to offer this service a European agency would be asked to set it up. Such a plan, the commission was told, would deprive this country of communication with Liberia. Plans for building the needed facilities will be started at once where they were left off last July when the commission indicated its disposition to disapprove the award of the short wave band for the Liberian channel. DRAW ANYTHING YOU WANT TO AUTHOR: BENNETT BURGESS DESIGNER: JOHN MAYER COPYRIGHT: 1971 AMC LITTLE ROCK 1971 AMC LITTLE ROCK Past G.O.P. Attend to Porto Mineiro Reserves Professor Hinggings WASHINGTON, MARYLN. - Herbert Heaver's attitude toward Porto Mineiro affair is tended toward in a letter addressed to the Secretary of the National Committee by Chairman Thomas E. Benner, of the University of Porto Rise, who suggested that he would like to know how the government would deal with the Porto Mineiro before he feels free to complain about it in the present Postal Commission. "I am a member of the Confederation and have always been a member of the Association, a Representative of the People, and a Member of the People." Chancellor of this institution, I have been forced to observe that the Republican Administration in Washington, as regards this island where citizens are citizens of the United States, does not regard these citizens as 'American interests,' but does speak frequently of 'American interests in Porto Rico,' with reference to the sugar and tobacco corporations. "To witness the injustices which have grown out of that myriad is to force one to ask one's self whether the same thing may not be true of the policy of the Republican Administration regarding public affairs in the continental United States." Australian Women SYDNEY, N. E. W., Sept. 12.—Both New South Wales and the Federal territory of Canberra declared overwhelmingly against prohibition in the referendum taken yesterday. In New South Wales State 818.812 votes were cast against prohibition and 229.941 for it. In not a single electoral district were a dry majority. An unknown quantity had been the women's vote in the industrial areas, but this must have been cast solidly against prohibition, which gained its highest vote in fact in some of the best residential suburbs. Canberra decided on a licensing system for controlling liquor sales, only 193 votes having been cast for prohibition. Under Ground Treasures HOW AND WHEN TO FIND THEM LET ME HUNT A new book by the author of "The Treasure Hunt" will be published this month. The book is a thrilling adventure that will take readers on a journey through the treasure hunt world. The author, a former police officer, has spent years searching for hidden treasures in the United States. The book is a must-read for anyone interested in the mystery of the treasure hunt. The book is written in a lively and engaging style, with a mix of humor and adventure. The author has used a variety of techniques to create a sense of excitement and suspense. The book is also well-researched and well-organized, with a clear and logical structure. The book is available in a variety of formats, including paperback, hardcover, and e-book. It is also available in a number of languages, including English, Spanish, French, and German. The book is a great addition to any library or bookstore. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the mystery of the treasure hunt. GENEVA, Sept. 29.—A fantastic Arabian Nights tale of poisoning and oppression at the Court of Ras Taffari, regent of Abbasinia, was laid before Major Johnson, one of the British officials of the International Labor Bureau, today. The complainant was Dr. Alexander Garabedian, an Armenian, now without a country but holding a so-called League of Nations identity card. Dr. Garabedian's charge, in brief, is that he was asked by Ras Taffari to conceive at the poisoning first of Ras Taffari's mother-in-law, then on the Empress, a daughter of former Emperor Menelik. When he refused, he may, he was persecuted, exiled, imprisoned, broken in health and materially ruined, for all of which he claims damage of $120,000. Dr. Garabedian cities as witnesses the staff of the American Mission Hospital at Addis Abeda, and especially the English lawyer, T. R. S. Praser, said to be a member of the American Association of International Law, who recently visited Abyssinia. Armenian's Story Dr. Gerabedian, after escaping from Abyssinia, arrived in Geneva eighteen days ago. His story, which the correspondent has seen in writing and heard verbally, may be summarized as follows: His family was massacred by the Turks. He came to Europe, was graduated in medicine at Lausanne, served in the Lausanne Hospital, then in the French Hospital at Heraclea, Artz Minor, and then in 1922 went to Addis Abeba to establish a practice among the large Greek and Armenian population there. Immediately he fell afoul of a rival Greek doctor, against whom he makes serious charges, but he persisted, was successful, and was treated politely by Ras Taffard, eventually being named chief surgeon of the Moneik Hospital. But Ras Tafari, who on the death of Emperor Mendik in 1916 forbly occupied the throne from his court, Prince Yasson, the emperor's grandson and rightful heir, desired, it is said, to become emperor, but has two powerful opponents, both women. They app his mother-in-law, who also becomes editor, and the emperor Mendik himself. HUMAN FOOD AND THE FOOD that in food is said to be easy because of the large quantity of red pepper used, which conceals odd taste. Mother-in-Law Died Two years ago the royal mother- --- Regardless of how dark the skin may appear, Hollywood creation will be absolutely brighten it. This attention is NOT A BLEACH! It acts in an entirely different way. 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He was the most distinguished man in the world for his devotion to the Sacred Scripture. He nationalistically and expatriated himself in England, returning to private practice. The rival Greek doctor then was called in and the royal mother-in-law soon died. Bee Tuller, according to the story, now feared Dr. Garabedian. He continued to datter the physician and in due time prepared that he should treat finally another percentage of the royal household, this time the captive herself, holding out promises of favor and riches if he accepted. Dr. Garabedian's refusal led, he asserts, to a police plot engineered by the rival Greek doctor, Dr. Garabedian hyl ill with pleurisy. The rival doctor forced his way into the house with a rabble of police, but without a warrant, and charged Dr. Garabedian with selling cocaine to a native boy. A servant was dragged off to jail and an effort made to force him to testify against his master. Dr. Garabedian brought suit against the Greek doctor, employing an English lawyer, but before trial of the case Garabedian was ordered expelled from the country. The public took siding. Ras Taffari commuted the order to six months of exile in a desert town, where Dr. Garabedian's health rapidly failed and he contracted tuberculosis. He was allowed to return to Addis Abeba and closely interned in a hospital, from which he was rescued by the English lawyer, Fraser. Now began, according to the story, a series of persecutions by the police and mobs. The doctor's house was surrounded, friends were forbidden to enter and he was forbidden to go out. He was left alone, helpless, in bed, without servants or food or medical care. New York Death Rate Higher Than Last Year Deaths in this city from January 1 to the close of last week showed an increase of 5,037 over the same period of 1927, when 47,062 deaths were reported, as against 85,199 this year. The death rate for the first thirty-four weeks of 1933 was 18.57 per 1,000 population, as against 12.25 in 1927. For the week ending last Saturday 1,194 deaths were reported, while in the corresponding week in 1927 the total was 1,066, giving a rate of 10.27 the 1,000 population for last week, as against 8.81 in 1927. From January 1 to last Saturday seventy infants under one year died out of every 1,000 born, as compared with sixty deaths at this age in 1927. Love Only Me 10 MAR 8 H $1.80 Send No Money In to the following addresses: 1234 MAIN ST. APT 100 CARLTON, FL 33020 LOT 100 PRINCESS CO. DENT 0 COMING---COMING TO NEWARK, N. OF THE U. I. 135 Broome Street At 3 P. M., Sunday, Sep The Renowned Statesman At 3 P.M., Sunday, September 30, 1928 The Renowned Statesman and Racial Reformer NICHOLAS KLEIN Candidate for Judge of Supreme Court (Short Term) 305 JUDGE NICHOLAS KLEIN of Cincinnati, who will speak to the colonel's message. Also MADAM M. T. L. DE invitations have been extended to Governor President, and Hon. E. Edwards, candidate of Cincinnati, who will speak to the colored people of New Jersey. Mear his message. Also ADAM M. T. L. DE MENA, International Organizer. Invitations have been extended to Governor Alfred E. Smith, candidate for President, and Hen. E. Edwards, candidate for Senator of New Jersey. BIG MUSICAL PROGRAM BIG MUSICAL PROGRAM The famous Y. M. C. A. quartette of New Jersey Mrs. Louise Hassell, soloist, of New York Miss Ethel Collins and Miss Madeline Amos of Newark Eleationist—Miss Gladys Parker and Master Samuels of New York Monster Military Street Demonstration, under command of Senior Commander of Legiona, Vincent Waltley Universal Negro Improvement Association Band of 30 pieces in attendance ADMISSION TO AFTERNOON MEETING—Bee Who can afford to miss such an interesting program as the one herein mentioned? Divine services will be held at 11 A. M. sharp The famous Y. M. C. A. quartet Mrs. Louise Hassell, solicite Miss Ethel Collins and Miss Madi Elseutionists—Miss Gladys Parker and I Monster Military Street Demonstration, un- mander of Leglona, Vine Universal Negro Improvement Association ADMISSION TO AFTERNOON Who can afford to miss such an interes- tional mentioned? Divine services will be EXTRA SPECIAL CALL—EXTRA ALL HEADS OF LEGISLATION in the ENTITY have report to Nebraska Division, 123 Broadway 12 N. Sharp. I have business of great importance. TO AN HEAD OF LEGISLATION in the ENTIRE STATE of NEW JERSEY Please report to Memorial Division, 235 Broadway Street, Sunday, Sept. 24, at 12 M. Sharp. I have business of great importance to going to apply. JOYZONE RHEUDASTISM MEDICINE (Double Strength) Just take a doo. It is very pleasant, instantly that gain stops. The blood becomes purer; no more SORK, STIFF, ACHING JOINTE, no more SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, NEURITIS—all the RHEUMATIC PAINS gone. Take a step away from the grave! Don't wait until it is too late! 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Be a Winner—Lucky Numbers Crystal Ball An annual event to celebrate the birth of a lucky number. The ball is a large, round crystal ball filled with a precious gemstone. It is placed in a room with a fireplace and a window. The ball is then rolled around the room and the gemstone is removed. The winner is the person who rolls the ball the most times. Life R. — LUCKY CHARM FREE with every order. The ball for your lucky number, with every order. The ball for your lucky number, with every order. The ball for your lucky number, with every order. Life Reading and Lucky Charm Books, by Billy and postage. Guaranteed to plait, or more refused. Shipping by J. C. STEVENS CO. Dept. G. 3102, 4211 N. Haskell Ave. Chicago, IL. ING---COMING N. J., DIVISION J. N. I. A & (Liberty Hall) September 30, 1928 n and Racial Reformer Milorod people of New Jersey. Mear DE MENA, International Organizer. Nernor Alfred E. Smith, candidate for date for Senator of New Jersey. PROGRAM Hartette of New Jersey Hoist, of New York Madeline Amos of Newark And Master Samuels of New York , under command of Senior Com- Vincent Watley On Band of 30 pieces in attendance BOOM MEETING—Bio eeting program as the one herein be held at 11 A. M. sharp ENTIRE STATE of NEW JERSEY Providence Street, Sunday, Sept. 26, at and important to please to adjourn MON. CHAS. JANE subscriber of Macy's Stores