The Negro World
Saturday, October 8, 1927
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
SELECT COMMITTEE TO ASK PRESIDENT COOLIDGE TO PARDON MARCUS GARVEY
N regard to the invitation issued three weeks ago to non-members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to co-operate in bringing about the release of the Hon. Marcus Garvey, we desire to state that The Negro World would be pleased if those distinguished individuals---newspaper publishers, and editors, educators and leaders of various Negro groups in the nation, who during the past six months have so ably assisted in crystallizing sentiment in favor of Mr. Garvey's release, would communicate immediately with the editor of The Negro World as to their willingness to serve on a select Committee which will approach the President of the United States in the great leader's behalf.
May we state that any suggestion from these friends concerning the formation of this Committee and the procedure to be adopted will be greatly appreciated.---The Editors.
FEEBLE-MINDED NEGRO MURDERED BY MOB OF BLOODTHIRSTY WHITES
Demented Negro Farmier Riddled with Bullets by Mol of Fifty Whites When Laborer Complains He Demanded Money—Those Taking Part in Killing Exonerated—Murderers Arrived with All Sorts of Guns as Sheriff Called for Reinforcements to Slaughter Lone Victim
(From The St. Louis Argus)
EL. DORADO Ark, Sept 21 A demented race tenant farmer lying near here was slain Saturday afternoon after a gun battle with nearly halt a jumbrello whites that lasted for over three hours. The whites besieged the cabin of like Eerguson, the farmer after white laborer for the Sine Oil Company accused of eming him after he refused to give him money.
EL. DORADO Ark. Sept. 21 A demented race tenant farmer living near here was slam Saturday afternoon after a gun battle with nearly halt a hundred whites that lasted for over three hours. The whites he seged the cabin of the Ferguson, the farmer after white laborer for the Sue Oil Company, accused Ferguson of entering him after he refused to give him money.
Officers went to the home of Ferguson to get him after the white laborer, named Lambert, called them and told them he attempted to hold him up. The officers found that Ferguson had barricaded himself in his cabin. He retused to come out and surrender, and told them they would never take him alive. They exchanged shots.
REIGN OF TERROR ON IN ALABAMA
Farmer's Barn Burnt When He
The sheriffs, Ducks and Nelson, left deputies to guard the house and went to town to obtain reinforcements. Whites came armed with all sorts of guns. After the reinforcements arrived the officers advanced on the house. As they got close to the building Ferguson called out that he was "coming out and wanted to surrender." He was told to come out but when he opened the door and walked out the shooting began. Ferguson fell wounded. He drew a gun and attempted to run at the persons who shot him, but he was literally torn to pieces by a hail of bullets from the guns of the whites.
Ferguson had no relatives and had been long regarded as weak-minded. Lambert said that he had never had any dealings with Ferguson, but that the colored farmer demanded money from him. The officers and posse were exonerated in killing Ferguson.
TAMPA, Fla., Sept. 26. In recognition of his determined and successful stand against the moba which attacked the Hillborough county jail on May 30 and 31, Sheriff L M Hites was today honored by his fellow citizens by the public presentation of a handsome medal commemorating his felony. The presentation was made at the county court house by Mayer Ferry G Wall in the presence of a large assemblage, including many officials and other prominent citizens. Mayor Wall paid a high tribute to the determination, courage and resoluteness manifested by the shefft in his defended the jail against the frenzied moba bent on lynching B F Lovins, confessed slayer of the family of Herman Mergill.
The medal awarded Sheriff Hiers is a handsome bronze, picturing a hercule figure standing with drawn sword before a classic temple of justice, while roundabout is the inscription, "In Defense of Law and Civilization." Engraved on the reverse are the words, "To Sheriff L. M. Hiers, for Notable Service, May 30, 31, 1927." The medal was designed by one of America's leading sculptors for the Southern Commission on Interracial Cooperation for presentation to sheriffs and other officers who protect prisoners from threatening mode. Up to the present it has been awarded in about a dozen cases. The commission of award is composed of Governor John W. Martin of Florida, ex-Governor Hugh M. Dorsey of Georgia, George B. Denly, proprietor of Dallas News Magazine, Marshall Ballard, proprietor of New Orleans Item, and Mrs. L H McGoy, president of Athena Female College, Athena Alabama.
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Medal for Sheriff For Duty Well Done
A demented race tenor farmer
sunday afternoon after a gun battle
is that lasted for over three hours
like Ferguson, the farmer after a
company accused of erguing at a
the him money.
REIGN OF TERROR
ON IN ALABAMA
Farmer's Barn Burnt When He *Rebukes Negro .Floggers Deaths from Masked Violence
LIVERNE Ala. Oct. 1. A sign of terror in Crenshaw County resulting from masked violence which has resulted in several deaths is under investigation by Attorney General Charles McCall. In a statement here Mr McCall said that conditions in Crenshaw County were the worst yet brought to his attention and revealed that twenties or more masked doggings recently uncovered by authorities were being investigated with all indications that 90 per cent. of the guilty persons will be brought to justice
The firebrand, he added has alternated with the Irish in Crenshaw County as an instrument of intimidation in the hands of masked men. Sociologist Walker cited one instance where a farmer a burn had been burned because he rebuked a party of men who dogged a Negro farmhand. "More than 150 persons are involved in the whippings, with the mask and hood involved in 20 percent of the cases" Mr. McCail said. "I want to issue the public that these guilty parties will not get away with it. I am going to get them. With good grand juries and good trial gurles, I am confident I can get indictments in 20 per cent. of the cases."
The Attorney General revealed that he had ninety-three flogging cases in all parts of Alabama under investigation. Names of suspects and victims will not be announced until the Crescent County Investigation is completed, he said.
"I am not a fanatic on the question." Mr. McCall said, "and I do not seek to exaggerate this situation, but it was virtually a reign of terror.
"I find that immediately after these crimes" are committed those responsible get together and frame up falsehoods and false alibis.
Several floggers have been identified and their cases will be presented as soon as a Grand Jury can be convened.
Many victims have been intimidated into refusing to testify as to their injuries, Mr. McCall declared.
Organization to Produce Pictures Starring Negro Talent Exclusively
With the formation of a new company known as the Famous Artists Corporation of America, organized for the purpose of producing all-star Negro pictures exclusively a new note in motion picture production has been sounded, for this new company will not only produce features and comedies using all-star Negro talent, but news weeklies as well. These news pictures will cover events of Negro interest all over the world in thing litherero never attempted by producers of Negro pictures.
Recognizing the real need for an organization that can furnish exhibitors of Negro pictures with features, comedies and new reals devoted exclusively to Negroes, Famous Artists Corporation have built an organization fully equipped to supply this great demand, regularly instead of profitably, as has previously been the case. Religious men behind a reliable organzian will carry out the policy of the company to supply exhibitors of Negro pictures annually with six features, two comedies and twenty six new tools, all devoted exclusively to Negro internal guaranteeing at the same time that all releases will be on time.
Dr. said by such men as Albert A. Mitchell president, who has been in the most pictures business since 1911 and is throughly familiar with every phase of it. H. Squitt, treasurer, a man of sound business judgment and years of experience, Murray F. Reier, also president, associated for many years with a number of the leading motion picture companies, Philip S. Cochhers, secretary a well known statesman in motion, picture circles. A test will simply exhibitions of pictures with only the best of the best.
Virgin interest all over the world
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1927
The tactical developments in the State of Maine case and the action pursued by lessons of civil liberties in all instances of the country everywhere all other cases in the past few months coming to the report in the court the Saturday for June 15 and August which has just been issued by the Amerit in Civil Liberties Union.
The report also deals with the recent outbreak of bollard attacks by Ku Klux Klan men on defensemen men women and children in Georgia, Texas, Mississippi and Alabama.
The conviction of the four Workers' Pity members in Pennsylvania solitely on the grounds of their political opinions in opposition in the organized movements and to show that this is practicable the only state in the union which takes time of persistence conti-
The conviction of Warren W Williams under the Massachusetts laws against the refusal of the governor of Iowa to send troops into the Iowa field holds the request of the operators, the decision of the U. S Supreme Court holding the refusal of union men to work on such material a conspiracy in restraint of interstate commerce and the decision of the New York Court of Appeals upholding the right of pricking, where no strike exists.
The burning to death of two Negroes by a mob at Louisville, Mine, on June 13 is reported.
Tangier Squabble
British Foreign Minister and Spanish Dictator Confer, and Europe Gets Another Sensation
Austen Chamberlain Says British Interests at Gibraltar Cannot Allow Single Power Control
MADRID, Oct. 1—The important interview between the Spanish Dictator, Prime de Rivera, and the British Foreign Secretary, Sir Austen Chamberlain, the announcement of which caused a sensation in the European press, took place yesterday evening aboard Sir Warden Chilcott's yacht the Dolphin, as the ship lay at anchor at Albounda a little port on the Island of Malorce. Significance was attached to the meeting between the two statesmen because of the delicate situation existing between France and Spain over the disposition of Tangier.
After a long conversation the Spanish Dictator remained aboard, for dinner. Later in the night the following official account was issued through the President of the Spanish National Council
"The interview between the British Minister and the chief of the Spanish Government was chiefly the result of mutual desires for acquaintance, and expressed the desire of Primo de Rivera to greet Sir Austen on Spanish shores. Undoubtedly there was a mutual exchange of opinions regarding political conditions in the interest of both countries, but no definite decision of any nature was made or projected."
According to the official version Lady Chamberlain was present throughout the interview. The Dictator expressed appreciation for the kindness with which he was received and for the complimentary things which he heard from the lips of the British Foreign Minister.
At 1 o'clock this morning Primo de Rivera embarked on the steamship Rey Jaime II, which he commandered hastily at Barcelona. The Dictator returned to Barcelona and is expected in Madrid late tonight.
In well-informed diplomatic quarters the results of the interview are not described as successful. Despite the official communication the chief purpose of the encounter is said to have been the wisp of Primo de Rivera to urge the British Minister to consent to a relation of the status of Tangier, giving practical control to Spain. Such revision has already been denied by France, which bought the French-Spanish negotiations to an impasse.
According to reliable sources Sir Austen diplomatically explained Britain's view that her interest at Tihir-rattar cannot allow of any change which would give a prejudice of vontio to a single power at Tingler. Such an attitude on the part of Britain, it is declared, may induce Spain to modify her deprends when the Franco Spanish negotiations are resumed this month.
Restraining Whites from Marrying-By Law
WASHINGTON, DC. The lot-
ton (G) citizen who published
at Dalton, G., is living upon
the new marriage he selected by the
(through legal) eyes. The new
marriage law passed by the last
time is a landmark. The lawmaker
can found to make a preparation
for its enforcement.
Of all the food for the hostages we ever ran across that is the tea. It has the aroma of koo koo banana plastered all over it. It evoked out any put into effect. It would give employment to a new crop of office holders and would set the state about $400,000 to begin with. And for what? To keep our white people from marrying Negroes, Windows, Japanese Chinese and Mexican. It is come to the end of a white people
J. S. PRESIDENT TO VISIT CUBA TO STILL LATINS
Coolidge Decides to Attend Pan- American Union Meeting in Havana as Friendly Gesture to Latina—Hostile Feeling to Be Counteracted
WASHINGTON JUNE 1 President Coulidge will go to Japan to be present at the seventh National Conference of American States, which hosts its sessions January 16-18. The President's decision submitted to change only in the current song has unresolved development presents that become known to the public. I support associates and is prompted by a desire to take the opportunity to give formal assurances to the South and Central American Governments that the United States has no imperialistic designs or any other purposes illegal to the freedom and independence of the neighbor nations.
The visit, incidentally marking the second time that a President of the United States has left American soil upon a genuine diplomatic mission, will be in the nature of a friendly gesture to the Southern Republics. Intended as a reassurance of the good faith and disinterested policy of the Government.
President Georardo Machado of Cuba came to Washington last April to extend the formal invitation to Mr. Coolidge and to Secretary of State Kellogg to be present at the opening of the Havana meeting of the Pan-American Union. Since then Mr. Coolidge several times has indicated his desire to go, and the decision to accept was matured in large measure by the spread of anti-American feeling through Central and South America in consequence of the Administration Mexican and Nicaraguan policies
Ambassador to Attend
If the present tentative plans are adhered to, Secretary Kellogg will accompany Mr. Coolidge and most, if not all, of the American Ambassadors to the Southern Republics will be assembled at Haita simultaneously, to emphasize in further degree that the policy which Mr. Coolidge probably will outline in an address is not merely perfunctory oratory.
This congeing of the American Republics will bring together diplomatic delegations capable of exerting great influence with their respective Governments, so the occasion offers an unexceptionable opportunity for Mr. Coolidge to counteract the hostile trend of sentiment aroused by the Mexican and Nicaraguan adventures.
That foreign Governments contributed in no small measure to keeping this hostile feeling alive has been repeatedly reported to the State Department, and one member of the Cabinet privately has told his colleagues and the President that the Administration policy of last winter already had been reflected in a decline in trade.
According to statistics of the Department of Commerce, total trade of the United States with the twenty republics of Latin America for the fiscal year ending last June showed a decline in both imports and exports over the preceding year. The drop all told amounted to about $280,000,000.
President Coolidge never has been outside the country. He was first favorably disposed toward the visit to Havana by a speech President Muchado had prepared and which was read here last December by the Cuban Ambassador when his chief, because of illness could not come. In this speech the Cuban President said the only imperialism exercised by the United States toward Latin America was in behalf of right and justice. Mr Coolidge was strongly impressed by the speech and spoke to the Cuban Ambassador in praise of it.
The only Indication so far at the White House of the President's purpose to go has been an inquiry or two as to how many newspaper men would accompany the President if the trip eventuated, and some signs that consideration was being given whether to take a cruiser or to make the first lap by rail of Key West.
Wilson Trip a Precedent
The only precedent for a trip of this importance is Woodrow Wilson's attendance at the Paris Peace Conference after the war. Although that stirred up a furor on Capitol Hill there is no reason to believe Mr. Coolidge would incur criticism for following that precedent, which none of the critics ever succeeded proving contrary to the letter or spirit of any known laws.
Mr Taft and Mr Harding were over the national boundaries for a brief time while they were in office but came from the peace mission to Paris no extended visits to foreign shores have been made by Presidents. As the plan now stands, Mr Coolidge would not remain in Cuba for more than a few days at most, long enough to address the conference and to give the homage and honor that the island republic naturally would bear upon the Chief Executive of the nation that gave Cuba its independence.
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and onboard second Assis-
tence.
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The packages you get at the low, 50c and 25c prices are so liberal in size that long before you have used up your first one, your hair will become so soft and straight, you can arrange it in any style you wish and it will stay that way, always looking smooth and glossy.
Miss Connie Baltimore, the attractive singer and dancer with Connie in the Fields, long in the more important district through out the South side. I made my hair and straight and keep it always smooth and glossy but be using a little of the Improved Pluko before I crumb it.
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Charged with obstructing a public way Stephen J Sarridge, prominent socialist of Lenn Mass, was arrested in that city on September 27 when he attempted to address a crowd. He was held under $100 bail.
Mr Sarridge is the first person to be arrested under a recent order issued by Mayor Bauer prohibiting street prepping.
After the mayor issued his order however the city council passed an ordinance allowing a person to speak on the streets provided he first obtained a permit. It was provided that whoever desires to speak must give his name, the place and time of the address. Mayor Rainer retold the ordinance but the council passed it over his veto.
Mr Surridge applied for a penni under the Essex Social Labor Party and it was issued. Mayor Bauer however, maintained that the ord nun passed by the city council was illegal and ordered the police apartient to arrest anybody who attempted to make a speech.
Mr Surridge, speaking from a small box, declared that there was a rule of "monarchy" in Lynn and that the right of free speech had been denied. He was being applauded by the crowd when police detectives and a squadr of patrolmen arrested him.
The American Civil Liberties Union is investigating the case with a view toward assisting in the defense of Mr Surridge.
Abyssinia Kingdom Asks Pres. Coolidge for Diplomatic Representative
WASHINGTON—The United States will have a diplomatic representative in Abysinla, it will stated at the State Department, following the call of Dr C Martin, personal representative of Ras Tafari, Prince Regent of Abysinla, at the White House.
Since 1913 American affairs in Abysinla have been in the hands of the British Minister, although previously the United States was represented in the capitol by a consular commissioner. Dr Martin presented to President Coolidge a gold shield, such as are worn by Abysinlan warriors. Although the President was unable to accept the gift personally he expressed his appreciation and the shield will be kept with other decorations and gifts made by foreign governments to United States officials on the archives of the State Department.
A plea was made by Dr Martin for the help and cooperation of the United States. Last year the State Department asked for an appropriation to reestablish a legation at Addis Ababa, but the request was not approved by the House Committee on Foreign Relations. This year, if the appropriation is not granted, the State Department will send one of its representatives an charge d'affaires, an act which dogs not require a special appropriation from Congress.
Hubbard Breaks
World's Record
WASHINGTON. Sept 29 - Exactly 28 feet two and one-quarter inches in the distance broad-jumped at Cincinnati, Ohio, by DeHart Hubbard, the famous Negro athlete and holder of the world's record, in the broad, of 25 feet and 10 and seven-eighths inches, made by Hubbard himself while a student at the University of Michigan. - C P B.
Negro Homes Bombed As Sequel to Refusal To Quit Neighborhood
Woman and Baby Barely Escape as Porch and Pantry Are Shattered—One Family Will Move as It Is Impossible to Get Roomers Owing to Bomb Scare
Culmination of Tight of Whites Against Presence of Negroes in Neighborhood—Police Fail to Give Promised Protection, but N. A. A. C. P. Offers Reward for Arrest of Bombers!
(From the Kansas City Call)
M. Garfield Williams, 2010 Montgall avenue, narrowly escaped death Morty, night about eight o'clock when her ten porch and pantry was blown away by a bomb placed by unknown parties.
Only a hesitation of approximately thirty seconds saved Mrs Williams from receiving the full force of the explosion.
Two bombs were exploded in the same block on Montgall avenue within three minutes of each other. The first explosion came at 1926 Montgall, in the rear of an apartment building owned by Mr. and Mrs. George Rushing. The Williams family, at 2010 Montgall, hearing the first explosion, rushed to their front porch to see what was the trouble. Mrs. Williams, however, went to her back door and falling to see anything from a casual glance, rubbed and wilted the front with the rest of her family. As she reached the front door, the palm went off under the very spot on which she had been standing only thirty seconds before
The back porch, kitchen window, rear bedroom windows and pantry, which is just off the back porch, were all badly damaged. A gaping hole was torn through the pantry wall and Mrs. Williams' dishes and cooking utensils were shattered. A skillet had a hole blown through it the size of a tomato. A cake pan had its entire bottom blown out and aluminum sauce pans were twisted as though they had been made of paper.
Baby Endangered
The baby boy, Leonard Ray, aged 2 months, of Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins daughter of Mrs. Williams, was endangered by the explosion and just missed a shower of window glass.
Mrs Watkins had been sitting with the rest of the family in the living room and was about to go to the rear bedroom to place her baby in bed when the explosion at 1926 Montgall was heard. Had she retired five minutes earlier the youngster would have had a glass shower at least.
At 1926 Montgall the bomb placed there under the back porch did approximately $200 damage, according to George Rushing, owner. Two basement doors were blown out, a number of windows shattered both in the Rushing apartment and in others in the home building, and the rear porch steps and lattice work were all damaged.
Mr. Rushing said all the damage was covered by bomb explosion insurance.
At the time of the explosion Mrs Rushing was home alone. Mr. Rushing had not come, from his work at the Catholic Community Club, Armour Boulevard and Forest avenue, where he is engineer. The Rushings purchased the apartment building, 1926-30 Montgall, recently, and moved it about September 8. They have lived in Kansas City fifteen years and lived for-
igall avenue, narrowly escaped death
the rest porch and pantry was blown
parties
y thirty seconds saved Mrs Williams
biosion.
merely at 2418 Campbell Mr. Rushing
said he was going to stay on the property.
"I'm not going to make any trouble," he said, "this is my property I bought it and I expect to stay here I have asked the police for protection and they have assured me they are doing all they can I'm not afraid of anyone."
The Rushing property is the last, piece in that particular block, going south which is owned by colored people, until the Williams house is reached at 2010 All houses in between are occupied by white people.
The Williams family will move, according to Mrs Williams
"We are not going because we are afraid." she said, "but because' bought the house with the intention of having roomers help us out. Now, of course, we cannot get any roomers. No one wants to live where a bomb might blow' them into eternity any night."
The Williams family had been living in the house just seven days when the bomb exploded. Neither they nor the Rushlings have received any warnings or heard any hostile remarks from whites in the neighborhood. The white family at 2006 is said to be bitterly opposed to Negroes being in the neighborhood as well as a man named Saunders who lives at 2001 Montgall.
Sheriff Who Held Off Lynchers Gets Medal
TAMPA, Fla., Oct 3.—Emraged mobs seeking to lynch B. F. Levins, who had admitted killing the family of Herman Merrill while they slept, were turned back from the Hillsborough County Jail for two days First May, largely through the efforts of Sheriff L. M. Hiers.
Today the Sheriff reaped a partial reward, the presentation of a special medal designed by the Southern Commission on inter-racial cooperation for officers who protect prisoners from threatening mobs.
Tampa made the presentation an elaborate ceremony. Mayor Wall pinned the medal on the Sheriff's breast while a considerable crowd cheered for the man who frustrated their fellow citizens four months ago. The medal depicts an heroic figure with drowned sword before a classic temple of justice, surrounded by the inscription, "In Defense of Law and Civilization."
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and American chief justices and you will readily see what a gulf divided the two.
We reproduced in The Negro World of October 1 a London dispatch in which the facts in the situation in Sierra Leone are graphically set forth, and we are sure our readers found the facts as presented startling and repulsive enough. The departure from the humanitarian opinion delivered by Chief Justice Mansheld is so radical as to accentuate more than anything else could do the development of the British policy in dealing with colonists and natives of getting all that is possible out of the natives, of land and labor, without adequate indemnification, for the colonists at the expense of the natives. "The master hath need of it," is considered by British colonists everywhere now as sufficient excuse to despoil the natives of their lands and substance and labors
Of course, the opinion of the African judge has stirred up a great stink in England, but the fact that appeals of natives of recent years against reactionary policies of the colonists, have been given a deaf car by the British home authorities is not to be overlooked or ignored, and the dominion status of most of the British colonists since the World War, places the natives more and more at the mercy of the selfish colonists, with less of protection from the home authorities. This condition of affairs is bound to develop the disposition of the natives to antagonize the reactionary policies of the colonists and to light it out in the several doctrions for justice and fair play. The natives are showing a pronounced disposition in South and West Africa to antagonize the oppressive policies of the colonists, and matters promise to grow worse before they begin to grow better.
Negroes everywhere are beginning to realize that the only way to get what belongs to them of social, civil and economic values is to fight for them as others fight. The despoilers loosen their grip only when fooled to do so. The Universal. Negro Improvement Association has taught the Negro people that much, and some more.
HAITIAN JOURNALISTS HAVE PLENTY OF TROUBLES
GIVEN a free press it is not possible to have a slave people. It is as true as the saying, "Error cannot long prevail where truth is free to combat it."
President Borno of Haiti appears to understand very thoroughly that the easiest and safest way for him to get along with the Haitian journalists is to keep all or a large part of them in prisons most of the time. The reason he has trouble getting along with the Haitian journalists is that they do not consider him a citizen of Haiti and, therefore, eligible to be president, and that he was never elected in the legal way by the voters of Haiti. They claim that his creator and protector is the American high commissioner, General John H. Russell, from whose acts there is no appeal. Regarding President Borno from his viewpoint it is quite natural that he should consider the Haitian journalists as enemies who should spend most of their time in jail, where they can neither be seen nor heard
"PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Sept. 27 (A. P.)—Three Haitian journalists arrested on September 19 for the publication of a sensational article charging that the United States was negotiating secretly with the Haitian government for the establishment of a powerful naval and military base, were released today. The order for their release came after the charges had been met by complete denials in the United States and Haiti and after the journalists, it is stated, had admitted that the charges were false."
The United States has been striving to secure "a powerful naval and military base" in Santo Domingo or Haiti ever since the administration of President Grant, and the effort has been blazoned in the American newspapers as often as it has become a matter of news and opinion, but American journalists have not been arrested for publishing and discussing these rumors in the routine of the day. The American government controls Haiti in the same way and a little more dictatorially than it does the Philippine Islands, and free discussion of the acts of the administration of affairs as dictated by the government of the United States is not tolerated in either Haiti or the Philippine Islands. And the United States shows no more disposition to restore their independence to the Haitian people than to the people of the Philippine Islands. Strategic and commercial interests stand in the way of the independence of both countries. We are sorry for the journalists and the people of Haiti. They have a dictatorship and not a republic of their own to deal with and they must shape their course accordingly or pay for not doing so.
EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS
Negro World
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.
THE CALL OF AFRICA IS THE CALL OF THE RACET
RACE consciousness, knowledge of the inherent powers the race possesses as an inheritance, seem to be dead in many tribes and races now living on the face of the earth. They do not understand themselves, therefore they do not understand others. They live a purely animal existence, viten of the savage kind, and regard with childish interest or savage ferocity any stranger who may come in contact with them. They live a very restricted life, and have few wants they cannot supply without any great mental or physical strivings. We say that they are arrested in their development, but we are ignorant as they are of their past, which may have been as glorious and spectacular as that of Babylon or Greece or Rome. We do not know. The records of what they thought and said and did was never written, or if ever written unaccountably destroyed.
Professor Kelly Miller of Howard University appears to have come into the full truth of the Negro's relations to the rest of mankind and what the Negro really means to himself and should mean to others. Low American Negroes think as Professor Miller does along lines of the United international Negro who cannot live to him self separately and in ignorance of his inherent values, which make others rich while leaving him poor indeed—along the lines blazed first for the Negro people by Marcus Garvey and broadcasted in the organization of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Other Negroes see as Professor Miller does, and as Marcus Garvey has taught us to see but they have not the courage to think aloud the way they see. Self-interest on the one hand and biased intelligence on the other make cowards of them, and they are silent.
"After all has been said and done the Negro peoples, everywhere, feel deep down in their heart of hearts that Africa is their racial home. Some may try to support this feeling; some may deny its existence. But a closer searching of the recessors of one's own soul would disclose it hidden in the deep recesses.
"There are few if any deep thinkers, of any race, who believe that the scattered fragments of the Negro race will find permanent satisfaction and full equality in the lands of their sojourn upon the face of the earth.
"The far call of Africa is the call of the race. The deep crieth unto the deep. It may not always be a clear clarion call, but overtheless, it sounds and resounds, "far far away, like bells at evening pealing."
"The far call of Africa is the call of the race." That is a great truth. Ring the changes on it throughout the earth so that none may be ignorant of it.
BRITISH FARMS AND MANUFACTURES IN SLUMP
THE World War and the recognition of the interdependence and self-government of the British Commonwealth of Nations, with dominion status and powers, have brought British farm and manufacturing interests to a sort of paralysis, according to Constautine Brown writing from London to the New York Sun. When the British raised their own foodstuffs as a small island population and their sailors scoured the seas bringing home wealth, "trade and agriculture made England a powerful country." When manufactures were advanced at the expense of agricultural interests the latter steadily declined, making the country more and more dependent upon importation of foodstuffs and reliance upon manufactures. Now these latter are at a standstill, because the "English manufacturers are conservative and are hard to move to produce goods according to the tastes of the consumer." says Mr Brown.
Oppression is so much the fate of our group that we are likely to fall into the error of thinking, we do enough when we protect ourselves but to stop with more defense will be to make a grand mistake - Kansas City Call.
The "Uncle Tom and Aunt Mandy" type may be gone, but there are too many representatives of that kind of "Negro," for the good and welfare of the race, still alive in both the North and South - Cleveland Gazette.
Many people are blamed for bad traits that they inherited from their parents. Those who achieve success have been able to overcome those traits and practice self-degal and correct living - Richmond Planet.
That is to say, British traders are so conservative as not to give customers the sort of products they want and are unable, therefore, to meet the competition of American and European traders who are willing and rush to give them what they want and will pay for. With the loss of the export trade and the abandonment long ago of the agricultural interests of the country, with the dominions claiming the right to manufacture their own raw materials, instead of selling them in England in exchange for manufactured products, Great Britain is facing a problem such as she has never before been called upon to face. The great nation which has dominated the world, more or less, since the destruction of the Spanish Armada, appears to be dying on its feet.
.
We have many specials in almost every profession, but very few specialists. The white people striking the Negro from without does the Negro less harm than the Negro who strikes from within—Tampa Bulletin.
Our own country, America, is the child of discontent. The desire for more land -- more knowledge and shorter voyages -- a larger life-discovered it. A longing for a better government established it—and our dreams of grand destinies preserved it. Discontent is nothing more than human protest against the invitable demand, progress. Sacramento Union
SLAVERY IN AFRICA JUSTIFIED BY SUPREME COURT
I seems incredible to read in cold type that slavery still exists in Sierra Leone, a British African colony, and that the Supreme Court of the colony has justified the system by holding that slave owners in the Protectorate have a right to capture runaway slaves. It will be recalled that the slave system in the United States came to a parting of the ways by the efforts of the government to enforce the Fugitive Slave law.
A great many in our group seem
ingly find more pleasure in pulling
against each other than pulling
together. Real success comes when you
line up and all pull in the same direc-
tion. Try it from how on and watch
us grow. Oklahoma Eagle
At a time when Great Britain was leading the world, in a crusade to destroy the slave trade, a chief Justice Lord Mansfield wrote himself into the Hall of Fame by delivering the opinion that "No man can be the first air of England and remain a slave." That opinion broke the long strong arm of the slave power in Great Britain, and put the fugitive slave hounds out of business in Great Britain and its possessions. It did more, it gave added strength to the anti-slavery movement in the United States. It also enabled Chief Justice Roger B. Taney of the United States Supreme Court to write himself into the Hall of Infamy by the opinion that "It is held to be good law and opinion that a black man has no rights that a slave man is not to respect." Contrast the opinions of the British
If the Negro is classed as an inferior race, he has never committed such harboring crimes as the present superior race, which makes him mortally superior and the superior race morally inferior. Red Bank Fohe.
The habit of mind that considers millions of human beings as by nature unfit to work with, with work with, with pride with, with and
play with, cannot fail to affect the whole human character, and to implant in it a disregard of all rights, whether of property, or person, or reputation, or other relative right -- Washington Tribune.
Alabama, outraged, and disgraced enough, acted none too soon and none too drastically. With laws and courts and public officials, no citizen or band of citizens has a jot or title of a right to flag anybody for anything. No one can blame us for feeling more than a bit good that Negroes in Alabama may now escape the lash, even if they have to wait until somebody else ox was gored — Louville Leader
The American Negro will never stand any higher than his highest pile of silver and gold, for these are a power of the times, with which all men rockon, if not wisely, most times fully — Indianapolis Recorder.
When fortune surprises us by bestowing on us an important office, without having conducted us to it by degrees, or without our being elevated to it by our hopes, it is almost impossible that we should sustain ourselves in it with propriety, and appear worthy of possessing it. — Portland Advocate
Harlem Health Organization Celebrates 5th Anniversary
Many Harlem residents out-of-town visitors and welfare workers attended the reception at the Harlem Tuberculosis and Health Committee's offices, 202 West 136th street, last Thursday afternoon and the party for committee members and their friends Friday evening. The affairs were in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the organization of the Harlem Committee of the New York, Tuberculosis and Health Association.
The committee's offices and the dental clinic were open for inspection and exhibit showing the rapid growth of the committee's activities were on display. Refreshments were served by the Save a Life Club, auxiliary to the committee under the direction of Mrs. Augusta Cobin, president of the club
MAN'S IMMORTALITY
Eternal is my lease on life.
If courage I can find to live
My soul and mind are both in one.
And Nature but my elder self
Of all I see I am the lord.
Including earth and stars and sea.
From time immemorial I'd been
A part of the Aimighty God
He was the Other Self of me.
The All in One, and I a part
There is no life without my own
And there's no life without the
God
He is the source of all you see
Divine, but I a part of Him
MARCUS GARVEY
September 13, 1977.
Fisk University Increases Sphere of Usefulness
After spending over $75000 in rejuirs and equipment, and having added many new and important courses to its curriculum, Flak University opened its doors to 528 full-fledged college students on September 26. One hundred and fifty freshmen have enrolled in Flak for the first time. The total enrollment lists 256 women and 272 men from all parts of the United States and many foreign countries.
The college curriculum carries many courses offered at Flak for the first time, in addition to its regular schedule of courses. Courses in social science, under the joint directorship of Dr Paul Radin and Dr C Luther Fry, are offered to graduates and undergraduates. They include courses in anthropology, social psychology, social research, and a course in statistics to be taught by the president of the university. Dr Thomas Elsa Jones, in co-operation with Professor Hugh Pratt Kean, of the mathematics department.
Graduate courses in research chemistry are offered by Professor Thomas W Taley and Dr. St. Elmo Brady.
Additional courses have been added in nearly all departments Majors in fine arts and biology are offered for the first time this year. In the English departments there are three teachers, instead of two as last year. In addition, the Dean of women teachers, Meng Susan, Mendenhall, offers a course in children a literature, especially adapted for mothers and elementary school teachers; and Mr John P. Davis, the new director of publicity, teaches a course in journalism.
A decided advance in health conditions of the institution is expected as a result of the new medical clinic being conducted under the directionship of Dr. C. Carrie V. Roman.
By DR. M. ALICE ASSERSON Of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association
Your General Health and Your Skin
Good complexions are the result of more than an occasional visit to the beauty parlor, and frequent applications of rouge and powder. The condition of the skin is often an indication of the state of one's general health, and good complexions must be obtained by keeping one's general resistance high.
First, you must be sure to get regular sleep. Proper amounts of rest and sleep are essential to good health and good complexions. You must take regular exercise out of doors. Exercise helps the body to carry on its normal functions, and thus indirectly helps to keep the complexion clear.
Watch your diet Do not eat excessively of rich foods, such as fried stuff pastry, fancy cake, candy and other sweets include fresh vegetables and fruit in your diet regularly If there is a tendency to constipation it is a good thing to eat high bread or other laxative foods as constipation is a frequent cause of poor complexion
Remember that soap and water are good for the skin not harmful. There seems to be a rather widespread idea that cool cream is better for the face than soap and hot water. This is not true. Soap and hot water do not hurt the skin in fact, they should be used at least twice daily, in order to cleanse the face of the dirt and perspiration which collect during the day. This is especially recommended to those whose skin is oily, and where there is a tendency to black heads and large pores. Cold water applied for its tonic effect, after the skin has been cleansed has beneficial effects and after this if so desired cold cream may be applied especially if connectors are used.
Prejudiced, ignorant, muck-raking Indiana gave the Negroes something to think about last week. The white papers of the country gave us all of the details and we learned a few more things about what white folks will do to Negroes in a so-called Northern state with all of its boasted freedom and privileges.
We read that three machine gun squads patrolled Gary for two days to prevent outbreaks. And then "three mass meetings of Negroes were broken up before speakers could be heard." Mass meetings you know, are often dangerous. There you may receive the contact which is the life of inspiration. But the striking students had lots of mass meetings. Well, this is what you would expect, isn't it? If you want to forget that this is a white man's country, he always finds a thousand ways to help you remember.
What does the average Negro think about affairs like the Gary incident? It is a pretty safe guess that most of those who read about it have forgotten it and passed on to other things. It is sad, but true, that what does not affect life Negro as an individual leaves little, if any, impression upon him. The most fragrant exhibitions of prejudice will pass out of their minds like water off a duck's back. Some call it optimism. When Negro optimism develops to this stage, it ceases to be a virtue and becomes a vice.
Such incidents are unfortunate because of the humiliation and inconvenience, but maybe they are not so tragic. In spite of all our orating, writing and preaching to the contrary, the American Negro is not thoroughly awake. Millions of them are sleeping soundly, soothed by the death-dealing potion called American citizenship. The Negro never has been an American citizen, and the sooner he realizes it, the better. Perhaps when we fully realize just where he stands in "God's" country he may wake up enough to try to better his condition and cease to sit quietly by and accept what the white man chooses to dole grudgingly out to him.
Suggestions for conditions on which to return to school offered for approval to the mass meeting were The Negroes are to be segregated in one corner, to be barred from athletics and other activities with the white children. Strikers to return on the same basis with those who did not leave their classes.
No more Negroes to be enrolled at Emerson, and those already in
enance to be removed as soon as possible
Every possible effort to be made to complete a plant, with high school and grades for Negroes.
The New York Times tells us that Gary's population is estimated at 102,000 with 14 to 18 per cent Negroes. The native-born population is 36 per cent, and the remaining 46 to 50 per cent is made up of 47 different nationalities." Forty-seven different kinds of people, and the American-born Negro is the only one considered unit to enjoy the privileges of co-education. Page the disciples of amalgamation!
Curiously, we have just received a copy of a little leaflet issued by the Commission of interracial Co-operation of Atlanta, Georgia. It is entitled, "What the Bible Tells Me About Race Relations," and is compiled by Mr. Robert B Eleazer. It is a nice little pamphlet as far as semions on brotherly love go, but as we read, we wonder how long the Negro is going to be tullled to sleep by religion. We wonder how many Negroes are kidding themselves into believing that the parents of those striking students are altists? Any well meaning white or black man who still is preaching religion as a possible solution to this so-called race problem ought to be locked up to prevent him from doing any more harm than he has done.
If the Negro would achieve a glorious survival, he must fight to win. He must not fall to use all of the weapons at his command. What happened in Gary could happen anywhere in this country. Don't allow yourself to forget for one instane. And remember, not to hate, but to be inspired to place yourself beyond the reach of Indiana crackers. There is a way out an economic, political and financial way. Start now marching toward the goal which will place you far beyond the reach of your enemies. If you gain respect in one way you will live to see miracles worked in other ways. As long as you stand beside the road begging alms, you will be treated like the beggar that you are.
Science has again "proved" that the mind of woman is not inferior to that of man. We are told that a scientific examination of the brain of Mrs Helen H Gardener, an eminent writer and suffragist who died in 1925 at the age of 72, proves this beyond the shadow of a doubt. Mrs Gardener willed her brain to Cornell University so that it might be used for study and research to ascertain whether there is an innate inferiority in the female sex. Women have been trying to prove that for a long time. We thank Mrs Gardener for doing what she could to help the cause, but we seriously doubt the efficacy of that sort of help.
Women who have spent years fighting for equal rights will tell you that the hard-boiled, pig-headed man is the hardest nut in the world to crack. You may prove anything you like about this "equality" business in the laboratory, or on paper, but women will continue for a long time to find themselves confronted with the same tough situations in business and professional life where actual production is the only thing that counts.
The "lords of creation" have always run the world and will continue to do so for some time to come. They have all of the odds. Their attitude toward women is much the same as that of the white man toward the Negro. Having once held the position of master and slave, no white man wants to admit that the Negro is his equal. No matter how many times the Negro proves it, it is his job to keep on proving it. So with woman The road may have an end, but it is certainly not in sight.
Of course, the question has its humorous side, too. How under high Heaven could any man in his right senses believe that the male of the species has had a monopoly on the brains of the world throughout the ages? He doesn't think so, but it is part of his propaganda of domination to keep the women of the world believing it. And women get serious and worry about it, instead of pursuing the even tenor of their way, treating the master with the indifference it deserves. When a woman matches her brain with a man's and brings back the thing that he also has gone after but missed, she needs no argument, scientific or otherwise, to prove both equality and superiority.
The Gary Incident Negroes Still Sleep Woman's Uphill Fight
Prejudiced, lkentious, muck-raking Indy to think about last week. The white papers details and we learned a few more things in Negroes in a so-called Northern state with privileges.
We read that three machine gun squads prevent outbreaks. And then "three mass up before speakers could be hegid." Mass numerous. There you may receive the contact. But the striking students had lots of mass would expect, isn't it? If you want to force try, he always finds a thousand ways to help.
What does the average Negro think about it is a pretty safe guess that most of those it and parsed on to other things. It is sad, like Negro as an individual leaves little, if an flagrant exhibition of prejudice with pass or duck's back Some call it openism. When stage, it ceases to be a virtue and becomes a
Such incidents are unfortunate because fence, but maybe they are not so tragic and preaching to the contrary, the Awake. Millions of them are sleeping soundition called American citizenship. The Neg citizen, and the sooner he realizes it, the be alzized just where he stands in "God's" country to better his condition and cease to sit quite man chooses to dole grudgingly out to him.
. . .
We are informed that:
Suggestions for conditions on which approval to the mass meeting were
The Negroes are to be segregated from athletics and other activities with
Strikers to return on the same basis their classes.
No more Negroes to be enrolled at B
andance to be removed as soon as per
Every possible effort to be made to
school and grades for Negroes.
The New York Times tells us that G
102,000 with 14 to 18 per cent Negroes. The
cent and the remaining 46 to 50 per cent
tionalities." Forty-seven different kinds of
Negro is the only one considered unfit to en
Page the disciples of amalgamation.
Curiously, we have just received a copy
Commission of interracial Co-operation of
"What the Bible Tells Me About Race Rac
Robert B. Eleaner It is a nice little pamph
love go, but as we read, we wonder how lon
so sleep by religion. We wonder how many
N believing that the parents of those striking
meaning white or black man who still is
solution to this so-called race problem ought
from doing any more harm than he has done.
If the Negro would achieve a glorious as
must not fail to use all of the weapons at a
Gary could happen anywhere in this country
for one instane. And remember, not to hate, be
beyond the reach of Indiana crackers. The
literal and financial way. Start now near
place you far beyond the reach of your ence
way you will live to see miracles worked
stand beside the road begging alms, you wh
you are.
Science has again "proved" that the mind of
man We are told that a scientific expan
H Gardener, an eminent writer and suffi
72, proves this beyond the shadow of a doubt
to Cornell University so that it might be usu
tain whether there is an innate inferiority
been trying to prove that for a long time
what she could to help the cause, but we se
sort of help.
Women who have spent years fighting
the hard-boiled, pig-headed male is the hard
man prove anything you like about this "epe
or on paper, but women will continue with a
fronted with the same tough situations in bu
actual production is the only thing that con
The "lords of creation" have always run
do so for some time to come They have all
women is much the same as that of the wh
ing once held the position of master and sla
that the Negro is his equal. No matter how
it is his job to keep on proving it So with
end, but it is certainly not in sight.
Of course, the question has its human
Heaven could any man in his right senses
cles has had a monopoly on the brains of the
doesn't think so, but it is part of his propo
women of the world believing it. And wom
it, instead of pursuing the even tenor of the
the indifference it deserves. When a woman
and brings back the thing that he also has
no argument, scientific or otherwise, to pro
0 0 0
. . .
DEATH OF MRS. HIGHTOWER
Madame Mamie Hightower, internationally known beauty culturist and philanthropist, passed away at her Memphis (Tennessee) home on Sunday, Sept 25. With her at the end were members of the bereaved family, including her much loved and popular life partner, Zack Hightower Madame Hightower had achieved national prominence as the originator of the famous Golden Brown Beauty Preparations, and their universal acceptance had caused her name to become familiar in thousands of home in every state and numerous foreign countries.
French Hotels Must Account For All Tips Received
PARIS - Passing of a law making it compulsory for hotel proprietors to account for the tips they receive for distribution to the personal has been suggested by the French League of the Rights of Man.
As it goes now many French hotels have 'abolished' tipping and hotel add 10 per cent to the tourists bill. Many tourists have been somewhat curious as to exactly now that 10 per cent is distributed. Failure to the hotel employees are curious too.
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English Tenants in Arrears Object to Publicity
LONDON (AP) — Enfield, a suburb of London, is in a turmoil because the town council has posted notices on the municipality owned houses whose tenants have failed to pay their rent.
The town clerk explained to angry householders that this procedure was followed only in cases where it had been impossible to serve the notices personally to tenants.
One happy home was seriously threatened when the notice appeared on the front door. The householder had given his wife the rent money, but she had failed to burn it over to the town officials.
Literary Debate
NEW YORK Sept. 29 - The October "Forum" is featuring a literary debate between Dr. Albin Lerry Locke, Rhodes scholar and Howard University professor and Ledhup Stoddard (white) well known literary analyst of interpersonal relations in America. Dr Locke has the affirmative and Mr. Stoddard the negative of the topical musculus. Can we abort the Negro?
| eh 5
AW ‘PROVEN WAY
TO STOP FALLING .
4 A” HAIR and DANDRUFF
Ope Pete is ig gmt
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) ASEHGSA) * these germs, ensich the walp. Grow
|, Mont Experiment /
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LZ RR
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Amazing Offer to Negroes!
: 7 Educational! Economical! Inspiring! ;
One copy of the book, “FROM SUPERMAN TO MAN,” by the famous '
eM © Negro author and journalist +
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mT One. Year's Subscription to.the - , :
“The Voice df the Awakened Negro” at-the combined price for both of
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. + ‘This hook by Mr. Rogers answers overy argumont put forward’ by '
white peojte to bolster their suppriority claim. Educative and, yet
easy to read. Order now. ,
* “NEGRO WORLD =. Cy
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Foreign Orders $3.25 : Oe ‘
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CHINESE TO RULE -
NEW CHURCH AND
“ABOLISH, SECTS
coca aaa ate
(From the New'York Timea)
SHANGHAI, Oct 2—The firat step
in & movement seeking tolabolish all
enomtnational Hines In Protestant for-
eign miesion work In China was takert
here todsy when yx conference of 94
Chinese delegutes representing 16 ge
nominations voted to.-dirsol\e the old
satus and organized the Church of
Christ in China.
“Their dgcision writer Gnin to the
work of the Presbyterian, Congregs-
tonal and so .e lesser denominational
Institutions ar Nuch In the ereus af-
fected, al), losing thelr identity in the
new non-denominationat organization
It ts understood that this move Jus
the support of the honfe offices of these
China missions in Amerwa and Great
Britain The Rev E C Lobenstein,
Presbyterian leader, has just roturned
‘trom the United States asserting that
‘hls organjzatlon Js virtually eponsor-
Ing such @ aiep.
‘The action crystallizes efforta to
establish a wholly Chinese Christlan
‘church with affiliations abroad, but not
to be controlled Im future by any but
Chinese However, (it Is understood
that it will continue to receive foreign
‘support financially as well as continu-
‘ance’ of Toreign advisers.
‘The foreignets declare that theif
chninatiun as head of missions wae
expected, stuting that they are 19 favor
vf the Chinese atudatstéing tbelr'own
Christian Instttutiuns, and the sconer
the better of
Methodists and Baptiste attending
she cénference as observers were not
reudy to merge Into the hew assocta-
ton Miutonartes suv that the ad-
vantages of the non-sectarian organ-
teatlon Inciuds thats '
ous dénominational teachings which,
they sdy, have always beon mystifying
to Chinose J 8
* The conforence involves more thin
1,000 <hurches in sixteen provinces,
representing ubout one-third of the
Chineso Protestants. Twelve hundred
foreign mifestonartes are affected They
wil become advisers, but this ts” ox-
pected to mean Httlo drastic change
immediately except in titles
A Chinese modorumar,* the Rey
Chang Cheng-y!, was elected The
conference tseued a summary this ove-
hing stating
“The church still needs foreign ald
But members should-undortake Atting
responyibiilties, dismtas denomination.
lism and creda! strife and set no
limite to the activity of tho spirit of
God in the wide sphere of human
activity. Not that the church should
enter politics, but tndividuals must
face Fesponstbilities Foreignérs are
urgetl to be patient and continue thetr
work ‘with greater energy”
Legionnaire “Foots” Way
From Athens -to Paris
PARIS —Henry C: H. Stewart, who
heads a delegation of ten fegionnaires
from a post at Athens, Greece, literally
“footed” his way to Puris. =
+ He arrived Here the other day from
Vienna, after having hiked for sixty-
six days. The Legion gt he and his
delegates represent ts fne of the larg-
est in Europe, having a ‘membership
of 10 American and 130 Gfeeks of
American citizenship. He served in
uhe war as a captain in the thirty-
‘aieth infantin. :
ee: Re ee:
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, .1927
CAN WAR BE OUTLAWED?
yee By Amy Jacques Garvey ——
‘That another world war Is in the making la certain, and the knowlédgo that
it will be a war in which chemistry and aeroplanes will play tho leading roles,
fe causing humaniterians to wonder If eumething cannot bo done now to outlaw,
war, Bnd thereby prevent what Is suie to bo 4 sluughter of the tnitoconts—
whole citien will be ‘dentroyod and, their Inhabitants ushered into eternity with-*
out olther artes fring a single shot—atroplanen carrying deadly gas will do
the work, and the country with the boat ectentists and the best planes will
win the war One wok of the next aff war will cause more casualties and
destruction than tho four years of the last world war. This {a by no yheans
‘a tar-fetéhod statement, for the nations of thb world are secretly perfecting
themsolves in the air Only this weck-the report comes from Russia that the
‘Soviet government 1s determined to have 3,000 war planes in eight months
Aviation te compulsory in the schBols, and’ if by any chance militaristic Ger-
many should join with Russta and answer John Bull's threats with an ultima-
tum, nother world conflagration would be started that would leave halt of
the world desolate. Methinks they are not prepared ap yet, but thot longer
the preparation the moro hateful they will berame toward each other and the
more deadly “wilt-bo the weapons of destruction used Time will tend to
embitéer.them rather than to soften them. |
eed a
‘Tho troubles of England and France will increase as thelr colonies and |
popsessione (2) become moro gelf-assertive. Russia, Germany, Turkey and
other countries will sympathize with tho latter, since by 40 doing they wa
woaken the imperlulists, and create for themeelves friends from the oppisased
groups. In the meantime the game ts being played until one day the hunnie
will burst and the tong ‘expected will happen. The talk of outlawing war im
‘just tatk, and nothing more, because those who do this kM of taking are
‘not responelble for making wars, and those who make wars du su, not oni
for the sake of giving another nation a good Iicking, but for the plunder they
can get from a defeated rival War, then, is brought about because of a desire
to get sqmething, or In order to hold on to something youl. already took Now.
knowing’ the temperament of the strung nations of thle materialiatic age tant
It stark hypocrisy to believe that they could getstogether and decide to give
up all the loot they have taken, and promise’ not to try to take any more, that’
henceforth they will respect fatural boundaries, and in © humanitarian way
holp: to better the conditions of backward peoples: to respect the rights of
/weak-nations, and that whoso breaks any of these promises wil) be punished
and ostracfsed by the other honorable law-abiding nations? They wont do
St, but this ip honestly the only way of outlawing war. :
o .
H. G Welle offers the following suggestion to avert war, but he admits
that the warmongers won't stand for it. He ataton. \
“The moat effective resistance to the approach of another groat war
lies in the exprossed deterrtigation: now of as many people ag, possible
that they will have Wothing to do with it, that they will not’ fight in it,
wark for it nor pay taxes when it comes—whatover sort of war it i.”
“Paoifiam je vory ineffective and has an unpleasant flavor if it is
adopted after war has arrived; the time for active pacifiem is while peace *
atill rules. Poople who have made no effort to avort war cannot vary well
resiet and grumble when through their tacit invitation: war tekes hold
of them, The last war was a war to end war, and the politiciens and
statesman have not made ggod.. So now ie the time for a great parifist
‘effort. Now is the timo for people who want to delay and avort a catas-
> traphe, before the more doliberate organization of a world peace can be
achieved, to make it clear that the war makers wilf have to reckon with |
Cuba’s San Juan Hill.
To Be a National Park
‘WASHINGTON.—San Juan Hill.
near Santiago, Cubs, made famous
during the Spanish-American War by
Roosevelt and his Rough Riders, has
boon cet aside for preservation as a
national park’ by a decree. of President
“Machado of Cubé.
. The preserve will embrace the val-
ley of the San Juan River and the
summit of the famqus hil) on which
ia standing the block house and obelisk
placed there by the United States and
‘the memorial erected to the Seventy-
first New York Volunteers by that
State in December of last year.
‘The park will be maintained by the
Cuban military forces when finished
and the cost of all tmprovements wil!
‘6 rained by public subscription sfon-
sored by Cuban newspapers. ° a
———_>——___
Women, Weak, Tired,
i a ae a
or _ who guffer ovarian pains, pains in the
iSner" part ot the etomaon,” tearing owes
talon, forthte: weaktesnoe Woadecnsm Sack:
Sther meluncholia, dospondeney, nervous, ae-
fongomeois: ‘Sushos of hast, dootiog. and
feashnite patna, whites, pastel or terewus
tar erage, nboeha ito. te. Sire. Sites
Uavols Gate" Maan ieanaan Clty, Moe
‘She’ wil, ential PROD "and without
charge ‘Yo the. inquirer, “advien “of "cone
Saoient, ‘home mathot” waorshy ate end
Sthars women say. they. hove ‘ueseetfully e+
Gut8a “Simtter tout lon
"The. mont common expression of thess
thacktel tomen lt tool akon a new
Soman! “and otters, don't have. any
pune whatever any more” "X\can pardiy
Balieve”myscit that your ‘Wonderful Mothea
hae done ea. much good for me in such, a
ther timer? write’ today. This advice ie
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Bes ae Les Mit gD YY ‘
. CO secre cs we
war eas Po ee
MLS. a cs Fee Da ae a ro A
OE rs Aa ee iP ee “eee ld A
ae i, Reese a cane .
eens SY ‘ Zpit et om, +. TS j
eee “ee, a
‘tte treceenaiie: a 8 ens : See
: SARA MARTIN SAYS: Se ee ous sede oo =
pigpatefatectn ne aoe ‘ . . ae tn a ae :
*h fonvatada atthe very ore ema OMML Na a
aces eat, , EEE ee ;
| emeraregolty end © : we AEE SA Se ea os
> - a eR a aa ag pH ot
ah Oe 5 aula Sa ce cieenes see
Pera (oot Aas eels te
t. we ha . Gin eae 2
mmr fe a Pees
Twastroubled with pim- ° ar : cones edgtabgle Dae ei os at
sae eee Oo an eet SPE ES
cere thanks ond Blessings. . . “ og =<
. ve Use Golden’ Brown, Hair Dressing. It’s made by Madame Mamie
: ‘Hightower, only costs 50¢ and you can’t buy better at-any price . i
GOLDEN BROWN HAIR DRESS- abundant hair ‘
. growth, removes dand-
ING is pure white, sweetly scented and ~ ruff as if by magic and enables youto '
is undoubtedly the finest hair prepara- _ easily “ress your hair in any of the pres .
y iy Pi
tion on the market. It is & boon tof ferred modes, fos .
. | qmSTARS OF THE STAGE AND SCREEN ENDOOSE, ey
“ . . _ =" Natemy Warnic Heh ds gio »
Sear 6 ag. ‘f Se A)
Gee Golden Brown) ¥ |
letetednaea \ \0 h my i
4 Nt ‘ + ae cy
erate a BEAUTY PREPARATIONS \2in, |) .
fi Et . SS tn a ¢
ao at) YOUR DRUGGIST GLADLY REC “AY
Cnt GREENS” ~ - saec compa
Brown |Z) siswateernerd Soe
HAIR DRESSING i . Quality nowe tn tho conmede wold , EA PREE COUPON! Youd)
"Onn Be Seeker Raye B [P Mane nantn moyen, og |
} iat ed ‘i Balaes Brown Beauty Qian de EH” OO Meaty Tepes
Bt SOK SOMMER a ih alten Brown orld Crear, TAIT at eZ 4 am euloag gon Sheet ramre and eddyessa of te0
eee auea Brows Meweree/ Wiens ars. 6983 (© NY BUR al fh ttm ee Cn nna st
ae BP Bolded Brown Benge cco Be R a medaices taconite
Seidss Brows Somes UN Veal ais vateh ecios (et errr ners ft fee
SE iN Scene coe serine
LT TT aceon nero
defections. That is the really practicable anti-war measure to attempt
now, but it io much moro likely to lead to jail than to imprestive cere-
monial junketings at the WiRite House.” °
= rh ex
‘Tho feadera and thinkera of nations must first become righteous of beart.
and, deal justly and fairly with all peoples, before pkace will mark the path’
of man. In the meantime the weak shoud prepare to defend themselves against
the strong, while pacifism should be preached to the lepdors and citizens of
imperialistic pyntries. Let us therefore face the situatfon as it is, aceing It
ap it renily fs and prepare toymeet the futuro. Only b¥ the measure of our
preparednons-eitl-wé ‘be-ecved: oe
Madame Mamie Hightower's GOLDEN BROWN HAIR DRESSING
Delightful Feeling Comes”
From Watching Others
Work, Says Writer
Why je it that the alterations now
going on in Piccadilly have become
one of the sights of London? asks
John Blount in the London Day Mail
Of course. 1 know. that nearly evory-
body will stop to wateh any ununual
Shing that 19 happening in tho street.
but that doen not acount for tho fact
‘that people ure making special four-
neys to Plevauttly Just to seo the road
being broken.up, and that all day long
hese Are srewile_samhing: igs sieht
which. if ono comen to thinkvot tt. “Is
one of the commonoat of all London
eights. S
+ Wait then, 1s the reason I It the
lasgenaus of tho operations thut Jac
nates peuple, ur {a Mt tho wense of con-
trant hetwhen the Plecadiily of today
and ofta few weaks back? Both play
thelr part, no doubt, but I think that
there ts also another reason whicn 13
probably the strongest of all
Deep down in the heurt of every man
—asnecially in this holiday season—
these Is @ curipus feeling of sutistac-
Uon to be derived from watcining other
people hurd at work while he fs doing
nothing
This goes not arise from laziness,
It craves tone foeling of complete
relaxatlon—und that, as we all know,
fs u very delightful feclings Only -the
man who works hard knows the Joy
of rest, “and 1 have very Hittle doubt
that many of the people who gaze fo
earnestly at the men tolling In Picca-
dilly are holiday makers savoring
thelr freedom in a particularly acute
way The scene of bustle and activity.
the,polse of the dritis, the general air
of dosperate haste must make thelr
own idleness seem Gory sweet to them
One of the finest senxations possi-
blo ta to feel for a few days or works
complotely caretroerif it leated in-
definitely {t would “hecotho a bore—
und nothing fagkes ono fect shat xon-
sation mora than to look ut others
working when -one has, earned one’s
Font :
And that Ia one of the reasons why
Moliday crowds are wlwayn ao Inatinl-
tse, they are enjoying themselven py
the delicious sense ut contrant.
Fon tte name rdion a *busman’s
hollday* {a popular with xome people
‘They don't want tw work, but they
can scarcely tear themscives away
from the scene of thw ir work, bedause
by watching somebudy else do It they
really appreciate their awn herty
Germans in Controversy
Over New Version of Bible
BERLIN —Martin Buber, Jewish
apostle of old-fashioned monothe fi,
in carrying out, tmgether wyh @ comn-
mittee of learned meh a aba trans:
lation of the Gla, Testament, incl
dentally causing some controversy
“Buber aguerin that jn7 hie. trupsla-
tion thi true meaning of the Old Testa-
ment writers is made clear tor the
frag time Fits erttics say that ff the
wrisigge of the futhora are really no
vlearer than Bubera Uanslation, then
they did not knew what they meant
Ty pleat im the seaicenee un waite tle
inamuenges of te Lged tells Hogar that
she shall haves sen ty Huber» thane.
lution a8 reads Me shall tw a wild
asu wan 2 * He alts nthe fuce
Of val nis mothers.” And erties wonder
whethog, Buber a Bibig. will mote sit in
the face of most of hin readers’
>
Spelman College Opening
ATLANTA, Ga, Sept 28.—spelman
College opened ite forty-m .cuths+ ow
this marning, with a total enrojiment
of 659 students, distributed us follows
College department 125. senior high |
school 174, Junior high sehiiul 128,
Rrammur ahve} 120, nureo training
echool 17. 4 ji
1¢ you ere SICK with
RHEUMA1ISM, SCIAT-
ICA, LUMBAGO, LaME 7"
BACK, GOUT. If you aro :
suffering, with "BACK. c
ACH, ETIPE MUBCLES, ss
SORE LIMBS, (PAINFUL .
|JOINTS, ‘ACHING
| BONES. It your BODY fs | o -
tuil of URIC ACID POIsr
| ON It your BONE) MAR-
ROW fs drying up so that
you cantyWORK, CAN'T
DIGEST your food prop-
ery—LOSE NO TIME.
Got the wonderful
JovVzone
RHEUMATIOM —-
MEDICINE
| (Double Strength) .
| Just take a dose It fe very La.
pleasant, instantly that
i pain stops. Thb blood be-
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SORE STIFF, ACHING \
| SOINTS, no wore sciat- © i v
| CA LUMBAGO, NEU-, :
KITIS —all_ the RHEU-’*
| MATIC PAINS gone, Takg
[a atep away from the
gtave! Don't.walt until it
| is too late! Why suffer :
any longer? Here ts your
Foppertunity to get well
qui" Don't. walt until
“you get worse’ Write and
| mail the canh with “it
/YQUR NAME and aD.
DRESS on tho coupon and ‘
| mall the counen right now!
ACT QUICK’ DO IT TO-.
' Day?
DR, ts sy sARgon,
P.O. Bos 47. Hamilton Grange Bta.,
New York ‘city.
ethos mena
tree toon an catalog Y acloye wit this coupon 41.38
{3 "ovatmne fer 96 00—gire ose fo your frend 9 Fear
Are th fal capuest This & gunaloed—ay elney FO
- Rabded iT am ot Bates z
Please Stato How Many Treatments ~
Fouswant <y
KEAN ses sesascnasecnenncosencoveonenens
City and State cece sossestseeeestsenseee ©
——_.-. ____________________,,,
Loaf of Bread Made in 1865
Still Looks Substaritial .
‘The Panhandle Plains Historical So-
clety of Canyon, Tex. has recelved
what 4s believed to be the ofdest loaf
of brend in the State It wan mode by
Gussie Gough when he returned from
the Crvtl War in 1865
‘ Ashen were used in place of soda.
and the bread still looks substanftal,
gayn the Boston Globe ee
a: ; ee Poof | } fot
-* . * e- oe e Sey abe 4 “NERS 0
SS . r \
an nis ection |
. ) a econtifive
= - = = - ape PDT
aa —erernneme seats =)| EMPEZANDO‘A“VER- ibertad Garvey -
: SECCION EN ESPANOL. Ao?) p02" eo ee ee
wed” 2 te “sae ee En ef cufto de fos altimos meses | 2 Teevlar mae
El por La, Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de Ia ‘La luz gopiese a brillae en ta} 8 han dejado manifestadas rob-| “trom rceni
Sh fe Raza Negra . Al] sombra, Se cies que hati sido|chas expresiones de opinién por | follawed wy pr
“| + 142 West 130th St. ___]fescurecidas, en Tos verdaderas pro-| Varia instituciones y directoresres- hott and resal
3] ~ Ciudad de Nueva York, N. Xacsusecssmtoenal-bleuaeaereetronta ol negro, Joo] Ponsables de este pals, sabre la er |progratn wae
H * “ 7 > i al mi .| carcel: de] Hon. Marcus Gar- | Simikinn, wo
mel as PROF, M. A, FIGUEROA, Buiter tuiales él mismo debe entender y so=|carcel@on de OA ay. view Pre
wo : 2 . lucionar,-toda véz ambicione Ia prac- | V¢Y- eit +_* | weleome gddres
Se fica de yaa justicin imparcial, ala} Estas manifentecionet sinceras €O- | as follows: Rec
fa . ‘ , | cual es incuestinablemente acreedor. [rroboran el hecho: de- que ¢l gran} quartotte selec
+ El ridfenlo como arma para contrarrestar nuestto progres. | "ser ‘resro fo debe dejar estos pro-|Tmader en su laudable esfuerzo para | Four: recitation
G Un presidente :negro para une reptiblica en Africa. | plemag a merced de aquellos que|servir a su raza, fue victima def Mies wutame,
i + zQue hay acreca de Yrlanda? La Ardua-prueba de dnjuriaa a caracter,y usan su valor | tecnicismo de re Tey jen y cons ees bed one
aS a ati nen ._ | social, civico y econdmico en, bene-{ secuentemente fue reducido a pri-| aio had with |
ox” nuestra‘organizacién. Sunerioridad del elemento pr9- | cio propjpgcomo agontecié’ en-la| sion, contribuyendo a ello styuellos | 48», Fitsiuent
= gresista. Léamos y escuthemos con entendimiento. | épaca. que se implanto 1a esclavitud | que por razones de egoismo, se opo- | SNS Disision
_ venir ef-progreso del negro es et ridiculo. Desde que se
. abolié la esclavitud_y la fugrza legal no puede ser emplea-
‘da por mas tiempo, para mantener la subyugacién del
. hombre de color, el blanco literalmente se ha reido del
‘ negro y ha continuado Ilevéndofo hacta-un bajo nivel,
~ creéndose asi un estado de inferioridad para la raza pre-
" teridar RIDICULG. Esto es mas cruel-que el létigo, por-
que azota las almas de los sensitivos y desconcierta.s los
‘ apocados de mente. ~ ~~. 3 = *
> - Nada de lo que givnegie ama y reverencia y por lo
* tanto muy sagrado para él, no se\ha escapado a la sard6ni-
ca risa que le brindan sus enemigos. Cuanto mas-grandes
- son los ideales del negro; cuanto mas grande su ambicién;
mas apayasadas se presentan estas actuaciones progresivas,
* a los ojos del hombre blanco quien las afea’y 148 tilda de
»- atrevidas e insolentes, por el hecho de que son actuaciones
“ nuestras, producto legitimo de Ruestto avance en la lucha
: desigual.planteada para Ja consecusi6n de nuestra perso-
Y fidlidad. eosoe Sey : .
: El hecho de que un hémbre negro se declarara presi-
" dente de una-republica negra por hacerse, fue la causa de
s mucha hilaridad y burla entre los blancos. . No. obstante
= estos aceptscon, como materia de principio, la eleccién de
” un Presidente de la repGblica irtandésa, mucho antes de
* que ella. eitistiera:: -De esto se desprende que el negro aun
_ no tiene derecho a aspirar a la ghia y direcci6n de su propia
" £aza. ¢ ° - - . . ‘
" “- Por espacio de cincuienta afios el hombre blance ha
~tenido éxito riéndose del negro, sometiéndolo a un estado
de subyugacién y servidumbre, Depende del negro hoy el.
. acondicionarse para no Seguir haciendo. el papel de-tonto
‘"y continuar esa actitud ireisofia; ‘patrocindndosele un
: medio selv4tico y no permitir que su hermané de pigmenfo
claro, crea que sus gestos, esfuerzos'y Juchas para conse-
~ guir una orientacién progresiva, han sido perdidas para
: siempre. . « . .
{ El negro progresi8ta de la actualidad deberia pensar
Ly prepararse para decidir por s{* mismo’ lo que mejor
‘ convenga @ su condicién racial, y distinguir por si mismo
} tambien lo que importe o no importe a su sensibilidad.
: Tambien’ deberia.preparar su mente aftemano y una vez
i hecha su decisi6n, no estar sujeto a los devaneos y pre-
} Juicios que?la raza-opliesta tratara de hacerle, toda vez
} que este flegro se diera perfecta cuenta que esta en-lo
} cierto y concurre abiertamente las exigencias de la época
| que corremos. «
*«" La Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza
-- Negra en la historia‘de nuestro pueblo y entre las organi-
zaciones del ‘mismo, ha sido la que mas ha suffido el
escarnio de Ia risa y sobre ella ha caido con mas gravedad
el, ensaftamiento del ridiculo. -gPorqué? Desde -el mo-
mento que ef hombre blanco se di6é guenta_del grito de
“Africa para los africanos,” éste empez6'su labor de descré-
dito hacia nosotros; ayudaso por fos negros mal guiados
quienes‘aun creen “que el. leopardo cambiaré sus manchas”
e ifusos creen que algun dia el negro tendré oportunidad
en el pais del hombre blanco. As{ se nos sensura, se nos
veja y ridiculiza porque pénsamos en Africa, trabajamos
para Africa y dariamos nuestra vida por el olocaiisto de”
Africa. ye Lo
‘La prueba de los afios ha sostenido que los principios
de nuestra organizaci6n,. puede resistir cualquier ataque
que el hombre blanco pueda hacerles, Los miembros-leales
. ‘a nuestro movimiento que han laborado dentro de éste, con
todas las durezas y visisitudes que el proceso de.su formato
ha tenido, son amity superiores al negro que facilmente se
descorazone, por fa propaganda tendenciosa del hombre
blanco, y son mucho mas superiorey a aquel ‘hermano de su
raza, que esta ciego para ver la resultante de los principios
que encarna nuestra institucién, ‘ .
‘La raz6n verdad det ridfculo qué sé le “hace a la
Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra
por elementos de la raza blanca, se’ ha ocultado con éxito
de los ojos de millares ‘de negros que son garvieistas de
corazon, pero que no obstante son victimas de la risa y de
Immofa, por su actitud mental q. falta de sentido comun en
fo hacer un examen‘detenido de las criticas' inconsisténtes
? que diario se nos hace. Puede que se rian a mand{bula
battante porque‘ostentdis un uniforme cuyo significado ellos
no entienden, ‘con el hecho marcado de que olividéis lo
. que realmente ticho ropaje significa. :
=: Hay que tener en cuenta que a la raza blanca todavia
de falta por inventar el uniforme que mejor Je: cuadre en
Jas actuales circunstancias. Elfos jalean, gritan“y vociferan
Nevanda al ridiculo mas extremd vuestras conversaciones
y argumentos, al tratar de conseguir vuestro propio pals,
tierra donde podrdis vivir en: paz y armonfa como seres
* normales dentro de los vuestros y obtener asf una condi-
clén y un propésito que os nivele al igual de las otras
tee proce que pueblan el universo. 7
: negre debe aprender a oscuchar y leer con entefdi-
+ miento. Cuanto mas permitdis que vuestro ‘semejante
- trate de hacer un tonto de vuestra humanidad, tanto mas
. tiempo permaneceréis subyugado, . .
OO Be :
v@ Parana.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8,°.1927
All divisions are requested to send in all orders
: for uniforms to‘headquarters —-
Order blanks are now ready; also, price list
Please Do tot Make Payment by Private Check =~
: Send Post Office or Express Money Order *
REGULATION FULL DRESS CORDS
FOR OFFICERS, N. cor. AND PRIVATES {
Ah . ARE NOW READY, a *
EVERY MAN IN THE LEGION ‘MUST’
SECURE ONE. PRICES QN APPLICATION. a,
: For further information write
UNIFORM DEPARTMENT . .
Headquarters, 142 W. 130th St, N.Y.C. 0 -
EMPEZANDO ‘A‘VER: bA
. &. * Se
La luz gopieza a brillde en ta
sombra, en Yas mentes que hati sido
oscurecidas, en los verdaderos pro-
biomes aresiwetronta ¢l negro, los
‘cuales él mismo debe entender y so-
lucionar,-toda véz ambicione Ja prac-
tica de una justicia imparcial, a la
‘cual es incuestinablemente acreedor.
“El negro fio debe dejar estos pro-
dlemiag a amerced de aquellos que
injurian’su caracter.y usan su valor
social, civico y econdmico en, bene-
ficio propjp,comno acontecié’en-ta
épgqca. que se implanté la esclavitud
en las Antillas y en los Estados Uni-
deg y como acontece en la mayor
parte de los puntos en donde el
negro se halla en contacto con Ia
vida del hombré blanco, especial-
mente el de habla inglesa® *7-—_
Por el hecho de servir fielmente a
su Projuinio, e blanco de habla in-
glesa ha-llegado a la conclusién de
que nuestro elemento.es-un pueblo
inferiok, incapaz de gobernarse a si
mismo 6 de particiyar de equidad en
Jos_gobiernos de! hombre . blanco,
‘siendo solamente considerado.cusan-
do puede ser usado para sont
al poder y riqueza de la raza blanca.
El mismo principio que’ gobierna
la relacién del blanco con ef-blanco,
debe gobernar la relacién del blatico
con e] negto; pero éste es general-
mente ignorado por la raza. blanca
en Ips, Estados Unidos, en las An-
tillas y en Africa. El espiritu de
libertad, sinem¥argo, se extiendé por
sobse toda la superficie de la tierra,
Los pueblos oprimidos empiezan' a
preguntarse porqué dede subyugir-
seles sin justificacin. Cuando un
sentimiento tal se pone de sianifies-
to, podgmos vera, simple vista que
seriog trastornos amenazan a Ja hu-
manidad, 2! 2
Los refractasios a nuestro movi-
miento de enaltecithiento -ya empie-
zan a ver que el negro Mio puede
vivir para si, porque el, poderose no
se lo permite. Si de algun modo ha
de vivir y, sacar algun partido a sy
existencia, “debe realizar que su:
problemas,corgo fos del judio, mien-
‘tras aparentemiente tienen un carac:
ter local, son realmente de un carac-
ter internacional y para obtener el
mejor beneficio de su valor social
civieo y econémico tiene que Mega
@ un entendido y. coperar con los
demas elementos de sti raza univer:
salmente, ¥ :
El Ile "Garvey percibié todo est
al crea ia Asociacion Universal
pata Adelanto de la Race Negra
fundandola en las bases de entendi
tmiento y cooperacién, mutua entre
todos los elementos de la raze negsa
Sus enemigos sienten ya la solidari-
dad de su posicion y la'efectividac
de su propaganda, la cual ha ense-
fiado al negro a pensar por si mis
mo. Nuestro elemento tiene aur
que apreciar- su. valor como pueblo
Tal eg el objetivo capital de est
organizdcién, .
. Gloria de la Cuesta en al
Elks Auditorium.
En Ia noche-del.27 de septiémbre
s¢ llevé-agabo en el auditorio de'lés
Elks, 160 oéste valle 129, el primer
concierto de Ia genial pianista cu-
bana Sra, Gloria de la Cuesta, quien
se halla en esta ciudad procedente
del Conservatorio de Pajis.
EI selecto ¢ interesante progeanme
consuitiado deleits, extremadamente
a Ja culta audiencia,-la cual con
encore tras encore revelé su apre¢ia-
cién del talento musical de la su-
blime pianista.
Mme E. De Lyon-Leonard, colo-
tura soprano de gran valer artistico,
acompafiada al piano por la Sra.
Cecelia Butler-Nash, contribuy6 al-
tamente al éxito del concierto, En-
tre sus deleitables selecciones hemos
de mensionar “Quiéreme mucho,”
fa cual canté en espafiol y con muy
bueraciertor 4 -
El espacioso salon estiivo enga-
lanada para el acto. Los palcos es:
faban_ todos' ocupados. Nos falta
espacig para describir lo encantados
de la representacién del bello sexc
en dicho aeto’ musical.
_Pro libertad Garvey
En el curso de los altimos meses
se han dejado manifestadas rot-
‘chas expresiones de opinién por
varias instituciones y directores res-
ponsables de este pais, sobre la en-
carcelg@fon de] Hon. Marcus Gar-
vey. oe,
Estas maniiegonses sinceras co-
‘rroboran el hecho: de- que ¢l gran
Yaader en su laudable esfuerzo para
servir a su raza, fue victima det
‘tecnicismo de una ley federal y con-
secuentemente fue reducido @ pr-
sign, contribuyendo a ello atuuellos
que por razones de egoismo, se opo-
nent al enaltecimiento de nuestra
raza y han constituido un bloque
injustificadg, para desintegrar el
magno movimiento de redencién
que tan habif y latioriosamente di-
rije, el gran negro martir de la pre-
Senteera. + *
nat ated on pro de
su, excarcelation, yublicacion
agradeceria que aquellos que no
tengan coneccién con la Asociacién
‘Universal para el Adelanfo-de Ia
Raza Negra, pe¥o" por’ simpatia al
hombre 6 a*su-grograma desean, su
Hibertad, envieys nombres a esta
redaccion con el objeto de que apa-
rezcah en una nueva peticién de cle-
mencia para el augusto prisionero;
siendo ademas’ altamente apreciable
el que esto se haga a la mayor bre-
‘waded souttle.
El prejuicio en la educacién
Mas de mil*alumnos de Ia escuela
superior ge Emerson, Gary, India-
pa, qué sé declatar€n en huelga’el
lunes pasado rehusando asistir a las
clases, parece que estin dispuestos
allevar el asunto a un fin y han pre-
sentado a la Junta de Educacién lo
que puede lamarse: sus démandas
para regresar nl estudid si se les
conceden. a
En caso de que Ja Junta de Edu-
cacién decida acceder a las deman-
das preparadas -por el Conmé de
Estudiantes en Huclga, regresaran
4 sus clases. =
La primera condicién impuesta
por el comité es de que todos los
alumngs* de ta raza de-eolor en la
‘escuela sean asifmados a un rinédi
del aula donde se hallen y sean ser
vidos separadamente, en ef restat:
rant de layescuela,
La matficula en‘la Emerson High
School de varios alumnos ‘de la raza
de eolor fué lo que motive’ el parc
en las clases. :
Otra de las condiciones es que se
excuse a todos los Huelguistas del
trabajo perdido por causa de Ie
huelga, es decir, que ino se les obli
gue a hacer el trabajo que-no hi-
cieron durante esos dias. .
A fa Junta de Educacjén se: Ic
pide también en otra de las condi-
ciones que suspenda todos los tras-
lados en proyecto de estudiantes de
Ia raza de gplor a la Enterson High
Schoo! y.que elimine todos los ma.
triculadgs hasta ahora en dicha es-
cuela, * 4
El comité de estudiantes hucl-
guistas también recomendaba a {2
Junta G3 ‘Edycacion que se constru-
yese a Ia mayor brevedad posible la
escuela superior para dlumnos ex-
clusivamente de la raza ‘de color.
La. escuela Emerson tiene unos
dog mil ochocientos alumnos, de los
les-mil_son de escucla ‘saperies
y el resto de la elemental, ~~ ~~~
La huelga se ha conducido en me-
idioadel mayor orden y, aunque la
‘policia se ha preparado para cual
que emergencia, no se ha registra-
ningin desorden, :
Varias manifestaciones publica:
han celebrado 103 hiuelguistas ducan-
te la huclga y una salva de silbidos
fecibio. las’ declarsciotee del ‘aupe-
rintendente de escuelas cuando
amenazé con Ia expulsién a mil
guitmentos de Ios huelguistas si no
cidian regresar a las clases.
- Varios cientos de los alumnos
‘que asiatieron af diltimo mitin de los
estudiantes no se habian unido toda-
via a los huelguistas, pero se espe-
raba lo hicieran de un momento a
otro. |
(Contyiuedtrom page 8
—The &t. Petersburg Division opened
ita regular muss meeting Sunday, Sop-
tember. 1n with the afnging of the odo
“From Greenlan¢’s Toy Mountains.”
follawed by prayer and the Scripture
losson by tho chaplain, sing vy the
chole and recding ‘of the minutes. Tho
program was conducted by Mra G
Strhkine, whe presented the Second
keatly Vico President, who made the
Welcome gddress. ‘The, program was
as follows: Recitation, B. N. Hall. Jr :
quartetto selection by the Universat
Four; reeltation, Jaoies Snith; paper,
Migs Willams, quartet. selection: pa-
per, Mra Hrown. sung by chotr We
alto had with ua in our meoting the
Lady Titsident and the eecrotary of
Tampa Division Tho Lady President
read. wonderful papoe on “Unity,
after whieh ho secretary mado a few
brlet remarks. Solo by the’ prpsident’
My. 5. N. Heil of this division, “When
‘Mother Prayed” Papor, Mrs. A. Smith?
addrose by tho Lady President, re.
E'Lo Louls “tho processtuna} was 1ed
by the Lexlon otieera and Motor
Corps. ‘Tho mveting waa brought to-a
closo by the singing of our National
Anthom .ané benediction. “We -“Are
Marching On t@ Afrfea and Hope That
Victory Will Ba Ours”
L. ROBINSON, Reporter.
BANES, CUBA
On Sunday, September 18, tintvar-
sity Day. wan well “observed inthe
Banes DiViston. The divine service at
4p. m wan éondicted by our acting
chaplain, MF Jobn A. James At 1°30
p.m a monster mans meeting wan
held The untformed units played
thelr purt at both moitinge under the
command of Ieutenant L. Brown.
Afjer tite ritualletle ceremony wan per-
formed by Yr John A. Jamen, acting
chaplain, 4¥ tlterary and musteal pro~
gram wor turned.over to Mr R.A.
Harris, who-avas shtroducod”as chal
man ‘Tho program ta an follows:
President's hymn; reading of front
page of The Negro World by Mr. G. C
Douglass, of-socretary; solo SY Mrs
B, Burt; addres by Mf. R. A. Harfte;
solo by Miss H. Bangburry; tddross
by Mr. James Degrasse; a solo’ was
renderot by Mrs. 8, U. Hibbert, dur-
ing which thd offering was. lifted.
‘Among thoce who contributed to the
remaining portion of the literary pro-
.ccam were Menars, B.C. Douglas, &
'T. Munroe, William 8.-Green and H. J.
Williamson. ‘The meeting was closed
with anthem, “Ethiopie.” Special men-
tlon must be made of Master Enrique
Hibbert, a youth of not_more: than
seven summers, for the compétent say
In which ho played the accompaniment
on the oFgun in Niaz Rangbury's soi
a ¢. MUNROR, Riserter,
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tale st hod balndresiing ebops Or
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AG gage casvcenntte ies ght th
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Public Speaking Taught by Masi. 10c
‘Will bring you the proposition. Write
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P.O. Box 184 -
Kingsburg, Callf., U. 8. A.
: p . :
. Witat will become of the Negro one hundred years from
‘now if he does, not become a powerful national unit?
Will he allow himself to become a victim of the white
ais system of economic exploitation? -
| ‘Will he continue to laugh the time away until the crisis
comes, then in despair will the surviving members of the race
sommit race suicide by miscegenation? ~, -
These are the questions that are agi.ting the minds of
thoughtful persons, and that is why we want you to geb a copy
of “Africa for the Africans,” written by Marcus Garvey, so that
you can get a perspective of the futurg and prepare for-the
changes, that are bound to corie.
, : ‘
Vol. 2, $1.76. Vol. Il (with 25 illustrations), $3.00
: Combined’ offer, $4.50 .
: Large Size Pictures of Hon. Marcie ‘Garvey
. (for framing), $0 cents %
. African Fandamentaliem (for
framing), 40 cente
. < “ - ”
Song Hit of the Season, “KEEP COOL’
Sparkling, captivating, piano and uke arrangement—only
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Send All Orders to -
. Mrs, AMY JACQUES GARVEY |
+ Box 22, Station L - oy
NEW YORK CITY, U.S. A. a
Violet Rays as Detective;
Can Expose False Teeth,
Fake Diamonds and Notes
‘Tiepeftectivancas of the . Invisible
old violet ondof the
spoctrdm wap demonstrated by Dr-
‘Herman Gooden of the New York
Skin“ end Cancer Hospital at the
‘Cherateat Industries Exposition im tho
Grand Contéal Paluce recently, Dr
Goodman euid that a nowly invented
ultra'violet Miter made yosaibie # con-
centration of ultra \loiet rays which
not only were benefictal tn the, treat-
huent of many Gjsvascs, but alee Could
servo other purposes
Ultra \fotct rays, he egid, Instantly
reveal faitation of many things
which appour genuine in ordinary
viglulo light. Imitetyun dlainonda,
Imwevor peifect, wre Gull under the
ita \idlot rag. Whercde, gently
akgaiduds ahtne brightly and usually
are blue In color “A fulne couth, tukes
‘on a ‘chocolate culor, whereas & natural
tooth {9 brilliant white Counteifett
bili, raised checks, eranures and many
other fakoscan be detwted, Dr Guvd-
man utd
Last nicht a motion pitture was
shown by the Lenurtuent of Axrt-
culture disclosing that while the Fed-
erat Govornmont has outlawed some
baverages It 18 promoting, a new ong
calfed “cussina.”,a toa produced by 4
plant grown'in tho Carolinas. Accord-
Ing to Department of Axiivulture ox-
perte, Mt resembion (ea in tdste and
Jahonld he we ppular of toa Linele tf
tho public becomes familiar with ‘ite
taste The filn showed hew canaina ts
wrown and how Sts leaves afe treated
to spalin tok. tan antiaiincitns,
White, Flowers Sweetest
Experiments indlcato that &hito
Hower in general are sweetest, then in
onder yellow, red, blue, violet, green
find orange.
pas
aaa
: <
4 h..
sce’ by hospitals and beauty pare
Tore att Sy? thotande ot eakaae
bab, “Thy ’nanaet te Ave misuse
Femoves esely nd i ee
election the bas seht down
forthe skin’ autface, taking ‘sur.
Fees tosotiear uate “ANS
His EPPemowe ei ptmoie and
Shenpar"wolsker and belie Olers
sae Soars BeSeT ge
Scateong tnd tothy. Wonet and
Steers nm: Wome,
Prortannte dar when f eel he
Godsend? Saw. Wee.
Spice usd our praduct foe's
zernrand Sand trod Howe Sak
Bee Te sete ete ae
_ ‘Of Bumps and pimples ond ta tho
BisdGss in Siampe for » yackas
ier. (2 Sete fer a pastas
Forslan ices asiel St rebacst.
(But. 00185 yoora of atlfoetion)
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IndiwPearl Rush Yields
Only Eggs to Thousands |
BOMBAY, Jntia, Sept. 26 (A, P24
W great “pest rush,” almilar to the
god rushes of Eaiifornia, the “Kione
dike ana the Gort Coast, has just
taken place in Secunderabad and Hye
‘Attor a hesvy raln the roport went
around thut beaullful pearls, raoging
in size from a peanut tO mustard seed,
wero discovried: thivkly strewn over
the felds, Within a few hours thou
candy of people rushed to tue flelds in
motor vary, Iiyeles and on fopt. Poe
Hoo authoritien sent a force to keep
order. :
‘The pearl turned ous tobe tho egaa
of olther fn insect oF reptiles very.
simlinr In appearance to pearly, but
dureting oh the ellghtest pressure,
Béreune who rusted to the ftelds
‘came away with handfuls of the eggs.
Mans are keeping then » retuning.
Welleve they aie nit Jewoln >
“SICK FOLKS
Now Get Well Without
Bevcee fue Wadi
A new book le now being distrJbuted
ine Ainericen Tlewtth "asoumtion eh
21g ‘Ate Pieeien auinneiion orave beers
Prevent und. weal isenne, The walptee
Trai eepiniee visislg. te te aoe ett atte
out eapenae for medicine, ‘secery “Sieeaee te
Sarcfullyagd “iorougiiy, (rented, euch am
Bheumecinot siomace. kidneys Liver and
Binder roubles, Aston, Conary Gone
Bation, Nertiuseoes. Ualiatonen, fosonia,
Biabeten: Thin tind, Prien coltre Oberg
Underweight. “children a, Diseases Beeeye
thing’, vainsteuinsly “iold'in thle seme.
Uoast “Rebipsge “beuy. “WRAL BALE
Mitch aggmia te eect miracuous eure ang
Tato, in tho mnoat, avauhurn anes, “includes
Te charts and: 42° Cournot xerctaen: Well
Charts tvcites for Natural Romodier Daim
Expelinry rie” Four only expense ts 4118
faethe hook tor pay Be6 CoO D) NS
Sapeave for medicine’ “Weite today ae ele
sotiee” may not appear paatn
EDUCATOR PRESS
FULLER BLDG. :
suey Cite, ‘Dept. m-1038,
wm Dm Pinas,
+ oF @ro ls ¢ é
ngciive arriications ¢ 4
FoR AGEXcy of,
| FRom PEnioxs — ¢
aN THE Q
FOLLOWING CITES:
BIRMINGHAM, ALA. 7 q
MONTGOMERY, ALA. |
LITTLE ROCK, ARK. j
BAN FRANCISCO, CALIF,
BRIDGEPORT. CONN. °° 4
AUGUSTA, GA. . {
MACON, GA. 24
DANVILLE, ILL, ;
* DECATUR, ILL. ae
LOUISVILLE, KY. |
LEXINGTON, KY., ae |
SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 7°
WORCESTER, MASS. ,”
BOSTON, MASS. :
ST. PAUL, MINN,
DULUTH, MINN. = 8
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN,
BATTLE CREEK, MICH. ,
LANSING, MICH. - ‘@
* ELIZABETH, N. Jy &
ALBANY, N. ¥,
LORAIN, OHIO |
HARRISBURG, PA.
BETHLEHEM, PA.
GHEBTER, PA, 4
EL PASO, TEXAS #4
/8AN ANTOMO, TEXAS
DALLAS, TEXAS 7 |
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
PORTSMOUTH, VA. 4
.ROANOKE, VA. i
“Send In name and addrose to
NEGRO WORLD” |
CIRCULATION DEPT.
142 West 130th Street’
NEW YORK CITY
THE PEOPLE'S FORUM
up, which may greatly threaten the existence of present-day civilization. It is hoped that the next toplef for discussion may be "The Solution of War," as the dominant races and nations seem not to think in said strain, and the Negro may be able to save civilization from wretched doom by offering the real solution for wars, providing the white man would harken to his voice.
For the Hypocrite
To the Editor of The Negro World:
Please allow me space in the precious columns of our paper to throw light upon certain exciting 'black bolts' somewhere in the machinery of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, so that real Garveyites may get out their monkey-wrenches and tighten those bolts in time before the running machine should break down.
Since the organization of the Universal Negro Improvement Association by the Honorable Marcus Garvey a lot of Negroes joined its ranks, thinking it was a big paying concern and that they could play the old game by running off with wholesale murder, and live at ease off the hard-earned dollars of their unfortunate brothers and sisters.
But finding that 'things' worked counter to their expectations, they grouped themselves together framed in Marcus Garvey and finally but him alive and knowing that Marcus Garvey had left the altar where the pregnant to give birth to son and wart w sons and daughters with a new weapon to ward off the curse
Marcus Garvey has seen his days fighting these people and enlisting the masses of their deeds and alms.
I
Name:
PROSPERITY
GOOD LUCK'S LEADER
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Some of the Principal Reasons for War
The real cause of war is generally selfishness on the part of some race group or nation, who would deprive some other group or nation of rights and privileges that abound to it. There has always been a disposition on the part of the strong to oppress the weak, thus making it impossible for a combination of peace. For if peace must abound universally, that spirit of real breadth must be exhibited to a larger degree than it is toola remembering that as long as the strong oppress the weak, sorrow and discontent will ever mark the path of man, but with love and good-will toward all, the reign of peace and plenty shall be marshaled in, and the generations of man shall be excited blessed.
This being true, we are convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that the primary causes of war are selfishness and greed on the part of nations as above stated. As in the case of Egypt and England England is determined to possess the oil fields of Egypt, which she has no legal nor moral rights to, and to eventually affect this condition war may become insultable and so it is with England and India, France and Morocco, America and the little Republics in the lesser Antilles and most of Europe with Africa.
Can it be possible to escape war when a tran comes into your home to dictate the policies of your family contrary to your wishes and inconsistent with the family's best interest? We should say, no, for war becomes necessary when one steps beyond the bounds of right and reason.
Yes, selfishness in the cause of war and because of this condition existing today war clouds are again looming
We dared tell her the truth
C W NORMAN.
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and he is now paying the price for doing so.
Many of these sharks are still recovering about even around our local diving sites, fighting for an office where they may be able to perpetuate their old game of self-aggrandishment. After failing to attain same an account of being found out, they resort to preaching addictive doctrines and finding thousands of reads-made faults of those in office so as to raise disagreements among unsuspecting members. I am pliding with all good convoyes to keep their lines firm and close and do not allow those cheaters to filter through. The race went to its tailory during those days and has seen its cross, since entrapment for the lack of a real teacher, a rear patricia and an indomitable leader. We hide him now, so less make good of him.
ALARIC T. WELLY
Doing His Bit To Help the Chief
To the Editor of the Negro World
White reading the World of Saturday, September 10. I saw in it a grand opportunity for the non-members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to co-operate for the Hon Marcus Garvey's release. By being once a 'member of the association at Rachel, West Virginia, I thought it my duty to do all I can to help speed the Hon Marcus Garvey's release.
I went around to see many non-members of the association and asked what they thought of it. Everyone was very anxious to see him released and said they would do anything that they could do to appeal his release. Only a few have read 'The Negro World,' and what few have read the paper said that they could not see anything to keep him in prison. He is there because he is fighting for a place where the Negro race can rise to the highest and be the ruler' of the motherland.
STOP PROSTATE PAINS IN 24 HOURS
Enlargements of the prostate gland is responsible for getting up frequently during the night, that draggy dull ache and burning sensation. If you suffer from painful urtination and feel older than you fall, you are in Hexagland Treatment, postpaid and free of charge or obligation. It should give relief in a few hours and stop all symptoms, quickly. If it hurts you, tell your friends and pay me whatever you want. Simply send the loss to mine. Simply send mine to send it under plain wrapper. Write today, as this introductory offer is good for only ten days. THE RAYNE CO. 82 Coca Cola Building, Kansas City, MG.
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How can you expect to keep the love and respect you have for your manhasset manhasset the right to pet it her lover or mate? Woman love real men! For years I suffered because I could not find a man who was a manhasset manhasset. Then A doctor shapped me the was back to you. Singer and happiness. I will talk to you manhasset manhasset if you need me. CAMPELLA, Botton Ivan, D. Bender (Colo.)
THAT ARE AND MAY ENTER INTO BUSINESS WE WANT TO SAY
Take a big store like Wannamaker's. They have been before the dawn when you can pick up a minute, hour or day you pick up a newspaper you will see therein in a thick page or half page of advertisement telling the public of their offers.
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POSTAGE 25c.
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BOYS & GIRLS $2.00 Given NORK work JUST FUN
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send you $3.00 and keep $2.00. We trust you
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Sporting Goods, Novelties,
Beer or Bicycle Caro. Ink Shiners, Luck
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hack free Hill Box, Box N. Sailo,
Cola.
OPPORTUNITY—will sell you a piano direct
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Give our three of a Good Luck. Surveys Wealth, Health and Happiness thanks all around you. Winnie games, business love, money and everything. Have money, friends, sweetness. Will you be lucky Blessed Candles, Spirited by love, roused and powerfulness, and by burning the fire and secret directions, one can discover the other will bring Good Luck.
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White or come to the largest and original Hinton Toilet Articles Manufacturers. We work with all of our agents are making workers. All of our agents are making workers. Where why not you? Experience and necessity. Free sample case and free delivery. Remember you make more with us. PRODUCT ST. $319 B. State St. CICUAGO, ILL. MENTRE-BROADFERRI $14.99. For ages 14 and older. The life of silk baskets and lingerie. Strengthens against airtrains (proventricular). Sanitary and harmless in color. A new product. Others making big money, so can join. North Franklin St. Philadelphia, Pa. AGENTS - WE START YOU IN BUSINESS and help you succeed. No capital or experience needed. We can earn $50-$100 weekly. Write Sandra Products, 666 Broadway, New York.
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MEN AND WOMEN to act as agents
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Education of Negroes
A Rural Problem
WASHINGTON Sept. 29 Of the
4,469 Negro schools in the 14th Southern State, during the school year
1925/1926, 2,494 (934 per cent) were rural, and 1,566 (66 per cent) were urban schools, according to study of Negro schools in the South by S. L. Smith, published in the Southern Workman. One-teacher schools, numbering 15,355, composed 63.8 per cent of the total number of Negro schools, 4,525 schools (18.8 per cent) were of the two-teacher type, 1,702 (71 per cent) three-teacher type, and 2,494 schools (10.8 per cent) employed four or more teachers. The average length of the school year in the 22,494 rural schools was about 6 months. The range was from 87 months in Maryland to 47 months in Alabama.
Of the 2,963 Negro children of school age living in the South, 68,99 per cent. in rural sections and 75,6 per cent. in cities were enrolled in school. Of the 801 Negro high schools in the 44 states, 209 are four-year accredited high schools. Total enrollment in the 801 high schools was 68,605, and the number of four-year graduates was 6,485.—C. P. B.
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
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On account of so many people writing me for instructions to teach them how to use Lodestone and Magnetic Sand and John the Baptist's toes, I am the only anyone of secret free of charge. All I ask is that they write me, stating their troubles or misfortune and giving me their word of honor that they will use the secret for their needs. B235 N. W, Eighth St., Miml, Fl.
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TARA
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AM-BISH-UN TABLETS
AM DISH IN TABLETS are used by men
and women to read books. You'll magaet at the result,
but get new ambition that makes you worth
and becomes better appreciated by those who
know you. vigor, integrity and willpower you feel as
all the joys of youth.
DO NOT SEND MONEY
Pay your bills
Sept to you in Plain Envelope
RUBY COMPANY
712 712-8000 M. P. C. C. X.
New York City
This book, given free with any order, will tell you two ways of paying for dollars of money. We will send you the two ways of paying for you to be seen and of fee享受. When all the gifts are received, we will return your money. Blink the links. Write today.
TRUTH* SCIENCE BUREAU
3221 w. Washington Hill
All foreign entries must be accompanied by
money.
That Baby You've Longed For
MYSTERIOUS KEY
MYSTERIOUS KEY
The Negro World's Directory of Negro Business in N.Y.
TELL HIM YOU SCARE IT IN THE NEGRO WORLD
The purpose of establishing this directory is to keep before members of the race.
Those of you that are, in business—who are ever-render to serve you. Therefore, let the slogan be: PATRONIZE YOUR GOWN.
Those of you that are in business and have not yet listed in this directory, please Morninggale $317 and we will take care of your peder.
HAMILTON TIRE WORKS—Expert vulcan-
tizer that works tire; auto supplies.
2572 7th Ave. (1498 St.)
Barber Shops and Beauty Parlors
WILKES TONSORIAL PARLOR, 864 Lenox
Ave. side of avenue. George T. Wilkes. Prop
We specialize in ladies hair-bobbing. Try
to find a salon. If you are not pleased, do not
tell us. Shop formerly at 864 Lenox Ave.
Sign Painters
DANIEL LOCKHART—Sign and Showcase
Maker. See me when you need work.
153 West 107th St. Audubon 1746.
SEVENTH AVENUE CIGAR STORE or
museum 211 7th Ave. (146th St.) . 91
CAMPBELL & PARRIS—Cigars and digger
stationery. 2484 7th Ave.
(146th St.)
WHEN IN NEED of dentistry, call on Dr. Woodruff Hopkins, Surgeon Dentist, 2344 Woodruff Hopkins, 14th St. New York City Hours 9 a.m to 9 p.m. Sunday by appointment. Telephone Edgecombe 8694.
Drug Stores, Delicatessen, Etc.
THE UNIQUE PHARMACY - Polite service, high prices. S. E. corner 1406 St. and 10th Ave.
W M JOHNSON'S delicatessen and ice cream parlor Cor 7th Ave. and 145th St.
BOUTTE'S PHARMACY - The ultimate in drugs and toilet prides; soda fountain and buffet lunch Cor. 7th Ave. and 137th Street.
CLOVER-LEAF PHARMACY - "Harlem's store. Cor. 142d St. and 7th Ave. Edge. 8608.
Expressmen, Employment Agencies
SQUARE DEAL EMPLOYMENT MORGENCY - We live up to our name. 1234th Ave. (133th St.)
GARNERS EXPRESS—Local and Long-
Distance Moving. Licensed Piano Mover,
Baggage and Mail. Office: 79 West 331st St.
Harlestown 244ly. Office: 79 West 331st St.
Harlestown 244ly. Branch: 1468 Nagle Ave.
Wedworth 6720.
GORDONS EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Specializing, in colored help—domestic
and commercial and board bound. 2260
71 Ave. near 1468 St. Bowie Rd/nurse
6255
Hairdressers, Hardware
VANITY SALON—HAIRDRESSERS — "We can be qualified, not surpassed." Mmo.
Stigrave. 217th 71 Ave. (146th St).
PROGRESSIVE COMMERCIAL ASS'N OF
Hardware. In Hardware. 2488 71 Ave. near 1468 St.
SPECIAL OFFER
WHITAKER PRESS
405 Carlton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
FITS FREE
Proof
If you have Epilepsy. Fits. Falling Sickness
on Convulsions—no matter how bad—write
one today, without fail. Attack is stopped
over night in many cases. No BROMIDES—
no harmful drugs. Plant warranted.
DR. C. M. SIMPSON
1964 W. 44th St., Cleveland, O.
IF U DON'T C
CONSULT
DR. KAPLAN
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE AND RBASONABLE
EYES EXAMINED FREE
531 LENOX AVENUE
NEW YORK
Opposite Harlem Hospital
Under Ground
TREASURES
HOW and WHERE
TO FIND THEM
A Secret you should know
It may mean a fortune to
you. FREE particulare
Write to: Harlem Hospital
MODEL CO.
Dept. 832. Como Blvd.
THE BOOK OF
LUCK
French LOVE SECRETS
Kind you need to with others. Secure dar-
ing book of wonderful woman in Paris.
Nothing like it -- only 10c stamps (not
coin) CONFIDENTIAL. Cannot be secured
with money. Please do not leave while
lives Mme Eve. Dolfo Potalagal de.
Dept. 1, Paris, France (Use 50 postage)
TO THOSE OF YOU
ADVERTISE
How in the world do you expect a salesperson to sell them something is a marvel. You must give your business publicity. The other fellow advertises it.
Now we do not mean to say that you should purchase a whole or less item in a newspaper should secure some kind of space in a newspaper that goes to the masses, for the reason of information. Now don't be like the other fellow that failed. And do not think that any money you may have is money thrown away, as a good number of persons think.
We would suggest that you get
travel with the advertising
departments.
THE NEGRO WORLD
And arrange to have advertising
matter placed in its columns.
THE NEGRO WORLD
is known to be the best local,
national and international ad-
vertising agency. Let us help you
get the stock from jje shelves. Let us get you
the stock from jje shelves. Let us get you
the stock from jje shelves. Let us get you
business booster.
Let us not least, let us be your
salesman—today, tomorrow and
always. Call or write for our, in-
quiries. Get on the right road to success
and happiness in the business
departments.
H. G. SALTUS
142 W. 130th St., N. Y. C
Phone Morningside 2517
ATTENTION! ALL NEGROES
$15 for my $35 course Rhodes
Sustom, Loomis, tools,
Loomis, tools, and
hats salen for $160, send
noney, foreign and cash, plus
plageage, Bob Tolmie Press Oll
Grove, Bob Tolmie Press Oll
Sivate, each 50c Special Grow-
1 Dye Salve, $150 Men's 12
Male 12 $150 Men's 12
1 $75 Razor Bump Dofler,
Big 36 Press Combs, $20 Oll
Oll $20 Oll Reed, 120 Bowen, Waycross
Ga., Mrs. E. Green, 2708-Olive, N. W. Wash-
off, Joff Kretel, Ancon, Panama,
Joff Kretel, Crietel, Z., Mrs. B. Marrb,
Sharples, W. Va., Write
MADAME RIDA
P. O. Baldge, Allegiance
128 Edgemont Avenue, New York City
(Editor Eye magazine, copy 10c.)
MALE HELP WANTED
AGENTS WANTED
Auto Supplies, Etc.
Sign Painters
Cigar Stores
DENTIST
Hairdressers. Hardware
Tailors
1000 BUSINESS CARDS
Nearly Printed
FOR $2.00
A Secret you should know,
It may mean a fortune to you.
FREE particulars.
Write today.
Contains tastiness, 'amulets,
chambers, marries, days, locks
marriages, marriage impressions, etc. Price $26. No C. O. D. Money-buy guardian, white and black magic, white and black magic, stage, scars, charms, fairy attaches and herbs. Catalog free.
W. DEAN CO.
Newark, Mo.
Direct From Paris
KIDS
Jewelers
ST. GEO. V. CORINALDI
JEWELRY, MUSIC, NOVILTIES
DEVELOPING and PHOTO PRINTING
2394 Seventh Ave. 149th St.
Views and Greeting Carpets for All Occasions
S. O. HAYNES—Jeweler and watchmaker.
"Give me—miseral; your gift to come back"
2829 7th Ave. (149th St.)
REID & MODE—Watchmakers and jewelers
giving love to customers. Give us a
arrangement for satisfaction. Give us a
trial." 2321 7th Ave. near 131st St.
Printers
Photographers
G. G. G. PHOTO STUDIO, INC. CORRECT
AND MODERN POSITIONS FOR MEN,
W. G. G. PHOTOS,
AND FLASHLIGHTS 100 W.
436TH ST. N. Y. O. PHONE BRADHURST
0368.*
Restaurants and Lunch Rooms
MASON'S. LUNCH ROOM-Good home-
cooking at reasonable prices. 2516 7th
Ave. (near 246th St.).
EAT. DRINK AND SMOKE at the Old
Dial Place. 2464 7th Ave. (near 246d St.).
VENTAS. RESTAURANT AND QUICK
all night. 2464 7th Ave.
(near 142d St.)
Schools
BRAITHWAITE BUSINESS SCHOOL—
stand on our record. Fail Tern begin
sborhand. Bookkeeping. Bookkeeping.
sborhand. Typwriting. Bookkeeping.
English. etc. 2378 Seventh Avenue. Phone
Audubon 9621.
NEW FORK ACADAMY IN BUSINESS
Fork. Bookkeeping and Bookkeeping.
Civil Service appointments after compi-
447 Lenox Ave. Phone Morningside
862.
Plastering
PLASTERING—STUCCO. General contracting. Philips, Harris & Company. 64 Morrison Street, New York City, phone 212-745-8168. 2 West 146th St, New York City, phone Audubon 7166.
Grocery Stores
NOEL'S GROCERY—"Quality and Economy in foodstuffs." Give us your support. 277 West 134th St. (near 8th Ave.).
UNDERTAKERS
ALBERT T. S. SAUNDERS FUNeral HOME
- Motto, courtesy and efficiency, 106 W.
1360th St. New York City, Phone Broad-
burst 4160.
BESTWICK BROS.-Undertakers and em-
bassists. Autos for hire. Notary public.
pubs. Notary public. Notary public. Notary
Broadburst 4160. Branch. 44 Folk St.
Brooklyn, phone Novius 6669.
Steamship Agents
MILTON W. MAYES—Steamship Agent and Freight. Forwardsmen. Tickets procured by Bermuda, Panama. Central and South America. All information courteously given.
25c **for Spiritualist Incense, Empress**
**GIVE ME BREET, Sacred, Cross Pin**
**GIVE ME BREET, Sacred, Cross Pin**
NEW YORK, N. Y.
(Send birth and date for astrologer here-
MONEY! MONEY!!
I can show you how to get the money you need you can always have cash. Note the money you can always have. Complete course mailed on receipt of $2
SUCCESS INSTITUTE
Box $ 1949 Sovent Avenue
NEW YORK CITY
YOUR FUTURE FORECAST!
Let Solicittee Astrology guide you to SUCCESS, HAPINRS and GOOD LUCK! REWI! A valuable partner about your future, given FREE! WRITE NOW! Birth date and 3 stamps for return postage.
ASTROST SCIENCE INSTITUTE. Studio 91. O. A. G. Box 72. Brooklyn, N. Y.
OLD STAMPS wanted. Cancelled countries wanted in any quantity Stamps must be sealed from the paper and not cut from Paper in cash or merchandise. John G. Copper, Red Bank, New Jersey, U.S.
FITS Attacks Stopped over night in many cases by now treatment. NO BROMIDES NO HARMFUL DRUGS. Results guaranteed. Lakewood Research Laboratories. Box 721, Lakewood, O.
SORE LEGS HEALED
Open Leaf, Ultran Elseaved Lees, Golter. Ezema healed while you work. Write for free book. How to use G. Liam Leps. 1385 Green Bay Ave., Milwaukee, WI.
ROOMS TO BENT
FOR RENT - Six-room apartment with all
modern improvements. Phone evening,
Havemoyer 0189-3272. 95th street,
Corona, L. I.
---
NEATLY furnished rooms, single, couple.
Refmad people, elevator apartment. 321
St Nicholas avenue, apartment 69
FOR RENT
No. 370 Cherry street. New York. Comfort-
10.00 to 15.00 per month. See Bathell,
jantor. 370 Cherry street, or phone 5987
Bookman.
400 ST NICHOLAS AVE.—Furnished room
for respectable couple. All modern con-
tainer large and small; nicely furni-
ished. Appartment, 114 West 137th
St. ground floor west.
FOR RENT, apartments downtown, 370-373
Cherry at. 3 and 4 room apartments,
clean and sweet brier. Colored, high grade,
bathroom. Apartment, Bottel, 370 Cherry
st. Phone Bookman 5987.
UNFURNISHED apartments to let. 4 private
rooms, steam heat, electric, bath, hot
water. 32 West 118th street, near Lenox
avenue.
UNFURNISHED apartment to let. 4 private
rooms, steam heat, electric, bath, hot
water. 6 East 118th street, near 61st avenue.
FURNISHED ROOMS $600 and $600 per
room. M. C. Donald, 200 W. 119th street,
414 floor.
FOR RENT - Unfinished apartment,
and 6 rooms, bath, hot water, electric,
29 East 115th street, near Madison avenue.
---
FOR RENT - Downstreet, $15 Cleryr St. 1,
Snowy St. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
First Floor, 1st and 2nd colored apartments.
Prices, $10, $12 and $13. See Bethel, tanner
on premises or photo Bookman $54
FURNISHED ROOM for respectable lady or
gentleman All improvements. Cell evenings. 224 W 19th St. Ap 22
U. R. GOVERNMENT, $OBR $1140 to $2200.
M. R. GOVERNMENT, $1140 to $2200. Appliance
mending from. Write immediately. Franklin
Institute, Dpt. R-56. Rochester, N. Y.
92-FUTNAM AVE. car Gover Place Brooklyn.
Lnore for rent. Gond location for
harbor shop or other business. Rent $20.
Hudson Fulton St. Brooklyn. Tele-
phone Triangle 1133
TO LET
LIGHT, private rooms or working girls
only. Phone before 11. Edge-
comb 241.
FOR RENT - Large furnished room 68
W 19th St. Ap 22