The Negro World
Saturday, January 21, 1928
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
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hacer. Hom. E. H. Kane, de la
nuestra universidad, la aun de mis
nuestro nero y lo quo nos
encuentra.
Su humildad instigita en sus
miembros del diario personales,
de sus modos comunes presentados
de vivera de vivera de su tamaño.
El jefe se definió del nero nero :
"Por el nero nero que es el nero
que se delige contiene de ser
nero y aunque sea de diez, chiamar-
o cien años de edad, tiene la con-
ciencia de que es nero y que como
si se vivera y esta satisfecho de
ello. Esto vosotros no lo tuviste
hasta que Marcus Garvey no estro-
en la escena."
El nuevo viejo ha expilado. Larga vida parcial ante nuevo. El Negro World extende al Horn. Marina Garvey, presidente general de la Asociación Universal para el Adeo lanto de Raza Negra, a todos sus oficiales así como sanitarios al inmenso número de asociados, un prospero y feliz año nuevo con la esperanza de que ello traiga una satisfacción completa en los anhelos, ambiciones en la realización de todas aquellas cosas necesarias para conformar mejor nuestros ideales de vida en este 1928 y que sea más equitativo de lo que lo fue el ya extinguido 1927.
"Es una gran ola el sabre lo que uno es, estar orgullo el doy y hacer lo mas y mejor que se pudo dentro de las circunstancias. Es de tanto honor el ser un humbra de color como lo es de ser blanco; ni el uno ni el otro es responsable por el accidente de su pagamento. Tanto el hombre negro como el hombre blanco no tienen exito en sus empresa; si lijan en sus miras particulares que luchas antigüñicas por diferencia; de color. El Creator ha tenido su propósito al hacer al uno blanco y al otro negro.
El hecho de que el año 1927 nos diera al final de su ciclo el ragocijo de ver en libertad a nuestro querido líder, sefa suficiente para que los miembros de la organización lo hagan memorable y sea visto dicho año como una fecha histórica en los anales de nuestro movimiento. Con nuestro lider en libertad y en buen estado de salud, con la fe que le asiste y el gran espíritu de altezas que le anima en la lucha emprendida, nos dan una idea de la seguridad de triunfar en la persecusión de lo que se ha propuesto para su raza en general.
El negro no podrá hacer nada que valga-la pena; sino torqa a pecho y piensa; como el hombre blanco, en hacer de su raza y de su color un estandarte; y tal como su hermano blanco, sacrificarse en la defensa de lo suyo y dar su vida; si posible fuera, en caso de cualquier ultraje de bochorno que le amenaze.
La organización se siente con brios para afrontar el nuevo año y no teme a los revices de la suerte, porque tiene confianza en la virtualidad de la causa que defiende. El nuevo año nos rendirá con abundancia lo que creemos necesitar para continuar la gran labor y obtener el éxito anhelado. Si tenemos fe en nosotros mismos y como un solo hombre laboramos todos los que estamos interesados en el gran movimiento de emanipación y un buen entendido lo haremos todo posible. Solo falta un pequeño grano de fe para mover una montaña, y si eso ha de ser necesario para ultimar nuestro éxito, podemos decir que el programa de esta organización responderá a los fines para que fue creado.
La cuestión del color es un accidente y nada más.
El pueblo de los Estados Unidos se ha alarmado con la existencia de hombres y nutjeres empedernidos que en gran escala, como una clase ya impuesta, cometen los crimenes mas horrendos a indecibles, mientras el baidaje del atraco, acompañado del asalto, muerte y robo, va tomando proporciones escandalosas. El tráfico illicito de licoir, con sus victimas enviedoras, todo demuestra que la administración de las leyes estan sometidas a un reto por los elementos desordenados, quienes destruirán los principios de seguridad de la ley, así como también los procesos y recursos legales estarán en peligro ante tafita ola de criminalidad.
Es la fe, es el trahajo, es la unidad de acción lo que cuenta en la realización de todo movimiento de progreso; y esto lo entendemos muy bien. Si aportámos muchas energías obtendremos muchos resultados. Sostengamos la lucha si queremos conseguir el precio de la victoria. Tengamos esto en mente y sigamos luchando.
En el último mensaje a los miembros de la organización su presidente general dijo "Estamos buscando grandes mejoras y mirando hacia los mas grandes periodos de potencialidad en nuestra organización, los cuales han de considerar ocasiones históricas que recundarán en gran酌ojjo para bien de la causa misma. Me siento feliz y en perfecto estado de salud, y con la gracia de Dios triunfaremos en la lucha. Soportad la universidad. Liberty en Virginia y mantened los colores del Negro World enarbolados. Dentro de poco pondremos esta importante vocoro de nuestra causa en el sitio que le corresponde. Tendríis mis arengas como siempre. Maniengos en calma y adelanté." Deseamos que estes palabras se tornen en una como salutación profética en el curso de nuestra labor de este nuevo año.
En todas las partes del país el
It is SAFE and SURE
to use this product
Northeast Airlines Inc. (NY, NY) seeks
Administrative Assistant to assist in
administrative support, provide logistic
support, maintain records, and will
understand customer care. Perform administrative
applications.
(Formerly Smallwood-Carey Industrial Institute) CLAREMONT, SURREY COUNTY, VA., U. S. A.
Situated upon the banks of the historic James River 12 miles from Jamestown, the old English settlement
Three Dms. 84: D. D. D. 84.80
Lachler (Hair Beauty Specialist)
569 W. 181st St., New York
A Negro slave pen in 1662, now a cultural training ground for Negroes
shave
without
arazor
Divisions should see to it that there is at least one student at Liberty University from their Division for the Fall Term 1997. We are offering courses of study covering a wide range of departments among which are Collegiate, Academic, Grammar Grade for children of the Practice School, Industrial, Scientific, Agricultural, Business, Domestic Science, Visual and Instrumental Music, Normal, Bible Training, Physical Culture, Dressmaking, Plate Sewing, Typewriting, Studiography, Bookkeeping.
Al menos, con este método se cancela la
contenida humedcida, mantiene la resistencia
de la viento, mantiene antifluorescence de la
sérus de la viento o el alfumeno (de la
sérus de la viento).
Estaba solamente franca en la mente pública la quinta de un negro en la montaña de Tamarané por una buria de blanco, cuando viene la información del rapo y de demisibracion de una nifa de doce años, cuyo cuerpo desacuntizado fue entregado al autor de sus das por un quinientos pesos, como valor de su sustate. Esto accomeció en California hara poco.
Mas este crimen no ha sido tan alarmante como la declaración de indoencía de George Remus, "Elrey del contralado," en Cincinnati, por mayor deliberar a su esposa. Los asesinos de Hall-Milla en Nueva Jersey escaparon la detención, mientras la Sra. Snyder y su amante estan sentenciados a morir el 12 de mes de enero, por el crimen contido a sangre fria en la persona de su aspoto.
También contientó con el caso de la Sra. Liliandahl y su amante, quiens han escapado con la pena de diez años, por el asesinato del marado, en una campaíde de Nueva Jersey también. Este es el record a grandes luos que nos deja el año que acaba de salir, regalando una sangriente herencia al año que entra.
It gives the support needed by the webmaster, and can minimize. It provides a continuous automatic measure with every environment of the body, thus reducing competition and allowing circulation in the affected tissues. The medication is absorbed through the skin and goes directly to the vena, but bumps can also inhibit the point satisfying the infused program, and restoring the free flow of the muscles.
We also to ask for donations for Chloe Kellogg 'Phlebotom' with the red channel mail. All drug stores.
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Learn Your Future
A new initiative for the Youth will be organized by the Youth Council of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The council will be responsible for organizing and coordinating the Youth Council's activities, including workshops, meetings, and events. The council will also be responsible for developing and implementing a Youth Council's website and social media presence.
The Youth Council will be responsible for organizing and coordinating the Youth Council's activities, including workshops, meetings, and events. The council will also be responsible for developing and implementing a Youth Council's website and social media presence.
The Youth Council will be responsible for organizing and coordinating the Youth Council's activities, including workshops, meetings, and events. The council will also be responsible for developing and implementing a Youth Council's website and social media presence.
L. A. 871/210 S. 4708 Brownsville Park Blvd. Dep. 510 6306/600, T.D.
A large number of the most important museums in the world occupy some of them. Museums have been the repository of many of the past, so many also are generatively made up and not of anonymous drawings or was held here believed.
Nineteen observatories, in various parts of the world, have been opened in the stupendous task. They are at Melbourne, Perth, Cape of Good Hope, Hyderabad, Holdenham, Catania, Gorilla, San Fernando, Noca, Angers, Peterson, Bordeaux, Sydney, Thyssen, Twilpa, Santiago, Greenwich, Paris and Oxford.
Electric Plow Kills Poets And Increases the Crops
At the Donald Woodward Farms, near Lehder, N. X., unprecedented crops are said to have resulted from an "electrical plow," which not only detrives woods and insect pests but saturates the soil by fixing nitrogen in the ground.
The plow, attached to a tractor, is fitted with an electric generator, coils and other apparatus, which are connected with two plow blades. "As these blades poke through the soil," says the lavender, an electrical field is created between them, producing an effect like lightning.
In the first blowing the current has a deadly effect on pests. A second treatment kills weeds and fixes nitrogen into the soil."
Further tests will compare electrically treated crops with crops grown under the best conditions known to scientific farming. If the new method proves practical it would save millions of dollars now being spent to fight insect pests.
LET THE YEAR
1928
Be One of Success
In order for you to be able to register success during any given period you must concentrate on the necessary units that tend to make it possible.
To business houses, especially those in Greater New York, and more no longer in Merlem, we cannot afford this argument too much. Because we cannot but note the small amount of
ADVERTISING
down by local business institutions.
How you offer interest to be a successful business man or enterist in consideration to the most necessary sales position in beyond our complements.
Do not sell down and work for a salesman to call you. In order for you to be able to buy something that is absolutely necessary for this successful copying on of your institution. You should get in touch with him and tell him what you want.
Now we are interested in selling you some advertising space in Manhattan including logos pages known to you.
THE NEGRO WORLD
read by at least eight thousand in the immediate vicinity.
There is not one of them that is not a BUYER. You should be interested if you want to sell your products to them.
Therefore you should give THE NEGRO WORLD some due consideration from an advertising point of view.
In the last two or three weeks our circulation has been gradually going up — due to the increasing amount of interesting reading matter appearing therein.
We are now making a very special advertising rate to local business houses that should. Induce you to give our medium a fair trial.
Get in on the ground floor of this wonderful opportunity to give in to your governmental needs, a most generous one for you.
I am a solicitor, so asked to be not wrong to sell my book, and I will be delighted on the book.
Whatever you can afford of
Treasury for service
BARBARA HARVEY
Director of Finance
BARBARA HARVEY
Director of Finance
BARBARA HARVEY
Director of Finance
NOTICE!
All Divisions and Chapters are hereby notified that we have in stock the following supplies that are necessary for the proper carrying on of the work:
English, French, Italian Instructor Morning 06:00 The Old Reliable
BROADWAY AUTO SCHOOL
30 AUTO INSTRUCTIONS $10
Including 15 Driving and 15 Shop Lessons, Day and Night
217 WEST 123rd STREET, Just WEST OF 7th AVENUE
Cars for Hire for State Examinations, $3.50 B. F. THOMAS, Prop.
Don't wait. Get your Bulgarian Herb (Blood). Tea now. Remember, if you have constipation, indigestion, sour stomach, liver or kidney trouble, Bulgarian Herb. (Blood) Tea should make you feel 10 to 30 years younger.
See your druggist for a package today. Insist on having it—tell him you want the genuine Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea in the red and yellow box. Measured in three ounces. For $1.25. Address me, H. H. Von Behlke; Marvel Products Company, Dept. A, Marvel Buildings, Pittsburgh, Pa.
If You Are Unlucky You Need the Wonderful MONEY MAGNET and WINNING KNOW
Now will bring you more knowledge and experience in the art of Bulgarian Herb.
At the Marriage License Bureau in the Municipal Building, 16,548 couples were married, and 26,229 licenses issued, a decrease of 618 and 72, respectively. John Sweeney, twenty seven, of Na. 185 Broad Street, Newark, and Mine Mary Crumball, twenty-six, of No. 22 Belmont Avenue, Paterson, getting in sharply at noon on December 31, were the last persons married there in 1927.
FREUNG, Germany, Jan. 2 (A.P.)
Dr. Sorge Veroumoff's method of rejuvenation by transplanting monkey glands was stated to be practicable in a report by Dr. Hoffmuster, first assistant to Prof. Eriele Loxer, chief of the University Hospital; after an investigation at the suggestion of German scientific circles.
Several gland transplantations from monkeys to men and other animals were made. A few weeks after the operations the glands were found by the naked eye or microscopically either to have been absorbed by the tissue or to have been atrophied beyond their power of function.
Dr. Hoffmuster said that in some cases a temporary apparent rejuvenation
NOT
All Divisions and Chapters have in stock the following for the proper carrying on o:
Price List
U. N.
Kind Copies
Ledgers $10.00 each
National Anthems 15.00 per
Constitutions 15.00 "
Buttons 10.00 "
Certificates 3.00 "
Dues Cards 2.00 "
Alphabetical Sheets 1.00 "
Disbursement Sheets
Small Flags
ORDER DIP
Secretary-General's Office
142 WEST 14
NEW YORK
English, French, Italian Instructor
BROADWAY A
30 AUTO INST
Including 15 Driving and 15
217 WEST 123rd STREET.
Cars for Hire for State Examination
Don't wait. Get your Bulgarian Herb you have constipation, indigestion, and Bulgarian Herb. (Blood) Tea should me. See your druggist for a package to want the genuine Bulgarian Herb. Brew in three glasses, dry for an hour for $1.25. Address me, H. H. Van Bell A, Marvel Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.
If You Are Unlucky You
tion followed the operation, but this was followed by a reaction in the form of rapid decay or the complete cessation of all vitality.
ICE!
are hereby notified that we
supplies that are necessary
of the work:
of Supplies
I. I. A.
Retail Price
hundred ..... 25c
" ..... 25c
" ..... 15c
" ..... 5c
" ..... 5c
" ..... 1c
Free
20 cents each.
DIRECT FROM
Office at Headquarters
30th STREET
ORK CITY
Morning 0600 The Old Reliable
AUTO SCHOOL
STRUCTIONS $10
Shop Lessons, Day and Night
Just WEST OF 7th AVENUE
Omaha, $3.50
B. F. THOMAS, Prop.
SAVE A LIFE
"Flue" or deadly pneumonia came from neglected colds. Never let a cold settle in your chest or lungs. For a few cents you can get a box of Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea from your druggist.
KILL THAT COLD
AND SAVE A LIFE
Herb (Blood) Tea now. Remember, if your stomach, liver or kidney troubles, make you feel 10 to 30 years younger, today. Insist on having it—tell him you lied) Tea in the red and yellow box.
Nikki; Marvel Products Company, Dept.
7 SN Pesan wee ee eer
"OF ACTION OF U>S:.IN NICARAGUA
ve eC |
er ee : enon ena
el i re i, ee ee
—Hypocritical -Ryitons, Whose Traditional Policy Has
2" Been ta. Lord Ht Over tf Weak, See-Peril in-
ao UL S. Comprercial - ion Comparable
os | (Figm the N.Y. Herald Tribuse)) >: f Hag
.. LONDON ="Untortunate” is the word being most. widély applied’
here to the rélations between the United States and Nicaragua. ° Corre-
‘spondents ‘and. editcrial writers of the Beitish'dgily and weekly press‘in-
“Yorm their publics that the Americam policy: toward. Njcaragua is un-
fortunate, first, because the “news of sending miasine veinforcements
coincided with a revival oi world interest in Secretaty Kellogg’s plan for
the outlawry of war, and,.second, because of its probable repercussions
dt the Pan-.\merican Congress at Havana. —_
“Axashifigton's Words and setionn do not
synthronize. \ The Brith Foreign
Mer, as always, shaintalnn’ a_most
Dunctilioutly-—correct attinide "when
questioned by repurters.” Nevertheless,
2 wentence {n A Gible by tits writer
which. appeared lirthe Merald-Trtbune
on December 29, 1928, ts Ax accurate a
deseription of tho altitude ofy British
Journatiam today. as is was then, Tes:
UA pleture of the United States ag
“slowly, inexorably reducing the Central
“Amarlean natfonayte politleal and eco.
S nomic va@laiag® fx presented in many
British newspapery tomy +
Fear Commercial Expansion
An exptinution that thls should be
so inUint be sought elnowhare, than ‘tn,
UnTinkarent paxstonate interest ofthe
URS! FubMe In Nisaraguin freedony:
It likewige- doen not le in the fict that
hows dss especialy dull in domentte
Spheres, Ja one sense, auch expinna-
Rong ax the Herald-"Trisune corre
syondent cancfurnish provide'a curtoun
commentary upon the Uability of ad-
infrableattaen pecastonally’to produce
unexpected Comseauences: +
Tt has-loig Been a aubseet of com-
ninint by"students of Anglo-American
relations that British newspapers pub-
fish xo Hule ‘American news, British
piiners now are publishing more Amer-
fean news—but much of It Ix.not com=
pilsipmary to the United States. Der-
haps London ultors would aiswer, this
hw caying that the xupply lt rented by"
the demand. In Zxense chin te true.
The average yeuder of the penny “pres
would dilmont cérfathty, Af questioned,
sdy that all Nicaraguans'are fdjectival
Saagon.” anyhow. <The heart of ov
British people dors not Puss, le azm-,
pathy with General Sandino‘s, men. ;
“The average ‘Triton Keems to sense
that extension of American ‘comaier-
cial influence throughout tho. world
constitutes 2 pesit only Tors .ctritcing
than German cxpansten’ of the exrly |
years of this century, ‘Therefore, what |
the United States does, f1 renigte car |
here of the world—whether comatrte
of soiling automobites ‘or quachtes
sevolutions--besing to asunie new in-
terest an heing ansacered:téd Atneriean |
pottey: = |
~ “Fed Up" on’ United States Advice
WIL momen of Helih adventures |
wit the Little Ivewn “brothers, ct
avenue Helton seaceely: egruienne rit
United States for piesttingg what be re |
sania a policy {Mentieal getth thet!
of Reitich faportal expansion. However
lin in, ta spooks biually, rather “fod ay"
Yeti what he resatés az American!
Mpramiinottiesly adytec” ce the reat of|
she wkd, Ants tooling: woaid dengue |
sal Nang emple.tehiek tz more €ga-|
corned with the problei,of how to id= |
wninfater what 1¢ hat already aequired |
than with the sequintien af nex
manifertations it represents the ver: |
WeeHMeg oe AGT type: Hatihernn’s |
Intense inittidualism : t
What bul-tompered evitieiers.akere te
tit Beate af-the precont Conevevative |
eovernmiont ih divected at tty alteed |
crazo for bureéucracy and sate eon-|
trol. Thit in a country where the a: |
chitin, yore se sontinestiy ineveazina, |
puratoxteal, Hole none the les Gate}
thet tho’ fact Tse Hk United states |
continues 46 claim Wininterestednex: Sx}
Nicarasws eaties mach Mere fHECTeET
ere than the landing of fhe mariaes|
hee . |
MANAGUA, Nicaragus, Jan. Ti)
Forty serie wero Hlfed cod hy
marino ‘cerps airplane squadron that:
aiacked Et oblpote atroushots of Gen-|
BRE
‘ASPIRIN
. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!.
: Pri ety snd pear physicians for
| Cues ae
a.
Marines Kill 40
Nicaragua “Rebels”
eral Augustino Sandino. the squadron’:
commander, Major “Rusty” Rowell, re-
ported on returnthg tonight.
‘The aviators bid 5,009 feet In the at
hehind clouds and dived down wher
opportuinty offered to drop bombs, fr
machine guné and even throw hand
grenades. This te believed here to be
the frat time band greabdes were eve
used from ‘aleplanes.
Plane Hit By Bullets o> —~
|The squadron ieft Managua, aris
iin morning for E2 Chipote, Sancéno’s
nibintain“atronghold, ein Ia Itwelf
5,900 feet.ubove’ nea level. / EI Chipote
is nearly..twenty milen northeast of
Quilall, Whick marines. recently cap-
ture@ Brom’ the. rebel gesteral In. the
comtitest- hattic nines they. came to
Nicwragva, 5
Walting above ‘dritting clouds, the
plines would dart into clear atmos-
phere, clrcle low enough for Sandino's
positions to ticcome’ dintinetly visible
and drop hombs. ‘They weilld then
sweep lower and “strate” the rebels
sith. machine guna and hénd grenades:
Thera tactics were followed time and
again with what the ‘squadron com
widered hatisfactoriiy divestrous re-
mult. 7
{Sandino had two anU-airerate. guns
Which Kept peppeting savay at, the
planes, which wero ‘lao targits foF xo-
vere riffle fre. One plane was struck
twice by bullets Which almoxd hit the
riiet, One aberrver anid he mavw eight
obits tated, ts
Six Hundred Marines Arrive
[tho ntrmed: ware «tated aver teduy'e
cxpeiition. which ties conridgr the
most severe atrafing yet riven Sthilino.
Murine headquarters wan Jatormed
tonight that Amerlean warships bear-
Wp Stator Cenerat Jonna. Teieune,
fcixelicr General Laxan Feland and
ahon:, 600 Marine Corps reinforeementa
wera “enitering thn part eft Corinte.
They were not expected umtll afon~
day, . 7
Insintent rnmore that President Din
wilt renien shortly ecannd of sitehealth
ure prevalent fi Nisarscta.
General Camnen Diag, brother of the
President, told the Associated Prev
ba had reaquested hls brother to resign.
The Dereident. has ‘been wa vletin of
malaria for rome time and he, family
euurhders the strates of the wong alee
Hoh, In additton t2 tte present xtratn
heauicht short ty! the presenen of
American nierines ind pressure of poe |
teal prosieme, toa seeat for alm. |
Beauty Farlers An
Aid'te fneone Wenn
CHIGAGO, Jan, 2 -A woman may
luso hier reason hut seldom nets £0 bad
Hpi phe forgets thes advantage of
Mouving up" through Marvels, telah:
anit othee cide’ te tuatity cules.
io, Naving Gsted the “oneal ag . x
henuty “puflor of demented women in
one aszlun, all Tineke horpltsts where
inedine women ave Reh will bo cunipned
seth much parlors, ‘Phe experhtaent Mat
proved that the beauty patios ti one oF
thot best methods yet deviged to hte
mentelly discdergt wenmen ont ‘of
themrelve:. aad shel vest oe inutytnary
ailments, —. :
— Dra ex 8. MePhBeld,_ State altenist
worklniz under tho direction of io.De-
partment of Public Welfare, fe enthu-
Hastle over the*results of the expert-
nerat. ( 7
“sobbed htir or a faclit treatment
may oF may not ettro insanliy." ho raid,
“put wo do Know, through these’ <=
periments, thet there fa « qoctged
change for the hotter th the \omen
who, take the treatments and those
who act an assistants.” *
VARA PAREENS
ARE FUTILE, “SAY
CHILE STATESMEN
Pan-American Contr. Wi
| ite spectal correspondent tn’ Chil¢, Dr
‘Max Jordan, with President Carlos
Yoanex and his Secretary of Foreigr
tations, Conrado Rios Gallardo. Both
these statesmen talked freely of the
situation “produced by” the fallire of
the Arica-Tacna negotiations; of rela-
UUons with the United States and. of
[Chile attitude tn the coming Pan-
American conterence at Havana. Some
Tor thelr femacks will interest, Amert-
jean readers: * F;
‘Tho Uresiitent was asked’ about thie
prospect of, an agreement with Peru.
He aupwered: :
util conslde® the_statua quo ss some-
thing definitive, Our people.woyld nét
funderstind ft J we abandoned. our
prexont position. Tho only possible
solution In through -tho taking of
Webinclte, Hut wo must insist that it
do taken with full respect for.our so8-
fexéignty tn’ Taenaflea.”
‘Tho Foreign Minister added . ‘The
xicnificance of this whole question ts,
In my opinion, much exinsgerated. ‘The
bringing 1h of 4 third power oaght to
have'boen avolded from the déginning.
It sgems to-mie now that a direct set-
ttem@at with Peru ts destrable.”
“Ry all means." rejoined the Presl-
dont. “But, unfortunately, Peru haa
always ayolded 4.tvlgndly understand
Ing. So St willbe hard tg come to au
agreement.” :
| . Sympathite with “Mexico
The Vrestdent way asked whether
‘relations, with the United States ‘had
becn affected unfuvorabiy “by “the
Tamna-Ariea fallure, Ho replted:
“Not at alle Chile has alwaye cultl-
vated thé best relations’ with the
United States and atill maintains them,
Ldolleve that theag relations are isxcil
on gonsiitonsness of comptete equallty
of Mehta and a mutual recognition of
soverclantys. es
‘The quertion of the Pan-Amertean
Wrifeyenee and of feletton Herween the
United States and Mexico wan’ then
valsed, °° =
“Ae synvPalhlee with Mexico,” salt
tue Foreign ainister. “We are obsary-
tng caretully:polltteal events In Central
America, and‘ belleve that all the
Latin-American delasates to the con-
ference in Havana’ will exprens thelr
sgmpathy with Nicaragua and will
uppore te Fovercinn right of that
country to choose Its officials without |
hindranes." |
“WII not Chile's attitude toward the
Pan-Ameriean movement alsa be de=
Veloned theres |
\ Sonferences tnetiestive
‘Tho Foreign Minteter rephea: {
“Panemerican veonforences awe fad |
nw phsetieal rods, ‘he eountrles of |
Ubi continent mui! catee: thete prob |
lentk eel: in 1G awn wey. But one tine
portant Ching ovaht, to bs attempted |
af Havana—the codidedtton of Amert=
wRieslees” sald the, Peéetdent, cine |
tend, 20 T hear, t propose at Havens
that Washington bs noty“az now, atic |
permanent Feat of the ies
Unloz, and that the seat be chiges
bb turn to the eapitais of other Amert-
gan eonntries.” «|
ORCA Chile suppert that propocat?*
24 bn fine Mea, but there are peace
tical Gifeulties. Ail the svehives and
mated! are tu Warkington, ond thele
transportation’ trom onc country to
another world ba dundenvome. Apert
frome UiRt, it miwt Be Fesntarbered cast |
Ciplomatic representatives: of atl the}
Lailn-Aneriean eounites come Inte |
core aisneiatton, sg: Washington. And |
GieTfact “makes “the tatty a Pan
American eleuring house: Dun't forget,
either, (iat Washington ta the’ most
tmpoziant eapitat af the Western
Heriaphere.” 7
Asked about “Latin-American rela-
flons with thé Leuste cf Ngtlons, Min:
jster Rios answered: mee
" “Vo.Eatin Americans have felt since
thé founding of tho League .that our
Influence in it's slight. Arseatina and
Frranlt lett It for that.reninon. T expect
Metba from Ganev, ‘The European Rov-
periments find. our probleme remote |
and_owr mentality x strange to ther. |
We have, therefore, hardly any active
intereate az Genova. Névertheless, we
shall co-operate, ‘
“Not only we, but’all Latin-amerl-
gan countries ought to co-operate,” |,
he President added. aS {
“E shoutd like to see, alf-4he coun |
ries of this gominent imaintath aid |
neregae-ttivir prestige and.their. moral |
eens tn tho League, and play art
wnt role in alt international d2-"|
Ford: Has Orders ~
.
For 727,000’Cars
‘Wiia its snappy new yady latroguces
to an. overwhelmingly ‘curious. public
Obly five weeks ago, the Ford. Moter
Company has'booked: retail orders fas
TH1.900 care. an uperecetented sabia
performance. g :
+ Of thpmn, 537,000 “cars are tor. the
earticnt; poanitie, delivery, with éach
exter: soeured by a cash Gupeatt ot 835
ee mare; 100,000 pre severed by de-
Tevany Wait gees Soe we
ate on
weit tavtalmust savings pina. Poroten
sabes hava fet yot heen tapaiated.-+
Te there fe 2 mice “war” inthe tx-
Beary Ford bas -wee it. is
vital eae—te wow. to attain
& pomteshed rite camel te the pubsie's
“fo: Pay Homage . ,
ok iy “Qa Liberia
O@ te witness what they char
‘ectovine dq "thie ‘gréat Atscsionn
adventure” Harvey @, Fivestens,
Jr, and his wite sailed. tor Africs
last faturday on the Cunard ape
Laconia, while Mr. and Mrs, Har-
vey Firestone, Sr, were at the
viet tw wish thejcouple bom vor-
age. “hee
Progyess is being made on-their
rhbber plantations in Liberia, the
elder Firestone exbiained. .
“We. have~15,000 acres already
‘under ‘cultivation ‘ind have just
cleared guother 20,090," he maid.
“The conceadion covers a milliop
cres.. We'll soon be getting rub-
ber off the first plantings." *
“Te 1s not .an experiment any
more. Hoan we'll have American
Tubber in an African republic
patterned after ahis gre. I don’t
think I ever entered Into = thing
thyt gave me auch pleasure, for te
means that Americans are now
doing thelr part in the develop-
mant of Africa.” :
Mr. Firestone, Jr, ‘sala that,
what reaxsured him moat ofall i
the project in Liberia was that be-
aides & perfect climate, there was
the added qualification of, a:ratny
and.a dry searon. This, he satd,.
eliminated damp rot which made
rubber growing digicuit in some
tropical countries.
JEWS PLAN DRIVE.
TO EDUCATE JEWS
~UNAANGTAL LINES
‘The’ Union of Orthodox Jew-
ish Congregations of America, at
a meeting of the National Execu-
tive Committee held. recently at
the Jewish. Centre, 151 West
Eighty-sixth Street, New” York,
decided to organize Orthodox
Jewry throughout the country
for the purpose of Jewish educa-
tien, according. to'a statement
isstied by. Rabbi Herhert S. Gold:
stein, President of the union. He
said: : foe
In@addition to carrying on in-
tensive propagands for fostering
Jewish ‘religious education, € is
propdsed to issue anifern cirvi-
cula for the various types of Jew-
ish schools, publish textbooks in
Hebrew" and in “Engli§y, ang
establish a teachers’ registry.
“Tt wan further delded to extend.
the werl of rganizing and rubsiats.
ing Jewish religieux rehoel: in the
nmall towns and “nur! communities
The union ie now paying the ralacles
df teachers {a 2 mtmber of communt=
ties unable to bear aléne the sinane
chil, burden of providinis = teaver Sor
tho Jewish ehtléren.
“Sianh wore also made to reaos the
Sewkiz students in the high schools,
collexes and universities, -
“Dr, David Ds Soiy Poot ts the
Chateman of & special sud-eommstes
which cll gbeshy setivitien‘immedl-
ately cinenn the Jute hors and girk:
ot the hich chook" in Greter New
Yoris. Conizen tn Hebrew, Jewish lat
tory snd Jewish hely das" ectebrations
vill bo given in sypsgonuer aud simi
far Institutions near tho high. schoo!
Dulldings, ;
“Pho, unfonshex Ineued 250,060 boots
leis, dealing swith Tewish history, Inve
uné customs, 7
"C. Jovhiia Bestein and Morris Ba
Kolnian tro In charge of, the Work in
the sell towns.
“Regional conventions will be hele
in Marylaid, Delaware, Virginian and’
the Tletrict of Colimbia and tho upper
sections of the Btate of New York.” «|
Thin Folks! Here’s
5 Pounds of Solid
— _or_ Money <Back
Underweight means your vitality ia
otnaeereleht, meane pour tay i
ee ces aad
ema ra ar
ee Be Games
wine seh Serr
aa
oy eer ee
Sone ope eee
ee ce, Se taver 0
Siete ae a
rT APH Ai Pe
TARE TO CAIN
— INYO
Welfare Leagua Dlsousses the
Cause of Crime Among Negro
_ Boya—Due to Poverty Caused
by Lew Wages and Dieorimi-
nation ©
‘The’ chief cause of ‘crime among
‘Now York Negroes, eepecialty amons
boys under twenty-one years of ase,
is thd inaditity ‘of parents to ‘hold
families together, due to poverty
Jcaused bY low wages and ‘white dis-
érimination, tn. tnduatry, according to
thé malority of ageakere, both white
and Negroes: e€ thé annual confererice
on ‘Thursday, the 22th inst, of the
New’ York Urban ‘Keggue, a Negro
wolfare azsociation. Mepresentatives of
twenty-five welfare organizations, city
institutions, schools and Negroes
bromincht in public and clele Ute, at-
tended, the conférence at thos Ieague
Contre, 204 West-138th Street”
“& gun in the hands of a white or
a colored Boy 16 a gun just the same,”
declared Bernard. J. Fagan, Chief Pro-
bation Omeer of the Children's Court,
at @ luncheon conference at the Vene-
tfan ‘Tea Room at 224 West. 195th
Street. * : es
“Negro an well ag white parents.”
he continued, ‘ust care for their
children, Pick any ~“btock In the city
and you.find the same caunes for ju-
venlle crime, poverty, congestion. and
temptations, such aw autos, the mo-
vies and the lack of parental control.
The fathel should afd the mother in.
this <yotk and be more than @ meat’
tlckee® a ae
sSumuef Al-Ofiitn.-a Negro proba
tlon olficer.nt the Family ‘Court, de-
claved at the afternoon sénston wint
more ‘Negro officers wero needed {n
courts. “Tho city should~employ patv.
workers In Washington Heights, Har-,
Jeni and Jefferson Market Courts, he
valde Sn ”
F.C, Melbing.” Superintendént of
he Sous of Refuse on Randalls
sland, sald that, Negro boys had. in
sroaeed tn his, Iisifeutlog 25 nercent
turing tho past dve years.»
A. KR. Henderson, director of the
Serimittce on City Prison: ot “the!
Public Edueqtion, Axxociation, ‘tole of |
Ux diMeulty in making Negro bers |
‘coma clean" Jn thelr stories to him. |
fo, sald that the-Negre bors Bente!
nanifested distrust in him, poerbly
“Wo belong to x Gownirodden race!
iad if wo hod’ the money, of the reat |
white race we'd not have theno eft.
nal conditions.” sald A.V. Williams, |
mr ottornes, "J don't-believa that "the {
Sosra aldo of ahis situation is any!
somee tata, the whitest |
‘igh ening sesofon Wax Wovoted to]
5b SGD Ip UAH |
RATURALIZATION. BIEL |
HOY! BERGE, CORGRESS
izasure ‘ould. Legalize Hairy,
efAliens Whe Do -Hot Appear |
on Sfficial Records
WASINNGTON, Jan. 30.—Coinci-
Gent with the inlradietton today of the
Aaministtation. ‘DIL dysizied ia re-
Jaove obstacles tothe: naturalization of
Gitens, Cheleraan Johnsen of ths iu
rnigratien Committee and Reprenentis+
tlve Boylan of Ness York resumed de-
‘bate in the Hote on the nolley adopt-
eg by Governor. Smith’ of refusing to
tien over paroled «tien: to, Sedeeat
hoonts pier t6 the <armination of the
porele :
whe Gaiiwattzatien Sal! which woe
efered in the House by" Chath.
Johncon’ of Washinton, and inthe
Nonate by Senster,Johnnan of Oakter-
nia, yrovicer, cmon other Uupits, for
legalization: of tho entry, for ¢ltizen-
ship nurpores, of aliens whos panies
do not appear “on the records of, th6
Dopariment of Labor.
The Bit weuld protect tho Keecity
of the reslence in this. country of
many: persons Who entered prior ta
Sumo 3, Wet, when the: registration
featuren of tho existing Iew became
effective. The proposed Ia ‘provides
Rirther. Ghat ic allen of this clise can
Prove. that they lesally entered the
United States and that they have xe-
sided here continuorely. sines the pes
ange’ of the iminigrution law thoy’ vith
ba eiigibte tor naturalization.©
Officials say the act would bs of par-
Houl#r Denese ta many *perrons wha
cnme to this country from Connéa’ bre
fore the new, immigration law went
Into effect. Wor a long time no certit-
welse GD EntEy Ters fetted, te teemte
grant, and thes> have singe found
tt aifMeutt, tf not impossible, to’ autality-
ae American. éitizens— ~~
‘The BI carries another provision
under which allns who have lived tn
more then one city since landing in
thia country wéuld find it.easter to
acquire citizenship. Under the law, as
tt would be amended, siiens would be
permitted to prove residence by affi-
Cavite testeud of being required to pre-
Quce witnesses. 20g st -
500.to Get'Fimal
@itioenshig Papers Daily
special court wil
Sra, an fared oot Toes Aree
Ore TUafoetey ctibaome’ of the:
are pela ae a Ae ea we
:.. WAY TO FUL STATUS FOR ALL?
a4 aan : L -, ae ee
Hon..E. B. Knox, U. N; I. A. Leader in U.S. A., Raps
: . the: Fond Hopes ‘of Negroes Who Think They
vance +’ the White Rack in Amerie 0°.
5 es : .
LINCOLN’ ONLY ° OPENED’ FREEDOM'S, BOOR
‘It ‘Is Now the Duty of the Negro to Build for. Himself, -
‘as Advocated by the Hon. Marcus Garvey, If."
~ Real and Complete Emancipation
. Is to Be Secured . .
~LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, January 15.—The
political status of the Negro-was the subject of the principal address
delivered by the Hon. E. B, Knox, American leader of the Universal
Négro Improvement Association, Here tonight. Mr. Knox pointed
out that ‘nowhere in the United States did the Negro enter seriously
pto-the reckoning, as a political factor and that the’ signs of the
times clearly showed that it was-futile to hope’ for political status
and opportunity co-equal with the white race. Abraham Lincolri
had merely opened the door of opportunity for the Negro, and it
was-the duty, of the race to work wholeheartedly so that they.could
build a government of their own, as advocated by the Hon, Marcus
Garvey.and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, for only
in that-\ay would they attain to. nranhood status politically.
The hall was well filled, as usual, with an\enthusiastic throng.
Hon. J. H. Miller, Vice-President of the New York Locak occupied
the chair. He introduced to the audience the Hon. C. Truesdell,
president of the Philadelphia, Division, who deliveréd a brief ad-
dress, expressing his pleastire at noting the earnestness and loyalty
of the New York-membership and-declaring he would: return to hiX
sphereiof labor invigorated by his-stay. among the methbers of the
mother division. 3
‘The evening’s proceedings were enlivened by several musical of-
forings, which were greatly enjoyed. eS —s “eg
EES |
! et
fl ty AG i
Write for ¥ ORD. wits 1 |
this Bf me ero ae
FREE i
Book = ‘ y) *|
aoe BK “ A
ed ys S
rates le —
=e eer
| Have you read this “Beauty Book?”
[ste Bee bie beetle hawt ernge yout
to your ype af aug Auk yaar Ong Be ae
wim te é : -
fete 4 Sap Jars fee co bn a alk you wane it
|, eietl enema nary,
~ Ramona pos ship cory St roe we this at
ig Nesets i ol by Sogn coupe. my se
NELSON ANUP ACTURING COBPABY, Ridtnsed, Va. ‘
>, * ae © Rm DRE! ING: .
HON, E. B, KNOX’S ADORESS
Hon, EF. B. Knox, leader in “tho
VUnlted_States of tho Universal Negro
Improvement Asyoctation and per
somit representative of tho Hon. Mar-
cus Grirvey, President General, rpoke
ay followey, 2T want to spel toniskt
On the Universal ‘Negro Improvement
Aszogiation and polities, Many, many
dsteas? and conceptions have gone out
khout the Universal Negro, Improve-
ment Association agd, ita method of
attacking, the rico problem. We want
tw stite tonight how the: Universal
Nesro” Improvement Axsockittion Is
Mradually revolutionizing’ tie thousht
ot the Negro in, every. vexpect! and
iont empecially. Jn tho ‘tel of poll
ier “3
“They say Unat polities is Dio sel
ence.ind art of rovernment, ‘They say
ft ts the- method of rutiniy ‘tho ‘State.
E want to point out te you the attitude
at the Nogro of the Univerral Negro
Smprovenient suvaciation aa to how #
Mate ourcht to he riled, ae ty how a
wa Rave as ove iss and object Gie
catabtishive of & stront novernment
of our own were we ent FEI or owR
people. ‘Fhev gay 8 powernment be an
organized qeoup or ciate ex-eontrollin:,
nods. Wo ant fo point out Junt what
the Univers#l Nero Improvement Ae
recisiton intends to, ao in reitiis yp
n government of ix own,
Mesniat Part in Politlen
Sime ane thne apaia you have deen|
reminded of tho many injustiees that
ave-enereied by the mda who are
suppaged to bo atntestaen, tn the reqim
of rilties, The Nevo har been Dar
ing ® ¥ery, Vely memset port da that)
lielé in thisTequatry and fn ever¥ other |
country that In strong politfenlly. The
Negro felt. tatn of them think tonight
that as a result of the Civil War of
1851. and 1865. (ho Negro wae being
placed om a par politically with the
shite peoplo ofAmertea, They, thought
‘that when slavery was rbollahed in
the “Britirh dominions and terzttortes
“that all subjects of tho King were on
a par, And there azo atill somo Ne-
roes-t thoso various sections. think-
ing that way tonight, Notwithstand-
frig the fact that ft Is apparent .to
‘every man, every’ person with common
sense, that the Negro's preatign, thet
he Nasrate wen politcal 16 wage
wally -dlelininge various Negra: ede
ers comm before: thelr audiences -and
point out.how the Negro haw pro-
Rrezse@ for tho last sixty years, -point
ont the prosrers they have made in
thin eld and in that Sleld, tol un
about ft in a'xentimental way, arousg
our emétions, toll us about how Abra
Sa a ree ne
tw rion the Provkkmption te cmane!-
pate the Nezroes, tell ue ahont. hate
various ministers have come to Ue
forofront speatinig for the Uberti a€
400,100,000 Newvoes, teil us slvr, bow
various Seomowsienl institutions “seh,
an Nexro hanks, Nesve fnsurance cém-
parker, warfors Conterpridan hve come
into esisienee, tell ue about how many
seheoks have Wech crewed, how myny
churches hays Been erected, how many
inihuonaries havé sone te wAfsien tn
order to eievnte the editeational plane
in our motherland, and un they tell
ud all fiat fn a very synipothetlc and ’
touching way it hes oftiiiiies ted the
Negro to belicvo that hfs political
was the consequence of no victory in the war and in no way in being victorious in it. It was the result of the weakness of the enemy and of the weakness of the enemy in the war. All of the people with not honest the Warrior, Reading States, who wrote Othello's Obligation, but there was a prejudice opposing way back before 1601 among two sections of the country, the North and the South. The North felt that it was an advantage, an unjust advantage, that the South expended in holding the Negro in slavery and getting their labor without pay; and the South had, notwithstanding the attitude of the Northern sections of the country, so thoroughly and effectively manifested their rights to building the Negro in slavery that the North, the people of the North, did not dare even to bring up the question in Congress about setting the Negro free.
"I am saying this to show you that the Negro, being a free, free, free, the emancipation proclamation having been brought into existence did not spring from a wholehearted desire of the people to treat the Negro right, to give him his dues politically, but it came by accident. When the question was broached prior to 1861, the people of the South would always rebel. They would rebel in Congress, and they were so effective and made themselves so fool in the nation that they were afraid to elect a Republican president or to have a president for a long time whom they thought was inclined to give the Negro freedom. And when Abraham Lincoln was finally elected they carried their threat of seceding from the Union. But you will find in Abraham Lincoln's early statements, before the war was started, that he did not feel
himself that the institution of slavery should be tampered with in the South. He said that the Constitution of the United States did not contemplate taking any such action on the race problem, on the slavery problem, as was then being advocated by many abolitionists. I am trying to show you now that it was not even in Abraham Lincoln's mind, in spite of the many stories told about him—about seeing a man asleep on the bale of cotton, and so forth.
"Now there may be conjecture in the minds of some, however, as to whether Abraham Lincoln really meant what he said; but, notwithstanding that the attitude that the nation has assumed toward the Negro bears out unquestionably the fact that it is not and has never been the consensus of opinion among the majority of people to give the Negro an equal status politically with the white man; but the emancipation proclamation was, supposed to attend to that.
President Lincoln merely gave the
Missouri an opportunity to work out an
alliance of states. He did not ap-
proach up the cause of opportunity the
American people had final. And from then
on, he was the duty of the New
State to the city of the Missouri and
to the own decision. Domin-
ing the Negro man never been less
important than man exorcite the white
victory he had a few years before. With
a man dared, every consideration
bridge the lines of a country he be-
taught to feel. When a man in invocation
girl-crowded and ridiculous in
every land he went into the World
praising for millions of this country,
and in wisdom all over the world, in
exercisable faith be called. And the New
State is an patriarchal. And the Missouri
that the American shepherd will
Missouri the American shepherd will
and patriarchal. All this august admire
and respect. Shall that be the
He knew roundly the business of a statement by one of the former judges of the country, who was in perfect agreement with the Hon. Marcus Gassaway, that it was not the desire and disposition of the Hon. Marcus Gassaway to place the Negro on per him himself, and that it was the duty of the Negro, in order to get real freedom, to establish a government of his own, just as the white man had done. He gave numerous illustrations from everyday life to drive home to his hearers the fact that the race was but baying at the midon when it fondly imagined that it would receive full political status in the United States, and that, as far as the so-called political leaders of the race were concerned, with them it was merely a matter of a job and graft.
The plain truth was the speaker declared, that the Negro today was in a partys common politically, as in other happenings everywhere, North and South. Much play had been made of what the Negro had done and what he received in Plains like New York but in the speaker, prefaced to judge severity, and the response from many people to the Negro had and will be held.
Johnson, Bill M. New York, New York. The International Improvement Association was married to Dr. William Tubie Elkhamer, of William H. University, Boston, and Columbia University, New York. The ceremony, which was performed by Rev. Norman Wilson, was witnessed by 'as remarkable a gathering as ever assembled' for an event of this kind. The members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association thronged the spacious hall, forming a circle around the meares reserved for the guests, among whom were three hundred white students of Columbia.
A feature of the elaborate ceremony was the attendance of the officers of the Royal Guards and the Universal Legion, under Col. C. V. Wattley and Major Hazlpel, Saltan adjutant, who, looking ultra-smart in their fetching uniforms, formed an arch of swords under which the bridal-party walked along the carpeted aisle to the dais where the wedding service was held. The bride was escorted to the hall by Mr. Charles James, President of the Newark division. She was exquisitely gowned and made a radiant picture as she came up the aisle, half-a-dozen flower girls in attendance. The Universal Band and Choir took care of the musical side of the proceedings.
After the ceremony a reception was held at the bride's home at 30 Edgecombe avenue, where a sumptuous dinner was served.
Among this guests at the reception were Dr. C. V. Howell and Mrs. Howell, Dr. M. R. Guenzel and Mrs. Guenzel, Rev. F. H. Clapp and Mrs. M., L. Earle, widow of Dr. Earle of Columbia faculty.
Says African Finch Has Own Language
The African finch, which is supposed to be the most voluble creature in the animal or bird kingdom, does not sing, as popularly supposed, but speaks in a language that has a distinct relationship to English, Sanskrit, Chinese and the speech of Hopi Indians, according to Dr. William M. Patterson, who is doing research work for Columbia University.
The African finch has a vocabulary of about 300 words, which can be spelled with twenty-four different letters, Dr. Patterson recently told members of the New York branch of the American Psychological Association who attended a meeting of the society at the university.
"A bird does not sing a little song when it opens its beak," Dr. Patterson said. "Instead, it makes a little speech. These speeches aren't a repetition of
Who Jackson said that he must be hold this theory of smooth penninsularity carefully listening to many praises. The foreign think exhibited would need no proof for the collecting a little much counting. The bird foraging and chasing of a bird.
Maya Wise Ann. Liberty
Word Allusion Boldness
LONDON (A. B.)—Way deeds have not yet discovered, grasped this which all allusion is a demonstration of the Royal Black Dwarf. The country was threatened with extinction, he said, but it had not died yet.
"If we have another war, there will be countries in which tanks and airplanes cannot win victory. I don't want to detract from the splendid work of the infantry, but they must have cavalry to help them."
out anything like promises for improvement in the future. Why, any alien putting foot in New York received more consideration than your Negro citizen.
With Loyalty, Success Assured
All this the Universal Negro Improvement Association had carefully noted and, through its great leader, the Hon. Marissa Carver, was trying to impress upon Negroes the world over that their only salvation politically lay in getting a government of their own. In the speaker, was glad to me that Negroes were beginning to see through the secret and hypocritical crimes who had in the past tried to steal their宝藏 by the stalker-ware used for the crimes would get prosecuted, and the white slave-owner would be convicted of the same crimes.
From Trenton (N. J.) Daily State Gazette
The South, or at least some parts of it, offers an interesting field for psychological study. Considered exclusively on the basis of the horror with which it views men in public life who advocate a modification or repeal of the prohibition enforcement law, the South might appear as a land whose moral standards were never permitted to fall below a uniformly high level. It would seem hardly conceivable that a section of the country which viewed the Constitution, or a part of the Constitution, in so sacred a light could go far astray in other matters concerning the fundamental law of the land, the laws of humanity and the Ten Commandments.
Of course, it has long been the practice in the South to violate the Constitution by depriving Negroes of the right of franchise, but Southerners have convinced themselves that this is merely the custom of the country and that it does not constitute a serious violation of the law. It may be that, in their complacent, self-satisfied way, they have developed the same attitude toward lynching, which also seems to be the custom of the country. The people of other States, however, have never succeeded in reconciling themselves to such a method of dispensing justice. They consider lynching as organized murder, even though the "best people" of the community may take part in the crime, and they view the participants in lynchings as just so many artant cowards, all eager to take part in an act of violence which holds no peril to their own personal safety.
The latest of these crimes, staged at Whitehall, Ky., where a mob of three or four hundred men raided the jail, seized a Negro accused of murder, riddled his body with bullets, poured gasoline over it and burned it, is just one more revolting story of community barbarism and makes it increasingly difficult to accept as our own the South's standards of morality.
Herring Has Played Big Part in History
The fortress may be given down on the north side of the river, and then be taken down upon prostrate and money. After the two great priests have escaped through the goodhead to the south and come to them parished with them in cladding. They pluck pieces. In the sixth century mark of the men in Germany, who now clearly who the inhabitants of power was to be found, work on the shores of the middle sea by the words of Brecht to the sound there, given the Donatello Snyder.
From the Athenians was derived the wealth of these prostrate cities they were destined to speak on court, with them and bishop and under the name of the Roman League. But when the house and weighed the graph of the power of the court at the end of the fourteenth century, the percentage of the power of the people was appropriate.
Due to its proximity to the Mediterranean and the Atlantic coast, the port of the northern Bengal. The area is flooded in cold homes in the North Sea, and on the Friyadh shore these areas to magnificent supremacy the masters of the new discoveries, the Dutch.
Remarkable Accuracy of Indian Astrologer's Predictions
According to a compilation by Tuskegee Institutes in the Department of Records and Research, there were 16 persons lynched in 1927. This is 14 less than the number 89 for 1926; 1 less than the number 17 for 1928; the same number 16 as for 1924, and 17 for 1925, the same number 16 as for 1924 and 17 less than the number 23 for 1923. Twice of the persons lynched were taken from the hands of the law; 6 from fails and 6 from officers of the law outside of fails. Four of the persons were burned to death, two were put to death, and then their bodies burned.
There were 43 instances in which officers or the law prevented lynchings. Eight of these were in Northern States and 34 in Southern States. In 24 of the cases the prisoners were removed or the guards augmented or other precautions taken. In 18 other instances, armed force was used to repel the would-be lynchers. Sixty-eight persons, 15 whites and 53. Negroes were thus saved from death at the hands of mobs.
All of the persons lynched were Negroes. The offenses charged were: Murder, 7; attempted murder, 2; rape, 2; attempted rape, 8; improper conduct, 1; charge not reported, 1.
The states in which lynchings occurred and the number in each State are as follows: Arkansas, 8; Kentucky 1; Louisiana, 1; Mississippi, 7; Missouri, 1; Tennessee, 2; Texas, 1.
French Senators Talk Fast, Reporters Find
Frenchmen's disposition to talk long and rapidly makes it necessary to have ten stenographers work in relays in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. Each-works three minutes, then goes out to transcribe his notes and rest.
The fastest talker in Parliament is Senator Loon Perrier, Minister of Colonies. Stop-watch tests show he speaks at the rate of 220 words a minute. The slowest talker is the elderly Albanian, Senator Lazare Weller, who calls off only seventy words a minute. Premier Poincaré never varies his speed. He gives out in his crisp, biting, high-pitched voice 160 words a minute, with the new form for minutes on the hour. He never breaks form. He usually speaks economically but whispers the phrase "Fifty cents he writes in himself in forty minutes and ends with written text he becomes more
Highest picture of the day, and
limiting bird have been presented by
the British Government in the hope
that this joint may be beneficial to
that will enable engineers to design
more successful helicopter and other
aircraft in general. Mechanics, May-
manna.
The highest picture of the day, and
limiting bird of designs of power in the
many civil and in the air, the most man-
ufactured and the most difficult to handle in his
design, does not exist.
The machines will no doubt be capable
when known, in an effort to learn
the wing and other movements. The
limiting bird is prepared as one of the
utilities of nature because of its skill
in beginning in the air without apparent effort.
French Scientist Would Cool Off the Tropics
PARIS, Jan. 4.—Cooling the colohes is the ambition of two French scientists, George Claude, known for his experiments, with liquid air, and Paul Boucherot. They have been carrying on experiments in mass refrigeration. "We can be certain today," said M. Boucherot, "of being able to utilise the difference in temperature of sea water to generate electric energy exceeding a million kilowatts. By their aid cold will be produced, not in the small quantities of today, but in mass."
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amalgamate expansion of the complete
biodiversity of the aquatic world
of the British Empire and India
which was devastated by the Great
War. British Ambassador there
when he declared.
The conditions are just of much more importance states as any recognized independent states in the world which are bound together by an alliance of any kind whatsoever."
Mr Hume, speaking before the American Engineering Council, based this interpretation of the empire on the definition of Grotius, "father of international law," that a sovereign power is one "whose acts are not subject to the control of another."
Since the group of nations composing the empire are recognised as of equal status "voluntarily linked together for their own interests and by their own decision," the Ambassador added, they "must aim, above all things, at maintaining the peace of the world."
The idea that this comparatively new conception of the empire is a cunning schema to obtain seven votes instead of one in the League of Nations and other international organisations is, therefore, altogether wrong. Sir Earne said.
He added that the British opposition to the Geneva Protocol of 1924, which was designed to prevent war and permit disarmament in Europe, was based on the unwillingness of the far-away dominions to become "committed to definite action in some obscure quarrel in Eastern Europe." Great Britain herself felt the same way, he admitted, "The dominion government," he went on, "while approving the Locarno treaty (which has been halted as the basis of a European entente) did not consider themselves bound by it. There are thus here the possible germs of disagreement, or at least the admission that a common foreign policy may not always be maintained.
"This is, therefore, another very strong and urgent reason why peace should be the principal interest of the British Empire."
Farm Laborers
Guest of Prince
LEICESTER, England, Jan. — Six farm laborers, each of whom has worked at least fifty years for his present employers, will have a special table near the Prince of Wales tonight at a dinner the Prince is giving to 800 farmers over whose land he hunts foxes.
The laborer with the longest service is James Adding, who at ten was a farm boy earning four pence a day. At seventy-one he walks two miles a day to work. Adding has served three generations of the same family of farmers.
The Prince will give his guests the old English fars of roast beef, pudding and beer.
WASHINGTON, JULY 15.—Telling the story of the life of a man in a poor house of the city of Washington, Deck James Macon, wrote that many lithered homesteads in the city have been destroyed through the ownership of oil, the city of Othalia, which is the most considerable New York city, the place of whom work for it, and the municipal have small lager and wine cellars. In calling a few lithered, the men tums, Perfect Homestead, Guest Homestead of oil was disused, and in 1814 a way to begin a millinery. He in industrial and clothing and had invented his fortune of a millinery.—G. P.
NEGRO WORLD_EXPANSION FUND
The Nepo World Academy keeps with thanks the following club
thanks to its Expansion Fund:
Million For Study On Prolonging Life
CHICAGO, Jan. 9. Through skilled surgery, close attention to diet and habits, proper care of teeth, stomach and eyes, men have extended their span of life about 20 years in the last century and the usefulness at an age when experience makes them most useful has been extended fully 20 years. Still further to lengthen the span of life, through study of degenerative diseases incurred after a man has passed the half century mark, Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Lasker have given $1,000,000 to the University of Chicago. The endowment will be known as the Lader Foundation for Medical Research, and will function as a unit of the Department of Medicine.
Mr. Lasker, advertising executive and formerly chairman of the United States Shipping Board, long has been interested in medical research. In 1922 he contributed $25,000 to the American Society for the Control of Cancer and has been prominent in assisting similar bodies.
The Laskeer endowment for the present, at least, will be devoted to determining the cause of death from cardiovascular ailment, cancer and Bright's disease.
Spanish Pine Cones Give Peasants Income
VALLADOLID, Spain. Jan. 6. Throughout December and January when the snow lies thick in this district, most of the country folk gather millions of pine-cones fallen from the relictuous trees abounding here and extract from them the kernels, which are regarded as a luxury in cooking and cakemaking.
Churches Are Invited to Observe Young Men's Day
Sunday, Jan. 29, will be known in New York City as Young Men's Day. At this particular time all churches of the city are invited to emphasize the great importance of such young men's work that the Young Men's Christian Association is attempting to do. In many cases, as was done last year, though no financial appeal will be made, young men themselves will be accorded the privilege of speaking from the pulpits of the several churches, either in the morning or the evening services.
STOCKHOLM.-Six hundred cups of coffee a year per person is the average consumption in Sweden, according to John J. Thadeu, managing director of the Brazilian coffee exporting firm of J. Aron & Co., Inc. of Santos, who visited Stockholm recently.
Thadeu also says that in no other country in the world is the discrimination in the taste of coffee as high as in Sweden. Coffee merchants in Brazil are particularly careful with the inspection of coffee destined for consumption in Sweden.
The secretary of the Swedish Government Social Bureau in Stockholm, Hugo Herman, admits that coffee plays an significant role on the Swahili trade balance as grain, compiling 20 per cent. of the whole import of food, liquors and tobacco.
ing against ever since they began to conquer Africa and subjects and exploit the Negro people. And the Nordic is a queer creature, who has so far been unable to properly classify himself, which has always been the misfortune of miscegenates, such as the British, for example, who were crossed in their race lines in many directions before they became fixed in the type they now are. The work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association has just begun in earnest, and Marcus Garvey still lives and has the ear of the people who rule the modern world.
JAPANESE DIGNITY STILL OFFENDED BY IMMIGRATION EXCLUSION
THE American people are very sensitive at all times upon matters which affect their national honor, but they have not shown much appreciation of the sensitiveness of darker and weaker people in their dealings with them. And the American people affect not to understand the sensitiveness of the people of Haiti, Nicaragua, and the Philippines because of American interference in their domestic affairs. Americans appear to go on the theory that they can have pride of race and of nation which others must respect, but have pride of race and nations need not have any such thing, if it suits the American interest or whim to deny that they have. They have shown this to be their way of looking at a very grave question in their dealings with Hawaii long ago, and with Haiti, the Philippines, Mexico and Nicaragua in recent years. Indeed, the high-handed away in which the United States has been dealing with the Latin American States, with the Monroe Doctrine and the Panama Canal as clubs, during the last quarter of a century, has got all of the Latin American States of a nervous edge; and, if there should come an outbreak of pent-up indignation and wrath at the Havana Conference, now being held, in which the United States and Latin America are participating, President Coplidge being on the program to make an address, there would be no great surprise, except among those hard-boiled Americans who have the notion that others have no pride of race and of nation except themselves.
The Japanese people have never recovered from their exclusion from racial equality with the most favored nations by the Versailles Conference following the World War, and when the United States excluded them from the immigration privileges enjoyed by the most favored nations, classing them with undesirable Asiatics, the Japanese were offended in their dignity in a way that it will be difficult to eradicate. Recently Secretary of State Kellogg has been sounding the nations on new proposals making for international peace, but he has not been met with any sort of enthusiasm. The Japanese government has given the proposals a very cool reception. The Osaka Mainichi newspaper, in discussing the proposals, recently, emphasizing the immigration exclusive principle, said:
"Without a satisfactory settlement of this Japan can never conclude an anti-war treaty with the United States," the paper says. "Not because Japan ever desires to exploit the possibility of war as a means to an end, but because the question is so extremely important to us that we would not feel justified in undertaking any far-reaching engagement without first having it settled. We are not keen about the few hundreds of our emigrants taken in the United States yearly, as the rate of our growth is too fast for us to entertain the elusive hopes of its solution by immigration. We feel rather like taking back those Japanese already there.
"The heart of the issue is not material, but moral and spiritual. To speak bluntly, it hurts our sense of national honor to be slandered before the world by Americans as an inferior race unworthy of the same treatment as Bohemians and Armenians. It is a useless attempt to impose treaties, on nations between which there is a persistent implication of national insult on the part of one against the other."
The Mainichi insists that "Japan harbors no grudge against America and that both countries are avowed friends." Of course, but Japan considers that it has been offended in its dignity and is in no humor to help the United States work for international peace while the cause of friction rises in force. The Pacific Ocean may come be one of the greatest battlegrounds in history as between Americans and Asiatics. In dealing with the Russians the Japanese showed that they know how to go slow in working up to a given condition of affairs in which they would not be outclassed. The Americans should not overlook this fact, but they are disposed to hold the Japanese lightly.
AN AMERICAN WHITE WOMAN AND THE DISGRACED RABAH
N American white woman, Miss Nancy Ann Miller, has gone to India for the purpose of marrying the former Maharajah of Indore, who already has one or more wives on his hands, and who abdicated his throne rather than stand trial for the murder of a merchant who had got mixed up with a dancing girl belonging to the Rajah. His native wife is prostrated at the announcement that her husband will take an American wife, but she can't help herself.
The American woman appears to belong to a decent family in the far West, and she and her mother have known the precious Rajah for some time. The British and American consuls have striven to dissuade the woman from renouncing her religion for that of the Hindus, and from marrying a man of the character of the Rajah with a harem, but she refuses to be persuaded, on the theory that "whom the gods would destroy they first make mad." There is nothing whatever in such a union to commend it and everything to condemn.
EDITORIAL COMMENT OF THE NEGRO PRESS
T. THOMAS FORTUNE - - - - - - Editor
MARCUS GARVEY - - - - - - Managing Editor
NORBON G. O. THOMAS - - - - - Acting Managing Editor
PENNEL V. V. - - - - - Advertising Editor
AMY JACQUES GARVEY - - - - Contributing Editor
PROP. M. A. FIGUEROA - - - Spanish Editor
ERNEST E. MAIR - - - - Business Manager
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 LOUD CALL FOR MORE WORK OF CONSTRUCTION IN 1928
THE Universal Negro Improvement Association has begun to feel the inspirational life of President-General Marcus Garvey, who is able again to "speak as one having authority," although residing in a beautiful-island of the seas, remote from his former base of operations, and Mr. E. B. Knox, his American representative, is doing a man's part to arouse the interest of the American members to a lively sense of the obligations imposed upon them by the parent body and by themselves.
In his front page article in The Negro World of January 14, President-General Garvey said: "I am making an earnest appeal to you of the Universal Negro Improvement Association everywhere to buckle on your armor for more work, harder work, more determined work, in this new year of 1928. It is a year of work, work, work." Mr. Knox, by word and example, emphasizes President-General Garvey's loud call for work and more work, in order to bring the association up to the high standard set for it and to enable it to do the great work which appeals to it in race uplift and safeguarding of race interests. We have a great big organization with a comprehensive program of conservation and preservation of Negro values, and it is the business of every member to understand that it is expected of him that he will do his and her duty in helping to make the program effective all along the line. The work of agitation, of education, of organization, appeals to the membership everywhere, for there can be no success without a realization of his obligation by each member. Support the Universal Liberty University on the James River, read and pay for The Negro World, and encourage your friends and neighbors to do so. We are engaged in a great and glorious work and it must not fail for lack of means of success.
OPPORTUNITY NOW SEES MR. GARVEY LESS HYSTERICALLY
HEN Mr. Garvey was convicted of using the mails to defend, on only one count, the evidence of which should have been excluded as insufficient, among the Negro publications, most unsparing in deposition of Mr. Garvey and his organization and his methods, was Opportunity Magazine, one of the strongest and most intellectual of Negro publications. We were very much taken aback by the venom and vehemence with which Opportunity handled the question, as it appeared to us to be woefully hysterical in its treatment—a question which involved a great deal more than Mr. Garvey's conviction, challenging in some sort the right of the Negro freely to organize and work under his own leadership for the conservation of his social, civil and economic values everywhere, for his own advantage rather than the advantage of others.
In the January issue of Opportunity there appears an editorial article on Mr. Garvey's release and deportation entirely creditable to the writer, and with no show whatever of any hysteries. The question is discussed on its broadest rather than its narrowest fines, and as it affects the whole Negro people rather than a group or organization of them. Opportunity says:
He was sent to prison on the technical charge of using the mails to defraud, a circumstance with but slight relationship to the important facts of his activities, and by a legal conviction which did not destroy that influence which seems to be uncommonly irritating to the authorities of several governments, including his own. No one dismisses his name now three years after his conviction, as that of a mere criminal and exploiter of ignorant Negroes. It would be worth the inquiry to learn why this lone black figure, humptious and flamboyant as he is, can call forth in such concert the interests of those governments with black subjects, in protecting them from his doctrine."
That is a fair statement of the case. In summarizing what the Garvey movement stands for Opportunity is equally clear in its statement. It is not unnatural, it says, that the Negro should desire a country of his own; that he should have his own standards and culture. "Rather than accept white gods they should conceive them as being of their own image, and things black be given the same virtue for Negroes that things white have for white people," it says. Opportunity concludes its editorial as follows:
We should stand ready at all times to do the right in all things with which we are concerned in dealing with our reenforcement. If there were wars in the old year, resulting from ecstatic assumption and presumption, then let such errors be eliminated by the common sense wisdom of the new year.—National Baptist Voice.
It is plain that the South is swallowed up in cowardice and fear. Cowardice on the part of the white man and fear on the part of the black man. Both conditions contributing a state of apogee, from which there seems to be no relief. The white man in the South in charge of every branch of the government uses the state government and its all-powerful resources to promote the interest of white folk, to the detriment and exclusion of black folk.—Atlanta Independent.
Considering the filmay evidence on which he was convicted, it will always remain a debatable question as to whether "it was right as well as legal to send him to prison." So, whether Mr. Garvey was or was not the author of the principles around which so many of the Negroes of the world have sallied, the fact remains that he breathed the breath of life into these principles and the dumb Negro everywhere but never wrote for the first time in modern history, and that as a result the least worst and have least made
Our body of "fighting" everybody and
everybody must have no one but our
means, and each method will always
keep us on a stand still, and we are
given that they are being discarded. It
is hard to a foolish man, who will
obstruct his own road to success. How
we can help a foolish man?
ones" among us. Putting our personal feelings into every public undertaking has had the same effect on the races effects on throwing a monkey-wrench into a fly-wheel of a piece of machinery. Oklahoma Eagle.
When the United States Marines killed a hundred or more natives in Nicaragua under the name of bandits, nothing was said. When five American marines were reported killed the country is being aroused and hundreds of thousands of dollars are about to be expended in a punitive expedition.—Richmond Plane.
The builder knows that the higher he would rear his structure toward the heavens, the deeper and broader and stronger must be his foundation. The digging must be dull and thicken himself, but without it there can be no loot to challenge the spiral stars.—California Volgo.
Some day civilization will progress to the point where, over in the most beautiful of places over mountains of a moth will be duty committees and pilots for murder or attempted murder. Some day the state of humanity will be in the hands of the people.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 14. Alfred Mayer, the English journalist, today condemned the newspaper policy of allowing itself to be used indiscriminately to further national and governmental policy. He pointed out that an intelligently conducted newspaper can render its country incomparable service by taking the risk of uttering independent sentiments.
"An over-commercialized press," he said, "does its country harm by rallying thoughtlessly to governmental support at all times." If the German or Austrian government had been provided with a free press to disclose the real sentiment of the Austro-Hungary empire about the pending war, the ultimatum to Serbia would never have been issued."
He quoted Bismarck's saying that the way to maintain the peace of Europe was to hang a dozen editors attributing too much importance to editors.
Mr. Spender today gave the second lecture in the annual Isaac Bromley course at Yale on the subject, "Journalism and International Affairs."
"In most countries it is to be assumed that newspapers will rally to the government, regardless of the party, when popular passion is inflamed," he said. "It is at just such a moment that the minority, which is often far stronger than would be informed from the popular voices, needs to be heard; and at such a moment, a strong man, who is willing to take the risk, may do his country incomparable service."
Negroes Worst Sufferers In Terrible Mine Regime
Thousands of Negroes are the worst sufferers of the terrible regime of oppression and terrorism which reigns in the mining regions of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Colorado. This was the statement made public today by Charles W. Pulp, chairman of a committee of miners now in New York for the purpose of raising funds to feed the starving families and children of the grinding miners. Pulp is a Negro, while the other members of this committee are an Italian, a Slovak and a Croatian. In his district in Pennsylvania he has charge of the relief of some 16,600 miners' families. For fifteen years he has been-mining coal in the moist coal fields of Pennsylvania. He has been a member of the United Mine Workers Union and for several years he was recording secretary and then president of Local 2012.
"Never have I seen such misery and oppression in the mining fields, and never have there been so many Negroes affected. Of the 376,000 miners involved in the State of Pennsylvania, fully two-thirds are Negroes and they are an agitator a most desperate and terrible situation. Many of them have had their belongings dumped into the street by armed guards who evicted them from company houses in frosting weather, and starvation raths among them. Added to this they are victims of the race inflicted which the miners have stirred up against them. At the Pittsburgh Coal Company, Mine No. 3, the coal mines have repeatedly lifted white strife-breakers to attack Negro stenkers. The coal mines make a brutal sport of driving their own mining Negro stenkers, and while they have not spared white miners, certainly Negro miners have been the worst sufferers of their brutal violence and terrorism. Two weeks ago, ever a hundred Negro stenkers were rounded up and hanged into fell, where they are still held.
Despite their terrible suffering, the Negro mines are holding out gently for the bitter struggle to save living water and human condition. Even the Negroes recently imported from the South under false pretences by the mine owners and put to work as staline-breakers are joining the mines just as soon as they learn the truth and can escape from the mines where they are held in virtual slavery under the guns of armed mines guards. Of some $0,000 Negroes imported from the South, less than 2,000 are now in the mines."
This Negro mining, Charles W. Pulp will be the principal speaker at a mass meeting in support of the miners which will be held next Sunday, January 15, 1926, at 3:30 p. m. at Mother Zion Community House, 151 West 138th street. Other speakers will be Reg Wm. Lloyd Ives of the St. James Prebyserian Church, Mrs. W. d. Burroughs of the Teachers' Union, Juliet Stewart Poyntzer of the International Labor Defense, George Moran, another striking miner, and Richard F. Moore, of the American Negro Labor Congress.
our rella of barbarianism, as the once respectable official by fire is now regarded.—Seattle Enterprise
The day of business enterprise on a small scale has passed. In the field of business, individual undertaking is as archaic as the single coach in this day of rapid transportation, or the ten them in this day of wireless telephony and radio. The individual enterprise that are still in existence are, however, from yesterday—Indianapolis therefore.
Because of early successes, that which is early by in his valued, A man earns a lodge and keeps it; Then his son earns the fortune and inspires it. One becomes valiant, glorious, puffed up and conceived when houses are shattered upon him prematurely. Sweet unamusing naturets become warped and repulsive in a night pay a result of early success and its accompanying glory.
Good fortune is a touchstone and only the prices by nature are unaffected thereby.
GEORGINA DOUGLASS JOHNSON.
Endurance Real Test of Achieving Desired Results
BY DR. FRANK CRANE
Importance depends on endurance.
Endurance is the retention through time of an achievement of value. Thus says Whitehead in Science and the Modern World.
Endurance is the real test of a man.
It is something that we can all have. If we can do nothing else we can hang on and remain the same.
Sometimes this is more pigheadedness and stubbornness. But in this world of fluctuating values and fluctuating men it is a pleasure to find something stable.
One of the strongest pleas of the Roman Catholic church is that it has endured throughout the ages and is still going strong.
Whatever has endured for a length of time must have some merit to it. The life of an organism depends upon its ability to adjust itself to its surroundings. Life is a tragedy for the unfit.
A man is in perfect health when he can breathe, the air, enjoy the sunshine and parakee of the food that is offered him, and his lungs, his stomach and his other organs are attuned to his environment.
If they become out of tune, or, in other words, he becomes unfit, nature eliminates him.
Emerson says that the best test of a book and the finest critie was time, and advised us, as a whole, to read no book that had not been printed twenty years.
Time has dealt harshly with some popular favorites, while others have survived.
Some of the popular gongs our ancestors sang are still popular. No one could tell at the time which they were, but the passing of the years has tested them.
It is perhaps a wise thing not to build a monument to a man before he is dead. Time must have its opportunity to pass upon him.
There is something in more endurance, and the man who is able to stick a thing out to the bitter end has the advantage over one who is constantly changing.
Do not stick to a thing simply because you have chosen it, but after choosing it, if wholly, keep your foot firm and do not populate copyright.
HEALTH TOPICS
By DR. M. ALICE ASSERSON
Of the New York Tuberculosis and
Health Association
Health Insurance
It is a moral thing for men to take out life insurance to protect their wives and their families. In fact, life insurance is being taken by more and more people all the time. But how many persons take out "health insurance?"
What is health insurance? Periodic health commissions are health insurance.
The best way to make contain of your health is to have of complete health examination by a competent physician once every year. The doctor will give you a thorough go over and will discover the condition of your physical being. If all parts of the body are functioning properly he will tell you that you are in good health. It is a belief to know this is true and not just to hope that it is so.
If, on the other hand, there are physical defects which are harmful to you, the doctor will discover them and prescribe treatment to correct them, if this is possible. This may save a great deal of suffering in later life. Most ill may be cured if they are discovered in time. Many diseases can be prevented by correcting minor defects in their early stages.
Get the habit of having yearly health examinations. They are a great assistance in keeping one's health; so they are indeed "health insurance."
In provision for the family after one's death is important, isn't provision for one's family by keeping healthy during life also important?
Have a health examination once a year, and see that the members of your family also have regular health examinations.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10—Making his first business competition since retiring from active army service, Gap Purchasing has become a member of the board of directors of the Riggs National Bank, top of the largest financial institutions in the United States. Purchasing he has declined all business offices, including his operations to affiliate of a civic or military mission.
"Along with Gap Purchasing, Dr. Brian P. Burford, chairman of the board of the Chamber of Commerce, is of the United States who was a major supporter of the firm," Purchasing said.
Governor Smith's strong commitment of his position in support of civil liberty and against insecurity and the representation of minorities, expressed for his annual message to the New York State Legislature, "calls for the commandment of all thoughtful citizens," says a letter sent the Governor on January 5 by Arthur-Gerfield Maya, George W. Kirahway and Cawdard Carson Villard, members of the National Committee of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Governor Smith's references, under the head of "Civil Liberties," to the post-war suppression of constitutional rights exhibited in such incidents, as the outing of the Socialist assemblymen and the bill giving power to a single Appalachian Division of the court system of the State to strike from the ballot the emblem of the candidates of a political party were among the items in the message which were praised by the Civil Liberties Union committee. His indirect reference to the repealed Lusk Laws, by which he said, "the sanctity of the field of education was invaded," was also included in the passage commended in the letter, the text of which follows:
Under the head of "Civil Liberties," Governor Smith's message included the following remarks:
"It is a fundamental tenet of our system of government that the civil rights and liberties of our people must be protected. We are often called upon to rule negatively as well as affirmatively. It is strange that when we emerged from a war in which we took part for freedom and liberty throughout the world some people seemed to be scared by happenings in some of the countries of the Old World.
"They seemed to feel that for our safety as a State we must restrict freedom of thought, of opinion—and of education. They also sought drastic control over the freedom of political parties to organize upon any platform they see fit so long as it is not intimical to the spirit of our Constitution and the law of the country."
"It seemed at that time as if the Declaration of Independence had been entirely forgotten, and likewise the document which was intended to give it force and vigor—the Constitution of the United States. We seemed ready to subject great numbers of our people in tyranny and abuses which that Declaration declared it our sacred duty in end."
After referring to the outlay of the Socialist assembly in the days following the war, the Governor continues:
"In the mad rage for what was thought necessary for our protection, we attempted in throttle freedom of speech. Freedom of expression was throttled when by law it was sought to have a single department of the Government place a test upon the loyalty and devotion to this country of our great army of school teachers."
Mother Alien. Baby
Born Abroad a Citizen
SAN FRANCISCO—It required three
and a half years for the红 tape of the
United States immigration laws to be
healed so that Mrs. George Geen,
a native of Australia, and the wife of an
American citizen, could come to the
home of her husband. Accompanied
by her young son, Judah, she has
arrived here.
George was in the United States Navy when the fleet visited Australia three and a half years ago. A courtship culminated in a wedding. Then George had to return to America. He left his wife with her relatives and an aunt so he got his discharged, from the navy made a trip to Australia to visit her, but was unable to bring her back to America, due to limitation of permissions. So she granted her turn under the quote and arrived here on the Union Line near Málaga with her son and was met at the pier by George, a prosperous minister of Novato, Marina Count.
"Due to the fraudfulness of the immigration laws," Geary said, "Mck, who was born in Australia, an American citizen and he was eligible to enter the country very time, but his mother, being an alien in the eyes of the law, has had to wait more than three years to get home."
Mrs. Geary expressed herself as delighted at being in America.
The Killing Madness
Grips the Nation
Some may think there has been overstatement of the killing madness which continues to spread over this country like a deadly plague. There is no overstatement. Ten years ago a killing anywhere in the land was national news; today killing have become local news only. A newspaper which would publish all the shootings in the United States currently would publish nothing else. Just how far is this copy going and where will it end? The nation cannot settle back on the comfortable theory that the madness is sporadic and will burn itself out. It is not sporadic and it is not burning itself out. It is progressive and it is growing in virulence.
Many of the present-day shootings follow the most trivial provisions. In the wildest days of the Wild West, when everybody in light carried a gun, shootings were more often than not the end of a prolonged food in which not only individual but whole factions slowly lost their balance and their manhood. It is not an uncommon occurrence these days for someone to take out a gun and begin forming because of some real instability as light and opportunistic as the moment that gave it blight. A great many of the so-called "battlefighters" had their day. The warriors now go to keep hold of their battles.
SPECIAL APPEAL!
we ‘ | i
"In order:that we may be better able to carry onto amore” .
successful end the operations of the __ -
"School at Claremont, Virginia ;
and in keeping with the wishes of the Président General :
a that members give their support to seme :
we nro now making a, specia} agpeal to all membere and friends .
, t@ Contribute One Dollar or Mere to us ;
_ LIBERTY UNIVERSITY DRIVE .
Please forward alt danations +: geal 46: ¢ . :
_ OSeruichiy Streliweed-Cerey iedertvial Instiate) — . &
"” Claranenh Serer Counties, Vin, BSA.
j . ca j
You . WILL LOSE MONEY n°
‘ . . ‘IF YOU DON’T READ ‘THIS *
| | OFFERNAT *, ae
. One Copy of “Stiperman ta Man” and One Year’s Substription.to the .
. NEGRO WORLD . ~ 2. - 5 2 es ete eee ww «$300
.| The above book sells for $1.30 retail, . | 5 i
J. A. Roggrs-tscourbeet Writer and “Superman to Man”, is hit best book, :
on . - + OFFER NO. 2 2 4
Large Phetegraph of Mercus Garvey (18x13 Inahes) This photograph sells for, 40c. |
Be One Yoavle Subsevintion to the NEGRO WORLD, $2.50, both fer only $2.00.
: Be ‘ OFFER NO. 3 “. fe
1 Box of Stetionery containing 200 sheets best quality. writing paper and 100 envelopes, all
printed with your namé and address (worth $8,00 by itself). with one year's aubserlption to the
NEGRO WORLD ~ - «5° .\. ‘ eee ee ee 98.00
Be sure to print or write plainly your name and address.” FOREIGN ORDERS, 35c, EXTRA
me Special to Residents of New York City from 2 2
= ‘b+ 3) New Until Jan. 31-Oaly: P cine
as ota * One -Yoor Subseription to the NEGRO © ¢ STS":
boed ; , WORLD ut HipllPriee . + « 6t25 Graig =
._.. THE- NEGRO. WORLD...
ee ee leaden ca sg veg TE og ne.
Le a nw Vine: ¢ FUTMA Le
SAHRA LRN A IPMRENS ELISE A AIRED + EIR GME SIT ENS ONES CRIME HEP
? oe eo. Th ee ee ee ee eee ae Sar tidal Cae Ti ee. a, ) oe
eee aN ET SS
eh 4s a’ Aaecae Rie ah
I a Wai ac. siynatttianh oe
Ree ata Ss scat IN
BE mee Se
<i Eededom.. Idee Wipimrens: ppdaition
a ot Stent mon a tare:
‘Dart of the pepulstion'oi the’ Indore
‘State, says a Bombay dispatch to Fhe
Dally: Bxpress. we =
“The former Mphsrejah:alveddy Des.
tire wives" says the eae
hate trip to Sorore after his abdication,
‘but.returned to India before her hus-
ad ~ saw >
“the Journeyed to Colonibo, Ceylen,
when’ she nesta of the arfival of the,
former ‘Maharajah, apd then learned
Tor the first time 6f big ‘intention to
moprry again. She-was told that her
presence was undestradle “and re-
turned the same day to Indore.
e Miss ‘Milter artived in Bombay on
‘To Whom This May Concern:
This Ie to inform you that
Divisionat Charters No, 214, of
Dayton, Ohio, and No. 286, of
Jacksonville, Fla, are hereby re-
voked, on atcount of ieregutarts
tive, by order of the Hon. Marcus
Darvéy, President-General of the
Universal ~ Negre Improvement
Ascodiation. Persone operating
under tl arters do eo iile--
tally pnd lay thamesives open to
prosecution. The Dayton Divi-
ssion No. 214 has been reorgan-
ized with. Benjamin‘ Montgem~”
‘ery es President. No other group
fe’ Dayton ie authorized to-Tune-
tion as a branch of the Uni-
versal Negre Improvement As-
sociation...
%. B. KNOX,
» Personal Repraxentatiye of
the Préaident-General.
al la a elcid es aN iain eli
3 Soar caw a
j iho. Anraoniggdh der: ax
Sree
: queries 4 ica: Ameriey
ring at Lien, oe
wnlaiets. wie-tntenhe th; tin ‘her. Stung
being made at Indore fdr the marriage
aceor@ing. tn the Hindo custom. The
Amvrisen ‘Consul infornied-me that he
ha@ given up. hope of preventing. the
mncetage Zhe only hope 1s. ter the:
GSvernment to interyeeel. |
“Indore ia wildly expited at the ap-
prosching arrival of the former Maha-
rajah, whe will yndertake s pligrimage
before the marriage. . He propeses |se-
lecting a wedding day upon which the
stars. arg most favorable ead will be,
married according to the arctent rites.
| PARIS, Jan, 13.—Essad Nassayhi, a
young TurkisA ‘navant, formerly one
of the enrators of the Murdum of Gor-
stan{liople, was arrested in Paris to-
‘day follqwing the discovery that he
had_sold a Hittite inscription. one of
the mont famous Ansyrign tablets in
exintence, to a French antiqué dealer.
‘The dealer, who after long negotia-
tions with Nansouh! purchased the
tablet -for 17,000 france, took it to the
curator of the-Loyvre, who immedi-
ately recognised if a the property of
the Conatantinople Museum. :
Nasrouhl, upon his arrest, admitted
the theft. He declared he had resigned
from the staff of the Turkish muscam
when. the authorities refused to rekn-
‘burse Aim fur heavy expensen incurred
during] scientife. investigations he had
agcomplinhed near Angora.
'E took the. tabict. intending to keep
{U unit T head received payment.” Nes-
Seer area xo ectrennenr erence ae = Sees SE |
ie
it
. Eon fi
‘AD THIS * . |
, Year's Subsiription.to the | UH
ee eee "$3.00 i
DO retail, Ar
i to Man” is his best beok. E 1
Turkish Savant Held;
Sold Hittite Tablet
a a a st A
4 eee we
Oe Me ec ee
ey ! eed
iS co er ay
eee etuicanp tn a atta
mabnition of, SNe, nant) fact
a amiotaretis
ioe Seen es
Teqrcay, setae ‘to: guter Smee
regardiess of ‘quotan, end to: permit
the children; under 31 years of Ameri«
can citizens also to enter, were among
the modifications of .the':lass advo~
cated bo Comsinteonar of Inmiftation
Deve: M. Day yesterday morning
in-an address, before the ‘Men's Bible
Ciass Gf the Park Avenue Baptist
Church. * wee = 7
“rhe. first thing that I Ddelteve
should bs, elimingted ftom the present
jmmigtation law,". Mr. Dey sald, “te
the national origin method.of deter-
mining racial quotas, ‘This bas groved
impractical, and. seme other echeme
for determining the size of the quotas
should be devised, Also, I believe that
the quota sykiem should be extended
to the independent republics af the
Wester: Hemixphere, to Mexico, and
the Eouttr—and —cCentral ~ American
countries. * oe
Other changes which he sald he
Would ‘suggest would permit the ad-
mission of parents of tmmigrapts who
have sjgnified their intention of De-
conting naturalized, arid be would sim:
plify and humantse the ee ioe
tive procedure under -the immigration
law. ge * ‘° |
woub{‘said, “but I needed funds’ bauly
and risked the sale.” -,
Frionds aid thet. Nassouhi had
been poorly pad; that he was a bril-
Mant scholareiid bad used up his own
resources, in conducting rescarches,
while he had’a wife nnd two children
te surport.
Th Worlds Best
icoe ce CRAs Oe
| ea
vow (GE
ae Peper on
hoe bee a
ae oer
oe es tet!
oe 5 ee r A Seow cd
#, P, A. in, he Ment Work World : .
te geataelags anejonn: My are
‘Brisbane mamlined ehoxt the BL Gu
Pana de Némeges, Company. Then
yeere Aggy he ‘wrote’ “that compasy
Invested $56,250,000 th stock of the
‘General Motora Company, Today that
‘stack: tw worth: 9660,000,004, xbaxty- ton
tines pty tt Gost..- Aind th, $927. tt
mata siocknetesre in the du Pont Gom:
BERy adout $90,080,000, Buch things
can be done!}a the fend of opportun-
ity. +
*'Aan.?" saya: foslish “yéuth, ‘but 4u
Font had 950,980,000 de invest. } have
‘not_get that, Why talk tone of op.
portunity® Henry Ferd did not have
that num a few years ago, either. He
was earning $100 a month ana watch-
wan. But while he watehed he
thought. He got a 00d idea, ox to
tt, carried it out, Me's richer (andi.
mare Ri phate
It strikes Us that youth in not sd
foollah a0” Mr.-Brisbasis thinks It Js,
or rather, as he would have hia read=
ere think he thinks. Perhzps it ia the
man who employed Henry Ford us a
watchman to whom ho owes his-Muc-
cess, ‘Fur he might haves sata, Sree
here, Ford, are you a watchman or w
dreamer? Whet I'm paying #100,
large amount of money, for is to have
& watchman who is a watchman. If-
aomeboily trics to rub this place you
will be so Immersed fir. your allly
dreams about machinery that you will
be worthless. Ford, you're tired.” And
then Mz. Hirlahane might nover have
beard of ¥3rg, except possi ‘83 «al
watchman whd had ‘lost Wiis job
(hrough lick of concentration om 1
And then ho might have written a.
warning to Foolish Youth to the effect
if it'a only a watchman, you should,
try to be tho heat watchman In the
world and there are greater things
than money, and—to quote Moby!
Ryskind—pno xuriila could lick" them
all. . 8
| Washington. Enjoyed ._. -
Sport of Fox Hunting |:
George Washington ensoyed the
sport, of fox hunting and in hix diary
he redorded the detatin of ono hunt
in which he. parttefpated, which’ took
place Decemter 12,.5785, saya the De-
trot News. wy
"After an carly breakfurt we went
Into the back wood of Muddy Tole
plantation a-hunting and were Joined
by "Mr. Willam ‘Feuke. | Abgyt half
efter 1 ollock (being fret plasned
With dogs runninx hoxsy we found o
fox near Colonel Mason's. plantation
on Little Hurting “Creek, having fot-
lowed on hie drag more. than hale a
|inile, and yun him with chlit doxe
hithe other four xetting, as was sufi.
pores, after a wecond fox) cloee sini
well for 1 hour—-when tho dogs cane
to @ fault and Co cold hunting 20 min-
ites after ZS when hein Joined by
ig salesnye Benn Uite GL tuin MH
afvert: and dn shout M0 rdniten, kited:
“ap-in-on open-field of Colnnel-Mazon's
Sovery rer and’ every don. belng
prearnt. bt the death?
Pieieh Town Ears Clecler-
HOTAUGS {iCit 49 LOS fclsy
MONNINKENDAM Halting Gttty
The anfet ching port ef Menntn-
kengar en the Suyder tine looke with
Rinten en the bir drainsge program
which wil pete x am andeng villure,
Ie WAL have fe find another Inaustsy
then firhing, end tevnsfels fear thet
tho eiange wil bring nolue aug bustie,
fantldiadsty avolied, for ceuturtes
this ticens: Rellow of the Netherlends,
_ The neon of Menniutendsm, have
ao timepleres da their hosaee Leesuse
the ek of 2 cigel ts ton notey, They dee
peng for the hour upon 2 dlrereetly
gales elosk dn the Htxdinls cower, on
foe pizorsa of whiels tea of inetet
hegses rallona nvannd every sixiy imine
they iso ter dhe nen, i bh, om by
Ax oman, 108, Smokes, But
Sevs Worsen Shouldn’t
PE-20h--veara dn tiie vale of tears
may ba mesredited 6 yours of experl-
creo, then—take ft from Mrs. Mary
Limebick ot igouses Cite, ‘Me—wo-
men shouldn't revoke,
Although she bas blown smoke rine
@nca whe was 15 years oli, sho ver
Rates the women of. today not ts
hardy a4 Uinlt mothers, anys the Hax-
ton Globe. <
- “Mo, Fir, wotuen shousidn’t, emake,”
ahs araertad. "SF amoke, of courae, but
Ioxot started when io uaed to Heht
grendina’s pipe for her
fe ean ee Perenen ee eee nce aor ae
| ce eee Te eee |
Is : eeetee: Sasehois Sees :
Pe E). Saaeek, ae Ma Om in sete, p Reaper a hacta. -e hake a:
| eM. eee Br ects Sees Acne ree tae a or
| Bes Ree peter cae ee omar ooo ae ones ae
HE SSAc eSBs, SOUS, Ses oy ney" sere a pecee Weak acetone a
eta : Bi tere wend tor “fr * Be He cnet, Cee a Saeed
| Srouber ty Reon Se ae Se ee
for Uo packages. Ie your Health Worth #1 Thon send us §1.00 money onder qr curhwmey. net ee
: = zp endear conmerene raacy Toh Wo SNnecrs 21 70, Dewees Sasnelt ny
‘y & SEND FOR IT TORAY—5O0 NOT DI nay gene FREE—AGENTS. ALAE- WANTED reg
,_~ IROQUOIS FAMOUS INDIAN REMEDY 66. -.”
; i. 18E. 113th St, N. Y. City; N. Y. ms
Judge Raps Insanity ° [Two Wolves Killed . - Picture Framer Wins ~
Plea as Too Freaucnt. At Kan oe Fine Arte Prise
EUREKA, Man. (A-P.).—Ivan M.
Hart, convicted of second degres mur-
der for killing his bride of three weeks,
Mabel Mermont“Hart, by sleshiag her
throat with @ pocket-knife, July 8, was
Aentenced to thirty yenrs in prison te-
cently by District Judxe Ayrea.° Hart's
cdunael indicated there: would bene
Sppealys —— - Bs
In, pronouncing veatence, Judge
Ayrés criticized the-practtce of Jawyers
“of pleuiing sneanity at every epper-
lualty to ayold ‘the Tonecutiences ‘of
sriraes! ~ Tn
i Atlorneys for Hart had .a@vanaed
‘the .unusual “plea of “ooinmiunicattve
{onanity,” muintaining kis wife, heraclt
wubjocs ta Inaasie delunions, had tram
mie her tnsanity, 10 her husband,
Inducing’ Him to kil) her because sic
foarea childbirth.”
‘French Scientist Assignes -
To Look Over Army Horses
PARIS.— Militery Chiefs, whe ere
proverbially supposed to detail s:kera
ae shoomekers.and carpenters ax “ook,
have another achievement. credi:-d to
fthems :
Georges Claude, whoae name ta linked
with the Sovention of Mquldjlvilp a
reserve officer and amked racially to
be anaigned to an artiliary laboratory
where hin sclentific rentua might ‘be
of aervice to the army.”
Ula army chiefs,” hie “frlenia say,
promptly galled him to act a: an ine
apoctor ofMuvalry horace, in-time of
war. “
Woman Heads Germ ~
Body ‘for First Time
ROCHESTER (A. V).—For the first
atime “since Its organization twenty-
nine Years ago, the: American Soctety
ot Racteriologists will be herded by a
woman, ft.war learned (oday.on the
Arkt scanlon of the three-day annual
meeting Kot under wes.
Mips-Allce C. Beant, af the United
State Hygienic tachoratoriex, Wash=
Ingtom naa vice-president ef the eas
clety, following -the Gustom.of the or-
ganiiagon, will eucomed De, Robert, &
Ureed, of Geneva, N.Y, a4 president
tor NEEL years e
SPECEAL N@TICE
FO ATHLETES |
FNS UIIMEREAL ATHLETIC,
CLUR wil held thete GENERAL
MEETING at LITERTY HALL, 120°
W. Tasth streot, on WEDNESDAY |
EVENING, JANUARY Tent 2 p.m. |
ncked to coms cur enriy. There will |
also be the MEGULAT ELECTION |
fot the yenr. eh {
Average OFF ay 4
ntvereai Athletic clus |
Po ee
| See > GRRE Rar |
t / tea tetetce Pon
[ Af Fee Mele-Tass
i » OBE Mebes Wey?
be 2 Sew aan quiskly bring
Sects ey cog he Tate Ba cone rae
f Fr ceenas So. specatlngs seceteeenail
i mchessuss te sutvieg is reguiee ea obs
tain spssioae-becania only one applica
tion of ove finid is nasonar;—ond b=
couse itis exsily waphed off the coslp and
j igeencthe Bale nofe, Mafly and silkea.
| No odor, 9 etichiness,
A S|
LARIEUSE |
Freach Hair Coloring suakes the heir s
Juvtrous black {9 15 mines, Coly one
application required, Acts like mugic.
Seat to you pompald Go receipt ot $1.15.
Enelove coupen wth your order or write
for further islermedion. . me
IR Bee
oo klolfee Be Latin Me cise
preotl Hap Celodae Becuesd hed ice |
beh sononianamnicaan idonaassonmndian
chy Lena R
ABRSTRONE. TAMAYO
sear tae de cio ty i ought nical aap
ee gee ees : Soe
[se either e567." Se aE
epee dba odes, ee : Sy eS
| Riess Sage tet ay f Sees
| SEeEReSe poeeenersen Meise. pees
| eee > Sameera temo. se.
ee Res Se ce
ae Bs ate
ae 2 : ; ard a :
Raneaeee.°4 Pie yee
ies A ae .
bs 5: ee me 4
eee Petree: obits Gia a f
Ha Same I st bf ay tease grs Pts oP a
Bei pe EE | oo Ser
Rags ete a ao gaeae =
. DR. J. E. ROBERTS, Principal and Qwner
& Miles North of Hastings, 13 Miles South-of St. Augustine
PHONE 39-5 +
THE ANCIENT MAGICIANS Cured the sil tenis berie from Nara’
One eee eae ee tintin Rr pau tine, Whnteveg rene tous
Carton LF roestitag necthe worse fete. tail tn peeaon oe tite me,
s DR. J. &. ROBERTS, P. O. Box 74, Armatreng, Fla, -
ne St. Petersburg, Fle.
a. fo October 3.102%. |
tee Sirse-T am ‘nied. to nay that the resulta obtained from use of your
perbahave heen vary xatiatying. as
T felt ike a new Wornait after using "your herbs for a few weeks.” T eam
now plainly seo that the natural products ef the fielde and woods are. the
Bent things to keep a person in good. condition. =
: « Yours very tats; eee ss
= re - (Blgned) - MRS. VIOLA HOOKER,
925 2nd Ave. South. ©
aa We Want 1,000 Ageints
a im rd Sree
Two. Wolves Killed . -
At Kansas City Doot
KASSAB CITY, Jan. 6.—Two of the
wolves howling at Kansas Cily'd gates
have been silenced
When ¢ polica patrol aesigned to the
southventern residential @atrict” killed
© large TINVDer wolf the forepart of this
wesk, nfany persone doubted the atory
until ine oMcsra coliccted a tonddtliar
bounty ftom tlie county. Yesterday a
wolf crossed. a xtret In front of an
automobile carrying {lia oMicex, ‘They
opencd fire with riot guns and obtained
another pelt from which to make gloves
as souxenirs of then prowess 'as hunt-
ore. . x
Several of tho animals hava toon ve-
ported: on tho outahtiin of “the city
since the recent’ heavy snowfall, They
apparéntly come from a wooned nev-
Uon afew miles trons the vity limits.
Historical Research _
| ASIUINGICON, Jett 12-1 hia A
ban? henaets Arthur Seed wae cioess
[ident of the:Necra Academy whic! ye-
cently héld a convention tn this elty,
sald Ahat Hild recent researciiex Jn Se-
Ville, Spain, hak dispoted an aaanr-
on of hiktoriane that Mongo, Peonte,
a pilot of Columbua, was a Negro, de
alng told of A dlacovery. he mide this
year ine Mbeary at Worcenter, Mass.,
Of a wond out of Heniiinin Runmexer,
Negro mathematician and engineer.
whos ie i(ed in makipe. the orlginal
wurvay "Gf tho “National Copuab--
(re ae ji .
Women, Weak, Tired,
Rundown and Nervous
crimin, sucer-avigen, pint -vainn inc cn
neers part ef te oanuimnschs heating ow
MOTE Fenmic maunrtnee seatirees ire
Rchioy melancholia, dexpmideney nervous wes
Te ee te na Sy
aniNs nuit ation piieeultie tee:
Bertnctiade ahold avis cia atts, oes
Beead Ae atnunetkamiay cue, Mas oe
Maiea. wi, ‘anteaiy 14pm
veubot. home —ameched ” xusrery atin ‘nd
peters eet wai thew Bake succevetsty Te"
faved hniine teoutlen
Iehs. tot commen enpressiiny af, nee
tnetitrel taneer ie Tien katte wer
Re leis atta hate By
Pere mueiee See mea cr ean nature
BU nse inekey Mieticonaeelae atetos
RaetAenatee mush gant for'uwa te. ies’
panna es Pie ered OOF ae ue
Seer ices ete ae ee Wallan Ge
ants yes t
cones a
gece a
po as
PALS Galt cn Sir be]
Picture Framer Wins ~
Fine Arts Prize
Sargent ‘Johnson, @ pictere framer
of No. 2777 Park atreet, Berkeley, Caly
has beon awarded the prise of $850 for
his terra cotta head of a Negro boy,
ealled “Sammy,” which he entered tg
the-nation-widé exhibition of fine arts
productions @y_ Negroes, it was an-
nounced yesterday by. the Harmen
Foundation, No, 140. Naenau street. “A
well-known patron of the arte” offered’
tha prize, .
The éxhitit Is heing held under the
sponsorsiip' of the Harmon Foundation
if co-operation with: the Commission
on the Church and Race Relations. of
the Federal Council of Churches at
International Hous, No, $00 Riverside
Drive,
The judges, who’ unanimously
awarded the prize to Johnson, were
Hdwin Tl, Jiexhfeld. mural painter
und wreridcht of the Natlonai Academy
of Henkin; Charles Co Currin, mural
painter; Wayman Adunisy portrait
painter; Arthur Lee ond Kart Mlava,
eculptora, . 7
i’ =
Backache _ .
pe
, Lumbago
| _ Rheumatism
+ Quick, -Sure Relief With
Red Croas Kidney a
x Plaster 7
- Why siffer another dur when this
famens plister will ae auickly ely
vou eut of your mifserr? The Read
Creet Kidney Phislor aipliod tmme~
nes MR, Re Uy ahs
Fippert and comfort. the medieas
tien penetrates 1a Te seet of the pain
and cimost like magic all sorenesa
wart: aad causes the mottostion tr
eenetrate through the wkin te the sore
fice and gointe. Try a Red Crom.
Kidney Viaster tonight, ap@ prove for
Sourselt how quickly tite old” reilabie
lemedy drives away the inisery of
hackach®, yheumation and Tunbmgod
Learn Your Future
Ieee ee Ee UN MC hbtinaed Whol
Kosei Td acainha cola a ast
(SO I OB EPR
Be 2s uw Vee a :
[ese SUSE i
aS se
SRM ge Er eee a a ore all Sa
Spanish Section.
i EXTRAGRDINARY -
f uy Ome g- i
pine uU. re. Be Ree : 3
: = 7° AT THE : -
ATTUCKS THEATRE - .
: _& . NORFOLK, VA.
DAY eee em
SUNBAT SARIN. ae -
“A Joint Mass Meeting of ail the U. N. I. A. Sranckesin,
Tidewater will nicet on, Sunday, January 22, at 3 P.M. |
the Norfolk, Berkley, Oakwood, Newport News and Titus-
town Divisions with their full corps of Legions, Nurses and
Mator Corps. This will be the biggest of all other meetings.
. MUSIC BY ST. JOSEPH’S BAND - ..-
‘The White Lily Chorud with othor ‘neted singers: will give you the nesee-
| gary metadion, Kil professional mon of the race are invited, alee. ehurches,
woteee gre ever organizations. The well-known Or. Trigg will be ‘the
| . . peeres pages
tte punore srnathing noes ‘ore sbeuts” to miata al the Auseede
PROF. BACHELOR, Precidest J. M. HALL, Sijyetary
a
+, SECCLON BN ESPANOL. =
+ por La “Apocinelén Universal para el Adelanto dele
ey Raza Negra sad
os = 44% Wes 190th St):
: ' < Ciudad de Nueva York, N.Y.
— proey 1M. A. FIGUEROA, Usiter, a
~ Indudablemente nuestros lectores
aii como lox miembros de Ia organi:
sacién en general han observade cor
‘gran interes y mayor orgutlo, el se
Cibimieoto real diépeisado at “Hon:
‘Mureus Garvey desde au partida de
Nueva Orleahs, apesar de ls actitud
de las’ autoridades.en fa zona del
canal. ae *
El elemento de.la riza demostté
al gran lider.eon sus ovaciones, :la
gratitud’ que siente por su lucha te-
staz ef) pro‘del enaltecituiento del
negro; y las autoridades inglesas de
Jamaica, en viita de tales manifeg:
téciones, rindieron un servicio es-
*pléndido ordenando la tremenda re-
cepcién, evitando de ese riodo la
nienor friccién y asegurando ‘el
iayor de los éxitos, 8
¥l primer discurso'del Hon. Gar-
vey luego de suearribo a la ciudad
de Kingston, fue una jo¥a de ora-
toria describier.-o-su-simpatia-hacia
cl. infortuno de los pueblos negros
del universé y su inciiestionable de-
terminacién de poner en_pritica
todo ‘cuanto esté en su poder para’
el remedio.de tales rae.
El gran lider'btzo sus manilesta~
ciones como un sitbdito inglés obe-
diente a la-ley, pero sin t&por de
luchar por el derecho del negro. EI
sento tin gran principio aplicable a
todo negro sujeto al gobierno de los
demas cuando dijo: -
“No hay necesidad de ser desleal.
Todo’ cuanto nuestro pueblo ‘debe
hacer cS entenfer seridinente el re-
conocimiento de si nfismo, y como
sitbditos ‘ingleses saber que tiene®,
derechos. inalienabies que el gobier-
no britinigo debe respetar, toda vex
e vean éstos dehidamente-represen-
tados. En cuanto a thi respecta, no.
tendyé escriipulo alguno en la re-
presentacién inteligente de “ tales,
derechos.” ss
Estanips en el pleno convenci-
miento de que sti voz, patrocinando
una causa justificadg, se hard escu-
chur y stt dtdua labor emaneipadora 7
ilenard una nueva pagina en la his-
toria de la raza negra. -
Nuestro Honorable présidente general reclama mayores
. esfuerzos en el afio en curso
Miembros de la organizacion: : 7 i:
EI nuevo afio.en curso debe ser uno de-mayores triun-
fos para nuestro moyimiento.emancipador. Para los efec-
tos, nuestro-elemento tiene que comprometerse’en Ia lucha
* por el enaltecimiento industrial, comercial y educativo de
Ja raza, y la libertad politica de Africa, plantando sobre la
_. cumbre de sus mas altas montafias el Rolo, Negro y Verde,
emblema de-nuestro mas ferviente anhelo. £
7 Si, por esta bandera debemos vivir y: por ella tambien
morir, tal como: muere el francés por-su insignia‘ tricolor;
_ morir.como muere el inglés por.su-Union Jack; morir como
muere él patriota norte americano por sus Franjas y, sus
Estrella. . ; > i :
Esta es la €poca.en que tanto los hombres como las
-naciones hacen sus resoluciones. ¥Los ingleses, los fran-
ceses, alemanés, italianos y. todas -las ‘naciones del” orbe
conjuntamente ~con. los norteamericanos, hacen nuevas
resoluciones. Asi los cuatrocientos millones de ‘negros del
universo tendran que hater las suyas tambien, para que no
ocupen un sitio secundario en el concierto de los aconteci-
mientos humanos. < a . <
° Marchar, sf, hacia adelante a pie firme y Ilevando en
-la.niénte el deseo del Gran Arquitécto cuando dijo: “Todos.
sois hermanos en la creacién y todos vendréis hacia mi.
_ como vuestro padre comun.” .
Cotifio, miembros de’ la .erganizacién, en que haydis
hechado a un fado todas las dudas e incertidumbres que os
envolvian durante el afio que acaba de expirar. Aquellos
de vosotros..que habeis pensado en la imposibjlidad de
reunir una ‘fuerzd* concertiva;..aquellos de vosotros que
- habeis creido que los negros no .podrén Ilevar a cabo nada
concreto, en vosotros, ‘pues; confio que hayais artterrado
todas vuestras preocupaciones.-en-los repliegues del afio
que se ha ido. a :
‘Ahora en este 1928, debemos postsionarnds de nueva
‘confidencia en nosotros.mismos y en nuestra raza en-gene-
ral; y’esta confidencia-debemos hacerla cada dia mas inti;
ma, para que sea 1a fuerza dinémica que nos mueva hacia
mayores cosas,*redobie nuestros esfuerzos .cn la senda |
escabrosa de nuestras vicisitudes y para llegar a la meta de |
todas nuestras ambiciones.. |
- Hago, pues, una ardiente apelacién a-vosotros los de la
Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza ‘Negra
.en.todas.partes, para que. todos y cada-uno, lanza-en ristré,
os propsngdis de une manera_determinads, a-hacer.una
labor=prepetente en ef. nuevo’ ario..~Son. doce meses -de |
labor; labor. abnegada, incesante y ruda-. No hay que |
rehuir la lucha; desertaren estos instantes seria la mayer
de'las.desiluciones. Si me decis que esta Jabor no puede
Hevarge a efecto, os ditia que seria preferidle la muerte y |
‘meéred@riamos ol calificativo de. intitiles ¢ incomnectentes. |
LeS seis millones .de miembros’ que componen nucstra |
organizacién miran hacia adelante con.gran esperanza pars |
el porvenir. Debemos, por consiguicnte, compromenteros |
2 tracr a nuestro seno un conjunto de veinte y cinco mie |
Ilones de hombres, muperes y_uifios, para que coperen en
esta campafia universal y Je de nuestra Africa una |
nacién independiente y de/nucsire elemento un puebio |
sedimido. - -- ©) § ae i
Con el mejor deseo por cl éxito, tengo el -honer de ser, /
Vuestro obediente, servidor, 0 t
MARCUS GARVEY, |
7 . Fundador y. Presidente General. |
Conmemoran un descubri-
. miento
Los artifices folandeses que talla-
: yepulimentaron.el diamante do
maas valor en el mugdo, descubierte
en ke ina Premier tel sar de Alt
ca por el capitan Wells, conmemn:
san'su vigésino aniversario.
Esta piedra preciosa-fue repatads
al rey de Inglaterra y actualniente
adortia'sit corona, siendo Ia mayor y
Ia de mas valor entre'su gran nti-
qyero. «Por si pureza y tamziio se
Pedria valerar-@h mas de un millon
de pesos, iene ven so pusiers a ke
vefle. 2 =
Hiv deseubrider de tan’ famosa
picdraren un viaje de insgeceiin por
la mina de Premier noté sobre ts
Foca aun brille muy carncteristice
para los expleradores de diamantes.
Tamediatamente extrajo de elia con
su cuchilio fe pieza mias grande ¥
mas pura que se habia’ descubjerto.
Dich descubrimiento causé una
gran exeitaciin ‘en tod aqucils co-
marca y fue entregada ai gobierno
africande. del Sur, el cual fa pre-
sentd como regalo ai monazen ingics.
Fue transportado bajo custédia’ a
Laondves y desde alli enviado 2. Ho:
lana pata su tattide y_pylimenta-
cién, inja Ia vigioneia'de represen-
tantes dei gobierno inglés. a
SICA eR eee” CBSE RE Ag
ie aT: JER ge RAPES
I NWIVERSE: &
é (Formerly Smnallvrocd:Covey Industelal institute)
| CLAREMONT SURREY COUNTY, 7A; US. —-—
ee : ‘ enti. Wiel
Situated upon the banks of the historic Janies
River 12 miles from Jamestown, the
old English ‘settlement
i &,
"A Negro slave pen in 1662, now @ cultural training
ground for Negroes .
aos f mo
Divisions should see to it that there is at least one student
at Liberty. University from their Division for the Fall Term
1927. We are offering-courses of study covering a wide range of
departments,:amang which are Collegiate, Academic, Grammar
Grade fot children of.the Practite School, Iadustrial, -Scientific,
Agricultural, Busincis, Domestic Science, Votal and Instru-
mental Music, Normal, Bible Training, Physical Calture, Dress-
making. Plain Sewing, Typewriting, Stenography. Bookkeeping.
. trom oteis Best’ sad Wetec waka ter
| ree ee eee ee SS
‘coven eld Miucagettaies Se tra vee! Witte hace tobtag tall ct Wa.
For details ds toterms, dpening dates; otc; write ter
-: Cferpuarty"Smaltwosd-Leter. industrial—tnctitute)
Claremont, Surrey Couity, Va., U. S.A.
El Espiritu. de America
i. ee Cee Geng Se BS
nido ef “embajador del aire”. coré
nel Carlos A. Lindbeqgh en las cis
naciones centroamericanas que. aca:
ba.de.visitar, ha servido para poner
ima vez mis en evidencia él “espi-
ritu” de América. :
El “Aguila solitarp de los ‘vuelos
épicos.ha recibido desde Méjico; 12
{Fiat nacido ‘do Jos aztecas, hasta
anamé, la joven'reptiblica del 1st-
mo y ain en fa misma Nicaragua,
| “la infortunada”, ‘una recepcion ca:
lurosisinia, cordial, digna’ de” la
grandeza, del. heroe-y~ det espirira
.que le anima hacia la cordialidad del
continente’ que undnime y esponté-
neamente le ha tributado su sincera
admiracion y.ha-demostrado von luz
meridiana‘lo.profundo de su afecto.
De este tributo de admiracién y
afecto se han hecho eco las naciones
hermanas del Sur. Ello prueba una
yez'mas que.el hidalgo corazon: de
América entera, conserva ininacula-
dag las ‘virtudes de grandiosidad y
de nobleza que Jes son legendarias-y
que forman la preciada herenpie que
Jes legaran las ‘dos razas gloriosas
que fundieron su sangre para darle
vida: la raza de los heroicos.leoncs
de Castilla, la raza de los ahorigenes
“hijos del Sol”... : |
La ‘América -indo-hispana esti
sicmpre'dispuesta a estrechar la ina
no amiga,.ctiando se la tiende et
gesto- noble, y “da el corazin con,
ella”. . Pero, tampoco le amedyenta
el ttonar de los caitones*y'ante ¢l
peligro esti siempre pronta a salir
por.su fueros y sus derechos.
Er“espiritu” de Bindgerbh, ef
“Espiritu de San Luis", debe ser el
Sspiritn de la ‘América, “Que la ria
lumingsa trazada en ei ciclo amert-
Jcano por él -héroe, abra Ia seid a
la paloysa de Ja paz, mas munca a
las aguilas voraces de la soon
Que Ia rata de Lindbergh sea él
comienzo de una ‘nueva era de paz
y buena voluntad entre Ids naciones
del hemisicrio occidental y que por
ella crucen mafiara fos navios aéreos
que han dé Tievar de un lado a otro
los productos destinados al incre-
mento de su comercio, al intercam-
bia: intelectual, y han de servir al
miutud beneficia’ es lo que esperan
ochenta millones de habitantes que
hablan espaitol y cua cilos Ja gran
mayoria del puchlo de los Estados]
Unidos, consciente de Ia similitud de
viuestros problemas y animkdo_por
nuestros mismos ieaies. + 4
Hea poderosa aacién det nozte det!
Nuevo Continemte no querrs. <in|
dada: dejar para. Jas, generaciones|
veuidecns una historiz, cuyas pi:
ginas dghabien de intervencion cI
naciones débiles.. No, Ella segue
ramente tiene ia contiencia de la}
justicia que anima a fas paciones de |
América Hispana, para defender s5|
derechos y sts exfuerzos por Hensr |
ct sitia qe ef futuro Ie reserve on |
los destinos ded aundo.” i
Asi ie necks de probar, negindose|
. interveni: en Ins nagecios internos |
Je uma nacidn ebil ane se esfuerza |
par solucionar sus problemas siicio-|
iales dentro de los limites de si pre-d)
pin heredad. Asi lo prokard si si-]!
snicndo dictados de st! propio cora- |
26n.y jos anhelos ée sa propio puc- |
plo que se aunan a lox afanes de |
oda América, Estados. Unnidosd
ainbia cl reimbo de su politiedsinter-|
nacionez-eamaredindola en ef dere-|
sho de gentes y en Ix. justicia que}
ssisté alos pueblos libres.
Asi lo ereemos + 7 «Ast lo quere- |
sias creer, por ef bien y ef progreso |
‘camiin del Ntievo Coutinente.—Lai:
NEW YORK CYS...
IPERS FOR 1827
. - BOUALS ALL ITALY’S
+ Eke City Govermpent pais oat Ma
‘year $2,060,155,188, oF “approxtmately
the sien ot the entire Nations’ Govern:
ment Maly, which has @ populatiss
‘of 40,000,000. 7 bea
‘Wor current expanses; permanent
improvements, State taxes and interes
and. redemption—of debts, it pald_but
$662,540,266,-or, at the current rate ol
exchange, aimost twice the budget of
the Belgian Government. ae
The figures forthe dity—not “the
comparisons—are taken from Comp:
troller, Begry’n elmpllfed . inanctal
statement of 1927, issued yeaterday, -
ros Makes the Taxpayer. Ree! .
. Bome of the other staggering Aguren
‘to produced wera:
Sk groan financial turnover of $2,408,-
000,000. . :
Groas receipts of $1,227,682,696. ~
Grone @isbursements of, $1,346,791.+
006. i
Eliminating inter-tund transactions,
the gross expenditure of $1,080.135,266
‘Was $97,763,919 more than for 1926, The
total cash receints wern,$1,061,026,856,
a compared with $247,288,851 In 1926,
‘Som of the items of expenditure
sere ma foHows: >
Salaries and wages?.......$273,211,835
Eaucation ..eeseeeevcvssses 126,225,900
Police and fire protaction.. 70.450,000
Charity feceeleeeeeetyeee ee 2,841,086
Health -norvics and water
SUPDIY seseeeeeeeeeeeeesee BRTREGNO
Ponslonn svereersveesseses 16,800,000
The tolat revenue receipts, exehualye
of loans, were $636,897,888, Current
expenditures totaled $848,641,833, leay-
Ing ati oxcesx of $02.250,012.
i... Aggounte and Contracts
‘the city's financial (ranaretions-dur-
ing he Yerr tavolved supérciston -of
15,000 neparave accounte; regintration
of 4,540 now contracts; renistration of
187,000" vouchers, 189.090" warrants,
making phyments; end, in addition,
3,007,000 check drawn by: the Central
Pay Division; 25,620 chocks returning:
npeclat accurity deporite, and, 28,622
cheoks drawn to redeem andepay inter-
eat on bondn, ” *
‘AC supplemental statement shows
that the total outstanding debt of the
cit én Doc. 23, 1827, wan $1,092419.24.
og which $1,385,597,497.05 tn redeem.
able by: the Binkinl; Fund. ‘Tho reat {
rodeemable from direct appropria-
tions:
ia Fes va a>
a 1928 ,
1 Be One of Success
| In order for yougte by able to”
f register, ruccees™ curing “unr
i given period you.muct concen
f trate Sn the’ necrsaary, units
| that tond to make it possible.
i To business houses, espocintly
E. those in Greater New York, and
F more 0 thoze in Harlem, we *
* ennnet etree this segumment (3
: nete the emali amount of
ALON ISIS BEC,
i dane ‘by lock’ buclnesn: inctits
(ie.
| How ypu evar expect to bs a |
| nuecestful “Business meno
Woman without siving tue eens
Tideration to chi mort neces
Sory gales medium is Beyond |
Our comprstiension.
De not ait down and wait fore
enlesman to enll cn vou. in° |
) order ver you fe be able to buy |
vamething that is absolutely |
oneecseasy, fer’ tho Successful |
esreying on of yaur inctivution. |
| Vou fhould get in touch with |
Dohie aad tell hie what you |
Now we arointerceted in ell |
ing yg some cqvertising cprce |
TRE NEGRO WORLE |
read by of legat sight thoudand }
in the irimedinte vielnity. '
‘There ic not se of, them that
is not x BUYER, You should |
be interested if yu want to well |
_evoutanradueta, to there. |
Therefore you should give THE |
NEGRO WORLD some duo
consideration from an advertiz-
ing point of view.
In tha last two or three wooke
cus cicculation has-been grad=
ually. going up — due to the
_ inerossing amount. pf ‘inters
esting reading mattor gppsaring
therain.
We aro now making’ a very
special advertising rate to ‘local
- Business houses that should in-
duce you to give cur.medium a |
fair tial.
Get inn the gromind thor of '
thia wonderful opportunity to |
ive iiie tu your geteietonicct,
Lae the: yeur 1928 be a most
prosperous one for you:
Lam a.salesman, as stated be-
tore. De got wait for me to'call
on my own, But drep me &
card, and-! will be Jehnny on
the spot, >
Wishing you “an abundanée of
success, &
Yours fer-service;
"ADVERTISING DEPT.
142 West. 130th Street
, NEW YORE cry. =
: © we
, pees eae of, RP ee
“Ail Divisions and Chepters ate heroby notified that we
have in steel: (he following suzplies “that are neseresis
“fer the prover careyhiy ca of the worl: se
(PICS sist GY buupuies -- “¥
| 2 ., UMA - :
noe 2d
17” Sent 80 of Feet!
Kind aol Division Price;
LSES Gros eee eee cteteceee es S10.08 each a i
Constitutions ...seceeeee 15.60 per HUNEEES....leeeseereeereernenmes 250 f
Buttons .....uetgeeeecsers 1060" 1 cegeesecsnenseceeeententee 156
Cortificates .-..scareseesee 3.00 a steed eeceeeeeenemesceeneee St
Dure Cards -vserteeeeree 200 1 genneeereeessrtrsevereenae So
Alphabetion! Sheets -.ne00 1.09 : hesenstagecsmecemsecnseran TC
Divbursomopt Shecto....i.veeesesee seceeedenceesecesesssteonseenees FRED
Small FlagesssescessstpsertsovcueserssesciisaseacsseeseesessiRd conte gach f
a » 4 ORDER DIRECT FROM .
- Secretary-General's Office ‘at, Headquarters
- ing WEST i50in.STRIZT
a _ .NEW. YORK: ciTy : |
English, French, Italian Instructor Morning 0034 The O18 Reliable
> BROADWAY AUTO SCHOOL.
‘30 AUTO INSTRUCTIONS $10 —
2 , Including 18 Driving and 18 Snap teeons, Day and Right |
rR fr Bae Beaming, 002. TA Fo
rete: ind Someta ig: tat: Se
|, One et the Jonson watts: neh:
‘the world nust-be A. B Ties, | young
man who’ Was injered fi a recent at-
tack Ay eavage tolomon ielapaece,-
~The -Rasarde“of-te iri that remote
part ef’the Mouth Sees ere tustrated
Sn-taiters recsived by the Ipaden' Datly
Matt from-hie-tatherB.Tjoa ot Bara-
down, Darset, sind froth the Young pio»
‘yeer himself. Mr, Tice senior writes:”
“My sen was-bitten by one of the
Selandora, and ost a finger. Being the
only white man an the ifland of ‘Tett-
patl,: te. aetk medical al@ he had to
Take & iarrtbls journey of WO les UP
native.canoe, rowing boat.and launch.
Finally he reached. Sulagt, the chiet
town of the protectorate, intestate of
collapse after. fifteen days of agany
without food or sleep and “with the top
Jolntof ‘his finger entirely gone froui
gangrene” |. avn Ke
In @ recent letter to.the Dajly Malt
Mr. Tlee'n cn sald: ‘
“Tam tn charge of a coconut plania~
(ion on an island fourteen nities long
end four ailea wide aud truly roonarch,
of all T survey. ‘The role commiintes..
tlon with the oniside world tn-a#mall
steamer that calla for a couple of hours
okey every two smonthe. Tata, wepa-
rated by milen of Ke from the néarent
inland, rnd the watera are. infented
With sharks qrid alligators, so aywim-:
ming’ tw an abkurdity. * €
“yersthing {cont England han to
como via Auntralia, and anywhere
from five to ten month t# the -uaual
time for things toycome from home to
thie fadana? ZEhe rmuives fire still ree
ogntred ax head hunters, at
“LAving conditions are rough; food
hae to he tinned, dried or walted~trea
meat, and vegetables simply do not
oxint! Fevern ara bad: and pgntn—|
ant gandfles, aninker, Nornets, eon
auitoen and beetlen:-rimply --Aeanuy
cveryaphere. They have no hark, but!
thty hava, the bite." ;
770 Killed. by Rum
In City Last Year
| Gace eonslituttienclinaer dies hogaeneine
from prohibitionutquor han heen catnb-
Mixhed in New York for the your 2927,
‘This ty. the Greatent number of deaths
[from alcohollam tn any yenr since ‘tho
para of tha Voixtead act and topr
the Fecord of any of the ien preceding
wot yehgg. sate
“tho Tureau, ot Vitat Statintion of
the Department of Teal mage pud-
Me yenterday detatied fguren giving
in conerets’ form the rexnltx of the
Igeel “Ateapt to de" ap, thle. portion
of Une, citthtry, TT. deat rate an
cotnplled by the bureay vrevenin Usat
thirteen.deathe from alcoholinn ac-
feurred for exch 108,000 uf papniatton,
whieh fe slightly greater thin the
Feith rate for mension cat Its yale, ae-
jeurding to 3, Sibley, Health Depart.
anent rtatintieinn,
PR Tow mane was ‘act in 1220, whon
rte deaths ero milly ox 140. et
from M21 to i327 the -rate tneréaaed.
Pay atnest bootie sean He far
can be leaned, the 1357 total in the
-ePeatent ty Una history of fie ely. “Ad
| ditlonal tates compited.try (he Meteo-
polltan Life Tusuranes Company, aut
by De, Mathtin Nieull, de, State
Health Commisaloner, aww Chat ta
TMG, with open reloans snd wae pron
peels, deaths. from Mune nuinimred
GS7, of SF ken than dn Be? te
‘Fa tho total of 77a deaths trom pro-
bon Hywore fe ET nwRe be bce
Li deaths ennset hy driniging jofson
Hauer or wend atvehel avin? fo tert
einvrss santa of Rist peaty Phe deatiat
heen eamptiod fot tha aonth of Toss
We ved’ hee mith ly
Pe S°CT, & rar
iat a Se
Beal? chet
vt eay San
SE a aan
the wenderful. °
eae er
* « RWBUMATION =. E
~ MEDICINE > :
~ Rowdle eeeanetiy:
Tunetane Ocoee ruts rey «A
apinse. instantly that .
& 5 5 mers ; .
parte; ab moe
Ons. “aay. T
JOINTS, ne more BCLAT-
ICA, LUMBAGO, NBU- ~
RITIG—all the RHEU-
MATIC PAINS gone, Take
an ite, awey from the...
sieve! Done wate-until it
fa too late! . Why ‘sufter
any longer? Here te Your
Spportunity. tov gst wall
quick! Don't: wait until Ss
cou get worse! “ Write.and *
= the veagh with ie
BUR. NAME and AD-
DEBES on the equpon and
rail the coupon right new!
ACT QUICK! DO IT To-
Bak
Prat yr gannen,
Rew ORR cH Omens. tee
softeners Meee cet nme
B uminaeve for TLt9- aire ete so your hieed order
MATAR acess fad eerie er coe
Macfie ame,
Pinay Pinte Mem Bany Trenhmaate—
Tye tet
Adidfbee sarvcasooqerevsstcineliseminesvanar”
City and state ssesteosgpeuce eae
Pane
New Yorkswiil exceed 384.when Sina
figures aro known, ge tho mort bart
deatha from Aslaking ethst. mlconot
iney De Iald to. accidental caeca Where
chitiven @rank grata aleohol oy malas
take, fo *
Burglars ‘in Britain
Victims.of Tipping .
| LONDON The tinping cell haxbee
come oo' fetoleeahin in. fnglnwd. Thad
wo Inay saw a guile of burglars
faa they Jett a Tienda Ioliuen wlth
sles wad ef piv, Shatedng yet
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Christian Rakovsky, forger Ambush-
adon in Park; Gregory Zmivieff, for-
mier head of the Third Information;
Leo Kamenoff, who has held high gov-
ernment office, and Karl Rakov, one of
the chiefs of the Bohlecki, are encro-
sured on the lake.
Large book, "109 WAYS TO GET RICH," will so
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REGULATION FULL DRESS CORDS
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EVERY MAN IN THE LEGION MUST
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BIG SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST
The Entrants Will Have a Chance at Three Prizes
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If other persons than officers care to enter this contest they may
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To the Editor of The Negro World;
After perusing again and again that masterful address delivered by our fearless leader, Hon. Mareun Garvey, in Kingston, Jamaica, December 11, 1927, I desire to comment upon a striking and pointed statement expounded in that brilliant oration.
This particular statement was in reference to the people that Mr. Garvey came to represent, i.e. "I have returned under certain circumstances to my native land, not to lead white people, not to lead coated people who do not call themselves, Negroes, but to lead black people and those who call themselves, Negroes towards their destiny."
So much controversy has been current relative to what group the Negro peoples and those of Negro descent should align themselves, that this declaration of the president-general is
PARIS, Jan. 19 - Leo. Tracy and
althirty or more others among the principal
fans of Premier Stein of Rugby
have been sentenced to imprisonment in
Switzerland for failing to report from Berlin and continued in news from Rugby.
It is underpinned the exiled leader, she too be treated as ordinary criminals, but have been appointed to consume administrative posts in remote regions where they will be separated from each other and everybody else. Trellis, who once shared the diplomaticorship with Lemm and to the office of the new director, Stalin, has been preferred to Austrakh. He is reported to have declared the government will have to use force to get him there. The appointment reserved for Radek is 320 miles from the nearest railway station. 'Some of the exiled supporters, four
of unique importance. As a race we must locate ourselves. The Ethiopian or black race has more to be proud of than any other race known to history, so why should we be ashamed or side-step our natural identity? The blacker our complexions, the purer our stock. And, if by accident our (black) blood has become contaminated or weakened by the unfortunate mixture of an alien race how foolish and ridiculous of us so affected to disclaim our own. Let us forever refrain from such senseless taetics.
Racial solidarity is our goal; we must unite as a people in order to achieve our destiny. Accidental variations of complexion should no longer keep us divided. With unity obtained, we can make for ourselves whatever our souls desire. That is GARVEY ISM up to date. If persecution, any are but of step fall into line and help swell the ranks of the U. N. L. A., the world's greatest Negro organization.
ARTHUR S. GILAY
Oakland, Calif.
their leaders will die under the hardship which they may expect in their new life. Furthermore, it is reported some of the one-time chiefs are to be abut to plague stricken districts. A campaign by a boykot, who were exiled from the Communist party with Trouzky and other leaders of the Opposition some time ago, have captured for readmission. They were told their request may be examined in six months if they will write a pamphlet against Trouzky. New York World.
10,500 Diamond-Field Workers Lose Jobs
JOHANNESBURG, Jan. 11. — More than fifteen hundred white workers and ten thousand natives have been thrown out of work, it is estimated, as a result of the decision of the provincial diamond syndicates to obey the government's order to stop work, the first of the year.
The order is aimed, at restricting the supply of diamonds to raise prices, is estimated that the stoppage of operations will reduce the monthly output of the Jacksonburg by $700,000.
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TOKIO, Jaeh 11.-Kusanosuke, Ko-hana, the wealthy Japanese who visited Russia in December as the envoy of Premier Tanaga, has returned to Japan convinced of the Boylet's political stability and its willingness to be a friend of Japan.
"Soviet Russia" is now free from political difficulties and the Moscow regime is secure," he said in an interview.
"Japanese statesmen and business men have been overcautious, and it is now supremely important that they realize that the Soviet has come to stay and formulate their policies accordingly.
"The Soviet's political organization does not permit the existence of opposition, but in a country like Russia this promotes stability. There is now no fear of internal collapse. Its downfall can come only through a foreign war or a peasant uprising, and Moscow is on its guard against both these dangers. I do not hesitate to say that the Soviet regime is good for the next fifty to seventy years.
"Communically, I believe that Russia will pull through. Here statesmen will have to adopt more capitalist principles, but they will do so."
M. Kubarek said that negotiations between Russia and Japan would be easy. Russia, would welcoming Japan's aid in developing Siberia, but the Japanese must be prepared to divide the profits, he said.
A Baby in Your Home
The Remarkable Influence of a Doctor's Prescription After Years of Cruel Disappointment
10
Hundreds of married women, children, for years, soldily find themselves in a state of the most distress in the world. The threat of a deploreous wonderful prescription, Mrs. Amanda M. Middleton, Glencore, N. K., wrote: "I know and what problems prescription can do, I had bounced for a brave and two years and I took six weeks' treatment and now we have old, old, old. I haven't worked to expose how much this medicine does for me. Every married couple who really want children should at once write to the queen and get a free trial of this thecription, together with the queen, for your convenience, all out the cloister and mail it today."
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ADDRESS ENVELOPES at home, spare
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The Board of the Arkansas State College for Negroes, visiting some of the leading institutions of the South, preparatory to rebuilding and reorganizing the Arkansas A. & T. College, for which recent large grants of State funds have been made, will visit Hampton Institute on January 20-21 to study the plant and organization with the expectation of incorporating whatever seems of value in the plans for the new Arkansas College.
Governor Harry Byrd, together with State Superintendent Harris Hart, and Mr. Greensham, State Supervisor of Negro Schools, will join the Arkansas group on visits to schools in Virginia. Mr. Fred McCulsiun, Supervisor of Colored Schools in Arkansas, who has done outstanding work in establishing new colored schools and in bringing
To GROW NEW HAIR
Bard a half hour for a farewell
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SECURE THIS BOOK
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"and West Africa Area Institute, Stamford, M.A., B.C.L., L.I.D., P.R.C.L., By"
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UNITY SPIRITUALIST SOCIETY
65 Clifton Place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Spiritual induction daily 6:30 a.m. & 8:30 a.m.
Developing classes daily 12:00 a.m. M. M.
Developing classes daily 12:00 a.m. M. M.
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B. H. K. BICHIAK, Leader
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DEL A. J. HENKINSON
300 Mile Road, Kensington City, Mo.
those already established in higher levels of educational efficiency, will guide his State group during their tour in the interests of the Arkansas A. & T. College at Pipe Stiff.
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No matter what the color of the carpet or how many red cushions, no matter how shows, no matter how blaky it is—use applicator and new invasions will give straight black hair. This preparation is not a more hard to maintain straightener; it is a more straightener, and hair color resistor.
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Lechler (Hair Beauty Specialist)
569 W. 181st St., New York
POISON BLOOD
H. I. Von Schlick herb specialist and manufacturer of the famous Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Ten, tells people that almost all diseases are caused by impure, poisoned blood. When the stomach is sick you feel miserable, you are constipated and the 'poisons go into the blood. When the liver refuses to work the poisons go into the blood; when the kidneys are weak and out of order more poison goes into the blood and the result is that your body is sick all over. For many years I have been telling people sick with diseases caused by poisoned blood that my Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Ten gives relief to those who suffer from stomach, liver, kidney and blood troubles. I say to every man and woman that suffer from sickness to try my Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Ten—millions of people will use no other medicine—they know that the roots, barks, leaves, herbs, plants and flowers are pure and help to make them well again.
Go to your drugstores today. Tell him you want Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea. He will be glad to supply you because he knows it is good medicine for the sick. It costs only a few cents. Doctors and drugstores everywhere recommend my Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea as the best remedy anyone can take to kill a cold. Don't go down with "Flu." Grippae or Documents. Kill your cold with a hot dose of Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea. Just ask your drugstores for a box today or I will send it either by mail postpaid. A large family box for $1.00, or by mail C. O. D., just pay the postman.
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HAS A SURPRISE
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THE MOORE COMPANY
Dept. 108, 220 E.ighth, St. Louis, Mo.
LUCK—Live Ledgestone, $1. Lock Perfume,
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Merrill Co. $80. Ea. Madison
Chicago, Illinois
SORE LEGS HEALED
Cave, Chicago, Illinois. Water, Sunscreen,
Baby wipes. Wet wipes. Wet wipes. Wet wipes.
FIRST CLASS college fellow; equiv trades 10
and 15; Bachelor of Arts in
G. Newsw. 888 K. Nichols avenue.
Barber Mage and Beauty Parlors
WILKET TONSORIAL PARLOR. 864 Lenox
Street, side of avenue. George T. Wilkes Prob.
We specialize in ladies' hair-bobbing. Try
their service. If you are not pleased, do not
tell us. Shop fororney, at 864 Lenox Ave.
AGENTS WANTED
AGENTS—WE START YOU IN BUSINESS
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AGENTS 100 per cent profit with U-CAN-C.
*Kenpa eye glasses and windshields clear
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frequencies, Detroit, Mt. Box, N.*
*DADIEN* $400 money in spare time. Please
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AGENTS—Sell our car perfume! Big, quick,
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mgm Co. 642 Garies Ave. St. Louis, Mo.
MALE HELP WANTED
DEFECTIVES—Travel; make secret inspections. Experience unnecessary, particulars free. Write American Detective System, 219 Broadway, N. Y.
FIREMEN. Brakemen. Baggagemen (white, colored). 150-$250 monthly. Experience unnecessary, 200 Railway Bureau, East St. Louis, Ill.
OPPORTUNITY—1 will sell you a piano display and keep you in perfect condition. Mr. W. Universal Building, 142 West 130th Street, N. Y. City, Phone Morningside 2517.
DENTIST
WHEN IN-NEED of dentistry, call on Dr. J. AWDWood Robinson, Surgeon Dentist, 212-755-2000, j.awdwood@nyc.edu, New York City, Houss. a, m. to 9 p., m.; Sun. City, Houss. a, m. to 9 p., m.; Telephone: 6054
Sign .Painters
LESLIE LOCKHART - Signs and Showcase
Maker. See me when you want neat works
158 West 140th St. Audubon 1745.
NATURE GREAT BERK TICKETS
Adam and Fire Root. 25c.
Queen Elizabeth Root. 25c.
John Conqueror Root. 25c.
Five Finger Ginger. 25c.
Horse Herd Herb. 25c.
Lodestone. 1.90
Magnetite Sand. 1.90
New York Botanical Garden for the Hewlett-Dodson
which teacher how to use all kinds of roots
street, Montgomery, All Dust. 2
WANTED
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E. B. WILLIAMS CO., Inc.
2350 Seventh Ave.
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81 Chambers St.
NEW YORK
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14 Wk West 111st street. Rooms to let, large
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133D B. BF. 147 W. (Apt. 12) Furnished
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129 W. 143rd street. Apt. 4. W. Nicole
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126 B. Nicola avenue, room and board, all
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LARGE and small furnished rooms, all容
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Miscellaneous
SHEMINAH SPIRITALIST CHURCH,
6 2092 Madison Avenue, N. Y. C—Services
P. M. All are welcome. SAMUEL FLOYE,
Seer.
U. S. GOVERNMENT JOBS, $1.140-$3.300
Vacation. Common education sufficient.
Experience unnecessary. Full particul
Franklin Institute, Dept. Q-34. Rochester,
N. Y.
COMPOSER, arranger and publisher of
writing. Alexander Seymour. 6 West 128th
Street, N. Y. C, Phone: Harlem 6739.
Jewelers
ST. GEO. V. CORINALDI
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DEVELOPING AND PHOTO PRINTING
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ESCWICK AUGUST UNDERSTAKERS and amateur
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