The Negro World

Saturday, November 24, 1928

New York, New York

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MARCUS GARVEY DISCUSSES SELFISH NATIONALISM OF EUROPEANS AND WARNS RACE OF CONSEQUENCES Fellowmen of the Negro Race, Greeting: If I were to be asked what impressed me most in Europe during my stay, I should reply: "The selfish nationalism of the Europeans." In my study of the different race groups and nations, I have found that the spirit of self-interest, racially and nationally, is most pronounced. In England there is an exclusive selfishness of everything for the Englishman, and we find the same attitude in France, in Germany, in Italy and all the Continental countries of Europe. Racial and Nationalistic When men speak in these parts of the world, they do so only from their racial and nationalistic point of view. The question of humanity is limited by geographical bounds, so that the Negro must be well guarded at this time in accepting the platitudes of international statesmen, because their utterances really are to be interpreted only in the terms of their particular race and nation. It is because the Negro never understood this is why he has grown to be the pitiable child of circumstance today. When some great white teacher or preacher or leader would address a Negro audience or a mixed assembly and talk about our past glory or our future, the Negro would be persuaded to think and believe that he was included in such expressions, but the centuries have revealed to us that such speeches and addresses were not intended for us, but for the race of the speaker generally. And so I have discovered that when the so-called leaders of the day do speak, none of them intend to include the Negro in any promising or hopeful consideration that may be aimed at as a policy to be observed. We must, therefore, develop a racial selfishness and exclusiveness as pronounced as that of the European if we are to overcome the political, economic and social disadvantages that we now suffer from because of misguided belief in others. Think. Pro-Negro Now and Always My advice to Negroes everywhere is to think pro-Negro now and always. Everything in the world must be seen only from the Negro's point of view. You may indulge in the same platitudes as others have indulged in, such as the talk about the larger humanity, the Christian brotherhood, and the rights of all mankind, but practically we must live for ourselves. This is the lesson Europe has taught me. This is the policy of Europeans. If you doubt it, go to England and you will find the Englishman living only for Englishmen; go to France and you will find the Frenchman living only for Frenchmen; go to Germany and you will find the German living only for Germans; go to Italy NEGROES MUST THINK PRO-NEGRO NOW AND ALWAYS "Africa for the Africans" Must Be the First Consideration and Guiding Principle—Negroes Must Exploit the Great Powers That They Undoubtedly Possess and you will find the Italian living only for Italians. The time has come for the Negro to live only for Negroes. It is good that I am not a preacher but a statesman, so that I can afford to give this advice to millions of my race who are suffering with me. If I am accused of being selfish and heartless, then lay the same charge at the door of Monsieur Briand of France, Signor Mussolini of Italy, and at the door of Mr. Lloyd George of England. I have learned to admire these men with more human interest than heretofore; I realize that they are putting into execution that ancient law, "Charity begins at home." Surely charity begins at home for England, for France, for Italy, for Germany, and it is only the foolish Negro who does not realize that charity ought to commence at home in Africa for his own people. Let No Power Persuade Negroes, let no power in the world persuade you about the rights of man when you are to pay the price and others are to reap the benefits. The right of man surely mean that Englishmen ought to look after Englishmen, Frenchmen look after Frenchmen and that Germans should look after Germans and Negroes should look after Negroes. Anything else preached to you from the pulpit or from the press is bunk, so you may listen to it with one ear and let it pass through the other; but set down one principle in your mind, and that is, "Africa for the Africans, those at home and those abroad." Organize to Be a Negro From now onward the Negro must organize to be a Negro. He must live as a Negro; he must struggle as a Negro; he must fight his battles as a Negro, and he must die nobly as a Negro. Standing on such a foundation, we will surely succeed. We are too numerous and too strong to forfeit any claim that we demand. The Negro is potentially strong and powerful; he can do for himself and accomplish much by being determined and persevering Our determination and perseverance will lead in the direction of a solidified race the world over. A Grim Reality What I am saying is no farce, nor any dream; it is a grim reality. Out of vast areas of European lands different groups have created their nations and governments that reflect today their power and glory. The same opportunity invites the Negro in the twentieth century. Africa with her vast resources beckons the Negro to come, to be awakened to the many opportunities that Nature offers in the greatest country in the world. The Negro who was great in centuries gone by shall be great in centuries to come, and so I am urging black men here and everywhere to buckle on the armor of service—service to race and service to Africa. We must do this by being just what we are—Negroes, not Jews, not Anglo-Saxons, not Celts or Teutons, but Negroes. We should be proud of being what we are, because Nature so lovely made us what we are. We shall lift this race of ours to a pinnacle of human service, of human accomplishment, of human dominion that shall make us a power and a great people. Thank God, there is no dishonor in being black! Find in it, men, the honor that Englishmen find in being white, that the German finds in being blonde. The same virtue that others find in their color and in their race, find it in yours. The World Our Stage Let the world be our stage of action. Let Africa be the objective of our concern, and so, whether we be in the West Indies, in America, in Europe or in Asia, or in any section of the world, let us work together under the banner of the Red, the Black and the Green and unite our forces for the welding together of a compact race and for the creating of a national inspiration that shall never die. Be assured that everything that I have written I mean. Everything I have given expression to I have experienced. I am writing to you from the fullness of knowledge. Let no power persuade you to the contrary. You must live for yourselves, with the purpose of clasping the hand of your brother, ignoring from what section of the world he comes, so that both of you may journey on to the great objective—Africa redeemed, the Negro race emancipated everywhere. With very best wishes, I have the honor to be, Your obedient servant, Marvin Sancy President General, Uttlversal Negro Improvement Association Address 76 King Street, Kingston, London, N. 1012 Seas SRSA it ht greene | race ROU UE ARIS 2 SiC CER Da eS aan ec mmace tes 5 sa Ce oe Se ae ee bt oie See SENN N SRI Ose RE OO Se TAI oc 2 Be ep taps pet triage 2 HOT at eae do OR Ne a aS ELOY SPR AT RBS PECAN RRR RE ROME II OL ONSET, SOMERS MRE RIE zi ie EB Fae dea ia’ oa Se anor emer erent & ries re 4 0G Fo BCR aS ai UR ge nce RR eee ae Pe eet ae he eG. At Sines oie Ceorer eet a WE wich tories ida + se alates “dns SPARES, Oo andl Ss x1 7 inn ree oem 18 EST , F ee ee RS SR Ds he OE os amen rae Pees eS ee gn Boe arrestin oo SS SO RGgaee pel meiens Os Tae ie Ce es Be ee ef ea he yas 2 De es irae aaa eee ae a i UP MMR BCR REPRE leveibeiee” Sowbes No acoe peaks Be eae ae ruse peer ong ar eR Bg PE Tee PTET EAE Pe 8 CRETE Tevetts actos week tert Me Nort | Oaree me: Si) cit eens cane thn bye dS jo abate tak Selec Rei tae | Pexeaongranaets eck # 2 ne tee ee hg = ane HEAL. TREE eas ee eee Te gE ast MN, A ese ee plas eile uk 2 USAR SS FRR aC wa RES fis aT EE MES 8 as ane “Powers ‘That Be-Are“Not-Relaxing-Efforte to_Hamperf «120. WEST 138TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY ~ iy; aol Staxtod for... SEEMS, Stee cae | SUNDAY, MOV. WE Jerse Stan ted Coolidge in His. Recent Enoncintign (f° SG UWMPEL Ws: Lady EAL «fp erotam of Lionet: Leora the: ‘of U.S. Policy; So. Negroes ‘Must Stand: | Sale ee ATE Pr ONARE ia “ff Neero eunrtermaptcr og “toy, Vs Mare in. His Fight for Independence fe : eS, * “ffwhe salad’ at tedpt -atxtgem and cus. Garvey in His Fight -for - ee ‘anid in : Offers atthe ‘fl naps-twenty persons who: were. # . < eee ee . * Musical Band endante : Saver | ferme at: Door sling in the sea, and suggested ty . . 5 * * i © he a Fo ~ r= ‘fund of $29,000 be raised for him. at Hh patna f , NEW. YORK, LIBERTY HALL, Sunday. Night, Nov. 18 ][. CER J KN - Several aurvivors of the’ wreck ‘Liberty Hall was filled. tonight with a large amber: of the staunch |} “=.” 9, Hi E B. OX. sive : on thelr ‘arrival Nere’on, sho Arve Lil a s lonight w: Be “ae eERsOKat 7B OF THE YRESIDENT GENERAL Shipper how the jlttle man ‘from followers of the Hon: Marcus @arvey and the usual quota of-visiters-Pie ie HON. M, T, De MENA ‘Barbadoo® rowed about ' picking who" enjoyed-with evident relish - the: inspirational , treat.afforded. ck Eat eae tie snenines _ [fsirvivora. “He nad bean swim them. Hon. E. B. Knox, personal representative ofthe President] _ppict th asmerdiey Sexeaw aye . : avout ty, the water toe sore: D . fe a age > > HON. Lo MCCARTNEY, ‘Lady President 2 1 Pp when he sighted: lifteboat-44—One General, occupied the chair, while on the platform were the officers |] _ wise t, Mc COLLING, sec twcy Vice-Powsdant ~~ {|e wan tm tho bont, an ngarea of the New-York Local and a few visitors. Ba : pe MerCOT Tne Resend keay Vis " man, but there were né oars, - ‘After the usual concert program and the reading of the last mes- |} are esa se Nara Tee ben eee sage from the Hon. Marcits Garvey, the-speech-making followed, |] ®# ee 2 Mine = aie Muses a Fee nee nel Hand found two serviceable oat | the principal address being delivered by Mr. Knox. __ |} Presentation of Tokens of Appreciation at 8PM. to the Mititary Departient or then rowed about picking Ub St.Joseph’'s ASPIRIN | las Pune 'As MONEY CAN. BUY # * Bh (BR etiocetision i A lB a & (ere a a pr Onan ramen ER ay A Uta; | MRO MCARTNEY'S ADDRESS . | Mrs, L. McCartney, First Lady Vie “President of the New York ‘Local, was “the firat: speaker.. Shie sald that, Ne- sroes ought to dwell with great, prid upon the aplendid deeds accomplishec sinking of the Vestris, especially upor the notable feate performed, by ‘Qitar- termaster Licofish, who ricked hii life to"aave othe In. auch herole fashton It was “incidents “lke these which helped to renew faith In the ultimate success of the Universal Negro Im- provement Association, for a race which could produce heroey, ke Lico- rish could ngt be kept enslaved by any other raco_for long. Own Papers Needed _ Mrp. McCartney further sald she had Fead the varled accounts’ of the dtv- aater with mingled feelings—the white man's hatred of the Negro was all too manifest as exemplified in his trent- ment of the news, stems. Here again the wisdom of the declaration of tho Hon, Marcus ‘Garvey that tle race Hon._Aareus Garvey _‘hat ihe me whould haye-Its own, dally ReWSPRPES was ween, It was futile forthe Negro to expect the shite man, in his pren- ent mond, to give the Negro race ‘4 square and qual deal imthe pres ventutlon of news, events, She com- mented on the fact that all <hatgone wlilte man who was disposed to pratng the..conduet of a Negro_xengnan_wiis able to sty was, hat he was a damned good nigger.” - MISS ETHEL: COLLINS' ADDRESS ‘Miss Ethel. Collins -2nd ‘lady viee- president of ‘the “New York Local, next spoke. Commenting én the work the Hon,"Mareus Garvey had done to unify uplitt sentiment within’ the race, she wald st was to the lasting gredit of the’ great leader and of far-déaching, tnfluence, she was certaln, that throughout the world day by day black men and women were .assem- biing In Liberty Hally with one object in, view—to Wwork for the reclimation of Mother Africa, ‘The Hon Marcus Garvey had Welded a powerful Instru ment for bringing Into one homo- Seneous whole the scattered vons and daughters of Ethfopfa, and there wax. no galnsaying the faet that fn the not distant future his work weuld bear teuit, : MR. A, A. M’'KENZIE'S ADDRESS. Mr. A. A, MeKenzie next spoke. He eaid we were now at"the dawn of a Few era in the life of the Negro and now was the time foF the Negro to put forth every. effort in, maintalnins: the prinetples of the Univergai Negro. Im- provement Avsoclation. ‘Thin was the time for every Negro, young and ot, to como forth and preach the gospel of Garveyism, The white man of to- day was trying to suadue the Newea through economfe’ starvation, and it the Negro was neplecttul of or un- grateful to the Universal Negro Im-| pkavicesnt -Aisselated hs Gace sine | be. forced to pay the penalty with ex- termination, ‘ o faxt HON. E, B..KNOX'S ADDRESS Hon. E. B. Knox, personal repre- sentative of the President-General, ald he “dgaired: to Impress upon the members of ho organization once ‘ocesialon and the times through which tho race was passing. Tho present-was almost a tragle time for the Nesto people of the world. . The powers that b& were doing alt they. could to disegurage the leader-of the otganization and to dis- hearten those who followed Iiim, but itttle dla they know Bow foredeomed to fallure-‘thelr efforta were + Opposition.in Bermuda Hie leurnt that-in Bermuda the Hon. Mureus™ Garvey was encountering ‘somo trouble, and he was culling pen the membership everywhere - to’ rally xround thelr ieader more than ever at the present time. Only few days ago, ho sald; President Coolidge mado & speech welling’ forth the inde- pendence of the Ameriéin, people, thelr’ ambitions and policics. .»The President had let (he world kno® (rat Anterlet, was goin. to pursue a cer- tain cotirsé, regardless of what the rest of the ‘world thousht,: and ft ReCINCA TO mth Hee—manner Mareuy Garvey iad outlined the poll eles of the Negro people of the world, and it was the businoxs and duty of Negroes to let the world know that they::were. gaing te, support: Marcus Garvey to the limit, Ferardiess of what tile rent of the world thought.” cs: A Comparison °° While the Europeah prews and Furo~ pean statesmen were criticizing Presl- dent Coolidge, the highest pald Jour- nalint in ,tho United States, Arthur Brisbane, ‘edlfor of the Hearst news papery, Miad told Mr: Coolidge that he hud spoken just ‘right, and tho rank and file of America were behind him, and just as the. ximérican people felt ihpelled to sustain President Coolidge in ayserting the independence of tho Americun White man, “so the black people, of the world Dught to rise up. an nover wefare ald: ict “no. world lenow Vat they sustain the Hon, Mar~ cuss Gurvey In taking an Independent stand for the black peoplo of .the world. “Buckle on Your Armor” Hr, Knox, continuing, sald the dght wax on, though many ko-called Negro | leaders didn't seem .to know st. Some- times -he felt that they knew, but were rot prepared to shoulder the responst~ bilities that they knew wuch leader ship ehtatied, But tt was the duty of the rank and file of Negroes all over to keep thelr eyes steadfast on the goal of an Africa redcemed’ and .to vow they would go the limit to achieve their afms. This was not tho time for, pussyfooting..."The times de~ manded ‘ardent hearts, and he was appeaitng to the membership through= out..Ameriea to buckle’ on thele armor and «be prepared (o give thelr leader the xipport required at this Juneture, Let them all work so tht the 1925 Convention would, be an eye-opener 10 the world and a eign that the Negro was in deadly earnest, * a ara Fe ee ace ME TTARYV TEMONC Oe Tin Ese CREAR DOERR NGL UAT ATE RES pa ears EEG he te i i POI RR ar ee ay RL LES SE Se FEE, Foi his ots hat wet RAN nee tee Wels rv = SSUNDAY, OV, Ws - SUNDAY: NOW. 3, 1S aes Se “AT. WG SHARE ©? cg “ Musical Bandi Attendante . Sdver Offering at the Door ee ee a : cpa JA E.B. KNOX... 7 ON OF ems PRESIPENT GENERAL me HONS M-E.T, De MENA . pin ASBOTART INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZER, Los th “= * HON, Ly MCCARTNEY), Lady Prealdent rs = MISS .E. M. COLLINS, Second Lady Vice-President.” ‘ OTRER NOTED SPRAKERS:WILINADDRESS YOU: Big Mass Meoting at @ P.M..." ~!"'" Big Musieal Program by, the Choir Presentation of Tolians of Appreciation ACU PLM: ta the MItitery Bepartntent “wean ‘THe rAMous- deverpor9 : SUBSCRIPTION +: <-f 0:28 CENTS © He Saved Lives of Twenty-one People SM eee rere Teg geen IR em ara John Henry Alexi wa too modest to acclaim himself one of the feroye fig- ures inthe -Vextris dimvter. It was he who, found Ufehgat No. 18 bobbing empty abot on the waves #cmoment after the Vextrls was overwhelmed, climbed into the ¢raft and subse- quently saved the boatload of twénty- one other survivors gineévered by the North’ Gérman Lloyd liner Berlin, + Elixele {Alexi} ts a-tall, raw-boned, Mthe Nesso with @ decided British x¢~ tent and blunt xpeceh. He Inughs ag ho relates the most dramatic details and hiv even rows of white tecth giisten. . we Tolls of Leap inte Sea He had leaped. into the seuawith the last of the crew on ‘the aturboafd side, ho said, fust*as the ship wan_slowly | turning over. Hé had fastened @ Iite~ pelt about him, ww tie others ‘had done; and ho made a dash to get away from the turbulent waters about the sinking | vesnet ax soon as he struck surface. “E was Reading away from Use ship, you’ gee,” he explained, “when T saw that one of the Hfeboats had been wrenehed looto from’ the port side-and want pliching about with nobody on yoard. The Big ship had not yet settled’ below the surface and the waters Were all in & stew, with’a lot of women and men scranibling and trying to keep away from the eddies that were swiel- ‘ing about tho whip. : “Well, I made for tho craft and got hold -of {it was about aixty yards agyiy’ and was being drawn by suction toward ‘the Vertris, ‘Tho moment I got into it I found it nearly half filled with water. But I noticed that ft was being drawn farther Into tho, eddies about tho sinking vessel, and 26 1 pulled with the oars with all my might to g¢t away from tho ship. “As I was doing so I heard people tn the water shouting at ‘mo and crying for me to plek them up. I wun puzzled. Thad to decide whether to try te save tho boat firt from being drawn down with the Vestria or to give these. people. hanil avd tke my chances. But I saw they had Hfebelts on and could hold on a while, and co I thourht it wise ,to {ey and savo the boat first. 1 pot aivay, about 100 yard from the ship, waited -perhaps “about two. or [three' minutes more until the turbue once about, tlie umpt where the Vestrls had gone down haé disappeared, nnd then T rowed back to pick up as many | as T could. * Saye : Necro Boy Climbs Aboard” ” “Asal pitched and tossed through the wreckago“two other boys from the crew climbed aboard, Archibald Ban- nister and John Myrick. .Myrick jaonly a boy. They ‘had work to do and 1 hid "WOrk to, do;:and-there-wae-plenty, to do for everybody. The boat was half filied with water. Sho was lenk- ing lke eight holes. Bannister and Myrick started to bale and I kept row- ing aroiind after people in the water. “Well, wo picked up’ Alfred Duncan then, the necond steward on the Vee- tris; end? thenwe dtagged Avard Adams; the chief engineer, out-of the ater. Atta that mara af the crew that had: Jumped overboard awiim to- ward us and we helped. them Rboard. It was no fun watching the roils and the-troughs and trying 0° keep, the keel straight. ind also make for the struggling ones. - au “And at onetime it looked as.though wo would just have to.stop rowihg and picking: up people and just dale, he- cause the water kept gaining on us tn he boat. We were baling with hands and .caps and shops and anything thet would hold wates, Gat tt kept sdbping m.. 1 newer on © rotten thing. Picks: Up Twenty-one Poreans “ “Wolk, .t happened that we Analiy.| nad total of:twWenty-two people, si pedsongers und the rest mpembere bt mg a Spllows that . bad to, Weinetet them, bid Deon ta Cie | < amy, ponte went under might ‘tiie thle Uther, and waybroke | way Ee “nace ‘We Giga, much bet bale a8 . ¥ i _ : . 2 , . > es eS ee So); eee >. Be A i i) ee SST ZA Ne ee LS Saige es fA > JS rR sine oN ae i Ry ey aN SSS es 2 ; PTT eae sea + - e . . - Amber D5°: RTE Snow White 50° ; : Hair that is ‘soft, lustrous and abundant is certainly worth ateatine _ * ing, for it mers admiration and popularity. Yet beautiful hair costs little in both effort and money. = : ways A can of PluKo Hair Dressing and.a littlé time will prove that! _ 4a fact, the first application will show a most satisfying improvement .~_ “ ..:. inthe appearance of your hairs;and by the time you have ysed a rea-- "sonable amount of this dainty preparation your hair will be softer, — . smoother and more radiantly beantiful than you ever though possible. , - °. Any hair-style you choose, even the most difficult of the lovely, . "*.. modern styles, will be easy to arrange when you use this effective .- hair dressing. -You'll have the assurance, too, that-your hair. will stay. - . . that way—always looking well-groomed and beautiful. t ee & or Sag yee ae ET, ; REE Pa Pa Z 2 LALWAYS THE: FINEST. HAIR. DRESSING "| Ms EASY AND PLEASANT To.isee = pees bate, “and the. chief engineer ‘Adams, sort of acted as captain. There jwau no une heading’ for any. place be: cause we'even Jost our sense of rec tion during “the’ night, and wo-jus bobbed’ up and down with ihe ocear troughs. ie “tt wan funny, though that firs night we anwthe soaschlightn St the Wyoming qnd some. sther ‘ships away off on the horizon, anid we,sort of kept pointed in thelr direction, hoping they would ‘see us; but they didn't. Sore af,the pede In the boat’ yeltedw fey times,-Dut It sounded funny’ and wé all laughed_nni Just Kept on baling “Once we heard a faint voles ana wi rowed In its direction and we got to where: we thought {t canté. from, out nothing wan there. 2 ‘And Just keeping hold of those gars wae nojanana picking, man. Look xt these “bilstered palms. * And, say, I'vo done hard work in my life, but"look at these bilstered pahhs. And St wasn't the Arat ‘party of the ort that I've had, I was on the Car- quet, back In-1922,-running-from-HiaH- fax'te Bermilda, .when she foundered on thé rocks about 100 miles off coliat. But that was not‘lke this ting. Wo had Uline to get out and we did and every bloody life was seved.” The able- nodied seamen then did it. =J'm un able-bodied Aeaman. ¢ _"But_say, have you heard, whether aiiybody picked up a Bible or a eati- tude of the Bible? You haven't?, Well in caso you should later hear of auch a thing please put it in-print that I'm at the Seamon'y. Church Institute and Il bo glad to saye some more-iivew for my-books. Don't forget tho Beatituds of tho Bible, monn. John, Henry Bitxele, able-bodied eeamart from Barkador, now at the.Seiman'a Church Institute.” ae ieaceee ar aeaea a ee oe Lee RF eg Moa plies B= 2 reagiel eatirggen fr. onion, De Heroic Quarterm: # gapesleett, apne ‘Nesterday., the Neero wuntlecmanier’ oy tog, Waste sero “quartermaster: a s [whe saked’ at ledpt-stxteen and’ per- haps.twonty persons who: were, strug: Sling in the sea, and suggested Spt’ ‘fund of $20,000 be raised for him. Several aurvivors of the’ wreck told on thelr ‘arrival Here’on, ke American Bhipper how tho {ittle “iin ‘from the ‘Barbadoo® rowed about picking up survivors, He had been swimming about tn the water for some time when he sighted lifeboxt-it—One per- son was in the boat, an injured fire- man, but there Were né oars. The quartermaster clambered aboard and then dived backs. amid the wreckage land found two serviceable oars,’ Lico- Finh then Fowed about pléking up’ vie~ tims. SC ceerpaeeecerant de neces 'T have read of the remarkable bravery dlapiayed by Lionel Licorish, quartermaster of the Vestrie, who rescued sixteen pofsons at tho risk-of he: own’ fein. the fecent_ahggter. “Mrr- Straus.-wrote,.to.the New@York ‘Times yesterday, ~ . * Se belleve a losting testimonial of thin occasion should be presented to this: man to signify the gratitude of the public." 1, suggest that a fund of 420,000, bo raised for thie: purpose,.and dim pleased to head tho istsavith $250 au my: share,” te “whenever a piltceman. oF Areman distinguishes" himyelf for» extruordl- nary bravery. int, Ifevaving, I believe ho should. bo amply rewarded. Thin hero: certainly dererven thin form ‘of recognition.” eee Anxious to Be Home NEW YORK, Nov! 19—Mont of the surviving membern of tho Ventrin's Erew who were stilt qiartered-at the Seamen's Chureh Institute yesterday seemed nnaloun to: leave New . York, Although they admitted that they hed boen treated excellently: hee, they de- xeribed New York as a “good place to sat" a One atthe poniasicie ones was Joshun. Ford, w fireman, who” was picked up by tho tanker, Myriam, Ford; a well educated Negro with a penchunt for oratory, xpoke o£ the Yereck in this fashlon:, ws “Ht tw ono thing to wee mLhera now, but another when the nea opened 118 angry Mouth and said, ‘I am ready for you ‘Théro we stood when the Yeusel “linted way over. We looked™to the east. Worlooked tothe went. We looked ull ways. Thero wax nv one to save us, There wan the water walling to takorun and we knéw wo wore wall- ing for rath." Port wuld they never expected. to be saved: Ho told how Barbados na- tives beconfe’ expert awiniimeri~ ind declared that’ many passengers who Poeun. on a TERRES, SOAC Ses a ee Se ee a NT IE Sea ‘ zs ae ae hy ad E oe oe aay tae eee a Can sah 5 - aa came SS ee. 3 ae a a ee ee ‘awayt Whee’ yeer Exergy desins.|hody;. maken Mervee = sbenty - to slow. dows, when you act dull | manty. VIGOR, womanty VIM; woe and played out before time, when muah ENGAGY Who need HL” Prive ‘the Canfidence. of Vex 12, cone pe ‘Speotal-oat rate offer 3 for ‘ne, Cocenaes 20 ‘oben | TE You wish..t0. pay; -post- ~ tine will help yout Jf you are grow- | mas “On~ Arrival ‘send no money, ing tited tio oon, Amst start, just, your name and address, - De « Quickly exhaugted,' FX ting is |it row! Why wait? Every day the NEW. compound! Randown | counts! QUARANTEE: cee ‘men and tired women for a quick | Potentine for 10 days. If 2th Conn Comeback order the genuine! pletely satisfied: your re: double treatment, entirely. different | will be refunded.. NOTE: Genutne from_anything you may hase used | Potantina ta 2 Tonic, pagity. and ‘Dbefore—exactly what every failing | quality guaranteed by a ‘chemdiat, man and woman ie after. Dv-|registered pharmacist, qualified Velop ‘@ real.cimprovement! Get| New York LicensesNo. 1517, New Your share of the youthful. of | Jersey License No. 49. Addvend *-, fe that makes everyborty. Soot your letter to ® Sap * FRANCE-N-FINSTON—®=< 2. Haniten: erenesginu? were rescued owed: their liven to the [good eyinmning oF seme of the Bars datos members of. the crew, especially Lionel. Licorieh,. whom Jhe character- sted aa-& great hero. * *oneph Alen 8 Ramsey and_an- bart Ford aecalveds wauaevite Hs tracts yesterday: and will atart this Afternoon one tour,expocted to Ina two. oc three. weeke, Hugh tua wil receive $65 a.week for appearing on the stages and’ telling. BE BID. expeae ‘A man appeared at the “omce’ of Wittam °C. Fowler’ director of law nnd order at tho institute, and told how nurrowly he had. missed shipping ancthe Ventria, lin name srun Sidney ear er the Lamport .€ Holt ner, Voltaire. He had signed on. the Ventris, but Necamos"il and seas, ho ‘moet chew the wip antag Judge Rejects Motion’. To Quash Indictments — Against PerryHoward JACKSON, Minu.—U.. 8. Jude Ed- ‘wink, alolives dunrroint-saedlou 3 aunwa fadiotments nguinne Perry How oes : Mr. Howard, ysth, three others and threo white moi t* aecuxed of aclling public office while acting ax nitional Republican’ ‘commiticemen. * Pending ‘trit] Re wen muxpended from.offico as Aratatint to the U.S. Attorney Geno- mah : ~ Inatead of quashing © charges the Semin tar cnc mtn Me Howshtend Edward be Patton, SD. Redmond and. 8. He Reon brothers, were tho other colored inten ME Chiesa Sisar Us o naetel my Gee must be poo thody;. maken Mervee = sbendy for manly. VIGOR, womanty VIM, woe- mal ENERGY who peed th, Prive $20 Boeolal-cat rate ter 00.2 You wish..te. pay -post- rad “on erivil ‘send 9 money, just, your name and address, - it tow! “Why wait?’ Every day counts! QUARANTEE: ee Potentine for 10 days. Ie nef, com Dletely satisfied: your re: will be refunded." NOTE: Genuine Potantisa_ta a. Tonic, pugity and quality guaranteed by a chemist, registered pharmacist, qualified: New York LicensesNo. 1817,.New Jersey License No. 42h. Adarand your letter to = fe tg Rex 47, Mamiiton Grange OP 3. G. Buchanon, George C. McClellan ‘und “Charles-Isaacs. ee “Buchanon _sarved:.the ‘Indictment upon “hitnselt,”~ ” Valding of the Andictments was sought.on the’ faulty’ and toa, general interme and (hat —an—attegwd—core apiracy was. started against them Dee fore gnactment of the federal lawa prohibiting: tram in public office dis- Densation™ , 8. D. ‘Redmond {g chairman of the “Stato Republican executlve committee of the Howard wing of the party and also the author-of tht anti-lynching™ plank in the Republican platform adopted at Kansas City. ; = Millar _McGtichrint, special prose cutor fram Wanhington, natidted the” kovernment end ‘of the prosecution, Friday. : » Mabel Walker Willebrandt, white, former colleague of Mr. Howard's in tho: Ux S. Attorney General’a ome, who secured the original indletments ‘against. him, was -conspicuously ab= apnt. _ ~~ -NOTICE” —— 500 LEGIONS. FOR 1929 Loyalty Marks the * . - Gpod Man e Military. training every. Sunday cat 3PM. and Tuesday nights at Bat * LIBERTY. HALL #19" Danneel St, New Orleanw, La. Captain EUSPST TORNER : Approved by > ts Col. ALONZO KEDLY +, 2 yar THutrcene MAWIISS 77 ree sh fis Sasee BE SO RR Bs eee cc IN Eph A RE GT ana par ATI ers PR EIR CE INIT gn aes eg LN Pp Ba a EC SCT NTE SUR a RE ar oo Urea Ta SRE ee erg LOG aan are a e a ORE A a aR re Te AMS era Tay Lege ars agent me RCE RELOAD RRO cae Val eR SO A POEL, IC) EMSS TORIES te WRU gE NN CON I TN EOE 5 Secd that Guingies Spe: alot 948 SP: chs AM oaks rae Regard tas ad Nana Gus Soest PRO A e ee rod Feed caning aC On on Fae ciene uae bases cna ee eat aig see t a ee Ee Penney ce er ae: eager se ne aes ~ Guihcient hag been told by'men ahd womeh eminently. worthy hhowen aa; the Vestrier went ta: the bation pt the ised Negeoes were ‘not the ‘offesiders: Says Mee B. MC, Walcot, a white merchant jaf British Guiana: “Pfc. Negroes'F saw, and! I-sav a good mapy &t them, behaved magnificently.” Mr. “Alfred Ramos declares: “That little Negro, (meaning Licarish) did what the officets of the Vestris inileg'to do.” The seniot Shaft officer of the US. S. Wyoming re: ported that three.white women picked up by: his ‘men said’ two, Ne- go of Barbados, also rescued, “helped then! cintinuaily: during the long, dark hours in the water and made it possible for them-to hold 00 until succor arrived: “As for our oi boat," says Mr. If, C, W. Johnson, genfral manager, ‘Trinidad Leasehold, Ltd., “the Negroes behaved splendidly, , They were ¢xperienced seamen, and ‘had the}-not beet we would never have kept that lout afloat.” And, a8 if in mocking answer to all this efficiency and heroism and ex? emuplification of seal “humanity, we could set dawn the reiusal of some white eccupants of a boat to permit a Negru-stewardess te go aboard: with a white male companion who was with her in the water when jt was-seen that she was black, The white man wastoid he could enter the boat,.and only,on_ his insistence was the stewardess ‘permitted to clamber to temporary Salety, rr " “But in spite of the ovtrwhelniing: evidence furnished. by .sur- vivors as to the splendid conduct of the Negro inembers of Ue crew oi Me Vextris there is still discernitile a disposition jn certaitt quar- ters fo make Negroes the scapegoats of the affair, attaching ty them a share.of the blame for the loss 6f lives of the great majority of the women and.children who were on the vjlifated iner.’, And so, #-behooxes shése wNadiald the good nue, of the tice dear te follow with an eigle eye therproceedings that are now Ving conducted by United ‘States Attorney Tuttle to. apportion the blame. We have no hesitation in*saying ‘that we have ‘cohfidence in this: officer and_ad- mire the manner ih which he is handling the inquiry; but still we hail with approval the. decision to hold a mass meeting in Harlem on Wednesday, the 2lst.inst., at, which Negro survivors of-the crew. will speak and a profest be fofmaily,made against the tendency dis- layed b¥ Whe presto berate and-belitiie-the blatk inen.on the Ves tris for the part they played in this-latest marine'disister, which, it is already obvious, ordinary prudéce oii thé prt of the ship's senior | personnel could have averted. ee Fea esllistory records great deeds of bravely’ performed by black vig Ofily-ten years ago, on every batile front.-they were covering them | selves with glory. Bravery, like; cowardice, is to be found in black | and white alike. Arid’ biack men must fight with all Ge vehesience | neocssary, any jinputation to the contrary. we ” Sonbaltihcietchet bene veiteciiiiiielagalchisi alain Aen TTR ee ee nT EME Coe oo SPSS ee ae SRE a a Ra cs Pee aa 2 eae a ae Co SS, SOON (Belge CARR NC EI een STR SS o aaa aiacae eR Cate ee ee aneomerei Larose reer pembier nr ceaanaer testa tetera i pacer Guha crore ester re a A Se WA is Gad $a Campeeare eres a ae | NADER renee 500 SS Fg tea Sea [3 aUsecRipTiOn Katee 70 THE wegRO WOMLD | : 8 , 8 ; Nye ee nena teatencly ee Weed ie ne Yoarsescesuicgersegpestar S260 [One Bhar seceveresyorreetenes ARO (She Monthe...-s.sbsesereeeetee 135 Bix “Months... .- 2.25 .-0+ceseee0y 160 Peres Mouths. ceils: 98 | Taree, Maaths-c.vscragcseicoe 480 7 sEplared aa second. clase mattier April 16, 1819, at ihe Post ‘Sihce at Now York NY. under the act of March. & 157%, PRICES: Five conte ib Greater New Tork: tan cent Sisewhere in the U.S, A: top cenis ia Coreign coudtrien, rcs ers cola Advertising Representatives, W. B: Zit Co. Transportation Bids. Chicago, Uk sore iii ‘Misainon avonus New Tork City eee iad SOF et The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable on 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. , 1 Voll XXIV, NEWYORK, NOVEMBER 24, 1928 | None —_——— TO T niust- have been distressing to Negroes. and, to, all loversciof <l iair plag: to how the efforts. of some-of the ‘stirvivG?s of the A Uestris: disaster.ta“asten tipon’ the-Negro member's of the crew the chief blame for the Jarge death toll ainong: the.passerigers. Fresh: irom the heartrending scenes off the Virginia’ Capes; with . memories of loved'ones gaging to theig death before their very eyes, these men_and, women who. were: the first to reach the port of New York onthe rescue ships could well.be pardoned if, their ininds stil udhinged, they became over-eritical of the ‘conduct of the crew as a whole.” But we do not find ‘it easy to be charitable when we recall the manner in which the Negroes wire singied out as special cul; prits—the captain of the ship dieing apparently the only other—anil the flood “of inendaciots and damning details that was poured into the sympiftiietic fats of white reporters of the New’ York dailies to becbroadcastteeniting world. - os “cathe facts which are now’being Spread upon the record arg’teiling i different story. -Far from being the sealaWogs of the disaster. the Negra menibers of the crew ate looming up as heroes; with none save one ivhjte membe? of the-crew even appearing in the limelighit, and he a steward, who scetied to have renigined cool when his supe- curs—yiil Nordica, -by the way—had mentally gone to pieces. It suv Lionel Licorish, a Negro quartermaster, slight of build but Swont‘of heart, who performed amazing deeds of-valor aad who by sheécr-example must Have buetressed the flagging spirits of many a, “man dnd waman ‘who were being tossed about by theraging seas. Let the New York World, through its. special reporter, Dudley Nichols, tell the’story.of what Liesrish dids————+—— > "There were wretched and suffering people-among the sur- vivors, but Lionel‘Licorish was aot among their number. “Lico- + trish, quartermaster on the, Vestris. is a pucé-black Barbadian, and ‘he had reason to wear that smile which showed even iets gold in his teeth than he had-in his heart. = : “For Licorish, in.the middle of all that drowning andi de- struction which followed upon the foundering. of the steamer, all at once found himself lying in a drifting lifeboat ‘with a couple of bruiséd ribs. He saw a man lying unconscious under sone of the thwarts, but there wash’t an oar in sight. Licorish . looked around.’ Then he.stcod onthe thwart and dived cleanly, and a moment later he was swimming back to the boat with a pair of oars. - . me ae a eat “However he managed.it, he did get into the boat and set te * work with the tielp of the reviving’ occupant, who turned out to. Ses Sete Of the foundered vessel's black: gang—that js, from . the tokchoie—and with himself for captain and the restored stoker for crew, Quartermaster Licorish set ‘to with such fervar that before he was through he had reached sixteen’ others.” © Contrast this unbiased retital of an epic of life-saving at ‘sea with the wholesalé tondenination of the valriglorious “Captain” Soiensan-now-se-steangelysilent, aiid you get the full force of the -wiédom of the warning of. the Universal Neg?o Improvement Asso- ciation to Negroes to be prepared to conquer Alps of prejudice and -hat¢ before:they.ccn ever hope to.come info their own, Now, know | ‘ing the facts, we are able to conden the,unworthy insintations ,of a certain. white passenger that.a knifo.a!Negro seamat- carried. between his teeth as he swam amidst'the wreckage was for bloody defense against ‘any feflow unfortunates who might come tdo near rither thrin against the man-eating monsters that iiifested the warm waters. -Now,we can’state our loathing, and disgust, without ming ing Words, for thuse white gentlemen of the Pourth Qstate whe, hardly had the"hysterical passengers breathed their mythical talgs, than they furnished for good-teasure stich epithets as “of course,” “naturally,” “the frightened Negroes,” et cetera,’secking €o impress Feaders thas Negroes wert by nature cowards, and nothing Valorous or éyen orderly was to’ bé expected of them in-moments of crisis an: denger: oe ee ea” Nor was Lricorish’s feat by any’ means isolated. - Several white passengers and members ‘of the crew have. come forward, almost angrily, to’ denounce the unwarranted attacks upon thie Negro sea-} “men and to-'deelare, to the contrary, that they comported themselves da a diidnsier worthy Uf ic best, tradigions of sien’ Sf tHE sear. It is Dow. known, for instance, that Joha Henry: Alexi, like Licorish, a ‘mative of Barbados; wwas ‘refponsitle for. the atecue of mdi less than, ‘Wrenty‘one pervons; that he-had leaped-intir tiie sca with the lait! Of the erew on the starboeril side just a0 the ship: Was.sibwly ty] tag over: that hg had faxtesied a fifebelt about bine, so the others had | tha sfokcing veisel; that be'was heading gway from the ship. whea| he aww that.one of the jifeboats had been wreached Jocte from-the What Kemal’s Turkey \— Expects —to— Cain : From New Alphabet J Ching has tmaiuted witat fsreatter [program ever sindertsiten stditenl by Hany country, but It does not Ineluds that chansd whteb enrries coniterna- ton ton peontgaehanke of alphabet Turkey under Kesnal ts putting over « Rew syntom of tetterd, uttering thy neript in wich tte diterature 44 writ- ten, and even the tenets of the Koran by unekampled “nisin stronith” SE ete ew, ape emanate Hsennt leéson: Wy the president of Fopublie) threaty of toss of offer t 1,000 government employes unless they show profeteney In two monthes aq wilt Auppresa newswinere thal Go nol Abunidon by December 1,"in favor. of [Roman tie qiimout Arsble type that thoir renee spent yours, in fearing “ho Okomen tangunge, dled wich tugOttomuen orapire." “brondeaste: dre foverniiient radio, “Its Atle” char- acters prevent our irexinuie frony de- Ivalspiip inaenteitanes teens by ile: torlewiecident that We ever adopted thom, “Wo have struyisled asafgat, them and our language and titeratuie tua ont force in the steussbie. ‘They ats ‘ynilited. for the ‘wkda of exjronslon in modern elvilization. Wherever teeh- nial torma are used—In Banking, com= moves, acigncts” modern “philosophy, Daycholory, mediciii—new - clutracters area necensty:* = AAAAGSA by. the reformers that they’ lament thé days lose In the Gevert.” When Under, tho aultans the northern, Turks turned toward the Per= majt and Arable cultisres the nation’ loxt fee vigor, Ite ltcrature became faule, ua-Turkleh’ and to qweetisl tn manner and content: Arahlc that hat mummiied Plato, made Artatotlo Mfeless puppet"! —"withered and drained of sap the etrong Turkish geople.” _ Thy itéragure that ts “biing tran scribed tuto Westeri characters’ is to be obleGy Western works oa ari and cent oon Ww auc goiter Atandonét, . *° wunciatien WE be tte min Cony ctamtiawple, weige wilt ‘be standard. Poqts “bad bein “Cceme te Arevic rhythene; im prose, ‘Turkich and Arabic | ated uly _ by “quitting - tie Bowery the os ten tS Suaday School Congress - . To Be Held in Cleveland NASHVIHLUR, Tenn, Now. (pe SMD Ake Gineacatigg ik dav bres aitielate, tne seasldgt Tote tad |neratow tha net gerston ot the’ San [aay Mckeen® Gomrtraw 86, Loveland Lote, rhe ante nied “hoe the 195 [acniton:of' tit Sipnamare:siuhease eben jwal be dune 8 tot, The dnvitatton Mona ese pth Devs dae Deh |B... the pastor of the. Bast Mount Zion’ Payilat” Gauche ite stern je ing eesti ROR at Loutaviite and It will be rrealie wat be pnute snr feutig wii Clovetanh tee tpe earn entertaining of ils, the largest de- Amvorlen, were iileego, iki San. mar etn Cite duets, na Hivos, ‘Texans syste 3 Cy aed Shreveport, Tat. . . ine ‘Society 75 Years Old; | Has Issued 76,000,000 Copies J, Riaee anor eam kiss heehee: Henk: Seas Hintormatly eflelrated! he vomplotion Of peventy Alive youre in ite wrevent bine Hono a Astor Dice. In thts lime. more «than 74,000,006 copies, of the Seripturrs t ohsty-nine tanaueses ang sis “systema for the blind have deen printed, band and issund from thle, Datlding > ag Althe processes “of Budte produce on, Inshdlng translation werk te inary, of sho Innguaies, have hen care Hed ott th EME. Home, "Ths Amer~ New Tegtiment wax made there, The [Rev, DH van Dyke coinileted he translatiin of the Bible jn—aeabienty the niflding, “and, tran.” Binghim, figher of Senator Tiram ‘tungtam sue Connecticsit... worked there on, te teanndatiog’ of (ie Bitte nyu ‘ihe Tan gunge of the Gilhert alanis, whero-he had sired ne a mivsioniry. The #0- clely han the only exintinx silnten of. thie. dlalect. a; * 80% of World’s Diamonds. Are Bought by Americans PARIS, “Nov. 12—Elghty per cent. of the worl@s| diamond output. this year Bas gone tp the United Staten mocording to dlainond eiperta here ‘The prosperity of the diamond market Gepende very lateely upeD how mand @eamonde | tha “Amertoee, peopis buy Aa." indication of he aisodne of man Saveters te Wile Yen's dense Gervbanee ba comtxtered fm’ thes state: sheat. thar in the Scot pigBt menthe « Vatal of $2,000,000 worth. of apne 000 during th previews year. Vigwrse Toe other countries are lacking, bet 1 da aid the 1025 trtal WIR show «, bg woo eeuneMee See ee ea Sean e rer Pe scr monet nat = Eanes seit Shar cee eas ce ise Rta ipsam om T Shonen: ae Get sree UME bigot T gator when wt Toes, ats paca er Roland Hayés Charms ~ Vast Audience With ~.. Undiminished Artistry Lives Ne ee ane wal een Hayen sung, to- the Kirgeit orca Sich thine Ha oe Beh [muon ng the Seaeo tenory’ rectal [assent cen nieen —ftehapoerisn tour that will range trom” Cagada. to Fiugidn int Calterrnia. He returned from fartler Fairopean debute in ito Aint lay yond Russin, A world-se acclaim hing since Radlett untouched [tie aloght, urtanc auees the. deferens int enly. the ateventton, an eer | Srititwollw st am act gf nome tna now anni, a6 wo ofteig Before, agen a prin ihe, poet perfucion ef Sion fenevishe exam atone niaeavty Hea tne and ensres one. of Tande's tram “IzAtleneac" untamilive to mn there followed “a whole Schubert [esmra, have heard, tvele tetee rarely Htcons thett-o¥nartsts. in impid tone et sesetat dlctton, by A deyeenstant WF abe antsican eres. bas orn rSaiitataen HRA Tye HTS Hw [dors "Dies Fowt” tie breathtenn. epecd Wvonin” the, tranaparency of ity ain bbe : Pie mis however. inthe éDréam” fiom Dinsienets Pyench “Stanon” ae enogte to the Gekman’ xeon. that Roe ang Btayee: sabes mot. remnrkts Interpretation te tone eran. to wiicter tie wende ta A careey, OF seh OU gest drains: Soloed: eed Toe qwentte shontitieaades Ttlet Base Jini hoe tetlgwed Hy. Iuchimantnnt, Kron -Sinittne Averss “Robtqson's “Slee atten Telwn, abd Gera Geers Ships Tat Paes team. tstie of Pag tauerace Dunas ‘A short Womviim ket the hows and wien corowarte-tin, Ihe “Seal” ee “sivitwnin In which Peretval Pacha im accommpiniets shared’ resolin, The ane elven were thon eginning “You Petter tind" “Peckiol Sie ae wien “neaediesStorntftes and "My Cad te Sn Thee We was nde Beton the singer, whe added "Tiye and Beer The erueinwions” ould retuse the, demand fer. mors each cloeene bad cohteen‘Solslag 04 tie doverionat apiratidns of sabe. folk, whites ay senting. comreatelian, wrens 3 cevry completion it dente ‘et et hte nose the hal New Ge Smajiét U.S. Banknotes To Be issued July 7 | WASHINGTQN, Nov.’ 18.6 Dweision Haas heon reuelled st a eontorenee of Governors’ of the Federal, Keserre Racine ta te tet eae a The new emailer Ganipetes on fate 1 ea eet ee acme ota ee tar es oe pec tenn one teom-$4 ts $2 se be toad Ia tie ieee bee ml apeneahett ‘that hleher denomintigas of gold eet: ace een ee ak wee ea te tenloscany ayge eetennee ab een at" Segtien thet eters Fests ty tbe oma Pe ee Ee enema ibe tr od ter cretion oo ee ae ai Wier eaten ime ile gor froctecanedtd, he unsee saat ao strtonieht,“lioraxen atnee « tonal srthte BEEGATO€ time hay elapagd Te Sererugty ofthe Preanary deems tt-gd: ‘visable to submit ‘the mutter to the Bgiee nies rinse moeiicaee es ues “Shomd the Congress determine that she Rational aoe Seserey Be te be udnoe tn Ceeuiatons ees aan pros wih Uh paciarea te toehs pees dostion g¢ Stelonal caroueias toate dtiewi-siae early in Me tatni yeur 1936, whieh heginn on duly fonext.” + A NEGRO REPUBLIC Despatches from London to the daily In anttating abe,Ateigine there to ata 2 keh War"iRuinst the whites who Ferra, {© Flee up, overthrow hem and a countedthat le hy tlebt ‘o¢ natiety tod inheritance ‘hele own, The Ene tan, alarm, stim that they wi apn any attempt which will “endgnger the SWhite.cupremacy”” standarda of Bouth Africa. Thin intehdified agitation tor the rights of the blatke in AfpiM, ‘toa- tered by the, Russiang,.is but the open- lag wedge" ina revolt. that. will cventually” riypyy the: unecrubuloud Witte men from “Alrice. te growth Wil be watghed and should be encoul, need,” We Bellove sn vAtricn. for the Mrlcas-—Tne Chicags Bow, “> -Oiptdoer- Exercise — Boat e - sce ad = ~ sat Se setae ee fale 4 dey. af sy See or ers = renee ‘cad “Meakh Committon, 303 Weet 19th ‘gtrest, New York City. Sere a eens Bey Tae Tr gel pasar ha ane Roem. DEKE A, DERE: Te TERE Fever ee ip capi ad piGanr aimee SET Bat Se waar eee co Fear mete eter ey aren eee On aa es eee Ree et es rece ns Sas aaa ee 2 ae ebm helmiRiy align Hen ae ie ot ners sever elo ig Kent Lotte Res, Segoe Sorgen wae ot 2 cpaetnod beta en er cee SS Verona of. 160 atamind of Sto se a rather antter" ith), EE SS i oC are eer gn a ae ae thor an, #: grap” vobe:oirontost| DA 48 SAL AL TS SA = ne Noma Souere- pha) Meare on |LOG ote Peay syne ae tay binyent -sibleatys | oer whoa. & shite ‘% sili" the one tad nd EAP rier egaina and ll Sarr ovclemen Not -goly, te alte Neere 6. inch eltiping fromm whit srumb onion Polisiatiy, oa aeane to: let all ig fetende tt and et 86: Be, biaonly. vars. “Pol | aigeries use & Negro paper Revartakaccept inp crumbs of pairot- | eTievel beste | Negro papas socand ofte ‘appointnrents: pau [Pee wive, hm Zt column, trisiy, cccuvattondi crumbs das toca [pictues ef thew page-—Che to han: and soctally. 1 is not the mode z : 19 permit even to fall ee Surely, this frasi of crumbs will not | “Wamoufage elnfull tn. was Lee ee ee rere. | cumounage #4 hurmful in busines be asin aratwart. env: yoath” wo | Cumeuiage, 14 hacimtu) In busine nally fort and demand w nese Re] cate we née dealing WEN frend tie festive board where the: ull area THEIMAKINE, M-Ionay IE you af sidersitlp Ie ServedicvClpvsling | ea Guano -teng’ do pod eke ness, sou can » | _ The Negro race.ia far bend other eas of ghe“world In the Sevelopnient lof linge newspapepa: Thére is a rew- [tim for thin "one inne the Nero does ‘not prefer his owe, ‘This, sot Jeouree. tga condition tolfowing out of slivery. He seeks truths but belleven thik It tan some only Fron the ig House--Mfeny. beleve ih fe thine—thinge that_ace ogtiot ne fs hve. inthe; thlegs Ge. So hot [Tema waitin er If the rohd South fs really broken sind sintee mentioned have formed tne Republican purty, let them reatine a they aed elosrm ferent coms jriny thar they Inge neon Keentew and Set acoordlnag Phaceforge we thal “wait with-a-dealof. interest. 2nd" see. what Wa" shalt Seey~Calltorta Haxl=. cin Bid: aieusaie upwind ano hag" nC sean ap aceain, uate Gee. Sire Tea" edceligcive "ot vahoee whom pe may regard ax ideals; but he ean Fakthcully eniptoy 4h the anencies, and Armistice Day Speech. , _” Of President Coolidge It ‘iw hard to take President -Cooi- Ige’s. Armistice ‘Day uddress xeri- ously? ie te such a-miea of absurdities fl contendietions. "Wo hope tat the fmt ‘thing Me. Hoover will do wil Be te hire a good-editor and give him a to put the Preaidentlgg public -utter- Rice tnto_eénaintew ints Ennitty hat this wpeech of Proxi- ‘dent Cool{die's should be held to. he etateamayship, and that It whould: oe folemmniy’ recrived beyond the seaz 1s laying Alown the foreign pulley of te Unlted Stste gore decades to come, Ze enovith to thai the ordlnaniy dveent Aiviericdn risen Ao roves TOAST DMankaatving Daya apedlet riod. oF Ghanizeniving Atal, Me, Cowie. 2 ng von ‘eetine to peveate He. St OE sane tng If sil Bane eae Imaveias ula age Riiover wilh ae bec = for en these subjects Gian Me wen trod adivtng sheseampaben. stonmwfie, thie fact remain that Presddent Gaat- line muder tse of Aetstee Day "Lo Annonnee that we are immediately x0 tng to ineveiar the ‘Aumuer uf MLE cruisers 10 the ratt which he thinks fh rishe for us te ninintgin, while we tring sth totem ‘wraddte a that ssa hae_antngeniton of enterins Inco way competition ef aenamentei that thlie arming more seo mint lend the fray tayeari dianehsment, that arm = meats cEuzet" protect. the nation {ror wae, but that ‘ete. the lees We Minit contlte to be arined, hil well armed ned. that swernee #0" antigay “and. res cutlurly constitutes that we may int culeate miitirintle doctrines and. arma tothe tnéth aril yet never bo aniise turkitte! Immediately on top of This, compen the. nw ‘ival program’ of tise muilifatats In. the Navy. Departmen demaniiae y/o ératetfand naw second Tenens, Wax Uiere, ever Reentens hynoerigyt ends = shduniity:? Fortunately, tieto are alfeaty, many rotests agfinst the downright wieter Sec ine solles cree aoe | Postmaster Asks Ban On Odd-Sized Greeters | Fm an-etfort to ise the salt ene rlere duties lighter, Postmaster John 5. Kiieloy announced “an appeal urztng the public to send no small, exfes darge or irrezular sized hollday greet- and New Year holidays” The uso of vords and eivetopes smaller than the mundard slze nects- fon the part of carriers and @@3r portal employees at seaxon when time. Is valuable and the: malla’ rushed, the Pounce aide ne ‘Tho Post OMce shictals obtained. the ‘co-operation of card ‘manpfacturers, The rest. depends upon the .public, it Was sald. Tho {deal sized card for the Pokt Office to handle is approximately three and one-half. by fye,and one- half, indhes.— ge. 2 Fe ne HOMELY PHILOSOPHY | “jadina « taoopsn + i tiooper Se 8. guidier; ‘one who js tile ced sony 10° do ane stare,. to ‘A trooper ;perees ‘whersnes. bs onny be—often far trim the -baitietaint, bq- Rid the cowed ant went “Goure of heme. He sver marelise forward with no hackWard, cernjig, ioftensreeated, Perhaps unwberietend eat -wrosqut- re. werd, Dut be surven wherever Bé:may decwallenty. Are you a treager— ene ter Lh dad ihe elles ok 33 cere ees i a ere rne eS eee EC < ae ck st oe aes Tesco [ie ark cit ellos Beare Sats. 16 aval Cae Hew oe [grosa of. 1hg stamina of ees' who wound a iy ple th oe po Toph ge Dantol oF: ec Mtoier jeated’=” Négrd "te. naually, ti’ eodnd: panven jwhen: © white, pera’ Weites him to/dind, and.be will carry around’ an neh clipping trot ‘s white:paper to ted ai) trende oe Te and fel agerleved bechuue & Negro paper doot nbt-give him a: full column, With ‘bis picture, on the_fent page--Chriatian nee @xmouftage js “helpful; in, war de- couse you are dckling ‘with bnemfen Cumoulage 13 harmtal in business ber Sauno we aie dealing. wih tende=tin {Sécmaking, a tong "Ie vou canna ike felenaa.seitn wo you a busle Tar fun elanpt Lone do padieet= California Voice. Rey er — :. Untottunately for us thal we ae cause ourspycalled teaders are un- tiwosthicde oftheir thine, engray and Intelligence are npeat teying to “At {hind de‘ spent tn selt-agernmdlverent eee ThE “Nezro church hay held itself, nh’ chalitoging all eonlelan, | Bue thts ia had ‘attitude. Any Censure Fatraceea ot chitem yadeva reheat oe Lpap to inane eroune xe Ia [vetons som ot the Rroun. who avail [ewer clic cventoally fall oy. the lwayside, AShumins, regardless of bactivitys, we abe snot Intntble—ri- LtbiaiedinTacorder | frrtnetnne tie, alle ate, gtdater Vihar? men or parties, They endure longer tiem bither, Government must Jinkiere in princinica, whatever the-par- fre eaaiatnsbeingha Hepontins an Honduras Lays Claim | - To Isles Leased-by-U. S. | PEGUCICALBA, Honduran, Nov. 14. Auguine Colle, Foreign Minister of Tomo, wail tn a public statement today that the Govermbein ves. Dye paring: mites aimed 16 detent duran tikhts mot only: Ini several sandal tsiets covered by ahe Nlewrathanseoe lombtan Trevdy but vplry" to Capa Gracione Wie Tie epners the southern point of tho day into site flows tha Coco River forming ihe houkuliry “bevween Tion- urs and Stearate. ‘The Ferien Minglie’s’ annowace- anent game. siwentyetiie hove after ‘Atiredo Treio Casihito, a former Une stor Scoretary_of Foreign _Affaien, bad ihe keys of Roneador, Quita, Suenes nd otter small fstamts tn. tele vie inky elone to Meaturse, shih Tne.treaty betwncy Niearazea sn Coe Tonia stated tha thse hats of ena wetw in ithgation etaceen Colambia fond tikes Wnlted Stati They se hhesiy. 200 milex af tie Neewwaruan coast, BR wee rol for Hishthoure ste Hons bs the United Stier under tenso finn Coton. “The treats also save" reerhlion to Ntearana’n mverrinnty ever the Sos- aquito eermt snd tea eying keys, Chapa Gracin Dinw'is the nethosnmest part Choosing ‘a President J This vers elvetion emphasized to Tan untieasl degree the disparkp that | ming exist” tetween “the electoral snd | novmtar vote of etnuldate under ote Heriot goothog wf elinoeinys A Brest lant. dtoover resolved ft electoral {Novo toy Sig’ A, Due aR tbs dane jar The Nation went to press Hoover's [Donutas, ote ind seuchos amon 2 00.009 ana Smttny not fae trom 28 eao.soe. ‘Thus Smithpreceiv#i only’ 16 er ene" “THe electoral” Vote but About 49, per eent of the poplar vote, Tn & cabinet system of ‘government such ia prevalis in Europe, Sinlth would bora gprver ax tho leader of the ‘opposition frkhe.national legislature — eke eine patina Atak, Sullivan writes _that_i¢ Hoover, had received 275,000 nore vote "eco=" way," he -would havo carried every State, ‘To whieh the ‘New York World retores that ff Smith had recelved 364 G06 more votes geographically dine tributed In tho eight way, he would have won the election, Smith had.a lead of.55.000 aver Heover-tn the come ined ote of: the: largest fourteen celtics,” New. York, Newagke, oston, Cherelany!, “St Lowik and—san Frans €lsco went for, Smith; Baltimore, But- falo, Phiindeiphin, Plteaburgh, Cinein~ ath {Detroll, Chicago, and Low aqme’ cleo preferred Hoover, Great Medical Finds .. Not Really Medicines ATLANTA, Ge,~Nov, 11.-The two ‘most important medical disopverioa” in ‘& decade, ingilla age liver extract put Rot strictly remedies tn'the sense that medicines are uavally whdersteod. "wth clasatfication of ‘these two at te {oP ot thw tenons manaing Be by-De Riste P, Joalta; clinieg) profewat medline at Harvard Untverstty.. the Sean tetas inte Sor Ghee ton of pafrlciane, sittce Seth WMongots $=u_apparemty’ the cenit: of: fm dey TARE ETEK I Tad WAY BOC DO eat may hive & ormal opth of Aids th sotto << thos adtbotions 1 toe-fpum- $e ore peed reper, Ce Rh ae hat eae ae ae rT a SA AE aos panieleinatn Se a ae ee adap peters aaa Tae GARE Wick koe Seis Gipcryy ee af ae pers herhrropnitir tester eeremgenieel RS ick arene Ait Se aoe * pare ie eed tele tad Ot ce Centimeter ene ree: Gn BE bet $] Rrseionn $0 ifa ee tien wceipa fo és hve. ‘peng oe ik eo Ange a would tree that section: trom Its post. —Selinity etre at the Reputrroan Parry nae aati disc winnisg we pak eee - pérmit. Ie to..epltt. normatty ‘3m eepnomic or political’ ‘isugy hes semed’ the: most desirable eet Y Qappenings, For the-dead dand of he party government and: race, prejudice somblned has thwarted or delayed un- Sonsclonably the Intellectual) “social, moral and ttustriat development of the South, ~That-the smashing of this solldarity should now havecome about through & narrow passion TH prohibi- Uon, through an outburst of sectarlan- tam'and of bigotry f@ the frony' of fate. None tho less the reat fact. Is there: the Solid South fs broken at last, A precedent { entabilshed of enormous Importance to the whole country. What haa deen done gnce can be done wxain. enpectally when It, appears eventually that the revolt of Texas, Floridiy, ‘VirZ ginia add North, Carolina willknot mean the soming of Negro’ domjnation or any o€ the other buggpbos by using whieh thevaverage Soghieen polltltan hus talked himself’ into office. Plainty, . Governor. Smith broweht about thie hatacteal hapnentng and not Herbert Moover.; “The Haun. .vaiea ogainat ths Goveciet SPN YOR ‘ated not for Mr, Hoover. “Reyorkt quvstinn tha “indtives: Were mfxed, and, tt Is equaily-clear thet {t wil never Ve pox- sible to assign to cach*one of those mOUNes Its -exact pereentitizes Of re= sponsibility... One Democratic county committee in Florida which voted not to support Governor Smith did so: solely" because he bid diayowed the Qos pak He esd patient solemnly recorded “its baller spat, the Governor had abandoned ie Demo- cratic Party and that therefore Joyal Demerats were justified in otlnis for sémebody cles, The appeal of thé lushops, headed by James Cannon, for votes against Smith becuse he was & wer-wasemectiven-hrredesree, But dread Of the Pope, the” bixetry ‘of the undameutalisis and” the generatly narrow Folistons tiews of that section sorb even ite effertive in been: the Folkd South-that there wore other eSailuttery causes te obvious, ‘There we KoW Whole commanithes In*Piorkda tnd “oKewhore maite gin of Northern | peupie. dia Georgia, in Nertly Carogina, | no MtSaria. in fet all through the | $4, thesindestriel docolopment has 2 oy eoemens, Bis, mannitned ers ish manaea of ratlis and factories | Imdemany of thet, enrplofac have be ee | OT TE Dep ce ae ow je Et ae St te RS te Go OS ge a? PAPA SES pe BP EPG the ee to Ue to Any. * | Business House _ < That's) 51 nM harapticon WS Advertises Wisely | : | So muct: money’ ean be thrown away | Shoe cise | | Therefore alwidys seok tho qurest | Seatare jremes tue ame ae BY ainecl aaeertieers omipements | ar Steeiconde te tie buble fr | Shee eneronee | Your Advertisement | / When placed th a Newspaper such | : ame | ’ = | NEGRO WORLD ‘A. pager that’ fr rend by an Intére assted buyer pnd-taken_tnto-the home, Se tr caine aoe Me etscte a vending fobllo oF one ao We want you to get to our readers, las Negro World ‘venders Duy from fue Wortaivnins ‘Therefore place’ your “ad copy” with Peraetne ea “We feel euré tat it you a0. this you Tesh sisson da menee Soe 3 Siint wan es tas wisee savenen: | ‘The Negro World is one of the lead- ¢ ing mail-order pullers published .in "Amenian’and read by every, group. Our Circulation te > 4 NATIONAL .*. Have, your Holiday Goods or what- Sat ou hare t0 ool ised Jn our medium. Write in for dur holiday savertising ratea. ‘De not put tt off- Write us at-once, for.every day counts, a | Toure fee-soocten, » 5 -_ HAROLD-G. SALTUS. 162. West 130th Servet ot New Yorks Cty A rere at at TT he | apeienormieenintien te nia EM hes ini 2, ee heh aeherie Mae sek Seriaeen asc ere oie {see mctaramigtitgns saat Gin bwmseonia Hains ote oad: Houston ite bistorto tari® yoke ley: * The. South. ls'’changing, and. {t ‘WOT continve to Shanae_aw Wt Sncpeaaes Peaiearcen.. r¥: furtise® aevelineds 6b capital: poure into. that sécttan’ Ffpally, tt’ fw beyond question that, more: Ne- groes voted In this eléctipn than’ have been, glowed to vote for aume time past, and they generally voted.for the Republicans. it fu-a significant tact, ao, that the States ,in the. South which remained true to Democracy were thoso in which the Negroes are se-numerioad superiority. : Now tt ls, of course, possible that the break-up -of the’ South may help to ffisten upon us’ the one-party wile of the Regubliicine. That chance we must ‘run--Just, ay we have to face the vne- party allegiancé.of. Maint, New Hamp- xbire and Vermont, a olf, block of Republicanism. that should eso. be brpken" uy.’ IC a riew awirty does not divide the South and New Engtand. op genuine politicat or-economte-Issues-the Republican Party ts more und more likely-to proft. Not that we delieve that the four revolting States have lett Uo Demusratie ford for Kvod, Not tn the: Teast. But the "breie-wil come swath ise “Shall caitia Chavis Bites leaving thé Democrats .because people worens -theysthink und nut:-beeagoe of UINgiLHo UR ag AMER Toaer that InteR marridee "ahd social equality with the Negroes” will folloyy’ the day: ater at Sure Wnts the Republican coltimn, As-for the Negep, we wre sure that he will prot by the hinge. Glven genu- ine durtles batween. two parties over, real Issues and mgie und more Ne- rors yill be ankéd to vote. Even SNOW this prove nor-TO" be the~exwe- it’ will be of enormouy benent to them if the habit of the ‘Tillmanx and 1tet- iin¥ of riding inte aflieo solely on the backs 6f tie Negroes ty .ended. AL ready.-tho dispatches repdrt that Mr, Hoover contemplives entrely-reorgast- ting thy Republican Party, in the, South, ‘That is an slmirable objective. It-ts sty Fall of crooks, black and white, font of mere Job -mecker's sux. any party” could possibly he.” Usually itis a, scandal and a Mtyraces. Tt" he, can bring it about that hq tine amen’ arid | semen hy the South Whore at heart Henblieaha vote and avt ax auel he | wilt confer w-areat benelt uyen the | wiinahe: commutes: "Bi i Ben. Davis, of Georgia, Finds Pelitics Expensive ATLANTA, Nev. 17.-iten Davis Negro Republican leader of Georgia “innduriect, tila that nnder sno’ eie- eummsners would he be a candidate Yor weeiection an Repubilern National Comauttwemai und that hdrenfter Re- Iyilioan stale i this etate would be condurted by white loaders, Fie maa Knnonce;nent. fostow- ing -an Kacentive session of the so- eatled Davis {action of the Repstitican suite centrad camnites, at whieh a Pesoligion wetadepted Feusmendiag to the Republican Nationa? Committee that .G, F. Funders, of Swatnzhove, be named “mpteual commiitterman and Mre. Chara A, Verneyco? Athens nas Hora? commitieewotican, a8 Biavix sald he “would have nothin to do with the’ étrtinuttons af queteon- sige In he State" He walk retains htt position as scevetary, Of the Ihubthe can, state central eummifitee for! the tape bens, However, We waid.~ 1e aye sured of the eusting of Genre and Hairis” (Gemacrmpic Senators), he waid, an@ wad unahle te stand the “inaneigl duin"0% polittes. -BEAUTIFOL NEGRO BOLLS Seana ah nates er mae sat eh pa ge eae : Gen a ao Soe Lae | ee i ‘aes hs one! ee : . BeBe py a ye eco a Seen ‘ Qiag 7. : Pe... a) TEM. iy eed ities ak Meeping se i eetugestececeeees 2D eae Rb sisal areca % Beautifol Art Negro Calendars: 30 CORREA Ria et heheh betere see ok | ART. NOVELTY COMPANY é 4 Broadhurst Ave. | |. Dept. W, New York City . FEE ey eel ‘ly $e pq Cevenat, OC Lea) ft eee a Se AG ee eae a a eae Dah ROTI: Moye ne tan iy meee ae Oe Welas waane tos Diem eed sae ad Pea AL ase eI chin Bat a a Far ve declared youteiday, ‘throukh ‘the ‘local Srekpionticn: fy “Chink Famine Reltet: eS ie ee tip deci Ohrid 2), nd tina vee ‘is. teported by some soutera hgre: - * “Many ‘thousinds atitea ‘thelr. thin ixcuel of kaftir, cory with chaff: eaves. oF Dark: by". way of celebrating the Harvést Festival,” he said. “Tho aus tunin-crope lave béen almost a com- plete failure” «=. * oO All Fields Raked Clean ‘He told of Mniting flelds “raked and awept aa clean: of leaves an a dance floor” by, ravenous gleanery who could rast,” iverything whiéh cannot ‘be ere eins ie secise auntie Go ter months, he sald, and in some sec: | (ions éven,'there provisionn wilt. have disappeared long’ before the harvest~ $nigot another crops The latest omicinl reports feom the Poking heudquartersy 6f, tho Chink In- terndtinnal Famine Reteg, Commission ‘tate that In all there are new thirteen provinces_in. China In_gehich famine conditions are known ‘to exist tnt varl- Que arcax, THE four ATER OF THe TFOT™ inces--named 1s 1,100,000 square miles. amd-the combined popwiation Ja,almost twee ae great ay that of the United States, including sher insiilar possess stuns. : "5,000,000 May. Die +s Betimates. made. by “ie commission | show thitt 5,000,000 mily, dle. this winter for lack of food unless ali is given: John Earl Baker, who recently re- nirnedt-to-Nene-Forke-fioithetsfiay-where, ho mide,a clone. survey aie*zie -copre- gentat{ve of the American organlan- Won for Chinu faming ‘relief, declared that one-tenth of the people in went= ern ‘Shantung and “xoutherv. Chibli were In:“an advanced stats of starve ton, sores, wetus ana relapalag General Feng Yu-hslang, vive-prest- dont and minister of war of Gre cn | noite. gayernmont, declayed revently thyoukh tho famine relict organtzn-, Gon’, thit never fm the leat thtty year iad the proviness of Shens! snd Kons, suflered from? xo severe’ drouth “as Mat which Visited them Inst year. ' s * Pon’t Get : . . it Bladder Weakness, Often Mistaken For Kidney Trouble, Quickly | Relieved by Wonderful e¢ New Treatment, aid You Sleep ih Confort Trial Treatment FREE crear ey a a aa ale wand wees eaMerve to Ue ae 3 ela soba Rivenerous Fiat itentment ire tac mit whe | INGE Riche UA" hear at men tn uke ite Houle rtinde these hive Peal henett feats He Se ies ss in Ths Mei 1 yon ave REN sae tainie. Sour Taudonss are Seukeiae 36 thie eitation th Ener wieatee Ee Mobaines tne trea tial treatment urine sou aieh” wonmareal rghce "Sow Fae Eo ae amt me naurees ‘on coupon veiw. Done delay tte dee ae” abet Seepear nese, Berks Seeth, ther ax, Mail coupe now. FT, HeWet hy | EREE.IRTAT, COUPON Boke MeWethy, 00 i EAM! Michigan Aves Marchal, aiten, Weoskatts G83 Yentagion of ia SMC. GW aracrencnensitiasnic Heblencieentnes 66 NAF ng Be PF Wash” Away Your Eczema! Stop Itching in One ‘Hour Aastnihg,, watringent Tiaulés, katun. ad reer sie teen ne eee a aiernes becscribe It.” GUIYEMKS0@:to-etre-promyt Tae panties Fh corti coBie pouane) AREOL CO.@CHATHAM, N. J. Mme..E. M. Collins + Typit - amet cea 210 FIFTH-AVENUE . fa Tate Heer Reer NW FOUR CrrT, Siegneeae white, 4 ite ter. "ase Sree ee Se She Modern Beauty ° tse ad T= C4 x ‘a os a _ ff + SE & H . oe Pa ey Tn > i. : ‘Ss “ae Aa fr . . = , * . : (Nan: so h, & Sa . 3 oO IAN Pn ZN ens ° x ey 7 2 oan ‘ / ae B : < * we ~ © Be lS bee A sssrardiote TP WW N 7 = ne 3 SE WS) : ee 7 DO" a ae is = “SO? - , # : 3 Wr we a : ~a—- Here is the dainty bux of Lace powdds that smart wothen of today | ~. .. term “the modern beauty “aid’—because it combines so many make-up — ~ ~ < features in one! — : * hess . = - ‘Soft and fluffy, Black and White Face Powder'smooths on perfectly, - ~~=7 lings through all kinds of weather and activity, and actually refinesthe . - : texture of your skin. ' The correct choice’ from its five glowing tints will“ lend a new beauty:to your complexion, a new brillianceto your type...» =) Deyittoday? 9 Fo Lo — -BLACK=®WHITE - EXQG@IJIFELY TEXTURED Ree reer eee Cars ee Reh: Se RN Gee See mee pe pee rete Meas Ree toe ‘epee: capt ire Seamed x Baie! Bettipt ape perce at bran te s Ee rere eparo Sst ATi tenes ee ee eee fused to execyte AN the’ lercothific ‘or- éra is supptiors. thought necersary.to cow’. the: population’: ‘of - conquered GM a Se es Fok a. century “ite ‘piaturee, ‘re: | Fialnel® in ‘the. Hagiin family, byt were sold fast’ Year “bythe: General's grand ‘nieos,’ -Madame: Glovanont “and naye Sust’ been Bought |by the MantersSArt “Gallery “Or New York.” They “have deen valued’ at $1,000.00 by a -xroup of experts, including Dr..W. X. Rakint of Petrograd, Desparmet Fitz-Gerald, the Sphnish. art authority. and Henri Gerver, one. of the French, .Gévern- nfint's appraisers, : Glass-Like Substance 1° Made ta Laboratory «. ‘::: LIVERPOOL, Nov.. 1f--A “frat coteig of glass” bas been produced in the lngratorien of the Liverpool "Uni- versie : : It has been -named plass and fe « cBibinution of. formilldy Wit ure, heated with ‘néld to produce # thick syrup, which harden into « subsininee with al] Ge outward appearance of slid,” Te may be moulded~cut or turngd ike a piece vf woud. ~ __ By anuther* process Y ix reduced to Powder, then preavea hoqraunicany To prodivce. an-opaquesubsiancs which can bo given any derired ‘color. ; In either form pluxs is said™-to ‘he non-breukible and noiriwlsnrey* > It ts. wtld_to ave properties of -d- migting -Ultra ‘violet ue” and tis phane i undeniinvertiizition.< -— | Plage incbased. oFifan invention by Dr, Fritz PoilidecAuntriai elvgnter, and producet tis. Prot. K..C. jak and tis won, ward J, Ralwe ~ - eee Se ao oe ae 8 5 5 ER: EG 2 eee ee ssa Co a eae CARES AV ch toe RN Seo th, OEP ORORE Reo Ng: He Keren ets: Aulhpd 2 temas aha 100 AG ANG Gaver Sear shat Tobe gaa ree Mlsiint utecsten tegen aviv deday et masitlon 52) EE ie " Broh{vftion. wal onthe baTlot In the Korm#f-a-reterenihiny- ae io-wheiher-s¢ shauil®: (be: continued —orimhother- a HeenBing~syatem ‘should bs adopted. The. Vote:-sae’ Gvereboloing. against cominoance: of Prottibition.."'s ,< A few United Party. under the lead~ erahip of. ‘Sir. Jepeph- Ward, made, 4s: debut’ by ‘gaining sents from Premier Coates’. party ail over the Domidlon.” The? fina) ‘standing “by ‘parttes was: Government, 28;, Untied Party, 26) Labor, 2; Indepetident.. 6. ‘S Pont of the. Instependenty ave, op- pored ty the.Guvernment. ‘Che. Pre mier's’ plirtyefalléd to qin xeaingle wat. Te held fifty-three Ui thé eighty wath in the=last Parliament... “The new Uhited Party .¢ ines moed to the Reforan und Labor: Pare Three Ministers lost their seats, ‘| ). Melgod, Minister of Lind: 0: J | Jawken Minister of Agiculture, and’ | Fe aléston, Ministee’ of Juatiee..f Per-Capita Cash-$40.46; - Cut from $53.01 in 1920 WASHINGTON, Nov, 18¥.- Inthe £4,807,526,485_in_meney_in_circulation. “or F0.iGy per capha of the bstinated UI or seat Ge eet hut om shat date. fycures were ame nounced today by the Treasury, ‘he eireulgtionestatcment Showed ntewly fll ih he pet capita enrreney (ctlalupsncesteteber, 1920, on: BiG Hated to F501" ver “iyernan, Dasist year, dustin Wetober the persedpit cltculntion was $42. ¢SSta. SRE ee Oe at e 2 renee meee SD eee — Ai iene mOReY CAN- BUY dhgieraea selina AQ. aspirin world ford ‘DELICATELY FRAGRAME, oy Statehood for Porto Rico " BANSIEAN, P_R—Amendment te cha ‘Gendttintign Ob: tue, Cnnieg. RUACe ty provide for the creation’ and. admix- sion of ‘oversens states te the inain padi oh tie gealorow of aerallentn Moya Dayilia In collaboration with ceve eaten Ente ane. tHITES eye, ere vers ‘of the-present House gf Repre- sentativen of the Island. ig “A Ul providing TSF overseas states cxner:Towner._while—he was _spill_a . Admission of Porto Tico as a spevtal slate, under (iis amendment, would harmonize, according to ‘the Alumna, TINder te Meio aibeotinent i xikat nenstors Saul representatives. to other rational laws would riot be en- forced here unless ratified-by the local festelature. . . Meantwhilo a temporary siatua te nought which would give Porto “Rico the right to frame ttn.own conatitution, ‘Tho platform points out, among other thinggA&that the admission of Porto Ricovas a regular state would mean seven ‘congressmen, “P . SEE Ee Cuban Reformers Call Death. Penalty Futile HAVANA.—Two; powerful’ adcietien havo Inunched a campytgt. to. abolish capRat puenishment InCuba. ‘The-re- tently: cretted International Péntteit= Vary Gross Federation and the Cuban Louniie Agivint Capital” Pantshnene have Joined forces to Hght,what they ell “oftletar anurder." toon In u otter to Vresident Slachndo the argument ‘in advunced that toclat re~ kenevation In Cubs Haw ventered death sentences itapfacttcal and obsolete. ‘The soclotics are keine dirested by"J. H. Carpeda, a hoted Spanish ‘penolog~ ha é EAE SN Tee Meg, NR CM ae Sg OT en 2: ape ae Li f eee Oe ee EOE SS OT iy co ha oh ats aA eae ene Ca cathe Lol deta NSD anmacamaee ipso Na a eat Pe a See >it) a arian errs acotae Ss SO ES Sa DG Tes natin rs Se ee Se ee ee ee eae er Per ee rane eee CG a i ae eer eS “ALC tC AAT AE en oe es ee ee | ema ee were eres ms THE NEWS. AND © FIC Vy ae 8) RE Te OR eseielieresreNOR es ed ee eae ee ak IN? VAR WD AE Uk + Ge Fe TVISIOiNS - - VIEW). VE UL INCL A. BAVIGIUINS... ee NR 7 Re ee a a eS EADERS. ARE REQUESTED TQ MENTION THE NEGRO: WORED WHEN REPLYING _TO~ ADVERTIS: |. Me -Dolls! Dolls!! Dolls!! Pa World's Prettiest Unbreakable fs 4 F : 5 RR 7 Regto Dotls > fi By THEY WALK, TALK AND SLEEP Y FE Recent, Gat SAE ARN gta SoM. Viekiy lig oa ead ta yg tita nd he Pr) x Ns eer a Tee ewe aceonge hh hex St ee tT ay rp ep od PAE «| ossteuctecameease cuetaas FRO ees Ei tie Me eete ama » 84 ah Une Beas can etn Sb iB 2 RUBRS Rout tthe, ahem that eras Loe 5 ES Slee Sab Ng. Sabet BeMctn dal “te grove See eee K sav thas Ferd ie ent ow BES, BPE Sn TARR STE ‘eaters eee eT Meta tetas : sone RGLING Bhper -NNU SALES €CO, + : Ew YORE OFT NNR CATALOGUE =”. amuagutan oo routers of thle paper = _p Sanday: atterngon, November ¢; the “Oniversar” Negro ThpRivement Asso: cfation, ANoting at the Gideon Hall ‘pasa i coeanies to the ‘black ‘women ‘Mie [Lule Bryant,’ lwdy president, -acjed sa general ‘chairmen and mie- (rose of ceremonies, Mrs. Lula, Smiitb ‘spoke frat, ‘The, Honorable Marcu Garvey'e latest thensage was “read punctuated with applavse-at the end of nearly every: sentence, A solo was Fendered. Mrs. Hansey Pope conigient- eq briefly on the statement: “Let him that has ey¥s and ears xce and hear.” Mrs, Mary Shepherd's adgress brought Teom her audience an enthusiastic re ‘Sponse in prolonged epplaule: Mra Janlo Evane: gave a short feetenony. “Rnothér- well -timed-addreae-wae-giv0n by Mrs, Baran Sytton; solo by Bre Baite;, auet, by Mr. ung Mra J. R. Davis, Rev: I. B. Boykins told how well heawas A@pressed with. what he had heard and seen, His addeess, wan Kreatly appreciated by everyone? Mra, Bryan cen toi he neeton te come’and yt ua some mare of what he Knows about us ax a race. She wax Introduced “by Secretary Hervant tp sing. a Presiaent Hayes, who, after TEM Commending, Rev. RoSkins, anounced that ee, Grlinex- Bas Jivited this dt= Vinton to, hold. its meeting this ehurch on the Gir Sunday: day No~ vember. * TAs A mark of yoxpeét to the Hon, STs Bovkinn It as unanimously de= cided to wership with: him “on “that rent Wolday, Thonkussiting. Me. Code ‘Mumford’ Uited the ‘offering. * maifter the oyirt_of the ‘receipts of Thevevening wan heard, and Oup MOTT Fepeated, we were dismissed by the Sari ne = pense TORONTO, CANADA . ais Peroni Division Hel thn ete far masa meeting Sunday, Noyember TH, Themecting opened eth the Pies tng atthe ges Prom Grocntan's Tey Sfountotna,"*follmred by, raver” nd seriprtre Inve by the chaplain fran page of The Noord. Work see Feud uy the ten, vtetepeeativnt. Tho Trang sehich wane flip we contucted by Mrs, Henwick: reitas tions flan Allon Clashes “3 Mother Tau, Afric" plano ol Sila Pang hha abe se Fo iam shee those at Sex": recitation, esr inana Brchey, “The Hone owe": Feetation by alte Doroihy Simmonat Feettatin he Mita Duris Daleyy 30 Shows peetlaton, title Amy Coury Fostation, Sse Atay Repay gn, Outi Stmumain op Appearing wale o¢ Aupeinia ued A. bier ovte fine ot hit mutica Mey eletion By ths chute aecprewigent fave ¥eXy Nec ARIRe nia eoetnee ouMiecss a ths cutee atte wean Eien Bh Sesion, netetsegs Phe amet Seah ith tun nagiog of pe, Sar °S wcte ate Reporter Asthina Had. Bim ‘ Thole Hel : . Choking, Helpless Was Desncrate, But Soon, “Found Wan Desneeate, Gut Soon, “Found * _Despondent sufferers from aathmnn oF pronehiat trouble wil he glad to read Raw sith wean leet Peataret to AEs Eiehome polar Seog pitore avenue, Se hyo Ao “Tios wetter enahe aah clneea en net tint ek wees aaa in or etna aed Mosinee La at free ‘Crom nathan, datthnda tthe beter font tatbine, Se Se erage totes hee ete Meet ANSE Exicent wade astute "ne ats inites taormation mint. Gheny esrdren. with Sera Settee Mchictae ec, FA cee to ate, ire Sootiat, “Segui else Sue whete hice nome ‘AN OPPORTUNITY dicsomaeae net, ong neve Ehere aeiiet_ renarations. ‘nonpn. perfumes, ERetadte Uae ee ee NOR ede ator meat Sf tole siticien ever 2 yete tor Parteatans YIVI PRODUCTS COMPANY iz Nee Sane S05 = - Phone Marlow @i0" s+ : CRACIRO. CR On Bunéay, November 4, at $'p. ‘m. 4 most-onoxable-svening. was spent ‘An. enthuslastic masa meeting under Aka, auspices of the La Afyics, Branch pt the, uN. 1. A. ip-the Guactme, Bap: fiat” Gheveh, celebrating Garvey Day. ‘The Ball was crowded with’ saembers frlonda and ‘well wishers.. The episit.of the audience ran bigh. wid enthual- asm. Assisting the President, Mr. F. |Barnes, was his son, Mr. J.© Barnes, ‘ex-Prosident ‘from- Mexico. ‘The pro- gqzotonal’ hymn, “Shine “On, Eternal Light.” followed the opening ode, “From Greentand’s Iey Mountains.” with read- ing from the Ritual. Mr. J. Barnes actifig as Chaplain, conducted the rit- Uuallatlc part of the service. ‘At the élose of the spiritual part of ho meeting the programa was turnéd ‘over to" the- President: Me-R—Pames who. mado the opening. remarks and Introduced Mt, J, acres ad airman tor the ovening. “Ho made an inter- esting talk, B°Garvey Day-and com ducted. the “prokram. as follows: "Anthem by the chale: welcome ad arews-by_seeretary: recitation by Miss 1, Young: ‘address by Me. Re Cyrus: -Fendition by the choir; address by Mr. P.Young: recitatBn' by Mina L. Will fama; anthem by the choir: addrens by Mr. R. Held: recitation by Mlsé Le arena by Mr. E. Coltri: recitation by ‘Minn 1, Siack:. rendition by the chotr:. Ficitatiow by: Mina Le Haughton: aelee ton bythe ehotr; recitation ty Migw B Eawards; rendition by, the choie; "eel, tation by Miss R. Morgan,» The'chairman made the tloxing yo~ myarkie and the meetings cloned with the Ethtoplan. National Asthem and the Doxology. We desire to extend thanks tS. Lester ana Stn Ve etgittor- “thelr cwlitine heliywone- orf, AW. B. LEWIS, . ‘Hheperias.. SETA, isn meeting on Sunday afternoon, November], st 3:30 p.m. ‘The meet- Rest viee-preatdent. “Seripture. tesion was read by -Mr. Allan Stokes, our president, Mra, Mararet Giron, who conducted the ‘atternoon’s. préxeam. = x BALTIMORE, - MD. Tho South Pattimore Chapter held Ais renglar meetioye on Sunday, with the .yetsident Me KR. Smith, In. the chati, We opened fy: singinie “Prom Greeniands Jey» Mountains” «he ‘chaplain, Mr. Byrd, ennducted the re- Ustous exercise, The presidant “dellvered the open Inge addrens. The proprani Wout oi fol lowe: ‘The exeiudy president. of. the Piiadeiphig, Diviaén,, Mra. Johnsen braved for "iw gare af the enarable Marcus Gazvey while ho it on the raw on his’ way Inek- home. Mr. Me- Keo yave a wofuertul adesn Me Camel wan the next sbenkeer. Ie Rave A very tnterenting tak, MF. Cousl and Sar Jegaings iso spoke, . Attor the offering was FabiGd, Ma. Johnnon vend the fest paRo of “Tho Negro Wort SIF —ainoy wae—Tne next sneaker. ‘The vice-president, Mr. Givens, gave a very Interesting ,tall Tho lady: president, ra, Ada’L. Bria- coo, encouraged. the Women. 0 Join ie “Bnei 7 Gross—nursee,—The~ptal— dont gave the clasing romurks. Wo closed by. singing, "God Bless Our President.” : A. SMITH, Reporter. _ + In the State of New Jersey. é ‘Pre tbe’, pata conference to be {veld at Liberty Fall, RSs ‘Broome Street, Newark, New Jersey, Thursday and Friday,-November » and- -39.-—Plans. formulated bythe ‘Honorable “Marcus Garvey at the recent confereace in Toronto will:be dis- ‘cussed at business meetings. “On each of. these nights ‘mass meetings will be held to which the public a CHARLES L. JAM! | High Commissioner of the State of New Jersey.” * —— OLD-HARBOUR.-C_ RICA. | COLUMBUS; OHIO. ‘Sunday aftegnoon, November 4. macked andther event in the annals of the history .of the New Negro. Ae Tt RT Carvey -Dayr-a-peatal-prosram fan prepared by Prot. . VW. Roper, cholrmasters—-Precively.t-2:30 p.m. the ‘xavel wak sounded by:the prerl- dent, Mr D. A. Shergold, ahd the ehip- Jain, Cob..C. A. FL Buchanan, conducted tho usual, ritvalletic rites brley., The cd over to the preal- dent, who, on account of his physica condition, wax Unable to do much. ‘The rat view president, Me. Joseph John- ron, acted 1s chairman for the balance rot the evening. Ile gstve-a-brlef. nd rdrcex tn" u. soothing’ and—encourasing manned. ‘The progeam was an follow: Opening: song? "Happy Greeting": the choir; reeltutlony <"Wietory In Near.” Mader V. Myrio: reoltation, “Courage,” Mia A. Myrio: reéltation, “Afrlea. Ts Calling,” 0, Patterson; anthem:" the chotr; select reading fro the "Phllos- opliy and Opinions of Home Marcus Garvey," Ming E. Patterson: recltation, "Re Detérmined;” Mise Mary Exelb: nola_and chorit, “Beautitul” Land,” Misw Wild MeKonele asd cote: éel- tation, “True Nobility,” tis, Me- Nith: omg, “Keep Cool;" Prof, ‘F. U. Roper: Feeltation, “Black Man,” Nas~ er Clay Myrlo: wong. “The Immortal King" the cholr; address, “Back to Atclea.” Mist R. Patterson; reeltatlon, “Land of Peace,” Entello Angus; ronK, “Sweet. “Sabbath ~ Bells.” -the-mebuie Reaiing of front riage Nexsage tn Tite Negra World vf, October 13, 1928, by the fivet view president wits ‘followed by aiahort conimentary by the second vice provident, Mr. Ferdinand Pattor~ son, who commented on the past and prosen great condition of tho Bren dente “Sin. Patterson Was followed: bY tho president, who delivered an’ inter enting siddress in his unual éaptivating manner. He -bado.Ro0d-bye, to the members for « short time whtle he goes assay to Ferain his health." “Phe mecting cloved in the usual ssaniane. © A BUCRTANAN, Reporter NEW YORK, N.Y: ‘Mr. G. Di Scott, second vice prextdent tive And: hew-out. spatitway for ie EM. GeGLINS, Mpnortor! ABabyin ~ sore Goud Blerppeiemene You Con Try ff Sree: (Cees a 5 - oe | Pees fp. ony ee rN os ‘ . a= 2 =~ 2 {an sce bose Bat et ee a ee: ‘BABY MIDDEETON Hiunatoda ot married women, <pild- ret Tor oat anddeniy. AB, them weied in ninter st iho meat Die Mintefpation, "dus. ¢ ‘he "tntuenee ot a eeceere ment ‘Sonturdal pesscr(es one Stre" Aone ste Sttadiatans Glen: Ones A ee rtea: eA ho lene hae Dr Bier nreacripton can’ ao To nad jommed=theshe baby and ewe Foren tooK a tix woah treats ont Bhd. nin wet nave “tne tany Bs Bey so cighiecr month eet ayant words fo covets mare wae thia riedicine haw done for_nje.” Ey- ty. faneried’ cote: who” teally ~want Rhiaren ahouia at’ once write: to tne Soclor "and got ‘a fee rial of hie pesscriotion Scowcther smiths bia ‘ine Seite So ors inatuetin, er Your" convenience’ fil" out as colpen your convenience Ait ‘out th <<: SEPM. COUPSN: “pe at wa meee BE-y wutnuer Bila, oe Toasphy we oe, te wes Jet Sache ite fer poate SES eree t nsion ton tor pot or BB DecbsersivesesesessconTensers COLUMBUS; OHIO | “Sunday, November 4, was celebrated ‘as_Garyéy Day. ‘Tho vecasion was made. more ‘Feallstic-than ever to the Jud Decauss of the fact that oUF In- Hdomitehieieadée was. Jupt across the border—in Canada, meeting with ob- utructlona’ from the enemtes of Nogro freedom. A apéctal devotional service was carried out in’ the ‘early part of The days proceodinge AEF Ue OpeA Ing odo wan sung prayer was oftered Sy Mes. Lule Crowell for: the vinéles Mion of the “Hon! Marc's Garvey In FEanaida. Another: soni Was “rendered ata ah earricat prayer wan offered by the Prosideny Mr. G. RO” Chietattan, pking God to protect, lend xnd’ en- courage our great leader through the many setback that beset Us In our fikdt for naslomhoo, Addresnen sero Jtellvered by. noveral members. and & very earnest mecting was brought to a close ir the singing of tho Ethiopian ‘Anehom. : i : _. Sunday, Noveinber 11, “the Garvey Club turned out In full force. Many Vinltore ‘wore present anda aay. £9 of food things trom the found) of Gar- voylam was spent. ‘Tho mecting was ene! t0 ordar ut 3.45 p.m. The Preal= dentate. GR Chrlatlan, presided. Tho, dovetlonal exerelars were carried through in tho usual manner, | ‘The members “wore thelr—rersHa—whleht twat’a fentive touch to the audience, ‘Tho presieot delivered "nm atirring adazens, touching on tho tncldost tela= Live-to our leader in Canada. ‘The, next number wax a song Jed by Mee. Lulu Crowell, which wan fervently sung by tho consregition, who entered fully Into.tho fecling of the occasion. ‘The first speaker was" Mn Rost Crowell father and trdatee of the Garvey Club, Tho next was Mes. 3illlo Johnson, Lally President. A song. was followed by & warm speech. by Mew, Luly Cro- well, Tho next speaker" was Mita, Ror seita, Bell, ne’ of our now members. wr, & F.-Gumm, our treasurer, was followed by. Me. William Washington. A thin point Say Bokaron, a vito, was Inteodueed ang she made 2 Yow remain hae were well recelvea, Other speakers inchaded Mea, Martha Sohnnon, ates. Ben Akin, Mee, Lena Meyern Mire, Fannto Hunt, and tr. WW. Mf. Nokanon, he eluty haw Stated to male pren= {rations te bo repreavnted at tite next converition in _Jamatca—1929. GOR CHRISTIAN, , ® Reporter. toorer SUFFER WITH. il Bysr’s Direct Treatment Yo wraeasy | 1 Gi haa. Toaneee ‘ || eee BREE | | 4 S gosmienne? Siten on areenciely sated whe jog are | | EE Boras |_| paxdenicK DYER CO., Butte 10% Brew 4 pease ren sata meee | nets Cam 2 NCR cocci e a Gema iciee ee ieee Heats Bure oe: ETA near, Ct ace yt mney a Lenox Printing Co. 2870 Seventh Avenue _ SRE OR AT Becta Shee Fexoaesaa Yomtaaeg betes Seem tor Price $3.00 -- "Christmas Cheer ie Sheer meg Soreiccne sees ses Be FAN DARD ow ae toe | ie estate mE rv ATT CS Saeed oa ei oer ox SIGE E I Ie: On % iW D> oT zeal Ce SoM wo Lael ee oe Ee S/O Bee Ny OQ. tae SO SS || BEER i) Ga: ; OC ZS hig | \ea\ 20 5/27 bse) ne : Sa 2) ial 2a : 5 = Have Yous lried It7 at A a5 a. i. oe Soo ee Rss Sa ae = ‘Thin 11h, vegetable tonic contains a : rarer cent 4 Soasroee 3 pa fener arr eee ie os s) OR an ce Ca Bl CHA US: GHA, f BARRIO > PUR ton We 36 “ot Peeetd Barvion able ta Baud! Fretean Fortivad services tr Lib ‘sty Hill, at'S pm. and at 7 p.m. Ob Aaguraay tbe ére of the gntecainiehy any migabere Bud feimwae woke oe sran wehding thee‘ way to the ball wus Ghote tage and omell gifts, Men ‘A.Gente and afr.'B. B Taylor, econ. Danled by other willing members, Ald the necessary decorating for the occa- sion. On. Sunday morning, -bflght and ‘early, gifts continued to come in froth ail directions Long before 8 p. m.,"the opening hour, Our Liberty Hall wan fled to it utmost capacity. atier the usual de- Yollonal.exerciaes had been perfotmed by Brother Willlam, B. Price, acting chaplain, $he reat’ of the eerylee. woe conducted oy Mr. Francis B. AM Dpréaldent of the division. "The follow Ing program was rendered: Hymn 6 from Ritual; reading of. fest. lesson from 22rd Paalm: hymn trom Ritual: Feading of second. lesson trom. Gen= fale, fourth chapter; anthem: “Golden Grain." by the: choir: presentation of ofterings, by the children; —tiymma $0 from Ritoal, and collection takent sor- mon by" Wililam 2B. Price, acts chaps Iain; anthem, “How Excolent’" dy the choir; short address by Mr: C. A. Drummond, of Losamatie; short talk closing prayer by the chaplain; U. N. Lea. anthein, by all’ The. Brandent teatore of thin aervlce wan the presen tailon of offerings by the children, who were trained hy Mfrs A. Gentle and Str. BE. Tur. «The T be me wrvice rougint out many who had’ wt at tended the aCternoon servlce—ao much that even standing ‘room was’ rather aimcutt to be obtained, ‘Our meeting qtnsted at 7 p.m. with, eneecting “chaplain contacting the ritualisie, exerclaen, after whlch the Presiding ‘ofleer ‘opened te. proRcam, whieh was ap follows; Hymn 65 from Ritual: reading of teont Page Wt The Negro World, by Brother J. J. Balled tine, who coromented en same. tn. 8 masttrly manner: hymn, “God, Bless Our Breiident# by alls” sowing and Praning ecersiees, Uy over forty ei10 and. Boye: anthem; “Consider the Lilies” by “the. ‘chole; addres ‘BY Brother George. Smiths: soo by Ss. Patten: oddsess hee eathor Pe Tad site: anthem, “Sowlne'to the Spirit by the choles addrens by Brother C. A Drummond, of Losamatin, Divialon, closing nddveva by the prenlatig oMced, Str. HB, Arnold; Un. 1A. anthem, by, all and praver ‘The: tire meetings: were 8 Bugs noes coon, both numerically and: Ananctlly The officers respecttully: bee to thanke nil who participated tm making: it-the nuge success that It was. Speclal men- | tion must bé made of Mrs. Angeline | Gentte, Bir, Hames MeFarlane and Me, enti, Maree eating se Me acter in afranging tha_mectines. = | SAMUEL E, TAYLOR, Reporter, -| | -, AMLBISH-UN- ote BLOTS | Paes ee TNE, aide Eee nk mae Lae ra Se eae : See eRe i : Tau "Ste se alte Bee eer | REEL ENTR BRE, | “| That Mado ‘a Man Out of My Husband That Made eon atl te (SERUAS eatteasrion Dae, nee Sradueen Vitaiey HORE RECS OME NaS ORLY Beceem SRGEANE teraea habmaneen was Seopara™ Ae, UG mene ae Lc, Sa eee ae $e) Shel 85" uavand ou T nomen Haforé Yetavsn of (A Hae bi aes fer aath carried A | “PGE RO CEE AS Baa ah RSP enhrne ‘te any onan er, wattane Yeung oe Suse oo Chee ere et ae are cee al COMBINATION DIST. COMPANY 1 (ncn Noone cine 0 RT ie ‘obser’ larvey Deg with rack &- Abusiagm. ‘The ‘members ‘and friendt With one cynatiy Unrovedd aur Eaters Han fe swolconie this: Ger’ Gental day Atwell oalected program was reridered of the offiters; “Black Cross nurses and the Legioraires, headed by Major 'S, Allien, marched from the’ rare and spaclous! grounds, of Liberty: Hall "to the Fostrum ‘by the ingpiring’ -atr, “shine Oa, Eternal "Lishl” ‘The re- who preached « most interesting. sere mon siltable for the occasion. Hymn io raater was cane waneeea: wit weaieet lel oy Bos we ete Harbert and Stxtére B. Cummings and Broke meee tentcuen te ine a receheecaccataeee: ike teeny Be opane posi vow: temee one to the lady prestient of the: division, Mrs. B. Cuminings, who devefed ‘an Audience for the brilliant turnout. ‘ Hon. Maréua Garvey wan read by the executive secretary, Mr. J. H: C. Clap- Forbes, Frank -Henry, Edilberto P. Méxdamox Henrletta Cummings gnd Ralsy Griffith. The first verse of the address by MFo J: Brown; addreys-im with the singing of the Ethfoplan Nu- @ ay | sree Lane te een -hed_on-uguesal comd_MAby nefe faces were to Bo seen..a4_an_ indication oie grstisot our gant incde mca ene rtour greet, t st the honda of thé Doristen Govern- mente The" programm wes! arruized by Mrs. 2. Chémbers: ‘The meeting come fesenesa“with the--aingtme” of |"#rem |Greentand’s Iey Mountains,” folléwed fey prayer from the ritual. Far Serip- ture leevon, «portion of T Samuel, 20Lh chapter, was read and commented upon by the chairman. At the. close of the spiritual part of the meeting the front. page of: The Negro. World. was rea by Truatec James, followed with the-dinging of "God. Blows Out Prost dent. A. violin aha! saxophone solo was rendered by’ the ‘Sealy. brothers. ‘Too muchy,praise cannot be ‘siven to these boys for thele excellent rendition. Prenldent Potter gave a timely and inspiring talk relative to the treatment of the president general. A saxophone solo wae given by Mr. Green with Slee Ciaske at the plano. ; ‘At thie Juneture. the collection was lieted. and) the amouncements given out, followed by an address by Mr. Chambers, which was eloquently de livered. Mrs Reddle, a young man of intelligence with great future, also’ exozutive body tor, the splendid ryan ner’ in “hich they Handled the ‘asao~ cintién during the past week. | The singing of tho Ethloplan "Anthem brought the meeting to @ clone. ~~ Since the visit of the president gen- eral, “Montreal has” taken onba Mew leave of life, We are more: determined than ever to support the principles of tho "U.N. 1..A, and-to-put .over the progeam, afd wa will not: be found canting. in helping inthe, redemption of africa. : ‘Z, CHANBERS, Reporter. ‘Stop Suffering, Stop Poisoning Your System ‘With Drugs Swrite at onco:tor rot, Searigtt Dody ‘Tonle, & combination “of pure. roots, nevi nevis ond Mowgres A Redd nerve onte “ana. veay bollger, Ain eective femeay for momach, tiers Kidneye and Seen he fray nana: Wont Moun body MENOCATOR. “Asbveesst= THE BOTANIC HERB CO. ‘34 W. 131at St, New York City ~ Deptt PRICE $1.25 ai mE Ase Fa Car ann Ash! ie ae SRS yD aM OS GOI PON DS se our ee MS halen era a aie eer a MR coc MMi ey ae ae ae Sm ae ee Gan ee eee ee ee eet ee ee ee ae UN? : mre Bit, “VRSTRIS GS ore A et 5 ft" Por be Asociacion Universal pare ef Adelinite de is” foe ea aa Week damages 8a A 3 2 “Ohndad @e Nusa York, NOW. 07 Se FA Baw dude,’ de ts Parte ico Li potato be -.. meres duxilios =: Jee: “Veattis~-con trescigntos tri pulantes, entre padajeros’y: personal det misnio, se hundio enta tarde del lunes 12 en una-posicidn -de 37.15 rados norte de-latitud y 71.08 gra dos oeste de loygitud. E] primer aviso enviads por Wit tiazs J Carey, ef eapitin Ul “Ves trisy”” fué alas 10.29%, m. del lunes y decia: “\Vestris” en desgracia.”” glnmbdliataiiente “al” saberse Ia" po: sicin del buque que. pedia auxiliz ‘cineo barcos se pusieron a toda mi- ‘quina en direcoion de éste para pres- tar-Jos stevicios de salvamento~ley estricta del mar.— El primero de los_barcos: en llegar’ fué el "San Juan,” de la.Porto Rico-Line y re- Porto inmediatamente no haber en- contrado niada, afiadiendo, que. In tripulacién en: los botes habia re- mado. lo-suficerite para. alejarse de Tos alrededores 6 que hajfja sido tra- gada por las enfurecidas olas. Sin embargo se quedo dand6‘vueltas al- FeUEMOE UST eattS agICO'S Ver A localizaba algunos de'los botes sal- vavidas.en dendé ta tripulacién ha- bia buscad® refugio. Poco despuits ego Ut destroyer “Wyoming” de tr Armada, de;los.Estados Unidos -y reports ‘un tiempo demasiado tor- mentuoso .para dar ‘esperanzas del salvamento:de los botes salvavidas-= merced de jos elementos, Otros de josbarcos.que-—respondieran_a_tos| SO S.del "Vestris” fueron el “Ohio Maru,” vapor de carga japonts, cl lestroyer “Davis,” de la armada de jos Extados. Unidos y el “Creole.” Se ha’ reportado sin embargo que ya tres de los’ botes salvaxidas’ han sido localizados por uno de los bar- 20s que estuvierén prestando auxi? ios"al “Vestris.” =, E}. barco hundido pertenecia la Lamport & Holt Liges. ° Las “thimas—noticias—indica solo han podido safvarse 206 tripu- antes, entre ellos 54 ‘pasajeros y los ‘estates 152" miembros de la. ma- ‘ineria del barco. Esta consistia de 19) hombres en total. Todo indica que los: 122 restantes ‘stdin gerdidos.sin esperanza alguna. MARCOS GARVEY, FELIZ Y¥ VALEROSO VE_UNA *. .pROBUSTA PERSPECTIVA PARA LA | s - ORGANIZACION.. 7 Planes de importanciainconmensarable se discute con los leaders “del _movimiento-en Toronto para Ix Confer- encia—Medidas practices para aliviar la situacién ~ Seran .presentadas en_1929—La secta Convencién : Internacidnat sera‘ la mas grande en record—Todos _Mebeis: tyabajar para “que: sea este un’ éxito sin ~ precedentes - z Seay Bybsotfé hemos ya terminado el trabajo para nuestra cotiferéncta en ‘wuestre programa_para la.convencién de 1929. Este programa sera e siistramento mas prictico presentado para la ayuda.écondmica politica, | ~ wenitends ‘generales de ia raza negra, La reunién de lés representantive: vt Toronté fué de lo nias importante.” Los temas tratados y las conclu : sionés ‘que Negarios fueron dé tales importancias 'y.de'esperanzis muy iplaguefias para el futuro de la U. N. ILA. y la raza en general. anny Et ecucion Practica tel Progeama + Por fin ya estamoé en'via de poner en ejecusion practica nuestr¢ wprograma. No hay dudi de que el futuro de fa organizacion sugiere Jas mejores perspectivas. “Todo el mundo se sieiite feliz y valeroso para em prender con mas celo y ahincg sus mejores oficios para hacer de, este pro ‘grama la‘ mejor ejecusism en sus mas misinios ‘detalles., Sin. tendo como Jo sentimos todos ta gran necesideal.de la organizacién, urgi- * mos de todas’ las -unidades compofientes de ta institucién, a que pongan en juego Sus esfuerzos mayores, con mas fervor que antes, de inanera que los principios de 14 Universal Improvement Negro Association <« “mahténgan. Solamente por las molestias y esfuerzo expontanco de todos y cada uno de nosotros.es que podrenios-tracr hacia nuestro aleance en tiempo razonable un_éXito' completo, que satisfaga aun aquellos extre’ madamente idealistaentre nosotros. ¢ : . Hay trabajo para (odo el mundo de manera qye podamos levar a icliz tgrmino el programa que fenemos delante de si,” Bate trabajovtiene s.nue hacerse; y debo informaros sin embajes que nosotros los: que ‘nos reunimos ei Toronid nos comprometimes ¥ nos juramos a que vieruni6s de que ningun detalle sea desentendido en todo‘zquello.que reclame ta ejecusion de los altos propositos a que nos hemos dedicados en Ia lator de fomentar Ja organizacion, . on . -La mae grande.Convencioden Ia. Hiatorin * | Todos estamos convencidos gue Ia Convencién de’ 1929 sera la mas "grande deméstracién y que hari un record, Vamos a’ Inborar porque clo resulte asi y toca a todo negro que viva’ en este mundo el prestar su asistenciam moral y de cualquier otra manera, para que no Veamos des- fraudadas nuestras esperanzas y verlas- por ef contrario-completamente _ calizadas, Desde'Tas lejanas lugares. del Africa’ asi Gomo desde los rin- cones mas apartado de! mundo, vendran delegados a esta-seeta Conven- cién Internacional de fos Negros del Munido. De esta conveiicidn se * degiriin los doée delegados representatives, que asistiran’a Ias delibera- - ciones de la Liga de Naciones. Estos defegados tendrin'la responsabili- éad dg suministrar evidencin y abogar ante ta Liga tos sentimfentos.ya * cxpresados por nosotros ante ese Cuerpo, los cuales seréti ampliamente + Giscutidos en la sesién on-1929. . ae i . +“ Roticion ante de ta Liga“aljora’ © Todé el mundo inegro ha ‘sido informado y se ie hapeitido el que de sui apoyo, moral 6 de ta manera que desee, a Ia peticién que esta ya ante fa Liga de, Nacionos.- Nuestra ‘conferencia aqui en Toronrd ha echado los planos por Tog cuales inosotras hemos de agitar sconitinuamente los sen- Atimientos'vertidos-en fe-peticién para que.swimporténcia:impresione a los varios grapos raciales délysundo y sus“correspondientes nacionalidades y gobiernos ha¢ia el fin de que elfos den consideracién y traten definitiva- mucate los problenias traidos sobre el tapete y apliquen-los remedios en -que-se-base-ta peticién. eae 4 ‘: Otro acte en tn Hietoria : - La reunién qd se Uevard 2 eho en Toronts, mareara otto impor ante hectio én los anales historicos de ta'U. N. I. A. La conferencia fué atendida por los thas habilidosso. leaders de la organizaciéin de, America ¥ todos nosotros tenemos causa gle estar contentos porque no sentaramos. rivconferencia y llevar a sdlusién el objetivo que se tenia en mente. - —————— waretie tuite-tor Cunitoler Geveralen Extranjeron : Salgo. para ‘mis oficinas generates, en Jamaica (Kingston), Indias Occidentales, donde estaré domiciliado por los mueves meses restantes. Todés Tos que deseen comiinicarse conmigs sspetn hacerlo’ dirigiendose a Jamaica (Kingston). Nosotros nécesitainds “trabajadores honrados, Nconcientes y leales.¢n todas las’ partes de! mundo, por consiguiente todo el thundo tiene el pliviteglo de eacribirne ahora’y manifestarme en qiis| _ capacidad paeée“servir prestando sus servicios, para/llevar a cabo el pro- —-grams:de la. Asociacion para el -Adclahto dela Rare Negra” > : Ge nena ab gl i oe 4 : = a Yuestro obediente verve, Ley BYES a ns MARCOS GARVEY, (* nln ge ee RemiNegr a pe ‘tora Caneds, Noviembre 2,198. 0.8 | PrAaNeeRc. ARF REOUESTED. T¢ A MANERA DE CUENTO (Si Diogenes’ Viviera (Para Mi Amigo Luis Torres Colon) En: ef pucblito de Newport, Pa, Jos barrenderos parece.que tienen !a costumbre de «pensar er diferent forma a como piensan sus colegas Jos barrenderos de la gran ciudi en Nueva York. El lector podri, si gsi lo prefiere hacer todas les can: eon que quiera y’ hasta Megara ja conchusidn de que este incipient emborradonador .de cuartillas ha pasado por el via-crucis: de hishe: silo barrendero en la ciudad’ d: Newport y en Ia ciudad de hierze, Aun todavia (esto como materia in: formativa por'si a alguien le impor: tare) no hemos xenido ese honor de emperifollarnes’ de“ blanco y - con gorra de visera negra con su distin- tivo. néiniero barrenderil, ppsp si pueden estar seguros los fectores gue.cl que malamente eseribe se in: interesé raucho en Tos diacios, cuan. do los escindalos del departamenio de batrenderas de Nueva York sta- baal palo. Bien es yasgabido «ue i in mumicipatidad ds Nueva York se Je robd de lo linto. Pero mirando Jas cosas desde el dagitlo-de it in- diferencia, esto poco nos importa y fo. que reaimente nos interesa én na- rrar todas‘estas menuidencias es hr- ceros una pequelia historia qua han tejido los barrenderos,de la. citidad quaquera. . Aquellos, aparentemente 6 son mas-estiipides éson mas Ifin- rados; pucsto due es costumbre cn Newport ctiando se carga con la ba- sura’a sul ultima destinacién, exa- minarla cuidddosamente a ver-si en- tre.ella aparece alguno que otro ob- jeto de valor, Ultigiamente un ba- trendero mientras dfnia los papeles viejos. teopez ss manos con :un bilicte de esos amarillo que hacen abrir los ojos a cualquiera con visi- ble. estupidez. ““Inmediatamente de este Incitente Ine demas paninaBerns de labor empezaron a buscar’ y con tan feliz exito que casi todos se en- contraron billetes de mas 6, menos denominacion, Apte-este-esiado de cosas algo ininediato habia que ha- cerse y uno de ellos, cominfeliz idea, sugerid .que todos. unieran-la pe- quefia fortunada que habiari encon- trado para entre garla.a su superior. Los billetes alcanzaron, ava vez reu- nidos, a una envididble. cantidads can cn as cis penctas aun esfan en’ iano Sere Newport, aguardando a que-sus due- flos que tuvieron’ Ta ane venga por ellog.” rae mee wie: pre fsntera, por wi bombsehontado te} livia B por. i ool er 7a ‘algunos hombres y levileze in-| Mt hee Wield << fo ¢s la ‘sufrida nacién cubandy en 23a tierra donde, eee [iecharod 7. dieroa bes, piscingas s¥: ‘cplor: y ‘doride atin’ tiene: esa. raza repjeoetativot de honrpsas. ejecu- torlastivicas -oon una .ateoia ,toda honor.y leajtad. En Cuba, donde ¢1 ‘brazd poderoso ‘de Jos Maceos ga- ‘antizaron.con valor-estoigo la inde- pendencia de ese pueklo. En ext isla, teatro de” epopeyas gierreras tan elocuentes y de trayedias épicas de un valor egpattaco, éntiulo de to- ‘das las manifestaciones mas exelsas gee hayan registrado al traves de ids tiempos: y las edades. En esa Cuba tricolor, se le protiihe la en trada a un periddico decente,-culto, representative de una causa noble; causa que estd en completa conso-, naneia con 168 principios deJibertad por los cuales la naciénscubana de- vidas en’ defensa-del derecho de su] nacionalidad. En Ja tierra de Mo cep, se hostiliza“al “Negro World” sin ninguna’ gatisfaccién-oficiosa, por el solo hecho de que -(suponemos nosotros) este periodiéo es organg de una institueién de la raza. de color, y al igual que cualquier otro yotero,. humanamente_alecciona a su raza a sacudir el yuzo de opre- sién a qué ha sido cometido por si= glos, y entra-en el déetrinamiento sano de leventar el espiritu de_sus hermanos en raza pata que se or- ganizen y en colaboracion con los hombres de buena voluntad de todas. las otras razas y éredos, garaiitizar-| les alli én, el Africa amatriz, en Tx tivrra de los antecesores, el derecho de constituirse en nacion y como curlytier—otra. division-etnogrifica vivir en Id suyo de acuerdo’ a’ Jas exigencias culturales ‘y civilizntrices de los tiempos modernos. Creewos al actual Presidente de Cuba; Hov.Geraldo Machado, un}, hombre de grandes altezas de’ tnira pira aprobar. una .disposicién tan} asurda como lo es }a dé prohibir In| circulacion eft su pais de wn periddi- | co queen nada mortifien él orden de| Id repuitblica, ni mucho menos ja-| mas ha entrado eit criticas ni suspi-| cacias'contea In persnalidad del: ca;} ballero ni del gabernante. Tampocs4 ; no se ha entrotiedito el “Negro World” en-nada que afecte fa de-} cencia.y foral del pucils de Guba; para qiie su circulacidn ‘se «en con xntipatia por el Servicio, Postal-Cu-| pando. En ninguna ocasion se hilt produgido este periddica en manera vejaminosa para eh pueblo y Ix ad- ministracién del fais; si solo ha he- sho una propaganda constructive en: ire Jos elementos de su raz pura un fin altamente plausible en esia épo- cho de‘ luz y-de progreso; pro-|° ereso y Juz que haiian fecrmdariente ut pueblo de Cuba; faz y peogreso | jue irradian al Sr. Presidente de lx Reputiica de Cuba quien tiene un concepto clevadisimo de ello part ratat las cosas y los hechos bajo su recta apreciacidin: _Tampoco erce el “Negro World” jue el gobierno de Cuba se deje in- fucnciar tan irresponsableniense por | meras conyeniencias dé‘determina~tt jos“ interdses, porque Ia seriedad | r euterens de fos die gobiernan: debe} isémejazse al’ cuadro que nos ‘pre~ ntan geometricantente una parale- | a perpendicular Sfsitio.en que pisa- hos: la seriedad corriendo paralela Ja éiifere#a, yendo ambas a mori, a Norizontal derivada de! piso que sia tinea basal de bumillacion, Des- artamos esta’ suposicin y confia- noseque las cosas sé ackiren ¥ la lemocracia que tanto costara al puie- No cubano tenga'mia ‘gerantia ver-|f jad.enla heroica. VERLA DE LAS! ANTILLAS. . ]| EL ARMISTICIO El dia 11 de Noviembre, “Dia del Armisticio,” coma ha sido ya consa- prado a tiavés del nniverso, ha, sido Gheeruada ma enti toda In faz de In tierra consagrando varios aminutas al recuerdo .de.aquella hora_supre- ma, cuando millones de hombres e suélo europes, hajaron sus arnias para entonar un canto.a la paz. Las noticias desde todos los rin- cones.idel mundo, dan la impresion que ¢| décimo-apiversario del Ar- mistivio ha sido celebrado con ver- dadera religiosidad. nee pe conmeisurable de otros Forman un bonito contrast: pars. coatemplacién yo eatudio de jno, que .cofna: ¥5, 30 ticmpy che yuupetee ce Go- sas. qpe ne tiepen pit mi cabeza. ‘Cotto-tes berrenderas..de, ambas cividedes hay ‘smaimers'de.clemen- tbs en ebta vida que perce eran parte desu: realtone actores dA_gran- daranab_aparecieran_ on comm de yrquemeda: ° STOP! LOOK AND READ "Wwe teach you Ick and (oll vou lucioMlays, wo avd the once. you ahaskt mitrur welte {0, for anything retardiewe to whut Mt fe, Are you te trontie ge Tr dlstreus? “aka you sufferings with any kind, of dixeure? Wa,zomove at Dinderine camden, bring peace out of confusion, make Pesos and Rapplncs | in gue home ang restores ie friends, Kesiove elt mlgery and pains from tho hudy, conquer all essed bY Giguineo"or, hts za02, g Donteray:thnt you uro sick anit can't et well, for there 4 no auch thitng. What fy the need of you worrsink, slokentmx atu! complaints, whon you Baye E company to worry for you? Wo also have itek chattmn and luck base.and ke lake earg of all Jove uffafrx nnd husinewe shatter, Wo wore born >with is Rift. We uro'in more power now thu ever towards, helpits. £6)link humanity. ‘Wo were gifted wifh thixtmost wonderful power to benetit man- rind, whiel ean be tentifed ta thousands who Inve consulted wun wlth. bena- Tt. Wo rive advico on ail affairs of life ani ainke It n Rnectlty to obvlato, finunclid and family troublen ax well ax for the nick. Kemove gvit Inquénen, | Jieach you fuck and Kivo you Life wiling also. Fayclase 42.00, neme, uddross, sronth- and de te OFM ma. ic ic -ARMSTRONG HERB COMPANY Mail Order House P.O.Box97 0. ARMSTRONG, FLA. : tO ¥ * ge . BE RD come Satire oS SEE oe: | asta Be [O- . | gage THRILL OF VIGOR Fees S| NOTICE Bio in .. |] AI Divisions and Chapters are hereby notified that. we Ee te Minted ee rii-|| have in stock the following. cupplies that are necessary Sh 2 Sa || Eat the seamen: cnerying ce af the works = “E+. ) Pena | : Price List, Of Supplies °° |r aienr ts Reet nn | fete ey fae gc » Boe cceneentie WpaR "SP ic ciscrctinces Mie sap, oa ee pa Ontde sccersscesersre 200 Bi) treterareeereeeseeseseoens Ss wie enter: ‘ronan COprpEY. es ipa socece 19 20 AAACN ef Reet Be FR ee ene] Omen Pi Srna igen crioene A a col RODE ay manl| + Seeretery-Ganeret’e. Office “at. Headquarters.’ =e eee Pa et oe S| “ae Ee Sepa i. ew SOPY 2 SS es es RL WHEN REPLYING: TO: ADVERTISEMENTS iit Sacie i ay tae Pes te Aen EBS SPOS | 5, ia acipiiea ate dorlig Sie He a oe ne La Stes Domenie oh oe tie petal tie gibi some seeds vou @ tr tuntan tener ae Fetch ea Retin meee Apentera ere, Mm aisle COAPIERN At, Bhuce, Biiven of thy New Re- “Throiighttay ths. Atiias he ony sitttoe-on ‘the ‘Cause and’ Cate of War Hag been promoting meetings if. wup- ert of the testy hich comée before the Unlted States Senate-at the sesaion opening Detember 3, The chairman’ of the, committee arranging this mesting, fg Milas Ruth Morgan of the National League ‘of’ Women Voters. Otherg on the committee are: Mev. Edgerton Par- tons of the Americun Asectlation -of. versity Women, Mra Willan “D., Wporbor« of the Federation of Women's Clubs. See. PBA LABoutettier of the Young Women's Christian Association, Mra’ Orriiv H. Judd of-the Council &¢ [Home ‘Stnstons, Sten Fila’ Boole of the Women's Christian ‘Teinperance ‘Union, Mra, John Ferguson of the Board of Foreign Misvions. Mina Lena M. Phillipa of Natlohal, Federation, of Buninonn and Profenslonal Women's Clubs, Aes. Julew, Hart of the Councht nf Jewinh Women, Mra. E:.C. Carter of the New “York Léague of Women otra: Minn Mary Dreiver gf Women's Trade Unton League. 9 | “MAYA BIBLE” GETS NEW TRANSLATION : Historical’ Now Historical American Document la in Library at-Guatemala iy “Has Many Legends MENICO CITY, Nov. 16—A_ new Wanslation haw apneated 6€ Une,"Maya Bible“ the Pepe I, ax was gabled ‘vy: the Indian convert to Christianity Whd serote He down a few Searn ater the Spanish conquest UF bit countey tn 1524. “, ne . The two" ether Wanelations of this valuable document tn American ee tori, made long neo. have dehy mab~ Jecte to certain eritctenne an mot bey Ing falthtud versions of the. orlpinal Yocause of this, J, Antonio Villacorta, of the faculty of polital andasistorieal efenees, ind Mavi Rodan, inspector fof archarofogieat monument of the Guateinatin government, bean & fresh Yerslay of the rare document, now: In The ‘otinindl, I x, Alulect of the | ‘Maya Jinguage, expressed phonatic- Atiy-in. Laeinvacharseters, was written by the Indisin DicRe-Reynenterrsrly tn the sixteenth century. LL gue then lent and. war dily redixeovered atthe ond of the xeventeenth contig” ‘The feat tradit{on explaine tht ke fitton of the world nis of vine creatiires anid thelr Ann? deatrnction In xreat cnticlysins, Be lant toxend Uiings the Wxtory up-to the Spanixh: tnvhateas) ses LOVELY, BEAUTIFUL HAIR cuaesoit Fouenee LUMENS, 7 Gages Haara elo tes PS AMEBSS } ices ttcninn’ sings treating. GRR a EE Rear ct aR Lc Seen ct soraranien ema ee ee ene on radii. Bs, ee, AS aig ere ae en oe: leat Uae Saeter feet gee Seat oe oat ee ee ee Gide ACE ae oe (etapa erage nN een aa teek Arete hate, Among. the ‘women, -club’ work: bis Mee wees le Se Gh’ they WL have. tonerain: coh ‘B-mouthly. meetings. wil), be -beld and sewing “work will" be done for. the Lighthouse clothing department which Gletributes ‘clothes to, the blind paor tm the clty. Plane are being made to organise iscéentlon: eyupss glee clube and ymnaplun claneea, “An Sncreased @bproprintion, for guide’ nervico will ena feny—veint- fave TDN UBT before to come to the Lighthoute, to be brought there for the meetings, Twice dyrinie tke year there will be Sunday atternvon teas for both col- ored blind men and’ women. . The Work for the men will be taken care of through the men's rrcreation department’ and will include among other things, the organization. of & glee club and an orchentra, Special attempts will be indo to place the col- red men in the Rouriie workshon- where the: Workers make mons, ar brooms for icummeréial eénaymanthin, and {0 find news xtundy’ or other oc cunatlons. for. them. : sii wrvie nine See he, vinita of the Rome: teachers which are tn turn atipplemented by the place mefit bureau, the meilicab department, he nicht waving service and various ee eet ee reece | - When rheumatic pains make you miserable, you make those around you ' miserable, too. To get rid of that rheumatic grotich you must yid your ays- tem of the acid poisons which “ease FhOMMTaue PANS, .» Prescription*C-2223 attacks’ rheumatism at its source and helps.to cl@anse the system of ~poison accumulations. © C-2223:is the original: pre- scription of-a reputable phy- sician wh used it in the treat- ment of sub-acute and chronic rheumatic aches and pains of” the joints and imuscles, gout and néuralgin, It is pleasant, to take, effec tive and safe. Your druggist sells the regular $1:00 size and the 60c trinl size on a money- back guarantee. Ask for it by its original nuinber: ~*~ St. Josepin’'s Prescription, 3 3 DD FOR RHEUMATIC ° ACHES AND PAINS en ee ee ncaa ted ORAS HO EME POT ee ae ae Sea ite Me ae ae Geer ae Re eR L SE Wt 3) Renee Meee POEL Dees a ges Se ERE oe ettesn NG a ee aaa 2 io poe eS eT “oe 2 gpg ee 1 SDeatite Stzenatn) Mew ee Tost take a dose. It te very. a»: pee sec: A pan oud. The blood be- | eh mes, parset us more 7 SORR, “Site, ACHING. a Tomts, ‘nolmere agian PS RITIG—all the RHEU- ees MATIOPAING gone axe seyel” pent wait oma SM ioo ter! Way “euter : thy longer? Here la your : ‘cpportusity to" gst’ well : Gilet Dont watt. wnt es ee SS. all toe cash ‘with ie YOUR NAMB. and. AD- : BRBes on the ooupomend— mail the coupdn right now! ACE QUICK! DO Fr TO- = Bae BEAM SABRI aaa a Saw Yoas'cry. oe Ty sate Rain Mn ua mie cas Mesias mata ea Wms tr Bitte ca vers SRR titan fas semens or ae pier y ee ovosuee| Piss ae Wea aay rectus —§ . Kon Wass) doer ates ossansecnesortabsenuipmeiianmao Addrean soiecossewmeceaneneesecsesammnanana Cliy Und: Stito sorvscconcesessesonsioooes THUCKT CHARM FREE Hee Se Hie eet ae etek) | Te ae tare Detmesscen PY aN Og i te) dW aUeaata IN ko pron worries RORG Se Ee ae thcpaee "Se: MEEVANR COL Dept, Xoettt | Poritibely gna Herealecty LIGHTEN)“ COMPLEXPN : aieN . HIGHT:BROWN * MEDIUNE BROWN Xe need of having + Be’ Jae Ractianerce an. nae id q Bon ae aie > Pua ieie - EE ese ete Bees eaeaee at Sanecaee Beatin aiege, total ‘ovat an delivery oe chin aimee ene Ce agiaes wets oul"teal aes Hint reid wt aha to wand our eae Naa aaa HOES GGD SAMCESP AOR, meng, 358 gy Under Ground fs TREASURES ik HOW AND WHERE ATO FIND THEM BD rcv foxsger iret and — pe | mice Te, Sn Titian Gi Hos 000: Cote ‘cclac ron onvt fea ius etic og Eee ere 8 ween Moa see rR ee ene Ese alg | fb tay mace ek [ore memngere comma | gg TEDL OF vido te sry, Een it Fie eR Sn roe Usa ae Potent F eee Huta cetera eat bak ees Snare ea eae i i a 6 a BLOOD Sa bere ta oe Ser eae oe Se eee eo Sea The message sent some time ago by the Honorable Marcos Garrov that the Huevos have no Gladiator, but they greatly impress us and cause Negroes the world over, to read and learn. Prior to the advent of Garrov on the scene many Negroes at home and abroad trusted Talibanism and of the hopes and aspirations in life, handsome the fact that reunities, decisive disadvantages and inhuman actions were imposed upon them, yet they considered that these treatments were avenues to a greater love by the white man because he always promised them an entrance into a mythical lily-heaven with their skins transformed from black to snow-white and perpetually feating on milk and honey. But he searched for that the pretended love of the white man is only bait to us into gifts of inevitable destruction. But many Negroes are still trusting sacredly to the white man's love. Can it be in this age of the world's great enlightenment, when the survival of the djig is the maxim of the day; when many of the expressed races are enduring to shake off the shackles imposed by an alien race through diplomatic measures. Negroes are showing that because of the corruption and selfishness which have impressed the human family, no one race will unselfishly and take cars of another, that the Negro is ignorant in spite of experience? Oh, if we Negroes could only see ourselves as others see us. We are facing a very serious crisis, and if we still trust to the white man's love for racial emancipation, ours will be an overlasting hell. Would to God that we would realize now that He is our only Friend and Lower and trust Him for our perpetual recompensation by developing the latent talents that lie within us, thereby presenting an African power to the world to save ourselves, and postpity-fresh rain, disgrace and annihilation. DAVID M. LIKE. Port Limon, Costa Rica. William W. Davies, correspondent "La Nacion," of Buenos Aires, South America, and lucky survivor of the filigree liner Vestera, evidently believes that self-preservation is the first law of nature only so far as the brave and proud Nordics are concerned. Writing his experiences during the skating of the unfortunate ship, Mr. Davies describes in glowing praise "the helpless of white women and the calm, strict and excellent work of white officers, and men during the scramble"; but, as far as the Negro people and crew were concerned, Mr. Davies, with merely his clan, face and eye out of the greedy English, French, Italian Instructor Morning BROADWAY AUTO 30 AUTO INSTRUCTOR Including 15 Driving and 15 Shop Less. 217 WEST 123rd STREET, Just WEST Cars for Hire for State Examinations, $3.50 WE WANT 1,000 AGENTS To Sell Hobb's Famous HAIR GROWER Hobb's Grower will Grow Hair in one Month SEND $1.00 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. For Complete Treatment or 50c. for Trial Box Made be gravined. For Fall Particulars, Write to DORA HOBBS, M.F.G. Co. 224.W.141st St.Apt.B Make all Money Orders, etc., payable to Mine, Dora Hobbs WANTED LIVE AGENTS MEN, WOMEN, BOYS, GIRLS Can Make Good Profit SELLING THE NEGRO WORLD The Race's Outstanding Weekly News Everybody that is somebody will buy and read such a work filled with national and international news of race A Good Seller—Once a Buyer Always a Agent Wanted in Every Community If you are interested write in for agents' terms today. Oog be one of our agents Write Circulation Department The Race's Outstanding Weekly Newspaper ybody that is somebody will buy and read such a wonderful filled with national and international news of race interest A Good Seller—Once a Buyer Always a Buyer Agents Wanted in Every Community Negro World, 142 West 130th Sq, New York City white men, and nothing but white men, on the one hand and women, and blacks and whites on the other hand of the few black men in the district. Why the white men detract so desperately the business of saving himself in times of great troubles may be so desperately in times of money, but why the black men are so desperately in times of money, but why the black men are so desperately in times of money, with which the Negroes had nothing to do, the Negroes, as usual, were regarded as "rowers of boats and sivers of white men, women and children." The Negro part of the crew of the Vestric, however, happened to be Barbadians, and Mr. Davies, it appears found out that those "Little Englanders" knew just as well the principles of nature's first law as the excited Celtics. If the enemy employed by the officers in placing the ones of rescue teams had been employed in another channel twelve hours earlier, there would have been a different story for Mr. Davies to write. "The offering in charge of the boat probably knew that they needed men for rowing and had to be tactful," wrote Mr. Davies, "but it seemed strange to me that places were left in the boat for such men as these Negroes while 'passengers' found them, and thus continued. "There was clearly something wrong in the arrangements made for manning the lifeboats and allotting places." A Negro who was seen lying on a bit of raft, paddling with his left hand and holding a knife in his right—obviously as a protection against an attack from a shark—was described as "wielding a knife in his right hand in defense of his right to the raft." This misrepresentation, of course, is to make it appear that the Negro was bent on murdering the first man, woman or child who attempted to rescue themselves on the same raft. A little white girl; nine years old, on being assisted by a white sailor, was seen to have had "blue eyes a smiling," nevertheless, "unfortunately, she drowned. Mr. Davies did not happen to see the heroic exploits of Gonel Liorishi. J. MILTON BATSON. New York, N. Y." SHANGHAI, Nov. 18.—The Nanking Government has issued regulations governing the official size and pattern of the Nationalist flags. The width and length of the banners are to be in the ratio of two to three. The Kuilimintang party flag is to be blue with a white sun in the center, the sun having twelve rays each in the shape of a 30 degree披帆 triangle. The rays are to measure one-half of the sun radius. The National flag is to be of a red field. The upper left hand quarter of the banner is to be blue containing the white sun. Kuilimintang and Nationalist banners have been made in many shapes and sizes. Now they will be standardized. Morning 0934. The Old Reliable AUTO SCHOOL DUCTIONS $10 Shop Lessons, Day and Night Must WEST OF 7th AVENUE $3.50 B. P. THOMAS, Prop. ER one, Month Trial Box Writes to at St. Apt. B Dora Bobbe TED GENTS WO WORLD Weekly Newspaper and read such a wonderful medium national news of soap interest Buyer Always a Buyer very Community terms today. Get heavy and become agents a Department ELECTION FIGURES SHOW BIG GATING ON FORMER YEARS 39,000,000 Parenting It is Estimated, Voted—Hoover Lead. Set at 6,000,000—Gain from 1924 Placed at 10,000,000 WASHINGTON, Nov. 16—The total vote for President may reach a new record of 39,000,000, or nearly 10,000,000 more than the 29,009,000, for 1924, according to Simon Michelle, Washington attorney and President of the National Get-Out-the-Vote Club. With more than 4,000 election district districts missing and complete unofficial returns from only a dozen States, the two major candidates President-elect Ivorsner and Governor Smith, approximates 38,000,000. To this must be added the vote for candidates of several minor parties, usually 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 and a vast number of incomplete ballots, such as "dry" Democrats not voting for the head of the ticket, or "wet" Republicans who likewise cut out the head of the ticket, though casting a regular party vote for State and local candidates. Puts Incompiles Ballots at Million "The percentage of incomplete ballots is always high in every election," Mr. Michelle said, "but in the election just held the proportion of 'split' and incomplete tickets will naturally pass all precedent, because of the issues in the election." The number of new voters or former "stay-at-home" voters, coming to the polls without ballot experience, the incomplete and erroneous ballots may reach a million or so." It now seems likely, Mr. Michael said, that Mr. Hover's vote will exceed, by nearly 6,000,000 that of the highest Republican vote hitherto cast for President, and that "Governor Smith's vote will exceed by possibly 7,000,000 the highest Democratic vote hitherto cast. Mr. Michael said that the last three Republican candidates polled, respectively: 1924, President Coolidge, 15.755,015; 1924, Senator Heard, 15.122,000; 1916, before women generally judged Judge Hughes, 8,633,221. The last three Democratic candidates polled: 1924, John W. Davis, 8,385,503; 1920, Governor Cox, 9,147,316; 1916, before woman suffrage, President Wilson, 9,129,608. This year, with 4,962 election district votes, according to Mr. Michael, the highest number of unofficial returns gave Herbert Hoover 20,912,192 votes and Governor Smith 34,626,603. The incomplete total for two candidates is 35,439,715. Missing election districts include 327 in Pennsylvania, 511 in Minnesota, more than 600 districts in Arkansas in Mississippi and South Carolina, while twelve States have 100 to 300 districts missing, and three-fourths of the States have many districts still unreported, and campbell, official returns from no State in the Union. President Fleet-Heuer, Mr. Michael said, is likely to have a total popular vote of about 22,000,000, and Governor Smith will probably exceed 16,000,000. The Socialist candidate, Norman Thomas, may poll 1,000,000, and several hundred thousand votes were cast for other candidates of minor parties. If you order the OLDSTONE and Talian- nish firm once you have secured Key pictured above, REND-NO MONEY! Pay maltly only the cost of the copies in deferred. Be sure to send ring measure at once. Mosky back if not fitted. The Victory Co. 23 Warren St. Depot 31. New York, N. Y. Under Ground CREATURES WHERE WE WANT TO FIND THEM MODEL CO. In 1922, a committee of the registered or poll lottery did not get to the ballot booth, and as many more failed to qualify for registry. But the increase in 10,000,000 in actual vote delivered is the greatest victory for people who has been achieved in several decades. Seeking to Mitigate Some of Race's Ills In State of Texas DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 17.—At its annual meeting, here last week the State Inter-racial Committee set as its major objectives for the coming year the continuation of its crusade against lynching; further investigation of transportation facilities, with a view to their improvement; the study and bet on conditions throughout the State; legislation propulsion to erect the school for delinquent colored girls which was authorized by the last legislature; and continued support of the excellent public health work that has been done among colored people under the Shepherd-Towner bill. About fifty of the committee's hundred members were present, and two days were spent in reviewing the work of the past year and planning a future program. Dr. W. P. Metoney of Baylor University occupied the chair, and Dr. M. W. Doeck presides of Wiley College, recorded the proceedings. Reports were heard from Mrs. Jessie Daniel Ames, director of the inter-racial work in Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, and from Prof. S. W. Houston, colored secretary, who assists Mrs. Ames. Perhaps the most interesting feature of the meeting was Prof. Houston's report of the ex-haustive study, which he has just made of the conditions of transportation by train, Pullman and in various. BE LUCKY Something New and Powerful Mind Makes the Man If you are feeling tinged a blue, and you don't know what to do, I am offering you the lot, and surest method of all. I am sure you won't regret it, and no one can fail with it, and the moment that you do it, you will be surprised. This is our guarantee, "Applied Psychology." PROE. S. E. FORSKIN - 6522 Champaign Ave, Chicago, Ill. Copyright, 1927. "MAJIC" MONEY MACHINE! MYSTERIOUS! DAFFLING! All you do is to put a slip of plain paper into much of the way "Treeza" turn the knob and the bill appear have made it our almost un- Sold at Leading Department Stores and Retail Jewelers at $15 to $25. A Writer, Money-Back Guesthouse With Every Ring Purchased. ... Money Refunded. If Not Satisfied. Contract With Every Ring Purchased. Money Paid. In New Sweep. Send No Money Pet Policies On Arrived. FREE! JOPSON PIAMOND CO. 45 West 45th St. New York, N.Y. Commons store from Inwood. DROPSY TREATED ONE WEEK FREE Short breathing relieved in 26 to 45 hours, swelling reduced in 18 to 30 days. Regulates the heart, corrects the liver and kidneys. Parties the entire system Company Dept. Bld. Atlanta, Ga. 666 In a Prescription for Cold, Grippy, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaise It is the Most Suspect Remedy Known. E NEG NO WORL looked at the man. "The agent you picked the man out of, you know, tough assassination, the agent which did he look at, was almost the same agent protecting you." Prof. Houston reported the results of thorough investigation of the two lynchings in Texas this year, and the committee accepted the obligation to do everything in its power to blot out this crime, including the possibility of certain special anti-lynching legislation. Prof. Houston urged the colored members of the committee to do their utmost to secure forgiveness and other causes of ill will and friction. That Baby You've Longed For Mrs. Burton Advise Women on Motherhood, and Companionship For several years I was denied the blessing of motherhood, writes Mrs. Margaret, nervous and subject to periods of terrible pain. I was empowered to be a beautiful little daughter and a true companion and inspiration to my women would like to know the secret of my married woman who will write me. Mrs. Burton offers her advice without further than a brief introduction. She should be addressed to Mrs. Margaret Burton. Her correspondence will be strictly confidential. STRAIGHT BLACK HAIR YOURS IN 30 MINUTES Men and Women No. matter what the nobody, or how many red now—or how many red shows—no matter how loving or of that mellow love of that mellow love of you beautiful, buttous you beautiful, buttous preparation is not a more hair dye, nor incroach- ing, nor hair straightener, nor hair straightener matter what the color of your blink now—or how many red shows—no matter how kinky it is—the one application of the new invention will give us a straight black blink. A straight black blink preparation is not a more difficult wrightheater! It is a com- and hair color remover. MOORISH STRATE-BLACK is made from natural henna and reactive extract of which is especially imported from India. Do not contaminate with polished Grown or MOORIEN STATE-BLAACKS in in-application. Moorian State-Blaacks in in-application produce results. Your hair, becomes a beautiful, beautiful hair. Moorian State-Blaacks out, becoming braided with each application. Limited time only, I will give FREE AINE FINE WITH EACH PURCHASE. AINE FINE WITH EACH PURCHASE of any famous MOORIEN WHITE BRIELE HAIR DRISEING (White Rose Gift) and also MOORIEN BRIELE LANTINE (Carnation Pregnancy). Special Interquest Price, $1.50. Mailfert to you in plain mail. Mary Gregory $1.00. Three Cases: 5. C. C. D. $1.00. Lachler (Hair Beauty Specialist) 567 West 181st St. New York BEADS MERBS INDENSE LODESTONES LUCKY RINGS MERCER MERCER MERCER Mail orders solicited. Write rcat catalog. CRESCENT SPECIALTY CO. 421 Erskine St. DETROIT, MICH. WHY WORK FOR LESS? 117 123-456-7890 Learn these tips and make bank days go by. All 117 songs for $1. Send no money. Pay on delivery, plus postage. BAR SALVATORE TRAVELS BAR SALVATORE TRAVELS BAR SALVATORE TRAVELS Find your vacation and答应 to your parents. A horoscope from me will allow you. I will send you a first reading. Just give the year and the month. I will send you a William, 19th April 11th 19th. FUN SAIL On Friday and Saturday we are on sail. There is a great chance of new swimmers. We are in good rain. In your crew now. These pails are all tall. Please weep. We would like to see you. New York City. Foreign countries send money with orders. GOOD ophthalmia—handschad, greasy and thin. GOOD conjunctivitis. GOOD IMM 1600 N. N. E. GO. AGENTS, DEALERS — $660 before Christmas selling beautiful Negro Shoes and fine lowest prices. Goods and Write In Company, 2808 Seventh Avenue, New York City. AGENTS wanted to take 'orders for sales' write in samples and greeting. Write far free samples and terms to Marcellens Chemical Company, 1920 W. Marcellens Chemical Company, 1920 W. 14 to 18 coupon and the cash bouquet. Razak selling the today direct to weaver. Real quality more suits or overcoats only. 471. TPA Fashion Tailoring Co. Denver, Colorado. ASTOUNDING NEW DISCOVERY. NON- shades. Enormous denim skin to shades. Enormous denim skin to skinned perma, all races. $60-$100 weekly. 409 Michigan, Chicago. HELP WANTED—MALE FIREMEN. Brakkenen. Bagaguenes (white or colored). sleeping car. train portrats (colored). 1898-1899 monthly. Experience 1898-1899 Railway Bureau. East Burl Louis. LOUIS. OPPORTUNITY—1 will sell you a piano direct from factory. Teach you how to play. Experience in piano. Universal Building. 149 West. 189th Street. N. Y. City. Phone Morningjpeg 3517. EMPLOYMENT In South American countries. Mechanica; clerical; field workers. Experience in construction. stamp particular. Southern Dureau. 294 W. Davison; Detroit Mich. UNDERTAKERS ALBERT T. S. SANDERS' FENERAL HOME = Knoto, coach, and encyclopedia. 138 W. 12th St. New York City, Phone: Broadway burst 4160 EASTWICK BURST--UNDERSTATES--and--music 138 W. 12th St. New York City, Phone: 1-800-745-3232 138 W. 12th St. New York City, Phone: 444-511-2323 Brooklyn, phone Nassau 0669. SPIRITUALIST OCCULTLUST. — MAGGIALES. Astro-Ocultu- tion, Cryptan, Tissue Toil Articles, Alexander, Box GS6, College Station, New York. SUBTITUAL MEETINGS 84 Clifton College Project 6774; meeting daily 8 p.m. Tue. weekly 9 p.m. Wed. weekly, spiritual weekly, spiritual meeting, private reading; New Richards Monday, Madame BROOKLYN Spiritual and Astrological Meetings every night except Saturday at Dumont Dumont, Brooklyn. MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL ladies wrist watches, to each one. *Keep good time.* Guaranteed. *Keeps wrist warm.* *Mkt Co. 366, Someret, Ky.* KING TUTS *12 magic wands* in a sure way with surprise. *Kittle Graves, Marwood, Tex.* GREAT-OF-PORTUNITY* for colored agents and pred families at skate. *Particulars and citrus, Wilmore Book Co. Como Dlg.* HOUSE FOR SALE BARGAIN FOR COLORED BUYER. 10375 occupied by white folks who are the own- ers of the property. You are not able for two families; 16,500. Terms can be changed for two wives. 16,500. HITCHING YOUR TOWNSLEY. Know the truth: once, A. Love, Adviser, 27 West 80th St., Ap. 26, Hours 1A, M. to 16 W. $ - ALWAYS HAVE LUCK! - $ Unlucky, in Money, Unhappy, in Husbandry, Husbandry, in Tour should cherry, a pear, BRAMHA RED BRAMHA RED NETIC LODGE STONES, Rare, Attractive, those Attractive, those are carried by Qg. GAMES. Love or Business? You must of genuine MYSTIC and HIGHLY MAGNITI HIGHLY MAGNITI LODEON Amazing, Compelling, LIVE LODEONS are carried by G. CITTUIT ORIental people a LUCKY CHARM, one to prevent. Bad Luck, and the other to attract tract much Good Luck. Prosperity. Special, only $1.27 for the two. Post payman $1.97 and 160. postage on delivery. Satisfaction or money refunded. You can purchase genuine Mystic Brahman Ladodones are ALIVE! Just what you want, for they are them—POWERFUL, HIGHLIGHT MAGNITI YOUU YOU A Are You Able to Enjoy Life as You Should? Can you eat everything you desire? Is your appetite good? Does your stomach always feel in the heat, of comfort? Does your bowels move regular? Does your stomach well? Is it hard to eat in A-1 condition? If not, tune your system up. If you realize HER man or SHE man, you should refrain from any of these troubles: CONSTIPATION, BILLOWING, WOUNDING, GAS, INDIGATION, RHUMATISM, SKIN REPETition or PIMPLE, send to your doctor of HAIR, POUND. PLEASE! $15.00 send money with order. No C.O.D. Ethiopian Medicine Co. 113 West 143rd Street NEW YORK CITY DR. KAPLAN The Eyeight Specialist RELIABLE AND REASONABLE EYES EXAMINED FREE 631 LENOX AVENUE NEW YORK Operative Morton Hughes FURNISHED room to let, private, call all Km W, 130th St, West 19th St. A. 130th St. 81 W—apartment 18; private room to let; respectable people; man or woman. FURNISHED BOOBS—to let, small and large; all improvements 68 W 131st St. NEAT furnished rooms, large and small. 130th St. 177 W 131st St. 4. Call evening. 48 W 130th St, mostly furnished rooms, respectable people only. LARGE FURNISHED ROOM, reasonable $26. W 114th street, apartment C-3. Thompson. FURNISHED ROOM, private, for godmother. (18th street, 8th avenue, apartment 8 (192d street). ROOES to set, large and small durables or builtin batteries reasonable prices. Call ROOES for details. FURNHRBED ROOMS, single or double; most recent 127; last 127; and other small, ally rooms; all modern improv rooms; Cabinet 196; people; hom- eowners; Cabinet 196. LARGE basement room furnished. Large Modern convenience. 8, 120th St. W. 10th Ave. WANTED—Respectable couple or single phone and electricity, $23 St. Nicholas phone and electricity, $32 St. Nicholas ST-WEBT 4141st St. Apart 44; neatly fur- nished. Phone Bradhurst 9061; call after 3 P. M. LARGE. neatly furnished room, suitable for couple or single person, with privileges; e.g. private bath, desk, toilet, to 1 P. 3, M. 11 West 144th St., Apt. (two flights front). SALAL AND LARGE FURNISHED rooms to tel. Government. 69 W. 123st street. Reasonable. FOR RENT NEATLY PURNISHED room for single or 4 person. Room apt. 23. 43 West 149th street, New York City. ST. NICHOLAS AVE.; respectable couple single person; comfortable room; good locality. Phone Monument. 0366. TO LET-CLUB ROOM 'SUTABLE FOR PLAYER PANO ON PREMIER. 200E UNIVERSITY 4300 OR WHITE 200E 150TH STREET. ROOM 100E. 5-room apartment, all improvements; panel walk; heat: heat. $40.00. 1602 Brook St. 3 blocks west of 113t St. station. JEWELERS ST. GEO. V. CORINALINI JEWELRY, MUSIC, NOVELTIES DEVELOPING and PHOTO PRINTING Views and Greeting Cards for Oralizations DENTIST 1284 21th Avenue, corner 140th St. New York, NY 10017 appointment. Telephones 1-800-745-3232. INSPIRATION So that she may develop race love and pride. There is no better pro-treatment than loved ones at holiday time. ```markdown ``` Therefore we are offering a special number of hires. Our bums is "Florence." Florence almost human, because it twenty-inch-long walks, talks, sleeps, has lovely long curls, pearly teeth, moving limbs, those stockings, pretty dressed and unbreakable. We will ship this beauty, to you at once. Do not wait until Christmas to buy, but do it now and save money. Send money with either No C. (D) and we will ship promptly. BLACK CAT EYE! ```markdown ``` day. Remember. Absolutely Guaranteed. THE VICTOR CO. 18 Warros Bc. Dept. 13 New York. N. Y. Under Ground TREASURES HOW and WHERE TO FIND THEM A large collection of valuable items in a variety of locations in the United States. MODEL CO. 022 688 0000 Glenn, MN WEST AFRICA at the site of Natalia. 7 pages of information on a variety of subjects. N.A. R.G.L. R.G.L. R.G.L. Journal of the West African States Journal of the West African States Read to story. N.A. R.G.L. R.G.L. Mongolian cross. Chicago, Ill.