The Negro World
Saturday, September 28, 1929
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Delegates Arriving Tell of Doings of 6th International Convention
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MIGHTY PROGRAMME MAPPED OUT FOR RACE
Vast Organization Projected To Increase Registration
Organization of Army of "Delaney-for-Congress Volunteers" Provides Work for All Who Apply
Nearly 8,000 Excuses Made Last Year By Those Who Supply Food For New York
Special Trial Board Separates Excuses; Saves Time
Organization of the "Delany-for-Congress Volunteers," a vast army of workers who will go out with the sole purpose of increasing Harlem's registration in the Twenty-first Congressional district so as to insure the election of Hubert T. Delany, Republican nominee, on November 5, is the plan now being worked out by Campaign Manager William M. Kelley, editor of The Amsterdam News. The backbone of the plan comprehends the use of existing political machinery in the five assembly districts embraced by the congressional district and as many volunteer workers as are willing to take an active part in the campaign.
As its name implies, the "Delany-for-Congress Volunteers" will be constructed along military lines, beginning with "Privates," or persons who pledge themselves to vote for Delany for Congress. Next come the "Corporals," or heads of households, large or small, who will pledge themselves to register and vote eligible voters living in a private house or apartment.
Any person who pledges himself to canvass an entire apartment, appointing and receiving reports from "Corporals," is entitled to the rank of "Sergeant" in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers. Active "Sergeants" are the principal need. Mr. Kelley said.
Above the rank of Sergant, the plan the touches the regular Republican Organizations and their elective and appollite officials.
Members of the County Committees in the various assembly districts, will be "Lieutenants" in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers and receive the reports for the "Sergants" in their election districts, and these reports will be turned over to the Regular Republican Organization captains, who retain the same rank in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers. These reports will also be furnished to the Delany-for-Congress Campaign Committee.
Associate and co-leaders in the regular organization, will rank as "Majors," while executive district leaders will rank as "Colonels."
Thus, the plan, if properly executed, will furnish as near a complete list of eligible voters and non-voters in the Congressional district as it is humanly possible to get, and these will be urged by the Volunteer officers to register between October 7 and 12, the regular registration days in New York City, and so as to vote for Delany November 6.
Delany buttons and badges setting forth the "rank" of officers in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers, along with stationary on which to make their reports will be furnished to the workers without cost.
Citizens who desire to enlist for service in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers have been requested to make application on the blank printed below, and to send or bring it to the Delany-for-Congress Campaign Headquarters, 2303 Seventh avenue, next door to the old Chelsea Bank (Continued on Page 2)
With the patience of a good housewife breaking in a new cook, the City of New York educates restaurant owners, grocers, delicatessen store owners, etc., who have broken the regulations of the Sanitary Code through ignorance; bus woe betide the man or woman engaged in supplying food to this great city who tries to "get by" with spoiled food, unsanitary apparatus and such sins against the good health of citizens.
Excuses, Novel and Naive
Once a week, the long narrow trial room at the Department of Health is filled with men and women, each one going over in his own mind the excuse he will present to the three men posted on a dais at the front of the room—men skilled in understanding what lies behind an excuse and—in no many cases—lies and lies and lies.
Those three men are: Thomas F. Everett, Executive Clerk of the Department, chairman; Christopher A. Mintzow, Acting Director of the
L. K. Williams Urges Union of Negro Baptists
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 11.—(By A.N.P.)—The union of the various branches of the Baptist denomination, was urged here by Dr. L. K. Williams, president of the National Baptist Convention, incorporated, the largest in his annual address, Wednesday afternoon, in which he cited the need for greater improvement and greater crusading by the church.
While the speaker outlined the accomplishments of the organization in the past and the program for future development, he stressed the need of unifying the Baptist forces, pointing out that there should be a "Baptist Reunion Committee appointed to meet a similar body from the National Baptist Convention, Unincorporated, and the Lott Carey Convention and draw up articles of peace and union.
"I do yet believe," declared Dr. Williams, "that the Negro Baptists of the world should somewhere and sometime-meet and work together in one grand body. I do not see how real Christians and true Baptists can cherish anything other than the desire for union, peace and cooperation:
Referring to the work of the church Dr. Williams declared: "A careful investigation of our church programs will reveal. I fear, that they are ill-adjusted to young life. Their forms of worship are often too dull and monotonous. The church has a distinct work to do. The church must check the reckless divorce craze now sweeping the country. It can do this by holding up the Christian ideal of marriage."
Turning his attention to citizenship, Dr. Williams pointed out to his hearers that "Negroes have learned that brute force and ruthless threats are not their best weapons. Character and accomplishments are more eloquent and persuasive." Today the Negro is not seeking pity, charity, and gifts, but real justice. Negroes have labored to make America and believe that they are entitled to the rights and privileges which others no more loyal than they enjoy without restrictions."
Miss Alyce Fraser, the West Indian singer, has paid a visit to Wellington Church, Durham, for services on Sunday and Monday. The church was crowded, and her hearers were delighted with her rendering of choice classical music and Negro spirituals. She said she was "out to do what she could for her race," and acknowledged her indebtedness to the Methodist Missionary Society, who influenced her when a girl to become a Christian. Monday night's recital was an unparalleled scene in Wellington.
Bureau of, Food and Drugs; and Joseph H. Shea, Chief of Division of Milk Inspection. In the last three years since the Minor Trial Board was established they have heard approximately 17,000 cases. During 1928 alone, they heard 7,000 cases and of that number they served nearly 3,000 from cluttering up the courts unnecessarily.
"Often, violation of the law in these cases is the result of inexperience and ignorance of food regulations," Commissioner Shirley W. Wynne explained, "and when we explain fully the exact requirements we find these people ought to comply with them." In many cases we have given the food handlers a new appreciation of their positions in the community—greatness of the health of those whom they serve. The others, who remain citizens to their public duty; are passed on to the Magistrate Court, where they get clear attention that they could have had if all the cases were pursued there.
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1929
The late Hon. Arthur Kennedy, who died in Kingston, Ja., B. W. I., while attending the Sixth International Convention.
MARCUS GARVEY
Marcus Garvey at the recent U. N. I. A. Convention in Kingston, Jamaica, launched a proposition to raise $600,000,000 to be paid by the association's branches within 10 years. The money is to be used to establish embassies over the world, representing the interest of Negroes and to establish daily papers in London, Paris, New York, Washington; on the Gold Coast in Africa and several in the West Indies. A mighty big program to say the least. While all fair minded people must admit that Garvey by his vigorous agitation has done more to arouse the consciousness of his race to their great possibilities than any other man living, however, he will never live to see the things for which he fights. And he will never get sufficient support to enable him to put over his program completely. Many of us will never agree with him on every point. Some of us oppose him but nobody has been able to bush him. He is just Marcus Garvey. Right or wrong, he has the greatest following of any of our leaders in the world. That being true, it is foolish on the part of any one, matters not however much he may differ, to attempt to belittle the man and the work he is doing. We are not a Garveyite but we do believe him to be a man of almost unmeasurable gift and inguished with a desire to render service to him race and we believe him to be sincere.—The Advocate, Portland, Orc.
RosenwaldGives
Libraries For
Rural South
Charlotte, N. C., Sept. 3.—One of the first steps in an ambitious plan to make adequate library facilities available to the millions of the South, white and colored, has just been taken here by the acceptance by the Charlotte Library Board of a conditional gift of $69,000 from the Rosenwald Fund, which is to be met by local gifts of considerable larger amount, the whole to be used during the next five years in developing a country-wide library system.
With the funds thus provided a system of distribution will be arranged reaching all the schools of the county, and the children will be trained in the use of the library and taught to care for the books. Other means of distribution, probably by sub-stations and library trucks, will be provided in order to make the services of the library accessible to everybody in the county. It is one of the express conditions of the Rosenwald gift, that equal service shall be provided for the people of both races.
This appropriation is part of a plan recently inaugurated by the trustees of the Rosenwald Fund to provide library service for any county in the South which will undertake partial support of the program during the first five years and entire responsibility for it at the end of that time. The sum of $500,000 has already been set aside by the Fund for immediate appropriation to communities winning to cooperate in the plan, and it is understood that millions more will be made available as needed. The appropriation to Charlottie and Mecklenburg county is the second big gift funds in this connection, the first being a five-year grant of $29,000 to Darwin county, N. C. Clark Funeral of Alpine, former field secretary of the Commission on Intercultural Competence and need, a secretary of the Rosenwald Fund, represents the Fund in association with county
Science Can Make Land Safe for White and Harness Resources
The work which South African scientists can perform, on the one hand in elucidating the immense antiquity of the African Continent and thereby, perhaps, discovering the origins of human life, and on the other hand, in developing the huge resources of Africa, was outlined by Mr. Jan H. Hofmeyr, president of the South African Association, in an address at Cape Town in connection with the visit of members of the British Association, says the London Daily Telegraph.
"The day must come," he remarked, "when the Victoria Falls will mean more for Africa than Niagara means for America."
"He spoke also of the opportunities for solving the color problem. 'We hear men speak' he said, "of the clash of color, and are sometimes told that Africa is the strategic point in that struggle. I think of it rather as the continent, which offers the richest opportunities to those who would investigate racial problems in the true spirit of science and so discover solutions which may yet enable that clash to be averted and the threat which it implies to our civilization to be displaced."
An Immense Field; for Study
There was also an Immense field for the study of tropical and other diseases. The work done in connection with the gold-mining industry had prepared the way, they might well hope, for revolutionary advances in the detection, treatment and prevention of respiratory diseases.
Mr. Hoffmeyer said they welcomed the British Association the more heartily because of the great indebtedness to the first visit of the association twenty-four years ago—linked with the name of Sir David Gill—which began an epoch of consolidation of the position of science in South Africa.
The most broadly significant feature in the development of science in South Africa since 1905 was its "South Africanization." There had been brought to bear on scientific investigation the distinctive features of the South African outlook—freshness and breadth of view, receptivity to new illuminations and readiness to see old truths, in new settings and in the light of their wider bearings. Was it too much to hope that in the next period they would "Africanize" their science?
The New Outlook
One of the most significant tendencies in the last few years had been the growing consciousness of their obligations in relation to the continent of Africa. They realized that their European civilization, set upon the verge of the great continent, was at once an opportunity and a challenge.
"In the mind of the nation there was being developed a new conception of South Africa, of a South Africa that consciously and deliberately sought to play its part on the African continent, not aiming at conquest or domination, but never failing in its readiness to give its intellectual and material resources to aid all engaged in the task of developing this great unprotected area of the earth's surface."
African geology, Mr. Hofmeyer continued, could establish the hypothesis that Africa, was the mother continent from which India, Madagascar, and Australia on the one side, and South America on the other, had been dislodged.
The exploitation of potentially fossil-bearing, rocks might yield remains of beings more primitive than any yet discovered.
In anthropology Africa seemed full of splendid promise of discoveries that might verify Darwin's belief in the probability that somewhere in that great and mass was the some of nature's greatest creative effort. This Brown Till, Tuseng, Monkey, and Tsetshenan discoveries opened up a vista of anthropological continuity such as no other continent could offer.
Fund of $600,00,000 To Be Raised To Carry On This Great Work
Wynne Will Establish Blood Donor Control
Transfusion Service to be Centralized
Blood donors, who have for years been indiscriminately used by some unscrupulous physicians and small proprietary hospitals, are to be regulated, listed and controlled under a central service, Dr. Shirley W. Wynne, Commissioner of Health, announced today. The very excellent results go often obtained from properly performed transfusions have led to such a rapid development of this procedure that grave abuses have arisen which the Department of Health feels must be eliminated, in order to protect the public health. There are more than 2,000 individuals, some alleged to be suffering from incurable diseases, listed on call in so-called "blood agencies." Commissioner Wynne said, "We will take immediate and drastic steps to control this unbelievable condition. Our investigators have disclosed that blood donors, listed in seemingly reputable agencies, are sometimes suffering from syphilis and pulmonary disorders."
"We cannot allow present conditions to continue," said the Commissioner, "for they would inevitably cause blood transfusion to be discredited. As a matter of fact, when properly performed this procedure is often a most valuable means of saving life. For this reason we plan to regulate transfusion through our Sanitary Code."
"To the best of our knowledge this is the first constructive attempt to organize and control blood donors anywhere. It is true that under the London Red Cross an attempt was made to organize London blood donors during the earlier part of 1926, but the effort I understand was only partially successful."
There are between seven and eight thousand transfusions performed in Greater New York annually. Commissioner Wynne pointed out. The need for organization and control is obvious. The department is particularly concerned about the professional donor, solicited from the parks of the city, who is cared for and hired out on a ten per cent basis by agencies in the city. There are approximately fifteen of these agencies existing. Dr. Wynne said.
"The success of a blood transfusion in necessarily dependent upon the health of the donor."
The dictum of a clergyman that Negroes would not be tolerated in St. Matthew's Brooklyn Episcopal Church unleashed a storm of criticism today that threatens to sweep the Rev. William S. Blackshear, the pastor who made the statement, into a bitter dispute.
Starting with the heated reproach of James Weldon Johnson, secretary of the Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who branded the rector's stand as "Jim Crow Christianity," many other protests were made.
While refusing to criticize Rev. Blackshear, on the ground that each parish is permitted to decide its own policy, Bishop Sires of the Episcopal diocese of Long Island sprang warmly to the defense of the Negro race.
DESTROY, Sept. 18. The Ford
Motor Company has put its River
River Rouge plant on a working head of
five days a week. This applies
throughout the plant with the exception
of the electric furnace, heat
furnace and cement unit. Officials
said there had been no last call.
8130.000 Raised at First Meeting in Jamaica
In Ten Years Race Is to Be Uplift Everybody Must Work
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
According to the commands of the Sixth Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World from the 1st to the 31st August, I was authori-
ing to your attention the important fact that the aspireses of the Universal Negro Improver-
rican Communities League of the World, Augu-
carrying out of the biggest program ever undiestrally, commercially, politically, socially a Negro race.
to the commands of the Sixth Annual Inter-
national Negro Peoples of the World held at King-
dom to the 31st August, I was authorized to write
tion the important fact that the Convention
of the Universal Negro Improvement Associa-
tions League of the World, August 1929, legis-
lated the biggest program ever undertaken geo-
mercially, politically, socially and education-
According to the commands of the Sixth Annual International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World held at Kingston, Jamaica, from the 1st to the 31st August, I was authorized to write to you: bring-
ing to your attention the important fact that the Convention has, under the auspices of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League of the World, August 1929, legislated for the carrying out of the biggest program ever undertaken economically, industrially, commercially, politically, socially and educationally by the Negro race.
Convention Tremendous Success
The Convention in Jamaica was a tremendous point of view. The delegates from America, Islands, South and Central America and Africa of unity to make a hereditary success, in part, they were called together to discuss and legislate.
ution in Jamaica was a tremendous success. The delegates, from America, the other in India and Central America and Africa, blended take a hereditary success, in putting over the best-together to discuss and legislate on.
a tremendous success from every in America, the other West Indian and Africa, blended in one spirit, in putting over the program that and legislate on.
The Convention in Jamaica was a tremendous success from every point of view. The delegates, from America, the other West Indian Islands, South and Central America and Africa, blended in one spirit of unity to make a herculean success, in putting over the program that they were called together to discuss and legislate on.
Among the things decided on, are: . I
Things To Be Done
FIRST: The establishing in America of six purpose of manufacturing the commodities need the hundreds of millions of Negroes throughout countries are to be located in central parts of the erica, and are to be the mediums of securing of of thousands of our people now unemployed. 7 also to have subsidiary factories in different the assembling of raw materials, and for the manufactured by the major factories in Amer
The establishing in America of six major fact- manufacturing the commodities necessary, and the off millions of Negroes throughout the world, the located in central parts of the United Sta- to be the mediums of securing employment of our people now unemployed. These major subsidiary factories in different parts of the the of raw materials, and for the distribution- by the major factories in America.
America of six major factories for the modities necessary, and consumed by us throughout the world. These fac- part of the United States of Am- securing employment for hundreds employed. These major factories are in different parts of the world, for and for the distribution of products in America.
FIRST: The establishment in America of six major factories for the purpose of manufacturing the commodities necessary, and consumed by the hundreds of millions of Negroes throughout the world. These factories are to be located in central parts of the United States of America, and are to be the mediums of securing employment for hundreds of thousands of our people now unemployed. These major factories are also to have subsidiary factories in different parts of the world, for the assembling of raw materials, and for the distribution of products manufactured by the major factories in America.
To Purchase Lands
SECOND: To purchase 75,000 acres of land of America, for agricultural development, 50,000 British West Indies, 50,000 acres in British Haiti British Guinea, 50,000 acres in Haiti, and 50 where we shall plant such agricultural product supply the millions of Negroes throughout the employment for our people.
To purchase 75,000 acres of land in the U.S. for agricultural development, 50,000 acres in Jamaica, 50,000 acres in British Honduras, 50,000 acres in Haiti, and 500,000 acres all plant such agricultural products as are millions of Negroes throughout the world, the or our people.
acres of land in the United States
ment, 50,000 acres in Jamaica, Bri-
lish Honduras, 50,000 acres in
aiti, and 500,000 acres in Liberias,
nural products as are necessary to
onghout the world, thereby finding
SECOND: To purchase 75,000 acres of land in the United States of America, for agricultural development, 50,000 acres in Jamaica, British West Indies, 50,000 acres in British Honduras, 50,000 acres in British Guinea, 50,000 acres in Haiti, and 500,000 acres in Liberias, where we shall plant such agricultural products as are necessary to supply the millions of Negroes throughout the world, thereby finding employment for our people.
hundred million Dollars to see that the program of the Organization is executed in the next ten years
THIRD: To establish 3 Negro universities; one in America, one in Jamaica, and one in Africa for the higher technical training of our race.
Sixth October Big Day
We have set apart, the 6th of October as the opening day for the Drive to start accumulating this fund. Every Division, Branch and Chapter of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, is therefore, advised, according to the commands of the Convention, to organize and arrange for the holding of a special meeting on Sunday, the 6th of October, either in the afternoon, or at night, to receive pledges from Negroes, in each and every community, toward the One Hundred Million Dollar Drive. In the maze at the first meeting, the amount of One Hundred and Ten Thousand Dollar was announced. Now that the meetings are simultaneously held, it is felt Negroes in all parts of the continent consent to Five
FOURTH: To launch a new line of steamships. To ply between the United States of America and the West Indies, Africa and South and Central America.
Daily Newspapers and Embassies FIFTH: To establish a line of Daily Newspapers especially in the United States of America, the West Indies and Africa.
SIXTH: To establish Embassies in the principal countries of the world, to act as clearing houses for the business activities of the Negro race and the leading of protection to the Negro people of the world.
Fund of Six Hundred Millions These, and many more items of vital importance and interest were legislated on, and it was decided conveniently to raise a fund of Six
Delegate Arriving 1st of Doings of 6th International Convention
The Independent Weekly.
The Voice of the Industrial Negro
Negro World
Reaching the Mass of Negroes
The Best Advertising Medium
A Newspaper Devoted solely to the Interests of the Negro Race
VOL. XXVL—No. 8
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1929
MIGHTY PROGRAMME MAPPED OUT FOR RACE
Vast Organization Projected To Increase Registration
Organization of Army of "Delaney-for-Congress Volunteers" Provides Work for All Who Apply
Special Trial Board Separates Excuses; Saves Time
"Organization of the "Delany-for Congress Volunteers," a vast army of workers who will go out with the sole purpose of increasing Harlem's registration in the Twenty-first Congressional district so as to insure the election of Hubert T. Delany, Republican nominee, on November 5, is the plan now being worked out by Campaign Manager William M. Kelley, editor of The Amsterdam News. The backbone of the plan comprehends the use of existing political machinery in the five assembly districts embraced by the congressional district and as many volunteer workers as are willing to take an active part in the campaign.
As its name implies, the "Delany-for-Congress Volunteers" will be constructed along military lines, beginning with "Privates," on persons who pledge themselves to vote for Delany for Congress. Next come the "Corporals," or heads of household, large or small, who will pledge themselves to register and vote eligible voters living in a private house or apartment.
Any person who pledges himself to canvass an entire apartment, appointing and receiving reports from "Corporals," is entitled to the rank of "Sergeant" in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers. Active "Sergeants" are the principal need, Mr. Kelley said.
Above the rank of "Sergeant," the plan the touches, the regular Republican Organizations and their elective and appointive officials.
Membrium of the County Committees. In the various assembly districts, will be "Lieutenants" in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers and receive the reports for the "Sergeants" in their election districts, and these reports will be turned over to the Regular Republicans. Organization committees, who retain the same rank in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers, these reports will also be furnished to the Delany-for-Congress Campaign Committee. Associate and co-leaders in the regular organization will rank as "Majors," while executive district leaders will rank as "Colonels."
Thus, the plan, if properly executed, will furnish us near a complete list of eligible voters and non-voters in the Congressional district as it is humanly possible to get, and these will be urged by the Volunteer officers to register between October 7 and 12, the regular registration days in New York City, and so as to vote for Delany November 8.
Delany buttons and badges setting forth the "rank" of officers in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers, along with statutory on which to make their reports will be furnished to the workers without cost.
Citizens who desire to enlist for service in the Delany-for-Congress Volunteers have been requested to make application on the blank printed below, and to send or bring it to the Delany-for-Congress Campaign Headquarters, 2003 Seventh avenue, next door to the old Chelsea Bank
With the patience of a good housewife breaking in a new cook, the City of New York educates restaurant owners, grocers, delicatessen store owners, etc., who have broken the regulations of the Sanitary Code through ignorance; bue woe betide the man or woman engaged in supplying food to this-great city who tries to "get by" with spotted food, unanticipated apparatus and such misuses against the good health of citizens.
Exercises, Novel and Nave
Once a week, the long narrow trial room at the Department of Health is filled with men and women, each one going over in his own mind the excuse he will present to the three men settled on a daim at the front of the room—men skilled in understanding what lies behind an entrance and in many cases—lies and lies and lies.
L. K. Williams Urges Union of Negro Baptists
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 11.—(By A.N.P.)—The union of the various branches of the Baptist denomination, was urged here-by Dr. L. K. Williams, president of the National Baptist Convention, incorporated, the largest in his annual address, Wednesday afternoon, in which he cited the need for greater improvement and greater crusading by the church.
While the speaker outlined the accomplishments of the organization in the past and the program for future development, he stressed the need of unifying the Baptist forces, pointing out that there should be a "Baptist Retention Committee appointed to meet a similar body from the National Baptist Convention, Unincorporated, and the Lott Carey Convention and draw up articles of peace and union.
"I do yet believe," declared Dr. Williams, "that the Negro Baptists of the world should somewhere and sometime meet and work together in one grand body. I do not see how real Christians and true Baptists can cherish anything other than the desire for union peace and harmony."
Referring to the work of the church Dr. William迪赖德: "A careful investigation of our church programs will reveal I fear, that they are ill-adjusted to young life. Their forms of worship are often too dull and monotonous. The church has a distinct work to do. The church must check the reckless divorce crane now sweeping the country. It can do this by holding up the Christian spirit of marriage."
Turning his attention to citizenship, Dr. Williams pointed out to his readers that "Negroes have learned that white forces and silly threats are not their best weapons. Character and accomplishments are more cloaked and paranoidize. Today the Negro is not seeking pity, charity, and gifts, but real justice. Negroes have labored to make America and believe that they are entitled to the rights and privileges which others no more loyal than they enjoy without restrictions."
Miss Alyce Prison, the West Indian singer, has paid a visit to Wilmington Church, Diefenbog, for services on Sunday and Monday. The church members were delighted with her rendering of choice, musical and Negro spirituals. She said she was "out to do what the could for her race," and acknowledged her indebtedness to the Merriam Missionary Society, who influenced her when a girl to become a Christian. Monday night's reel was an unparalleled scene in Wilmington.
Bureau of Food and Drugs; and Joseph H. Shea, Chief of Division of Milk Inspection. In the last three years since the Minor Trial Board was established they have heard approximately 17,000 cases. During 1928 alone, they heard 7,000 cases and of that number they saved nearly 8,000 from cluttering up the courts unnecessarily.
"Often, violation of the law in these cases is the result of inexperience and ignorance of food regulations." Committee, *Florida W. Wypra* explained, and when we explain fully the exact requirements we find these people eager to comply with them." In many cases we have given the food handlers a new appreciation of their position in the community—granting of the health of those whom they serve. The others who remain unknown to their public duty are passed on to the侵略ist enemy, where they get almost attention, then they could have had if all the others were suppressed there.
M.
the late Hon. Arthur Kennedy,
who died in Kingston, Jas. R. W.
I., while attending the Sixth Int-
ternational Convention.
MARCUS GARVEY
Marcus Garvey at the recent U. N. L. A. Convention in Kingston, Jamaica, launched a proposition to raise $600,000,000 to be paid by the association's branches within 10 years. The money is to be used to establish embassies over the world, representing the interest of Negroes and to establish daily papers in London, Paris, New York, Washington; on the Gold Coast in Africa and several in the West Indies. A mighty big program to any the least. While all fair minded people must admit that Garvey by his vigorous agitation has done more to arouse the consciousness of his race to their great possibilities than any other man living, however, he will never live to see the things for which he fights. And he will never get, sufficient support to enable him to put over his program completely. Many of us will never agree with him on every point. Some of us oppose him but nobody has been able to hugh him. He is just Marcus Garvey. Right or wrong, he has the providential following of any of our leaders in the world. That being true, in foolish on the part of any one, millions not however much he may differ in attempts to helpless the man and the work he is doing. We are not a Garveyite but we do believe him to be a man of almost unassailable gift and imbued with a desire to render service to his race and we believe him to be sincere.—The Advocate, Portland, Ore.
RosenwaldGives
Libraries For
Rural South
Charlotte, N. C., Sept. 3.—One of the first steps in an ambitious plan to make adequate library facilities available to the millions of the South, white and colored, has just been taken here by the acceptance by the Charlotte Library Board of a conditional gift of $80,000 from the Rosenwald Fund, which is to be met by local gifts of considerable larger amount, the whole to be used during the next five years in developing a country with a library system.
With the funds thus provided a system of distribution will be arranged reaching all the schools of the county, and the children will be trained in the use of the library and taught to care for the books. Other means of distribution, probably by sub-stations and library trucks, will be provided in order to make the services, of the library accessible to everybody in the county. It is one of the express conditions of the Recommendation that equal service shall be provided for the people of both races.
This appropriation is part of a plan recently inaugurated by the trustees of the Rosenwald Fund to provide library service for any county in the South which will undertake partial support of the program during the first five years and entire responsibility for it at the end of that time. The sum of $800,000 has already been set aside by the Fund for immediate appropriation to communities winning to compensate in the plan, and it is understood that millions more will be made available as needed. The appropriation to Charlotte and Mckleenburg county is the second big gift made for the connection, the first being a gift grant of $800,000 to Durham county, N. C. Clark Peterson of Affinity, former and secretary of the Commission on Interlibrary Corporation and now a director of the Rosenwald Fund, represents the
Science Can Make Land Safe for White and Harness Resources
The work which South African scientists can perform, on the one hand in elucidating the immense antiquity of the African Continent and thereby, perhaps, discovering the origins of human life, and on the other hand, in developing the huge resources of Africa, was outlined by Mr. Jan H. Hofmeyr, president of the South African Association, in an address at Cape Town in connection with the visit of members of the British Association, says the London Daily Telegraph.
"The day must come," he remarked, "when the Victoria Falls will mean more for Africa than Niagara means for America."
He spoke also of the opportunities for solving the color problem. "We hear men speak" he said, "of the clash of color, and are sometimes told that Africa is the strategic point in that struggle. I think of it rather as the continent which offers the richest opportunities to those who would investigate racial problems in the true spirit of science and so discover solutions which may yet enable that clash to be averted, and the threat watch it implies to our civilization to be digested." An Immense Field for Study. There was also an immense field for the study of tropical and other diseases. The work done in connection with the gold-mining industry had prepared the way, they might only hope, for revolutionary advances in the detection, treatment and prevention of respiratory diseases.
Mr. Hoffman told this welcome the Dutch Association the more heavily because of the great indebtedness to the first visit of the association twenty-four years ago—linked with the name of Sir David Gill—which began an epoch of consolidation of the position of science in South Africa.
The most broadly significant feature in the development of science in South Africa since 1905 was its "South Africanization." There had been brought to bear on scientific investigation the distinctive features of the South African outlook—freshness and breadth of vision, receptivity to new illuminations and readiness to see old tatter in new settings and in the light of their wider beginnings. What it often much to bear in that the next period they would "Africanize" their science?
The New Outlook
One of the most significant tendencies in the last few years had been the growing consciousness of their obligations in relation to the continent of Africa. They realized that their European civilization, set upon the value of the great continent, was at once an opportunity and a challenge.
"In the mind of the nation there was being developed a new conception of South Africa, of a South Africa that consciously and deliberately sought to pray its part on the African continent, not aiming at conquest or domination, but never failing in its goodness to give its intellectual and material resources to aid all incurred in the task of developing this great undeveloped area of the earth's surface."
African geology. Mr. Hofmeyer continued, could establish the hypothesis that Africa was the mother continent from which India, Madagascar, and Australia on the one side, and South America on the other, had been dislodged.
The exploitation of potentially fossil-bearing rocks might yield remains of beings more primitive than any yet discovered.
In anthropology Africa seemed full of splendid promise of discovery that might verify Darwin's belief in the probability that somewhere is that great land mass was the some of nature's greatest creative effort. The Broken Till, Tsumu, Bodip and Tukutahana discoveries opened up a vista of anthropological continuity such as no other continent could offer.
These great Tales
Fund of $600,00,000 To Be Raised To Carry On This Great Work
Wynne Will Establish Blood Donor Control
Transfusion Service to be Centralized
Blood donors, who have for years been indiscriminately used by some unsupervised physicians and small proprietary hospitals, are to be regulated, listed and controlled under a central service, Dr. Shirley W. Wynne, Commissioner of Health, announced today. The very excellent results, so often obtained from properly performed transfusions have led to such a rapid development of this procedure that grave abuses have arisen which the Department of Health feels must be eliminated in order to protect the public health. There are more than 2,000 individuals, some alleged to be suffering from incurable diseases, listed on call in no-call "blood agencies." Commissioner Wynne said, "We will take immediate and drastic steps to control this unbelievable condition. Our investigators have disclosed that blood donors, listed in seemingly reputable agencies, are sometimes suffering from nyphilite and pulmonary disorders."
"We cannot allow present conditions to continue," said the Commissioner, "for they would inevitably cause blood transfusion to be disproportion. At a matter of fact when properly presented this procedure is often a most valuable means of saving life. For this reason we plan to regulate transfusion through our Sanctuary Code."
"To the best of our knowledge this is the first conclusive attempt to organize and control blood donors anywhere. It is true that under the London Red Cross an attempt was made to organize London blood donors during the earlier part of 1920, but the effort I understand was only partially successful."
There are between seven and eight thousand Transitions performed in Greater New York annually, Commissioner Wynne pointed out. The need for organization and control is obvious. The department is particularly concerned about the professional donor, collected from the purity of the city, who is cared for and blood out on a ten per cent. basis by agencies in the city. There are approximately fifteen of these agencies existing, Dr. Wynne said.
"The success of a blood transfusion is necessarily dependent upon the health of the donor."
The dictum of a clergyman that Negroes would not be tolerated in St. Matthew's Brooklyn Episcopal Church unleashed a storm of criticism today that threatens to sweep the Rev. William S. Blackshear, the pastor who made the statement, into a bitter dispute.
Starting with the heated reproach of James Waldon Johnson, secretary of the Association for the Advancement of Colorado People, who branded the rector's stand as "Jim Crow Christianity," many other protests were made.
While refusing to criticize Rev. Blackshear, on the ground that each parish is permitted to decide its own policy, Bishop Bires of the Episcopal diocese of Long Island sprang warmly to the defense of the Negro race.
Ford Sets 5-Day
Work Week
DETROIT, Sept. 18.—The Ford
Motor Company has put its River
Image plant on a working basis
of five days a week. This applies
throughout the plant with the ex-
ception of the obligate furnace, heat
furnace, and cement unit. Officia
m said there had been no lay-offs.
Sunday 6th of October Is to Be Starting Date 5130,000 Raised at First Meeting in Jamaica
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
According to the commands of the Sixth Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World, from the 1st to the 31st August, I was authorized to give to your attention the important fact that the uspices of the Universal Negro Improvement Communities League of the World, August carrying out of the biggest program ever undertaken districtally, commercially, politically, socially and Negro race.
Convention Tremendous
The Convention in tradition was a tremendous point of view. The delegates from America, Italy, South and Central America and Africa of unity to make a hectic success, in public they were called together to discuss and legalize among the things described on, are:
Things To Do First:
The establishing in America of six purpose of manufacturing the commodities need the hundreds of millions of Negroes throughout the erica, and are to be the mediums of securing of thousands of our people now unemployed, also to have subsidiary factories in different the assembling of raw materials, and for the manufactured by the major factories in America.
To Purchase Land Second:
To purchase 75,000 acres of 10 of America for agricultural developments 50,000 British West Indies, 50,000 acres in British British Guinea, 50,000 acres in Haiti, and 50,000 where we shall plant such agricultural products the millions of Negroes throughout the environment for our people.
"According to the commands of the Sixth Annual International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World held at Kingston, Jamaica, from the 1st to the 31st August, I was authorized to write to your bring-
THE MUSICIAN
ing to your attention the important fact that the Convention has, under the auspices of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League of the World, August 1929, legislated for the carrying out of the biggest program ever undertaken economically, industrially, commercially, politically, socially and educationally by the Negro race.
Convention Tremendous Success
The Convention in definition was a tremendous success from every point of view. The delegates from America, the other West Indian nations, South and Central America and Africa, blended in one spirit of unity to make a bountiful success, in putting over the program that they were called together to discuss and legislate one.
FIRST: The establishing in America of six major factories for the purpose of manufacturing the commodities necessary, and consumed by the hundreds of millions of Negroes throughout the world. These factories are to be located in central parts of the United States of America, and are to be the mediums of securing employment for hundreds of thousands of our people now unemployed. These major factories are also to have subsidiary factories in different parts of the world, for the assembling of raw materials, and for the distribution of products manufactured by the major factories in America.
SECOND: To purchase 75,000 acres of land in the United States of America for agricultural development 50,000 acres in Jamaica, British West Indies, 50,000 acres in British Honduras, 50,000 acres in British Guinea, 50,000 acres in Haiti, and 500,000 acres in Liberias, where we shall plant such agricultural products as are necessary to supply the millions of Negroes throughout the world, thereby finding employment for our people.
Hundred-Million Dollars to see that the program of the Organization is executed in the next ten years.
Sixth October Big Day
We have set apart the 6th of October as the opening day for the Drive to start accumulating this fund. Every Division, Branch and Chapter of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, is therefore, advised, according to the commands of the Convention, to organise and arrange for the holding of a special meeting on Sunday, the 6th of October, either at the afternoon, or at night, to read pledges from Negroes in each city every community, toward the 6th Hundred Million Dollar Debt. In majors at the first meeting held, amount of One Hundred Million Dollar was received. Now that the meetings are commencing, they hold at 8 o'clock Monday in all parts of the city.
Three Universities and Steamships THIRD: To establish S Negro universities; one in America, one in Jamaica, and one in Africa, for the higher technical training of our race. FOURTH: To launch a new line of steamships, to ply between the United States of America and the West Indies, Africa and South and Central America. Daily Newspapers and Embassies FIFTH: To establish a line of Daily Newspapers especially in the United States of America, the West Indies and Africa. SIXTH: To establish Embassies in the principal countries of the world, to act as clearing houses for the business activities of the Negro race and the leading of protection to the Negro peoples of the world.
Finished six hundred minutes.
These, and many more, still of vital importance and interest were lightened on, and it was decided momentarily to raise a flask of six
SAY: NIGHT Al LIBERTY BALL
re
ge rarer lub Stages Big Mecting at the
CGenmowwealt Custis Large Hall “le
gen eked ‘to. the-Doore With' Eager Crowd
‘ Mambo peat Pichds Asser ee Hear
the. Messages Brought by the Hon. E. B.
‘Wsiox,: Ist“Ace’t: Pres.-General,: and -Mmes.
M_L.'T. DeMena, International Organizer
—Hon. Ethel M. Collins, Vice-President of
‘the Garvéy Club, Inc., of New-York, ‘Hon.
Milton’ Kelly, President ‘East™ Brooklyn
‘Chapter; and Hon. Mrs. S. V. Robertson,
of Cleveland, Ohio, Among the Speakers;
—Amazing Interest Displayed by the ge
Growd, Straining- Their Ears. to: Catch
‘Every Word From the Lips of the Speakers}
—-Determination Expressed to Follow the
Banner of the Universal Negro Improve-
mnt Association of the World, August 1929
—Must Climb Every Obstacle in the Path
Redemption of Africa, Say Speakers. and]
Great Assemblage Roars Amen. .
k fo Fe me eat, \ :
i Gey)
fo i eae ‘
a / : ae ee ‘
} WT See eal
| be Dr FR
born, - AIL e * .
TO “WAKE.UP”- . t
VOUR SCALP - 5 :
and Beautify Your Hair *~ = ,
Sleepy; lazy, innctive scalps are responsible for dull, lifelesse whe
Attractive hair. Yours necd not be that wily. Mme. C. J. Walker's .
Wonderini Hair Grower will “wake-up” your scalp, enliven: the
hair_rooty and. make yout hair 50¢ Almost Anywhere —~
healthy, tong; sitky. and soft It_ <gaeeaaeriarwere a>
T ‘is your guarantee of pretty hair 4.
Use thi: ti reguiarls pent i
apd you will be: warprised with | Sate. |
the new beauty of your hafr and wy A HE
= ‘thie comptiments it wilt bring” | [7 A if
pemroiniiie <A FE
> > Mme. {Seer am AL |
Ny UAT RE \ Swen
J: WALKER’S |: aaa a4
‘WONDERFUL Naa"
pate Wented a : WER
New ‘York, N. ¥.. Sunday Nignt,
September 22nd, 1929... One ciin rend:
fiy imagine-“that there was a. huge
tury out of members and friends of
we Garvey Clud, Inc., of New York
‘oulght, when all roads Je to the
Commonwenith Carino, situnted at 12
B. 125th Street, near’ Madison Ave-
nue, And why not? It was: the occ
alon when the Hon, E: B, Knox, ist
Assistant-Gencral of the Universal
Negro. Inrprovement Association af
the World, August, 1920 Was to” be
on hand to present his report of the
Sixth International Convention of the
Negro ‘Peoples of the World; and
ByeFybody wanted to de there.
Mme. M. L. 1. DeMena, Interna-
Honal Organizer, of the some Associa-
‘Hon was-also scheduled to appear.
having also, recently ‘arrived from
Kfagston, Jamaicn,- where she had
one to attend the historic cecsions of
the Sixth Internationa! Convention. of
| args 5)
A, DOZEN diferent thines, my
* Beare a headzslic, bit there's
just one tling you cecd ever do 0
fet relict. Boyer Aspirin is an
Fhsolute antidote for such pain.
Keep it at the office, Have it handy
in the home, Those subject to fre
etint or eiiéden headaches should
garry Bayer Aspirin in the pocket-
tin, Until you hizve used it for healle
aches, colds? neutaleiz. cte., you've
hoides how Bayer Aspirin caa help.
Ut iesns quick, complete raliat to
millions of mea and woth “who
use it every year. And it doce not
depress the Reart.
fon. eile
fecha (FREE EG
Ne de
Sapteln te the wade vaark of Dares stasmreetise
the Negro Peoples of the World.
| who' were listed to be present were the
Hon, Ethel Collins. Vice-president of
the Garvey Club, Inc., of New York,
Hon. Mry.@B. V." Robertson, “of the
Clevolana, Ohio division, und the Ton
Milton Kelly,’ presidest of ‘tie Zast
Brooktyn Chapter. 2
Enthugiasm ran bigh, and precitely
at §:20 the band under Prof. itasseil
struck up ftfe-Processional Hyma, the
Legions? MAmser Corps, Black Cross
nurses, antl the Junigr Cadet Corps
swung’ into lite, the vast, audience
rose to Hts feet, and joned by the
choir, uader Mrs: Mf. Dume, and the
Officers of THE GAREF Cram -and thie
High Offisiats who hid just returned
from. the Conventinn Lind, the unt
fori ranks gave x splendid display
which won the hearin af ail those
present. | .
‘phere, Weare Tettae aa the mlyetarsy
the Hon, 6. B. Knox, Isis Assiitant
Presideni-iereral of ige U.S. be aX,
of" the Worlds-nf August 2929, Hon.
Mme. 2. [. T. Délsena, International
Organizes, Stra. B Capers, president
of the Garay Club, Ine. of “New
Yorite Sirs. S. V. Robertson, of the
Cleveland, Oblo Division, Mrs. ©. W.
Brown,.cf Norfolk, Va. Division, Hen.
iBihel 38. Colling, viecepresident of tin
Garvey: Cith, Ine, the -Hon, Suton
Yell. presidect of the Bast Brimsiva
Charter, Mrs. , Forrest, Col. J. W.
Ballamy. of the Us. Lesion, an:
Rev. 8. T. Brown, editor of The Neato,
World, who acted as chalrrsam of the!
meetinss. : :
nnd’ iey Picunthing,” folowge hy!
pagers froin the pital, pnd the" shi
ing of tae hyetn, “od.of tte Right" |
Eves; Bites “hives osceet
iow Phin idem and
Women Gain Weight
Tndape. ample Guneesiee a
Hig ia wetgienuiiitne Satta ae ey
fatane aud wit net Apes or ects Gee
Neeser brash eter ciara
Hite vnaerruat _ hantinebultdans,
sisemiiyccneabing, wresatirodasinet cote
SE ine Sein, overs die ons
In Noth Amores, wid setts of Ges
Sheieee: cueey iota ae
McCoy tes kh Gyeerbldls werd ius
wrancsigg “auasnice © te ckcore eating
Hise saeiyecetin Inte, Of Mei Gegts Fae
feat of bee anae tat bore teas am
Ungeteipgine taamie seaman dowett de
He fare te poate au toes cmomaneeets
Hugged ‘Wait tie actieg, imbeeemnn
it isin geie nme Shh te eae
Uist afer “MeCoy'n “Tabiets nt ony
MeCoy's Laboratories, the, $2 W. Uth
Sitker REV SO CEE -
1 eS i
i ‘ :
ee, SOT ECF .
| Quine io Oontempleied Heorgentsaiion of | -
i 7 7 7 7
roe . ERERTY UNFVERSrey.
a ae ie at = Ta
: : cay
|.) Phe School Wik Net Se Gperied Uniil -
oo Further: Notice.
| BA wy oy
nat By Order-2f” wey
: ; - BOARD OF DIRECTORS
All Roads Léad to Boyie’s ‘ierorial Chueh |
| 2+ BRooKLYN’ *
“ . Gorner Gates Avenue and Irving Place ~~
_. ON SUNDAY, SEPT. 29th at 3 P. M..
To Hear Official Report of Convention Pro-. !
‘ eeedings, A Galaxy. of Speakers; Elaborate ,
- > HON, BB. KNOX, Principal Speaker)
“all Miniosore ‘and Leaders and tbe‘Public ie
oe gy - * Crdiglly Invited to, Atsend 52).
LL thdmistion + + 50 Conte
the brane. eek of Ages, CO
ae CGB ROC ALER. FO>
usted. Then cazas the reading wf tha
| President-Clenerel’s. re
Jn gsvet titon oR
i 2008, 7. Brown, peeveted a
mithewi, by “the chotr; oe
‘woundy. at hearty fe
ee-president of the Ghrwey Chub, a
Gelegate from the Sixth Rptoraational
Onavention: fora ahort eddrens. .At
tht lowk-6¢ ‘thie. Satereating-adtiress
the audience bad tht refreshing ex-
‘perience of listening to «: dramatic
Tecltal by Miss Glddys E. Parker, en-
titled “Hold the Light,” which took
the house by storm. -
Hon. Milton Kelly, ‘prebident of: the
Bast Brooklyo: Chapter wes the next
speaker, who also gave his impres-
sions of the great convention, and
urged upon his hearers the necessity
of standing steadfast and true,,in the
cause of Negro uplitt. ;
‘The Hom Mrs, S° V. Robertson, on
being’ intréduced by the ebsirmian, ex-
pressed the importance, of getting out
of the way of the big guns that-were
to do the real shooting for the ogca-
sjons meverthelexs for a fow ralgutes
she took the audiewee in charge, and
carried them with .her, Toying with’
the emotions of the crowd, as a cat
pias with a mouse. She swayed them|
whdyever she wanted them; ané-made
@ shat impression, 5 |
A Yeree of the hymn “God Bless Our
President,” was sung, then in a few
well-clsen rémarks the chairman in-
troduceW the next speaker in the per-
son of Mme, M. L. T, DeMenu,"Inter-
national Organizer. After ackrowlads=
ing the yalutation of the assemSiy,
Madaiye DeMena sald’ that she. too’
had to give way, ‘ao. this wer-really
the occasion for the Hom. K. B. Knox
tq deliver ‘bla repoit. Sue however,
took, opportutity to give a short.|
snappy and graphic description of the |
events which toox place from the’
great Parade which marked the open’
Ing of Ube Sixth ,Taternationsl Ca|
vention, of the Negro Peoples of the}
World. « < |
‘The audience. was roused to #high|
pitch of enthusiasm and expectancy,
the thrilling deseription of the things
Jaaé down thers in Jamalea, Bs W, Ty
for the xood of the inhabitants of!
that island not alone, but for the gen: |
ral Rood of the race, She promised |
9 give her fuil report on: Sunday, |
Detoher Gt, whjch was the day set
wide dy the asyociailon’ for fe|
nledgen to the great eménelpation
und. The notices were given out, xad!
honofferinas gathered up, thea ‘tae!
pealer for the evening, the Hon. E.
3. Knox, Ist Assistant “President: |
General Was Introduced, araid tie’ tu-|
wultous sappknse of. the animated
satherfaz. |
Tn opening bis address Sr. Knox
ire ty be with the frieuds tonignt,
‘ter a short aBacnee, -duting wAtcis
inl he had Aad ae pleasure of at-
ending Wie sescions of the Sisth In-
ctoaiywial Convention’ of the Negro
‘conles of the World, He deverthed
ne hospitality of” tha people, of Ja-|
paiva. and the ntiny interesting sad]
tractive features of ite down there:
hen bern 9 tellvof the full Import!
ceisions thet Nad been rade, and ot |!
ne hoe forthe ‘atire fs
ur has come Lor the Necro, where: [3
ver Re may Rappen to be, to come to |
retlaainin of the tat that if ang fs
croc sien have a right to the things |:
den by Native and Nature's Gon,
en Lan Nezzo hat also the night to}.
Voy these same blessings, Wh are {i
Sa OSE OSS OES
fade, $6-daba eat eke: plea
Sts Cpu ceo
Spon ia tak Taagrd. We baoe Monee
ig tarombe talon anes of ae
rs
‘8 dostingy of; whi we 281
proud: = eee mle te
now’ cn, ederpes
‘por ao ano ia
SORES Seek at
cup Garvey, a °
‘asennad of “iumpelfi® =
palin mage 5 wtering be AD
‘peal.ta the Negeeee’ is wodtion of
Saar
ove) tbe side Oe the ore
Treedom of the Megro aad Une,Fedemp-
top: of his fathertend Agrics, ~~
“I tmplore you,” aald the speaker,
“to throw aside all the, things which
hitherto have kept you from. giving
the'fullest service to“thie race of ours,
and come into, the. ranks of tie a
versal Negro ‘Improvement Associa.
tien of the World, of August 1929,
and so-help us to. put the ‘program
over, andthe world will e bond to
respect the Negra”
He concluded by thanking the of-
figers and _members.of the Garvey
€hus-who-had- worked-hard—t
things ‘together through the’ trying
times passed, and promised a great
membership drive, forecasting “great:
success a
‘The Natlopal Anthem, led by -the
band and choir, and the pronouncing
of thy Benediction, brought this very
inspiring and interesting meeting to
| IN MEMORIAM
‘The. memboraxand friends of the
| sonroe Street Chapter regret, to. ai
hounce the death of Miss Una Simons
daughter of the. secretary of that
chapter, whica took place on Weduew
Gay, September 17th, at 4:45 p. m
| She leaves a father, mother. “brother
{and a host of relatives and friend:
| te mourn ber loss.
;., The Rev. Harrison Rockwell, of Atl
j Saints Episcopl «burch, cor. Heary
| and Senanmet Stevet: officiated at tne
| funeral services, Floral tributes were
recelved from’ Mr. Albert Hows, Mr.
| Mrs. B. McLead, Mr. and Mrs.
F. P. Ruse. Mr. George Cooper, Mfr.
| Reginald Brown, Mr, William Hartis,
|Mr. Dantet Boley, Mrs, Thomas and
| children, Mrs. Dollie M. Green, Mrs.
| Agnes Hall and sister. Col. J."W. Eel-
jamy of tha, U- WA. Legions attended.
“A ond the! garden gave U2, 9. pure
| and loving child, .
He gave-lt to our keeping, tq cherish
: ‘undefiled. * *
/But down came a heavenly Angel,
«and took the bud away.
Nate tuaulzwistes to thank those
| who rendered t8erm assistance in the
hour of {heir bereavement. :
fe ae BE ees
Lions Deelared to be
Afraid of Humans
Lions cf the wilds of Africa arc
timid thitigs apd dlink silently “away
when approached by humans, “There
in no truth In tho popular concep-
Hon"of the cntmal as being aggres-
sively ferocious. Asa mintter of fact,
they never Gxht Unies: sttacked, ace
cordiag fo Twin. Pederson of Pretoria,
ehaiguii of the African Ceres! and
Produce Mnenange, who ts at -the
Bute.
Vas ellinate of Afrlea, ke says, is
somevhat similar to thst of Califor
nin, There is abuniiant sunshine
Win Gcvantonal heavy rains. Pedar-
son {4 fooling forward te & bg beam
in the: coming yoars"for Africs.
Pe 1S yp OPERA Rag ie
: Ligcoln® School. :
“= "266269 West 1256 St.NY.C.
ae rer!
Bt OPER RS PY 2 HB
V2 ed Dey
ToctMbat 2? the Aret mestine th os fel.
WH 2s Ve oy a
‘Matoun: Garvey ee ae
Any: Teocpows: Garver. Ho SOY
4 cepwn nah
Bae Q 2 os
ts" 4 coe
ram ings Sap
Om TEAMS +. ange args 22 3,098.00
ade, agen siacees
Brate’ Bortete 25) kgfoqe. 1,000.00
Leo Grabt v...:s.ccseee gee), 250,00
Webel Collie .......02..6.. 1,000.00
Lara Jarett ...2....2vece.2 200.00
Hattie. Jobnvem ........../ 1,000.00
BT. Buchanan... <.-.s...5 7,250.00
S.A. Walcott. .....<2.62. 200.00
‘Migs Ethel Waller ........- 300.00
Mire. BE Headley ...2.2.... 300,00
ReA ME Potter elec. BORO
D. Be R060 see ececesegs + 80000
Dr. J. J. Patere..ceeteeces B2Q00
Agron Jobnsdn ices eee+ ” “BOK0Q
ALG. Taylor 202000002221. 300.00
Wi. A. Wallace... ..065. 25 + 500.00:
[te-Goater 555 28000
Rev. 8. M, Jones... 2..2..57 250.00
Mise 8. Lee co... ccc Feces 58.00,
Miss 3. B. Miler. Hwee iv 10D0E
ALR. A, Leavy. ccececeee 00
Qiadya Parker ...000.....4 280.00
3. E. MoKensie ........... 200.00
Robert 1. Ephraim ........ 3,000.00
Me SMI ede ene ees 3,000.00
.W. H. Cunnthgham ...2,... 1000.00.
Mira, Betty Lyles -.......+ © 200.00
Freé:.B. JOBBOOG ....e.. ete 1,000.00
S, B: Rowe .....-.5+--s%5+. 300.00
Mrs, L.. V. Washington: .... <500.00
Mrs, F. Plommer ......... 800.00
MeL. Jackson ..2.....6.... 30:00
Grover Ford ......ssse++e+ 1,600.00
Johnson Ferman ........., 500,00
Calvin Fania ...222222.22'2,500.00,
James Amlth ... 6... ..ec 22 800,00
Avénur G. Smith... 220... 24° 800.00
Rev. H. B. Green....2,...2. 2100.00
A. LFOrW.eceiests 80.00
C. 3. FOrd.. eee e ees ete. 500.00
Rev. N. Bellam:.......+-.. 100.00
Miss Devonshire ....4.....4 300.00
RM, Sterart.....ccpscscc. 250.00
Biss C.-3:Franels,./2.722!5—200.00
GB. Scott..z...58 2022.3 100.00
N. Headlam -.....scicscss+ 100.00
Miss L. Miller--......02... 240.00
O. J. F. Hatfold........2.+5 100.00
S. +B. Spence... se. dereeesee 30.00
Edward §. Halh...s.c.eie.. 50.00
L. S, Rusuell....1.tlesscese, 100.00
James Foot .tesecqsessesee 10.06
Edward McPhetgon ........ 25.00
George McCormack 1.200... 5000|
“ire. Indiana Peatt ........ 50,00
Stanley ClTKe weeseeeeees 50.60
Gilbert Wright Joccccsccsee 80,00]
A. Hardware ....ccscvsccse 220.00
SMALE es eeeeecreeee 50.80]
Mrs. Grace Hall .......s.06 20.00 |:
SS. WAtSGR...sesecceeees 50,00
Francis Scott -0.e.e.cseeen 25.00
farts Throut .2. 222.2002. | 30.00
m. Co Anderson......teveest. 26.00
Mies. B. Spalding....-.ses.. 10,00
Misa Hild: Robinson....... 23.00
rg) Z Lewis. sasseisess 1000)
Sr. and Mra. Winder....2. 100.00
irs. D. Walters....+.i+++-. 10.00
E. JONCS wseseevercaserene 25:00
c. Davis cvecsseegyeecesees 25:00
5. SOMES ceeeeeleceesss 1500
emy Spuldigg of... 30.00 |
cheer Dufith voeclecceeee $009 [3
dia Betiy .cccicieceeeee 10000)
sane Gregory wo. .t.c..2. 2000041
thnley Atherton s..tseee + 200.90) f
LBrend weeeccseceeesseee | 200.00]!
Erlend vs.seseeeeeeeege 200.00/)
A, Aikman... 300.00)4
eH Hale. eeee cee ee ee 2000.00 1f
Mitba Sanches wacceeeseee 200.0015
. Williiama ciccleseeesssee > 25.0011
Wworne Faves .eeeeeeressee 200.004)
J Wan, Baveaecccssesssee 2090018
UhCdO GOSH eee eeetee eee 09.00 |
erardo Leon lees ssctseee 259.00
tr and Mex. GW Waters 150.00 |
Everyuedy Must Do His By}
| Everybody Must Do Bis BIL
| such aed cvery-tetivice oni te
ag the abave individusis have done.
| Those who ena pledge Five Thousand,
Dollars, or Thre: Thoursed; or Twe
Thoccahd, or One Thousand or Five
Husared Wollarx should Co so, aud
minke arangements to pay in’ the
bmoueis in quarterly, helt yearly or
procs Go ik: aq thoy ougit 16 co,
thera ts no reesén why we cannct
excente the program, that wo dectded
on ch the Convention, and lead the
race on to success withia tem yeas.
Letevery divisies, branch ant chap-
ter siagé its campeign meeling start-
tag oa the Gth October. *
With vory best wishes, F have the
honor tobe 4
+ Your Obedient Servant, !
BEARCUS.GARVET, |
Universal Negro Insprovement <Asio-
‘ion .and African. Cosamunitiey
League of the Werld, August, 3925,
"Rdelwe's Porky”.
6T Slips Road,”
Gross Roads P.O
"St. Andrew, Jamaica, B.W. 1,
September 14, 1929.
diiuees a. tames mated micas
Wise ta yeu eee ea eo SS
os Se Fi was Se cab cad Be eo Sam Berane
| pt So Si or eg crs areata oe Bg
ionity- Cw Hongsener
The Homr-Has Strock forthe Standard
oe on of the Neghe Have. Bare Cale x!
| - OPPORTUNITY —
.. OF A LIFETIME.
PRR SPREE RRG! Read This,
ii le Offer, Think. -
. } 4 Ras Hs gh op SRUMv fren Let.
ert te th ge Seleapgt at gh ERIE A 8
} ee sR eS Agy Lo As there may
Ro ig. pig gig, ever te any scl
i iti yuh See a offer made to zead- |
eee BRS re of one’ paper
Se ne
me he RRR acce that i
fC PETAR Lictribe to our
[Ras pa iret ne tae gi subst to ot
pS RE yee ES paper-for ene year,
Fug’ eee SE at the'regular sth.
oe HEREIN ZOU CAN ENIoY scription rate of |
: LCS IN REALATE $2.50, will have the
L opportunity of sceuring-a-plet of land 20 by 109 feet for the now:- |
F inal cost of $69.09. Pépular sale“price of these lots is $400.00. .
| These lots are situated in New, Prinswick Highlands, jus, “$5 |
| minites ride from New York City. This jand is “high aud dry. |
Gel away from paying the high rents in, the City, and own your.
owt Hemel Those fof: are caine fost, and this opportunity iS for: |
Fashort time only, - 7 a
New Brunswick is an industrial ‘center. Plenty of employsnent, |
schools, ibraries, bankks, churches, playgrounds, theaters, everything |
| life calls for. Tf yous do not care to live there, invest in one oF.two
| lots and make money, 2s this is'a fast growing community. i
"All you have ‘to do is fill out attached blanks and forward it to us
with five dolldrs for two years subscription to our paper, -and we,
| will forward you all-particulars. In the event you become dissastis-
'dicd, money paid for subscription will be reftinded on requés.”
se a CIRCLATIONDEXY. OF: TRE NEGRO WELLD . 4
i 835 Zeno Avenue, New York City * i
| Gentleracn? é “aw. &
+ Please enter xay subscription to your paper for ons year.
| Baclesed: you ‘will find the cum of $2.50 to pay. for z2me. Also for-
ward me full’ particulars: regardiag plot of land. ia New Brunswick
‘Highlands. : : |
AMOUR: $..eseeneeetie ;
Vame ..cgsenepescesecegesegerre Biss tere seus messeceesesensaes
“She Bigir has struck for the mane
of therEthiopian or Afri
Seaetor ar
oriehild of Afritan
“Sc race teat fats tomate
tata Ideals ta @ misfit, of hu-
‘Béme peovdo-students' would: ad.
vance tha'theory that there 4a but ane
race, 1 o. fue Rumoan race. Puch
tention 1s malébeading, abd fails to
prove ttself, .Whtte races,-Teuton or
Samon, are proud of thelr identity,
and have opt atteespted to evade the
extstence-of ther genus-homo® White
Peoples have tavested for their par-
teular beneft, ‘the propaganda of
racial superiority. "We shguld not
permit.curselves to become victtms of
this’ fallacious ‘doctrine, But realise
tbat the eupertortty of any people
fies in the ability of each to succeed
or surpass the accomplishments of
others. .
* The Ethiopian yas originally a per-
son of black piethentation.. "Time and
unfavorable “sectal conditios have
delt-unkindly with him and his off-
spring, sq that he now has a wider
diversification of “color complexions
than avy other race-in the world.
Not only has our original complexion
been tampered with, oraffected, but
a: distorted mental ‘complex nox “!2-
veloped which le causing many io
make ridiwuious gestures et “haciot
counterfeiting.” Ax counterfeiting is
always & cheap imitation of the rifal
thing, Jet us all, unanimously dis-
courage the continuance of such petty
practices. . :
‘We imust strive for ihehomogeneity
of color. We must-dignify and aonbr
the purity of the “xnbleached” com-
ptexion, We, muzt . recognize the
peauty. and. value of black: any other,
sourse nullisies all our tforts to corn"
mand, the respect of others. Let
white, peoples lift the standard, of
white, “It is'thelr privilege and*right.
Let yidiow peoples Tift the stindard |
¢ Yellow. it is their privilege and
Nene SRM by te, same, prosiae: of
cacvuing. It Is fitting ond_ propor
bat all black peoples {or vaflations,
hereof), lift high thé standard of |
ack: for such 3 polley Ie our priv |
ege and rigat, irrespective of what |
thers claim or contend. |
Every rece is responsible for its’
wn destiny. She very laws of Na-{
jtere diotate ft, Let us-alt be proud
of, and honor our ows, .Lat us as
sake i¢' Gomle cr areeurh. ton caus
This Is 9 eacred duty and Sbligé.
pron on gp tvosameatsl ta ot
proseryy
Nature, pig teers ‘a any
sense, is @ violation of this law! .
eee
Vast Organization Is
Projected .
location “on the northeast. corer of
135th street. -
Do You Live in.the District ¥-"—
‘The. territory Inchided within, the
following. -boundarles shall compose
jthé Twenty-frst district: ‘That. por-
Hot of the county of New York be-
ginning at the Intersection of Fifth
avenue and West i25tiKstreet_and
running thence westerly along West
25th street to the Hudson River, and
thence aloog the Hudson River’ tq
Spuyten Duyvil Creek, thence thrsugh
SpuytenDuyvil Creek and the Har-
lem.Rtver, and along the boundary
Une between New. York and Bronx
counties the Eighth: avenue to Went
45th street, along West 145th étroet
to the Harlem River and alodg the
Harlem ‘River to Fifth avenue, and
along Fifth avenue -to, West 123th
street, the point or ‘place of -begin-
ing."~-From the Legislative Manual,
Pag6 259. > wo
+, Volunteers Application. Blank
‘L-desire:to enlist in the Delany-tor-
Congress. volunteers as . Private,
Corporal, Sergeant, Lieutenant, Cap-
tain (strike out four),—andhereby:
pledge myself to. register, and-vote
for the election of Delany to Con;
greze. My time wil permit me to
falthfvtly discharge the duties of ‘tha
rank for whicir ¥. apply: , 4
Assembly District ....t.-seeeieees
1 (Leave BSH if not known)
Plection District ....s.cseeetepeses
(Leave blanis if not known)
NOME socevessnimwernsanenecente
AMS SSE ewe esetecewen apd
ADlewoussumetarepnnse BIOOR ces ss.
Send appeeation to Delany’ Head:
nuarters, 2203 Sexenth avente.
a a aE a
' = rs m
’ : pk 3 é ee ca ee at ee eae ee ,
Si ae ter a oe OS i Serpent a gt Sa cena fe Ene haan ce ila, SERIE ES Rte NT ae Deh hi ert a east
Sate Ree ST ree a a
Pac ear ten Asan
Ok a tani, de ROA 208
PRR er Sia
se vues Sot Dee ena Se
ae a ee caer
Pec sarbaeg nee
ears Ranked Jorn ¥:
is ER TT aah
RE Les: ech Eee
sie Genshanerion! De Boe: a
eatng tr. J. Fodepts,” the
“itis ina Ley. allchowe
‘worth oakijned’ the purpose of Un
meeting sit introduced "Mr. A. 1.
‘Btowart, the delegete, ax chief epesh-
‘ar of theevening. ” $
‘The mpetker’ was cheered to the
‘echo when be ercse to speak. He
echoes for bis subject, “The Negro's
‘Status Among Alien Governments.”
After speaking at length, and giving
much inspiration, the meetiig was
favored bya duet hy Mr. Wint ant
‘Miss Stewart, while Mr. John Rick
fetta presiged ‘at the organ.
“An addfeee by Mr. P. Hall, the #8
retary, My.:G. Wint, dnd “Mr. T.
Brown followed. ‘The. therue of ‘them
all was in hobor to the delegate, who
‘was about to Qepart, wishing, him
bon voyage, success, and an Sbun-
dant entrance tito the aspirations of
the.cause of the U.N.I A.”
At this juncture the audience rose
and sung “God Be With You "Til, We
‘Moet Agaif,” and waved the flag o!
the red, black and green, closing
with the Ethiopian national anthem
Vand the benediction
: DAVID 8. FANCY"
a Reporter.
Tela Honduras, GA
‘The Ninth Anniversary of the
“above-named division was celebrated
in Liberty Halt gn Sunday the 23rd
June, commencing: at 3.30 o'ciock.
‘The Processional hymn “Shine on
Eternal Light," opened the function
vwith he officers marching from the
Ante-room to thelr respective sta
tions. < *
“The: Hymn “From Groenland's cy
Mountains” was next sung, after
whlch ‘the Devotional exorclees were
performed by ‘the Asst. Chapiain.
Hymn 105 from the ‘Ritual wan next
sung? then came the reading of {te
front. page message of the “Negro
World” by Bir. S: Watson, Asai. Be0-
retary. *
Lv Anthem, “in!l aif Ball” by, the
‘Community Choie; opening: adress
‘Master of-ceremonios, Mr. D. .-Al-
len; recitation, Master Samuel Small;
Hyma, “Oh Africa Awaken”; anouil
report, Mr. Hugh A. Mathison, Gen.
Secy;;' address, representative from
the Hising Star Lodge 4. 10.6.8. &
DefS, Mr. DB. B, Thorpe;, address,
representative from the Loyal Hiram
Lodge 46, I.0.S.6., Mr. Wilks: solo,
by Miss Hf. Rissell; address, 38F. ©.
Brown, reprenéntative Loyal Progress
Lodge 1, LULOMLE.S.; address, Mr.
©. Archibald, St Johns Tabernasle
35, LO.G.R.; recitation, Miss L. Soa,
"AGies, my Father fond"? antiem,
‘tho ehoit, white Uae overtory wa. ia
en} addres; Miz, J.D. He Dyer, Bok
Central Star Ledge, 612, ISP.OE TN:
roto, dy 3siss White; addres, by 3.
2. Barrett; duct, 35, G. Hager ond
diss F. Ottley.
‘Addrens, Lady Barvews Godett, Inte
of Parent’ Body Nowe Yorks; wives!
soleetign, StF. Burn dnt address, <2
C, A, Watentine, Representative ¢-:
of Samaria Juvenls oder LGG
Help Us Yo Help Yeu
wr cote ees
portunity of extending its sineore
fiona: and sémivation to tke many
| readers that bave sent in letters ex-
| presaing tele appreciation Zor fe
Fgenere! appeatacs of ous paper
| Beileve wevtve are rently tryligs our
the Negro World. ats yo know,
| Mohed ts he interest of the awaic-
for the Afcioans at ligine and
[abioad, Aidiough thie fs oar aim,
Pwe-wasl-{o make eur paper s0 tat
Hit may aprent te avecyt ey.
| Now Jn order for us to be able
to do this it. will, ba mecessasy” #0
hear Ohls in mind, that the Negro
World belongs to the face. Why?
Because ib champions thelt.cause
On this accotint nieney that wortd
comie to vs fhrough other casnnels
Gnep not. 89st is ro more than
Higa that whenever we are fo
need, “Greatly in Need,” that we
ahouid appeal to you, our aiticre
wellwitshers, Therefore, beginning
with this week we are launching &
$50,000.00 Campaign Drive
me raise money for the purpose
wl pwdacing 5 mest: toteteeng
paper. ‘The editorial and business
departmenta are working hand i
‘and jo order to give you what 7y
howd have. So please help ox
‘all you possibly cany “Bend
fai yer you oan afford to help
put.over, this Grive. We will pub
{nein nazoes of Divisions, Cosy.
eo ene
‘gp the Feagras’ each week. Do
BE ack ad Bia iy
Bop Bec dino
ee eae ar So fess
a he bees ea ees oe
Sse agp ato an Pith, aye 7
pe Satta bs
ohne <A aimee Someta a
pealbleal Nios GME ney Son
fase Upey geeibcwee
Se eae
Seal ie Pane
bee eR a ore
is. Quite’ a, eaderaiie. evening. We
ae oealed ee
OG NOR
ae oe wens ower.
Hee te: toe pitaer
Of the division | faare
paris, Dut ae mem may come ead mae
9 igo tbs onguslastion mat 96 on
watt & eT ae
“aie. dropping: back tm. obe
\egein joka in The tenks’ “The
offiders-dasire to extend hearty than
‘to those whd assisted in. making the
eocanion & wacom.
“There is @ tide in the affairs of
men, which taken at the flood leads
‘oa to fortune” said the great writer,
Therefore, now -ls the tine for Ne-
Prose: avasywbere; especially in these
republics, to’gind Absir armors on and
pat the good-Aght realising that if
God w for us pone can be sgainst wus.
HUGH-A. MATHISQN, Reporter,
~ Anderson, Ind.
‘The meeting was opened with the
sloging' af hymn, “Fron. Greenland’
Tey Mowntatt followed by the at
versal .prayer by the Chaplain, | M
Sparks. The objects and aims wa
read by ‘Miss’ Sadie Turer. ‘Th
Preamble was read by Mrs. Will
Colman, then’‘camie the teading o
the front. page of The Negro Worl
by Mins Badie Marberry, after.whict
the meeting wai turned over to Mfrs
Fanny Berry, president of the ju
veniles. -
‘A song by. the congregation pre
ceded a Yecitation by Bisa Nelli
Jones. The reading of an article
from. the Chicago Defender in.regare
t the Sixth International Conven
Lion” Dy" Mrs:-Bell-Powetl~wan’ fol
lowed by a few remarks by Mre
Dora Tutner:in regard to the juven
les and the race; algo a short tals
by, Mr. Owehs.® Mx. -Owens ian heer
very sich: ‘or the past month, but
war cable to be with vs Sunday
Everybody. war-glad to see him pres
ent as hef alwayn brings & wonderful
message to the division...” ~
A duct by Mine Magixie Hartford
and Miss‘Sadie Turned. A short talk
by Mra, Susauna Townsend, the-lady
presiflent, and a solo by Mz. Edward
Powell. “
One new member was taka in
The closing “address by Rev. Mone
‘Thonias end the mecting came to s
‘lose.
ADOLPRUS ABROM,
ale Ravertec:
San German, - :
, Oriente; Cuba
On Sunday, August 4th, we cete-
brated "“Garvey's Day," which com:
“Shine on Biernal Ligh."
_ Our mess meeting Regan in the
net form, by engines ot the cd
“trem Greenitng’s fay Mesatelnn!
Prayer was condueted by one cep.
inin, Me, 3. Clarke, whose iescon was
sakes from Ex. 2,
Ecier the eercmontes the three mt
sigs iHlent prayer Im ale of our toned
clesod the religloss ceromese.
The mestiny way turned over:
ghe Drecitant ie. A. Johngen whe
Eaxe a very inepiting address. Next
Was the: reading of the from’ peze
of.The Negro World by ove exeatt
tivescerefary, Mr. J, 44, C, Claphem,
the President's Hymn was sung, We
were find fs Raving Mics Ina Weote
eect enrolled ax a mieatser. <The eboit
ther sune."Garvey Shall Lead", and
WES followed by A recltation by Mira
Jerapbins Comatantine, An cedeece
by Brother D.JT. Lamon @ reaitatien
Settee ix Francis; elo Oy SiseR
Mas. "L, sighty: an addreex by 23d
viee provident 3s, Comic, -
Anthem by the cholte entitiea
Sutter Lie Catdeeses address Sy
Brother A. Gordon: quartet by second
Indy presiden:, Mise AMSce Dixon and
others; address by Mrs. R. Irons, ex
firet Indy vice president. Solo by Sis-
ter Mins G. Gibson: recitation Ky the
chaplain Mr. J. Clarke: solo by. Mist
Portey. Addressiby first vice presi-
dent Mr. J. Brows and an antem by
rhe choir, "When the -Pestly Gates
vEtold.” ‘Closing remarks were made
by the ‘president. . Announcements
were made and the anthem and bene-
dictlon brought the meetings to a
Stowe. at 11.45 p.m. * %
JOSEPHINE CONSTANTINE,
Reporter.
Kingston, N. C.
emesis
Fg peter ce read and “ed of
if mee s wnat reed the
aoe wee
aes b Sata eo
Ze ee
re ee ae
neeeie seein
a ee
ERT oe a eae”
Pee ee ce =
aie So eee
‘ A , ee
Sk FS RR aS Re Ta Lo a ae se eRe
aera aaa RASC 2 ae
Soke pe
BERR Act Be as
oo ei pas
a ocr
oe ee
Be oe
‘A groep of Delegates who sttcnded the Sixth Fvtervatiensl Cosven-
thom of the Negie Peoplea of the. Warld. 8 2
Warren, Ohio ‘.| Washington, D.C.
“ ‘Thare wap a-great meeting of the
Werren-Divislon at thelr hall, $16%
Pine Street, on Sunday, August.
‘The Hon. 8. R. Wheat, of Chicago,
was the principal speaken. He was
actompanied by Prof. Witburne -also
Of Cnlcago. The hall could not ac-
commodate the large gumber of mem-
bers and friends who turned out to
Bear the Hon. Wheet-rpeak on the
aixth International conventign af the
‘Negro Peoples of the World.
‘Tpe speaker imprémed ‘upon us
the nedessity of doing as we bave
never Gone. before. Prof. Wilburn
2 wonderful concert, In order'to,help
tid Tulse finde to wend to te conven:
Goa. ‘The Hon, Wheat also rendered
a eole, 7Calvaty Mofber Dor't. You
5 Y :
‘The meeting clos ta] the regular
manner with. the singing ~ af/the
BHthiopian National Anthem. . *
: ‘GH. Lowe,
: Reporter.
Camaguey, Cuba
{The UNA Division No. 230 me:
ai 8 pam. sharp on Augurt 4t8 called
{o order ite regular mase meeting.
‘The hall wos Crowded. ‘The meets
ing waa opened by the singing of the
hymn. From Gretalsnd’s iey"Moun-
tains" :
Ms_-R-S. Reid, the acting ‘chaplain
Tonducted, the spiritual part of the
meeting by the resding Jessen’ from
the ritual; prayar, and the reailing of
Ysalbh Oapter 27a. wereld
‘The chairman, Mr. E. Blaci:wood,
waa introduced, He conducted the
Mterary part of tie meeting. In his
‘opening remarka he emphatically’ be-
sceched Use people to support rigtlly
and, determértaly Tm President. Geh-
eral. An (arithem wad rendered dy
the choir) a new member wan _Ad-
patted. noteworthy addresn Was
then give} By ex-prenidéot Br. J. A.
Thomas & the $a Germain Division,
Greate, Prsfubsect was “Phe World
{ Serious.” A duct war readerod by
Mensrs. Clarks and Williama “Lister
to the. Vole, of Garvey,” then an
address by Kin. A, W, L. Winlte, ace-
retary ef the division! net a solo by
Hees" Garter: then a reeitation by
Miss Selma WRtismsr an eddesa by
Be. H, Anguey ox anthers by the
hole: hola hy Miss Clarke: “sTee
via, Gar ethers’ Land’; auarti-r solo
by ties 2. Grayzon; song Ly the
choir, “Mow Excelent.”
A fev romatks ware mnde by the
Lady: Pesvitenty: Mis. HL Alten, (il
mae The people, that throashouts ‘he
version Go ’ihi'"Gonvention. tee nina
hnve u bright and ivarm time ttt Lib-
erty Hal, then 2n. B., Blachevod
rendered % solo: an anthem by the
chols cAsure Retrent,” wie dee oi
farings were being teken up; 1010
was gunz by Bir ieknsas, ~~.
Tee mesung wae brounat to its
cioge by ‘Une slogiaw af thet Netinnat
fcthem followed with. the” benewies
tien.
Hedy Vier Pras, IRENE B. COLE
Clegg ch #4,
Cegs do Avila. Crba
. Cube
|, Ca-funday, duty 21, the Viego de
| Axiin divinios had au’ enteriasnee
titted oe 1330 Pr, with ee
[Gent in the chaie. “ahe haute eae
look part mid helped to smsne the
fonatinn 'e aaccene ere?
Mlea,, Jamon Basten” “kepresented
Blue; Mrs. Alfred Clarke, repre-
sealing “Mallow Sea Bithel Coben
representing: Ree," and Mrs. Wii-
Delaina Rowe. represeniing Pink
eae Deus ied tele este hee
tha Color Tink won and etood fees
Amoug ibe cpeakers ‘wie. fork
pete were Meaers Ron Wentes rs
E’ bute: G15 Neutaile and Men
V. ‘hirer The scond, part of the
Prova wan occupied by, tho: slap
Hoa. Richard T. Wedjey performed at
‘the organ. Atmiong ‘those. who took
part at thd mass testing” wore
‘Messrs. Geotge J. Mullings, Henry
B. Cleghorn ang 7. 1. B. Osbern.
‘The. program was us follows:
sing eoug by the choir; address by
cial by Marat San Comeces:
lo ne ig me ooo ‘aad
a poe bao We mie
ior ghee Ei o>.
i
a Seen rte
Sap telesecertary tat ent sake
See er is soars soneec git. (a
ae es alee
ee aes Ree ee: na. soma
Meet oe
soilless ocatgera ame
. BQO BIARG MERLING
| MONS WER NASS Siaigi alte: |
Sunday Evening, September 29 |
AE GQ BM ca:
' All Members and Friends are Cordidily Invited |
~ To Attend -. ‘
’. A Monster Mass Meeting. 2
SOF THE GARVEY CLUB, ENG.
| At the Commonwealth: Casino, 12 East 135th St :
Tsethicen Fifth ex Madison Avenuen +
pt Prinetpal Speakers ~ .
: Officials and High Executives who habe just returned from the
| Sixth International ‘Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World
held during August, 1929, in Kingston Jamaica, B. W. 1, will
deliver their messages to the people of New York; the Hon, Ei B.
| :Rrnox, Ist Aas’. Pres. Gederal.of the U. N. 1. A. and A.C. L: of
the World, August, 1929, will deliver his farewll address’ before
going to the western divisions. Le
HON. E, B. KNOX, lst Aset. Presidegt-General of the U, N:
wT Al ami-A. C. 1, of August 1929 of the, World. 4
HON. BM. LT. DNENA, International ‘Organizer of tise U. N,
Wy {de Avand A. CL. of August 1929-0f the World...
RON: 3, M. CORLINS, Vice-President ind retusived Delegate, «
EHO} ETM Gumaecns ae et Wa
5 seat Ggranune by Prot. Hessel’ Band, sad Chir by.
fi aR I orf occa eee siaiars hf
Fs ag « Se, Randi ie Gite Pat
seep ime apa See 8B Lapis
RARE: <0 Nip «oe 49 ae, COME:
Washington, D. C.
Se
On Thuraday. July 18, the F. B. 8.
‘Chub held a reception in honbr of it
organizer, the ‘Hoo. 8.:R, Wheat, 0
Chicago, Ti.” In the receiving ini
were: Hoa, 8, R. Whest, Miss Henri-
cotta Cavanaugh president; Miss Ra-
chal Brown, hostess, and Mra. Betti
Lyles. ‘
‘The reception was held at the ticwne
of Miss Rachel Brown. The dining
[Foon was very chariningly decorated
"The: tablos were .arranged Ina "T"
shape: Ferns, cosmos, and greén can-
diea_(the'abade of the ferns)_were
jusegras center pieces. 2
|__Among. those present were: Mrs
Bettie Lyles, Mrs, Gladys Fitzhugti
Mra ivelyé Jonge, Mr, and Mrk: Be
‘Bizeéll,. Mr. and Mca. John McRey
‘Ms.amd Mra, William’ Woradiey, Mr.
nd: Mrs. George Hrowo, thr Misses
SDesbie Knox, Geneva: Reeder, Flor
‘Cavanaugh, ‘Ractiol” Brown, ‘Evelys
Beverly, Geraldine Alexasder,’ an¢
Henrietta R. Cavanaugh.
Hoa, 8. R. Wheat, Maire. Wittiam
Smith, William Moore, Jobn Mouton,
Dennis Johnson, R.'L... Witherspoon
Joseph Jackson, Eroert Mitchell, Ed-
ward May (Rocky Mouat, North Car-
oiina), Wacamaker Mitebell, (Ricky
Tount, North Carolina), Ernest Hop-
kina (Rocky Mout, Nort Carolina),
Mrs." Bottle Lyl@. a member of
the club, sailed Cor the, West Indies
on the following Tuesday to-tour the
Indies. ‘The Club ts alan proud to
spnounce that “Mr. Mastin L. JRek-
son will also sall on the 24th for the
Indies on artour.. Both wilt rétura In
September, *
. The following members were xb-
sent because of iliners. or other. rea-
sons: Mrs. Annie Jackson, tins’ Mat-
Raret Jackson, financial” secretary,
Mrs, Margaret Dudley ex’ Mra. Beal-
fle Cavagnugh.
“H. Re QRVANAUGH, Reporter. _
Jacksonville, Fla. .
Sundays July 28."Phe , Tackson-
wile Bruch of the UMTAL Held fle
masa mécting on the comer of Flor-
in Se-and Gersie St. 4
‘The meeting aves opencd at 3
seine with the prowent. im ae
Gein Aner the opening oe the
Puahislic eeremontes were periormaed
by tie chaplain, sp. 3. Dense. A
song by the Gunnflex sont the front
page of the Nesta World was read
fy Bowe Ruby 3c. Dianis, ta wes
responded to Uy oar ledy: president,
Men Bb, We Sonos. "God Biess
fae precieit” vase suine By the Chore
MriG. B. Jonnion, our second vices
PresiScat, gave aaa short bak very
eneouriing address. me
Mr, Eafe Dennis, “our chopiain
then gave an mindnentag addres to
the mien af the ety.
We had n very pice: meeting and
ovarghodse wis meas 40 feel glad, Ws
Joie forward to @ greater dys
‘The roecting aran ieoure ton
slose uy singin the Dhwlopia ate
them. ee
EELS BS GREP. Rinarite,
ook 5 A el ce eas 2 Many >
bate eal ee bie ot
pes ieee Seer rr
aa pee ee
re iget ik Eales ce ai
eee ee ent aaa
fee Gee otra Bet oe
Be, ere eens ee
eps gh has nied as eae
i 39.
bay eens was oo
Pacem ge ane
-_Sandad, sngutt %, Dividon Ne
Pregl Sout Bamxanedétne muting
was opened in tte reguiar manner,
Tee frst ‘speaker. was Woo Preai-
dent Ed. Bell, who spoke on “What
Garvayiam. Means.” ‘The next wes
the, rebding of the Negio " Workd
Presideot General's message by Mre.
Gv, Canrity, who In her’ pricteal
manner read it, a0 carefully that
even. a chiid could understand it.
Mire, Cawley {6 ont most. etiient
reader and orie of: our’ most willing
workers. The next speaker was Dr.
J. E. Hurst (our docton) .who said
that ‘we should coatribute more to
the program ‘by cooperating, and
producing. something for our Ta0e,
and put black men first, black mon
Test "and black men aiwaya. Dr.
Bret wasp triage an lpi me
age. The Aext “speaker was Under
taker'B. Roberta who spoke for abqut
thre Jnimuten and gave aa an excure
for it being as excleot spear ie
following statement: .” / people
with wholm I deal do ‘not beve much.
to aay.” (Remember be /A under
take) en ane a
é MRS. L. MeDOUGAL.
MR eDOUGAL.
Florida, Camaguey
-. ‘€yuba _
‘The Floriga: Divison fs: again act-
ing in Ite umtat manner and endewor
ing to de more progrenaive, . It ba:
passed through ‘all its Easter {itc-
Hons-and:made great success-by the
fionnclal support of thé public.
“The presidéot returned, many
thshke io. those who had attended the
different functions, ‘The. Floride’DI-
vinion with al! its obstacles. and dif
ficulties In advancing ahead for x
government In Afriea, and?no Negro
whalacever, wil prevent from go
ing #0. While the men are out, fhe
women are determined to keep this
aiviston “Alive.” ;
Aaawe walk In the town of Florida,
we gain ace that the propln.aze rehl-
fring day by day Ube Ain nnd gbject
of Ute UN.LA. more than ever Men
who have spoken many’ .{mpoiite
words against this movement até
forced to be active members of {hts
Unlverast movernent, :
thé pedple.ot this town are puting
forth thetr best efforts Snadiclaly end
bodily for the redemption of our
mother aad, Africa... “Africa shad
be nxdeered with honor,”. raf the
people of Floris" and not, very long
but al 2 very early date.
On the 28th Aprilesnas & very Mn-
teresting; muset ceeting. wea held te
the Laexty: Hall, Gis angetiig ran
called ub 759 po bi. Mr. Com, aut
Howtltt, picsident, poefarmed the re-
Ugious part of Ord jdeting. "He sso
netetan ghiatimns for the ight
Tha-preaides gave o. very Inter
eating Rédzees on thy-Tniversal Ne-
gro Improvement. Anspeldtion, .Atter
thie, the progres Sian enticed.
pPlist Die, the vedding of the front
page of the *Noyro Werld," felssco.
with © Song by =the choir entitied
Tae name of Garvéy." This re-
celved Jou cheosr, Next was a duct
by its BE. Whynn ang company, pre-
crding & Fondingg by Séles W. Pediys.
This Teoding won the epplauge of fre
Bight,
‘Phe pretlaent rave mush congrats
hilton to the Mlle Attsa For her br
Hat recinys, AZterthts the oferiz:
wos {Aken WS. “ERO! proms cbr
a Pa as aa
i. Rie ae 23
eae
| BIG-MASS MEETING
OF THE PITTSBURGH AND NEARBY *~, |
_ DIVISIONS OF THE U. N.i «| 3
.. OCTOBER Ist, AT.8 P.M. = 2
Teas sas Sto. Cee Oo, Sa bi
SUBJECT: “& Whe thems Vier, oom, est
cee: oe
S araaetliy singe Shi weeded
Se a eure
Seems Pe cue
te eo chel oes
Sr arte eee oe
“Cato, Costa Rica =
Ma Y oe
There Webs i evidence signs, :
the: : : ‘
aerdiee, = i.
Our qoqucet. proaidény/ Brother’ F.
U, Lavon, walled the piveting to or
Ger. ‘The singing of ie opening ode
came firet after ‘the motto was
fepeatede
He thet pre with the. regu
tar ritualistic aptvice. . Beripture les-
son was take/nfrom ‘Titus. Chapter
lat. After fhe religious part of the
nervice wag ended, & program con:
tinued as, Reading from he
front- of. the -Negro:.World’ by
the second lady president, Mra. L.
Saraey. : :
was a song by Mts. J. Bivins
soi ire Jem eed "ing Wa
fe Grte.* :
/ A recitation by Miss Veach en-
Utled “Ethiopian Flag"; addresa dy
Mies. Lowe: recitetign by, Mia
Beaty, #olo by Miss Jack#on; address
by Brother B. Barreit; song by Mra
Brown and Mrs. L. James; recitation
by Miss R. James; address oy Misa
Toxglinaon; solo by Mise Jackwon, re.
citation by Master Linton: address by
Mise W. Bobb, solo by Miss M. Por
ter; address by Mrs. LcJames; song
by_Mra.J...Brown'-addeear- by Mies
Y. ‘Stewart; reading by L. L. Thomp-
sou; song by Mra. Porter, first lady
president; recitation ‘by Miss Mulls
ings; address by Misn'B. Brown: reci-
tation by Bes I. Lewis; and evening
address by... B, Lind
‘The meeting cloxed by singing ‘the
national anthem.
; ot. & B BINDO.-Renerter. =
Charleston, S.C
The Charleston Division No. 886
of the U.N. I. A,, held a successti
mass meeting on Sunday, July 14th
1928, at thelr Liberty all, 226 Com
mings street, 2
+. The meeting waa caltedto order by
the president, Ms. I, Robinson, We
then sang “From Greenland’s Icy
Mouitaina,” “and joined in. prayer
‘The president thon tumed the meet
ing-aves.tp the first vice-president
Mr. R. Westeott, i
‘The aly president ayiveréa
Powerful address. Then ame «the
FeRding of the Hon, Bnscus Garvey"
Message by the mecretary, Mr. T. J.
Galulatd. We then sutig, “God Bie
Our President.” A short address by
Brother Mutphy, followed. We the:
sang "On the Sacred Soll of Atrica,
Now nt this time thé Arst tad3
vice-president, “Ors. 5, Lockvard
bad a small ‘program foz, the chit
‘dren in which -the chairman of the
meetlog: allowed her to presida. "Ph
Programa wa an follow: recitation
by" Miu “Ruby Lawrance, entitled
‘Awhile Stephenie Wate Phot
Blocks oy, Mlebt a duct by tw
file, “Bade Me Not." reeltation
fy Mins Fiazel Meare, A soio hy Mr
B, Knight" entitled “Wace to, Pee.
Mr. Knight —nieoinace Wo Ftrone aa
Area end at this’ tig tie proisrin
of the chilitrén cimé to = ekean
We iifted tie collection ‘and thy
brougiit the meeting (2 a ease with
the Singing’ of “Eulopin" te Land 9:
Our Pathern.” :
. SRS.'S. G. LocKwoon!
TR etlnae Venmavens.
Columbus, Shis
On Sunday! Arjrist 398) the Gar-
vey Gin held ee meeting, opening
by tinglhg “rom Greenland tee
Mountains,’ followed: by prayer Ny
the Inds’ nresidest, stile Fase
“he Ponding oF Tae Blueline Coane
néba,then a eablegeam wae teeelven
“WAS Bpeztiera. were tine Tutie
Growsit. bites Franete Willamna, nes
dnnia Hamte, Mise FA, Sump, Ming
ENia Oxeng, Mr. Froxton, Mew Eel,
Missen Zena Smith, Lent scyers, Hors
Crowell; Bie. “Anibo Gokusen, 3x
Olivee Williams, Mr. Luther Whit-
luker and Jessie Whittixer,
Visiting frlener expressed theme
selves that they love the-U. N. TA.
A grand day's enterteinment. ns
brought to a cloze, amid great” re-
foleinge, - ee BS
036 Goa,one Aim, one Destiox,
Witsdast WASHINGTON,
. Reporter,
Becta. OY
. Tite's arition >
2A flapper Urying to bide hee knees
aien ihe alia Oso, :
ae * ie
re eee
tt ete eee
i and ol ot a
oe Reeegs:: Detettars
Mies Loele: be i 2 Sang
acidireamn.” iia she aN
dress ho, stoned: wi, ‘
ee
fend, ‘fond, at $08
wv iin wot &. ane the EE
ave lanided in “Amopripa: Neh oat soe
program was s short addres ‘by.
toceting preldeat,
teresting. ~The ore:
Odella. Spears pn a @ short
sappy address, ar
‘The New Orlosiss Divigign ts plas!
ning an elaborate program for-A0+
Rust 4th, 1929, under the auspioée o¢-
the Indies of the division. wed 4
On Thursday night, August ‘X,‘ta=
ternational Holiday for the Negroes’
of the world and the opening: of the
great, ternational convention of the
Negroes undér: thé auspices of the
Universal Negro’ Improvement As
sociation’ was celebrated by the mem
bers and friends of the New Orleans
Division with a monster mage meet
ing. = “a 7 i
‘The meeting opened in the =
manner. TWe acting president
pleaded with all non-members to jot
rho ranks of the greatest movement
thet-has been organized since Jesus:
Cirlst organized the great Christian
Church, = .
Dr. Pars, delegate frm the windy
city of Chickgo on his wayto- the
convention wax then tatroduced to
the audience by the acting president.
Dr. Parz's nddcens. wae’ very cool
and ‘caim, iit very logleal and tn-
teresting. Ya the course of his address
ne begged the Negroes in the old
Crescent City to-organtae (0. get: to-
gether and do something worth while
for the DeueGt of the entire Negro
ruce. Me also, compared the leadere
of the Negro race with the lenders of
ihe other races, .
Dr. Parz left'on bis way to the
beautiful shorts of Jamnlen, Beitieb
West Indies. .
The members and friends want out
hele heartfelt prayers for Ore mic-
rers of the- delegates and resirenenta-
iver _nt the convention. We hope
hat the men and women assembled
Al-die able to put over ‘something
angible to help reniove some oF
All the evils that edsfront this race
of ours.
Please eupport ihe delogate tind
convention fund’ and .the Univers)
Nexro Improvement ation at
hearted Garvovite. *
a», B. Gordelte. Bunem,
ee
So. Baltimore, Md,.
Me, Mond (eon the Parent Recy’ os
ith a, Se beeen Bs a veEy
Gerful seene O¢ bls pletures, roosine
the pleture of out sSetser Sno,
Afnga, tis foundation of our Bresi-
Ferhondne Wovare very mien easiness
us ages"
mie South Paleimore.etaptoy 3s
2A nad a very suecesatl eye We
opened Dy staging, “Ftosa, Crees.
Hland's Hey Mounteins.” nr, “Con
quest, the chaplin, performed the re-
Ulgious exerclesn. :
‘The president muds the epdutar
adiverc Tse meeting wen etmaed
over to Madame Hate Zobusor, so!
tress of-eeremcnies. Shu eoace:ed
A eingeriul proqran, “Wa Rad mo3w
Wonderful aadrcsses- coming free
tie loyal: members of Whe Urats 2.
[vive oftertssg waa ratsed hin, Ne.
Mon Sach Woe were treated Te
Specs teem "a native of fe":
Bite spoke csveral Jangusctsy a2
ako spoke Begin very pial: Vs
orn veay eataced over Raving tm.
Te to a vory aene trlendeor dhe“es,
seasons azsay. :
“The South Bultimere chapte, No.
Dua sy eséeovoring to. put vs
tne prejetem over in Baltimore, They
say it mast he donc.
We ‘closed ty singing “God Biess
our President.”
3 A. SMITH,
[(: WEN = MEN”
80mm try 295 to B08 por week be rene
ene, taking loved gre reat
Te SSouten lets farms” Rand oboe Wor
seu paride
‘Apex Fils Co, 00 W. 285th St, NOT.
OCTOBER 6th IN NEGRO HISTORY
Indications point to the fact that Sunday, October 6th, will be a unique day in the history of the Negro Peoples of the World, since a claion call has been sounded, and it behooves Negroes everywhere to rally to the call.
That day will go down in history as a memorable one, because of the fact that at that time, Negroes all over the universe, who love freedom, who feel that it is unmany to remain the pawns in the hands of the men of other races; Negroes who know that the hour of hate has struck, and that the hand of destiny is outstretched, pointing them to their appointed place in the scheme of men and affairs, will rally to the call of the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION OF THE WORLD, OF AUGUST, 1929.
That day has been set aside as the time when those Negroes who are looking forward to the emancipation and uplift of this proud race of Ethiopians, will, at the given-time and places all over creation come forth to pledge themselves, their sacred honor, and their fortunes, to the cause of Africa and the awakened Negro: They will donate to the biggest fund that has ever been sponsored for racial betterment, anywhere since the dawn of history.
This is not a mere grandiose idea. It is the result of the deliberations of men and women who are longing to be free, and chose their representatives with care and precision, to go to the little island of Jamaica, in the Caribbean Sea, to discuss and plan ways and means for the all-round freedom and emancipation of this race of ours, from all the various hindrances which beset us on the upward climb to greatness. After careful thought and due deliberations their decisions have been rendered, and we are confidently looking forward to the future, with all its portents, its hopes, and its promises, confident in our ability to free ourselves from thraldom of every kind; strong in the faith that a, just cause will never want the strong right arm of the dusky sons of Ham, who have fought the battles of every other race under the sun, and have now come to the realization that we must unaided fight our own battles; reassured by the promises of Jehovah, and firm and unfaltering in our determination to make the Negro race one to be reckoned with in the future, a race which the world will be bound to respect, for what it has done, for the the sacrifices it is willing to make to secure that same full, and unlimited measure of freedom and happiness which other men enjoy, and which are arbitrarily denied the Negro in alien lands.
In October 6th, 1929, is to be a Dedication Day. Forward-looking, right-thinking and courageous Negroes are going to consecrate themselves, their lives, their fortunes and their all, for the cause of racial uplift. Therefore it behooves every Negro, no matter where on earth he may dwell, to come out on that day, prepared to give pledge of his best, his all, for the uplift, and advancement of his race, and the cause of Africa redeemed.
The hand of Fate is pointing to the hour of opportunity. The Voice of Destiny is calling. The very atmosphere is charged with a burning desire of all to be freed from domination and oppression, and to rule their lives and their fatherland, in their own appointed way. Can Negroes stand idly by, and let the golden moments roll away, without making the greatest of all trials for the most glorious prize for which mankind ever fought. The voice of all creation answers "No"; and the race of Negroes take up the strain and carry the echo, not only to the far ends of the earth, but to the very borders of eternity, if need be. THEREFORE REMEMBER WHAT IS YOUR DUTY ON SUNDAY, 6th OP OCTOBER, 1929, and make it a red-letter day in the history of the Negro Peoples of the World.
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Negro World
Published Washington, 1894. Ninth Street, New York. Established 1887.
A news publication every Saturday in the interval of the African Commercial Day.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES TO THE NEGRO WORLD
Receipt
One Yed $2.50
Two Months $1.25
Three Months $7.50
Entered as second class matter April 16, 1819, at the Post-office at New York, N.Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879.
PRICES: Five cents in Greater New York; ten cents elsewhere in the U. B. A.; ten cents in foreign countries
Advertising Representatives, W. E. Ziff Co., Transportation Bldg., Chicago, IL.
581 Fifth Avenue, New York City
The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained in a Negro World Advertisement.
THROUGH THE CRUCIBLE
NEGROES, everywhere, who look forward to the time when this race of ours will stand upon its feet and look the world in the face, when the Negro will be respected for what he has done, for what he is capable of doing, must realize that at this time, the great race of Negroes is passing through a series of experiences, that can be characterized as passing "THROUGH THE CRUCIABLE."
We ar not going to reach the high place among men and nations which we have set out to attain, until we have passed every test that will be put up to us, until we have brushed aside every obstacle in the path to progress and prosperity; until we have shown our souls to the others of the sons of men, in short, until we have demonstrated, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that we have that divine quality which makes men great, until we have convinced humanity, beyond question, that we too are sons of God; and being so, cannot be ultimately defeated in any righteous undertaking.
The events now transpiring render it imperative that we Negroes must stand together, or hang separately. It is for us to decide which we would rather do. The experience of our leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, hear irrefutable testimony to the fact, that mankind everywhere, is but human, not big enough, not great enough, not righteous enough to accord to us, or to any others of the sons of men, the rights which are uncompromisingly theirs 'till those men, or we ourselves are able to demand and secure those rights.
We realize, more than ever, that with the growing interest in, and with the growing impetus of the organization of which we are pleased and proud to form a part, there are going to be all kinds of obstacles placed in the way to success, but let us always remember, that difficulties were made to be overcome; and that each victory makes us stronger for the coming conflict.
Negroes the wide world over are called upon on this Twentieth Century day to come to a realization of the sternness of the situation as it will confront us in the days to come. We must know that the testing time has but begun. We must visualize the things we want to come to pass; and having a clear and unclouded mental vision of what we want, set out to bring them out to reality. And if we will stick to the decisions we have righteously made, and will not allow anything to turn us from our purpose, be it persecution, prosecution, trials, hardship, privations, sorrows, troubles, tears, fears, doubt, things present, or things to come, nor length, nor breadth, nor height, nor depth, nor principalities, nor anything on earth, or in the waters under the earth, we shall have the happy experience of seeing those desires realized "some day."
Let us look hopefully forward to the coming of that time. Let us bear ourselves like men who know how to meet all and any kind of privations, who refuse to be turned aside from the purpose we have set out to attain. Let us grit our teeth and bid defiance to oppression, to disaster, to death. We are bound for victory; to the enunciation and uplift of this race of ours, and the redemption of our fatherland Africa; and victory we are going to secure, even though we shall have to pass through the crucible of hell to secure that freedom.
Most financial institutions are capitalized with surplus of the rich, but run on the earnings of the pay, which is guaranteed by the confidence and trust inspired by the character of the men who carry on with them.
YOUR VOTE FOR DELANY
Burn that line into the inner recesses of your soul, so that it will not let you sleep on election day a November but will keep prodding you 'till you enter the polling station, and register your vote for Delaney.
The man without surplus risks his living in proportion to the size of his investment and his loss is doubly embarrassing because it invades his bread and butter as well as his hope for profits that might make him independent.
Every Negro voter in this section is expected to cast his vote for Hubert T. Delany. Party differences will have to be forgotten. There must be only one thought in mind, from now till you mark the ballot in November. There must not be any counter-thought, as far as this one is concerned. Hubert T. Delany in Congress will make a graceful, useful and honorable addition to that body of national law-makers; and will represent the hopes and aspirations of the colored voters of this community; and we must not fail in our duty to him, which in short, is our duty to ourselves.
When he does not feel that his can afford losses he is slow to invest and when the chances of losses are increased by bold, persistent, insincerity growing out of ignorance or dishonesty, it is needless to connect his support or his genuine sympathy. But the Negro must be the source of capital invested in Negro projects. He must build his institutions and they must represent him. His economic progress depends on this.
As we stated sometime ago, when it was announced that Editor Wm. H. Kelley of The Amsterdam News was appointed campaign manager for the Delany candidacy, the management of his campaign fight is in safe hands. Brother Kelley is organizing his forces in an intelligent, purposeful, efficient, and able manier; and those who look hopefully forward to the November elections feel that the work is being done as ably and as wisely as it can be done; and granted the Negro voters of Harlem will rouse themselves to a consummis of the needs of the hour, there is every reason to expect that Hubert T. Delany will be returned the victor at the polls.
The element of inefficiency caused by ignorance and dishonesty must be eliminated and this should be easy of accomplishment since it only involves the selection of men of character and intelligence. We think there is no longer the need for sympathy with ignorance nor excuses for dishonesty.
Volunteers are being called for, as will be seen from the announcements in our columns, as well as in the columns of the several race papers, in this district; and we are urging our brothers to respond to the call, as they have never responded to any call in Harlem before. Remember, Delany in Congress will be fully able to take your message, to express your longings and aspirations. Better than the seion of an alien race he knows your wants, your desires, and can best interpret them. YOUR VOTE FOR DELANY!
There cannot be a national faith without trust, a national fame with
Carolina Judge Forb
"Nigger" By An
SALIBURY, N. C.—Use of offensive references to members of the Negro race including the word "nigger," may not be used officially, judiciously, or legally by any person appearing in the Raven County court, presided over by Judge John K. Reedman.
NEW NEGRO·TOWNSHIP
We are calling attention of our readers to the opportunities for home ownership in a new Negro township, in the state of New Jersey, easily accessible to New York City, and situated on lands known as New Brunswick Highlands, just outside, and overlooking the prosperous and progressive city of New Brunswick.
That is the opinion handed down by this court, and it applies to both documents or witnesses.
Judge Sidney Sidman had made it known from the bench that evidence, witnesses or others appearing in court, hopefully contained evidence, will not be required to be admitted.
The facilities for owning your own home in this township are exceptional. The land is high and well drained. It has excellent transportation facilities, being just a few minutes away from truss lines, amusement rinks, etc. A short run by street car, and you are at the railroad station in Show Brunswick, which will take you anywhere. There are already several houses, with contented dwellers on this subdivision, all of whom are employed in the neighboring factories and mills of New Brunswick, where there is an abundance of work. The home also has beautiful fenced lawn and allowance is made for every improvement which improves the position location can have, for the comfort of its inhabitant. The surrounding school house has already been built by the State
out truthfulness and a national responsibility without justice. You and I are not only responsible for our own selves but for the welfare of all. What shall it profit a nation, as much as man, to gain the whole world and lose its own soul.
There is something radically wrong with a group of people who refuse to help relieve their own burdens. The day of throwing bouquets is gone forever. The Afro-American must face the fact that they exist. We won't gain anything by feeling ourselves into thinking that everything is all right. Everything—affecting the lives of Afro-Americans, is all wrong. The sooner we face these facts, the quicker we will begin to work for our own salvation, the sooner we attain our rightful place as American citizens.—Philadelphia Tribune.
OPPORTUNITY SCHOOL BECKONS YOU TO LEARN
Opportunity school means what it says—"Opportunity." Let all of our boys and girls who attend the pool rooms, street corners, and some time to go to school and take some study. No matter what you do, be the best. An educated pool player and gambler beats an ignorant one. Educate, educate, educate yourself in the School of Opportunity—which means what it speaks.—The Denver Star.
that no witness or officer giving testimony against a man or woman of color would be permitted to employ that or any other similarly objectable term.
Second Warning Given
Several days later another witness apologized to Nigro indicated on a charge页, vexing the publication how furious to the defendant on a "signup" and was immediately called down by the court, with the same warning, that all such unquestioning guess would not go in the courtroom.
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July, they stand amid the busy mart
Wasting the days by a Creator given,
Hoping to gain through longings of
the heart
Their life's ambition—just a place in
Heaven!
This much I gleaned within your advent here,
So should we live that after we depart;
Others may come without regret or fear
To find a place from which they too may start!
Whate'er your faults (for none is counted good),
You gave the word, deny this no one can.
Your sacred rights, for these you always stood,
And best of all you proved yourself
A Man!!!
Editor, Negro World "Foreign Affairs"
Arden Bryan, in your issue, September 14, has the following to say: "In 1888 a similar incident occurred and the American fleet under the command of Admiral Dayls, maneuvering in the West Indies, troubled area, and as Fish would like, landed marines, and attempted to take charge of the situation. Swingham promptly ordered him out and America protected the insult and humiliation. Great Britain diplomatically asked Sir James, to epologize, but like a true Briton, he proudly refused, and to the satisfaction of Great Britain, he was called home, and created to a higher position socially and politically, but the incident was closed; that's all.
The foregoing statement is not only erroneous, but misleading. It was not in 1898, but on January 14, 1807, when Jamaica experienced one of the worst earthquakes in the history of the West Indies. Over 2,000 people were killed in Kingston, the capital; and the city itself severely damaged by the earthquake and fire.
Without consent, Admiral Davis, of the American navy, landed marines for the purpose of doing patrol duty, and assisting generally in relief work. The governor, Sir James A. Swettenham (not Swettenham) promptly requested Admiral Davis to withdraw his men, stating that the forces of the Island were capable of handling the situation. The British Government called upon Governor Swettenham to apologize. He refused to do so, and immediately resigned. He was not called home, nor was he assigned to a higher political position as Mr. Bryant says in his article; but remained in Jamaica where he now resides, unless he has recently died. I think those who essay to give out information, ought to assure themselves of its authenticity, before broadcasting it to the public. I am etc.
Editor, Negro World:
Please allow me a little space in the Negro World. It is with feelings of the deepest grief, and sorrow that we inform you of Mr. Arthur Kennedy's death, in Jamestown, on Sept. 30. He was a delegate to the North International Convention of the Negro Troupe of the World. He was the president of Division TA of Martinique, France. He knew his widow, Miss Wilhelmina Hempsey, and eldest daughter, and his mother, to mature by time.
Mr. Kennedy was born to the names of African and the Indianian Naught. He was actively engaged in the work of the U. S. L. A., and one of the first group of delegates to give testimony which led New York on 17th July to B. A. Wade.
president. Many government officials will mug him, his good works. He will be mourned. The U. S. will be held host a man. All the friends he met in Jamaica for the years will be to his character. the year will be a senior member from January, 1946, up to the time of his death and a Special member to December, 1920. Find the next man.
May God in His infinite mercy help his family to bear the cross and give perfect understanding that will enable all good U. N. I. A. members to rally to the call of action.
Please permit me to say to the members of our grand and noble association that the time has arrived fully for all of us to put down all of the UNCLE TOM type of foolishness in our dealings and handlings of each other. Mr. Garvey is the representative and founder of our great association, and any common officer can approach him. How in the name of God and Garvey do some of our High Commissioners and "dicty" officers think that they are helping Mr. Garvey to redeem Africa, by taking advantage of the loyal members, on Sunday telling them they are tired of mingling with common people, because they do not learn anything from them. These same persons are assigned to the Negro" non-members of the association and leaving the organization go to rot. These same-members we never see in our Liberty Hall from January to January. From time to time, these same persons invite our members to leave the activities of our own organization and attend some "big Negro" meeting elsewhere. "Nitn't it an indispassible fact that our Liberty Hall is the biggest and only place where we should and ought to have big things done among our people and invite others to help?"
We have 'ordained' and intelligent ministers all over our association lined up; and our constitution provides a place for them to open, perform marriage ceremonies and bury able to perform this work, I say put him down and appoint another and more able one.
We have lots of nice gentlemen, ministers outside the organization, who have not the time to spare to help in this great cause. They even fight the idea of a great African Republic. Are we to encourage them in the prevalent idea that there are no worth-while, ministers lined up with the movement? 'Should we encourage such men as Mr. Daniel, a minister of Detroit, who fought Mr. Garvey from the very beginning of the movement in New York, and, who even threw down the petition carried to him to sign for Mr. Garvey's pardon? Let us not do us as has recently been done in Detroit by our high, deity brother member. Let us do what Mr. Garvey has asked of us, get busy and look after the interest of our association at the point of our lives. Gambling and playing Whist, and whiskey drinking 'a this time are out of place; especially so, since Negro should be up stairs evenings exercising in the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. The destiny of the Negro race is at stake. As for me, I hold that now is the propitious time for the race the world over. If we are so young and must have fun and pleasure, let us not allow our Liberty Hall go begging for occupants at all hours of the day and night. Our program is sufficiently broad to care for the wants of us all at times. 'God forbid that we should throw a stumbling block in the way of progress. We should at all times be on the alert to help Mr. Garvey to redeem Africa, our native land. I have thoughtfully found out that we as a race stand very much in need of real men to be placed over association to administer our affairs.
We don't need good-looking boys any more; our need is strong, healthful, sympathetic and intelligent men to take care of our work. Oh God! Help Mr. Garvey to pick out real sacrificing men to do the work of our movement, because we, as members, are hungering and thirsting for them from the Sahara Desert to Hong Kong, China; and from Hong Kong, China to the Golden Gate of sanity in the city of Los Angeles; to the lowest bottoms and valleys of Mississippi, and the can-fields of Louisiana to do the work of God and Garvey.
Thanking you in advance for publishing this letter and message. I herewith enclose $2.00.
A few years ago, a distinguished (slo) gentleman of our race stood on one of the lofty pedestals in the Hall of Shame by complimenting the District Attorney of New York for coining "The Tiger" at court.
Another magnificent one, three summits in the background, struck him bravely, gave forward, boarded of his suitability, made his magnificent announcement, and directed to the deserter's government that the Agnusculum belonged to the sixth international congratulation held in London should not be allowed to re-enter the United States.
POLITICAL FURTHER
my African pasture.
China, Christian nation, has down the scale of clashed through out that fair land of the great dominions, until the invasion of the contest is the planned event, the themselves are alarming at the threatening danger.
Discontented China is not only a source of danger to united capitalism, but even to accidental stability. If China could only choose the right path, the path that leads to national glory and Asiatic solidarity.
Europe, and all the exploiting robber nations of the west, would be forced to howl—are We the late.
The disquietude which has gripped China is not at all regrettable, so far as the colored races are concerned. The only thing that arouses our anxiety is: Will China do the right thing now? Will she affect an understanding with Japan? She ought to, and we hope she will.
China must, for the good of herself and the salvation of all concerned, despite her so-called grievances against her best friend, join with her geographical sister and proceed to carry out the destiny that lies before her.
If China can find time to listen to the wise council of Japan, she will find that the grievances she complained of are beneficial agencies, and if adduced to, will do more for China than all the white devils put together can do.
Asiatic hegemony ought to be the aim of China—the day Japan gets China to see things in the right light—the morning following all Europe will be draped in mourning.
Colored Racke Not Wanted!
The religious tranquility of the colored races was disturbed from the thunderbolt, which was hurled from the pulpit of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Brooklyn, New York, U. S. A. "That Blacks are not wanted even to worship at the altar of the white man's God."—Laugh.
No. Carolina College For Negroes Begins New Term Sept. 21st
Hope for Biggest Year
Durham, N. C., Sept.—With Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday set aside as Freshman Week, the North Carolina College for Negroes opens for the registration of advanced students on Friday while the classes in the various departments get under way on Saturday, September 21. Indications are that this will be the best year in the history of the institution, with an unusually strong faculty having been secured.
One new building has already been completed at a cost of about $145,000, one more has already been started, and another will be started in the near future. Prospects are brighter for the future now than at possibly any other time, according to President J. E. Shepard.
The opening address at the college will be delivered Monday, September 23rd, at 11:15 o'clock in the auditorium in the new administration building. Work will then have begun in earnest, and will continue without interruption until Thanksgiving. North Carolina College for Negroes Durham, North Carolina.
NEGRO WOMEN IN MANUFACTURING AND MECHANICAL INDUSTRIES INCREASE
A study of Negro women in industry in fifteen States, recently completed by the Women's Bureau. Department of Labor shows a gain of more than 50 per cent in Negro women employed in the manufacturing and mechanical industries, while the gain for all women in these occupations was proportionately slight. The percentage of gainfully employed Negro women in these industries, however, was still considerably below the percentage in agriculture and in domestic and personal service.
LOAN FUND FOR STARTING NEGRO TAILORING ESTABLISHMENTS
A member of the Association of Negro Talers, Designers, and Drama-makers in reported to have deposited a fund of $30,000 with a New York bank to assist Negro graduates in those branches to get a start in business. It is stipulated that loans shall be at 6 per cent and shall not run longer than three years. The president, secretary and one other member of the association are to pass upon the merits of individual applications.
—Domestic Commerce Bureau
from time to time to retard the progress of the N. U. N. I. A. for pecuniary benefits yet we fail to see what that compulsive writer will receive for his non-radical, non-progressive, and shameful performance.
Seeing that the Delegates have returned I suppose the "grand American" committee should endeavor to draw the maximum River day. He is still alive. I'll have to ask him should take a successive view of the history of the N. U. N. I. A. and that the first committee would that we meet, meet and divide one and stop the continuation of the U. N. I. A.
Willing To Give Free Samples To Readers of this Paper to Prove Merits
Well, hope we do get back to go
way this bridge. Thursday evening, on
the route of the Tankard Bridge and
all straight white boats, I have been
oil.
Just why local promoters continue to stage shows that are void of color, mystify me. It could not be any more or less than that they want to keep the Negro fighter outside. Talk about staging a heavyweight elimination tournament without giving the Negro heavyweights a play is a huge joke; especially, when there are so many good ones around. Such boys are Godfrey, Sondy Jim Williams, Leo Williams, Al Walker, Long Tom Hawkins, and others, that should allow them to play a slant at the card, and leagh right out: Jim Maloney, the fellow that turned over a punk full-fledged set-up last Saturday night, is grabbing the seminal. Well, what's the use! Let them have their play. I venture that the card that has been arranged is going to cause a stop in the box office. Mark what I tell you, as nothing built up on misgivings can stand the test.
Whenever a good white boy and an exceptionally good colored boy, are booked to exchange-walls, and this promoter offers to stack the winner to fight the champion of their respective division, one usually knows the results.
I am only using past results in this.
To make my point clear: When Baby Joe Gans fought Sgt. Sammy Baker at the Queensboro Stadium, it was stated in print that the winner would be booked to meet Jackie Robinson better. Nugget, witted the promoter at the stadium to pit him against the winner. What was the results? The decision was a draw; although Gans won five-of-the ten rounds, two even, and the rest went to Baker.
Over at Philadelphia last Wednesday evening Armando Santiago, a colored boy from Cuba, met Benny Bass. It was stated that the winner of this bout, would be given a sling at the lightweight crown, which at present is the top piece worn by Tod Morgan. What was the result? They claim, that Santiago fouled Bass four times in the second round, and the fight was awarded to Benny on a foul. Now boys, I ask you does this sound J. R. I have seen Armando in action. He is a terrific body puncher. So for me, I know the rest of it. Just go back a little stifle when Young Jack Thompson fought Jackie Fields, the winner to meet Dundee the Champion. What have we for you? Thompson was way up ahead, when something broke, and Fields got the fight, some way or the other. Oh, shucks! The way of the mighty is poor and weakling. Let me tell you the cagle gye of Justice and Mr. Square Deaf is flashed upon the gentleman that are responsible for such calamities, so beware! Beware! Many a brave heart have gone down to the depths. So beware! Be on the square.
What's happening to Bruce Flowers? He really is going back these days. "Seems to be losing every fight. He met Billy Wallace in the midst of Philadelphia, and dropped the decision to him, after ten furious rounds. Bruce must have
PETER
Several years ago, in Gold Valley, California, two boys were playing a game of rock battle, and accidentally stitched a middle-aged woman, Dr. J. C. Delano (the founder of the World Famous Blood Medicine Herbs of Life) was called in to dress the wound and found that the patient was suffering with a fractured skull and concussion of the brain.
Dr. Delano started in on his new case with a determination to bring about satisfactory results; and at the end of thirty days the patient was not only completely cured but her hair over the bruised spot had grown to such a remarkable degree that it aroused the curiosity of both her family and Dr. Delano; so much so that the doctor questioned her as to what was it that she had been using on her hair during the treatment. Her reply was that she had only been using the comment prescribed by the doctor.
While the doctor determined that the patient should immediately have done treatment by the doctor more than the treatment and for the treatment with the advice of the doctor and after the treatment the patient should then
just his sting, as the long, heavy stick around and call for me, wherever he is selling them out — what the hunging game is funny like that; some days you're up, some days you're down. That is the song of the ring, mug.
AY tellbwa_we, have two good boys than anyone to show to the Palestine Relief Fund boutie, to be staged at the Garden on October 21. They are none other than George Godfrey and Gentleman Canada Lee, Godfrey desires to meet any heavyweight, and I know he means it; he is actually about the best of the lot, and donate his end of the purse to sweet charity. Canada wants to meet Jackie Fields for the championship. His end also is to go to charity! Oh, how sweet. I ask what is going to be done about it? Mr. Tom McCardle can answer that one. Don't worry.
I am going to follow the developments in this case closely, because if charity is to bene't from this proposed show, then they should benefit and how they can be better benefited is to book Godfrey with some white hope, and Lee, with our boy friend, "If he 'Fields' right about it." So, let's have it over with. Sew up these two matches, and let Palestine spend the dough. They need it.
HARRY WILLS went to Mexico and knocked his man out in one round. The unfortunate one was. Andres Castano, Spanish heavyweight champion. They claim that Wills delivered the T.N.T. after the bell rang. Tell me how could a left to the jaw be delivered if the Spanishard was walking away, bent on reaching his corner. The referee gave the fight to Castano on a soul. There was not one present that did not put up a howl. Everyone disapproved with the decision, so much so that the Mexican boxing commission deprived Castano of the championship. Wills challenged him and he was as soon as possible, but Andres refused, and it was on this account that prompted the commission to act. So Harry is not so bad after all. Just one of 'hose awful breaks.' That's all. He should not let this discourage him, but bury him on to greater battles and wars.
PRACTICALLY had dropped like curtain on International Cricket, but word comes to me that another mammoth act is to be staged, so I will send up the asbestos and present to our readers, the world's most famous all around cricketeter, in the person of L. L. Constantine who hails from the Lancastershire eleven of England. The one and only colored cricketeter, playing professional ball in the dear old London. Cricket fans in Harlem are anxiously awaiting his return, and the team is due 24. "Two exhibition games will be staged in the city, so that the boys will be able to get a good line on the kind of wood and leather this boy totals." There is no question about the fans turning out, because all up downerriee line you can hear them talking Constantine! Let us hope it gets a little warmer—the weather.
Dr. Delano announced that he had discovered a certain herby, which when mascored with certain chemicals, and mixed together, with pure Coconut Oil and California Pine Tar, would produce a healthy, insurant growth of hair.
After finding that the experiment had proved successful in ninety-nine out of one hundred cases, Dr. Delano placed his preparation on the market under the name of Dr. Delano's Coco-Tar Hair Grower. From that day until the present time the sale has been of phenomenal and uninterrupted success.
In Dr. Delano's research he discovered that falling hair was due to single infection (Sebum), and that hair roots very seldom die. Remove the infected Sebum and the hair will grow—for science has shown that, under most bald scaips the hair roots live.
Dr. Delano is so confident that his Good Taste Heirloom is superior to any other on the market, that he has decided to give a free sample to every reader of this paper who will send his or her name and address to THE HERBS OF LIFE INDIAN MEDICINE COMPANY 3200 Block Spring Garden St. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
their own room. The kind of room they have is the one he has been living in for the past year. One of the reasons he has been living in that room will face Maria Hammond, a good white boy and one who has been giving them a lot of books here at late. He has taken to being such good boys as Lou Williams and Alain. He also claims that he will put the curtain on payee. Will that has to be done on Payee. Will that has to be done up such a fight as he did against Courtney some month back, he will do well. I am glad to be able to report that the Tyler is taking this fight seriously, and is training hard. So boys we are in for some real world next Saturday. Another cool boy, the name of the man Rogers, who halls from Texas, will be seen in action also. The boys in the know claim that Jimmie is a real scraper. I hope he is, as there is plenty of room in New York for good boys. There are a lot of colored mitt palshers in the confines, but they are just Jokers. Won't train, stay out late at nights, making the rounds; and a lot of other things that fighters should not do they can be seen doing constantly. Oh, I forgot, hot dogs, do they eat them. And when, so you see that whenever a new boy comes along that tends to be good, I go wild over him. Let us have more fighters like Al Brown and Kid Chocolate. Will see you Saturday night. Be early as the whole gang is going to be there.
COLORED New York is making ready for the pig skin, and who is bringing it to us? None other than the two great college football teams, Hampton and Lincoln. We have long wanted to see some college football in our own city. Hundreds, upon hundreds of people in our Harlem are interested in this game so much so that every Thanksgiving day they leave the big city in droves to go wherever the pig skins fly. So there is no doubt in my mind that this game will prove a wonderful success. At least New York-and New Jersey will be represented. So 'the boys in the East say to the boys in the South, come hither and be with us for a big day's pleasure and may the best team win.
MUCH ink is still being aplished in local papers regarding the plight of the Renaissance Big Five, basketball team. They continue to tell you of some players on the team stating that they would not desert. Brother Bob, but they fail to tell you just who are the guilty ones. Therefore I am inclined to believe, that when this team takes the center of the court, fans of basketball will see in the line up the same gang. It is customary whenever the Big Five makes their entry on the court, the orchestra strikes up "Hall, Hall, the Ganga is Here," that the crowd is cheering. As long as Bob has Shocum, Mayers, the Ricks, he has the team, two on three new faces along with them would mean very little as why all this disturbance. The less said about the matter the better. The public, does not like scandal. It requires too much explaining. So let it drop boys are down to get down to practice and seriousness, as the time is not far spent before whistle blows, and it behooves every man to be ready for the great day cometh let's play ball.
All stepping out of my character once again, as the question has been asked me on several occasions what was my opinion of the action taken by the Right Rev William S. Blackshear, pastor of St. Matthew Episcopal Church in Brooklyn, against the colore dancers of his church. I personally think think the Reverend was right in his stand, as he stated in giving his reasons, "That the race could develop leadership in their own churches, but not in white church" which was a true statement of fact. So why should there be so much ado over the matter. In the first place real race folks would not want to attend a church where the majority of attendance was white. The only Negroes that would commit themselves are those, that are ashamed of their race and they are so intelligent that they haven't yet, learned that they should worship a God in their own likeness and it is a church that a non-proud person of a Black God, and angels. If they think that after they die and go to heaven that they became white angels, then they should die now. For when I have passed on and enter the other world, if there are angels, I want to be a black one or none at all. Negroes please and yourself. I would welcome more blackheaded presbyteries such as Dr. Blackshear, because there are some members of my race that are so hard headed that they won't listen to their own leaders that are sincere and honest in their leadership, but continue to annoy the white people with their presence. Tee chase them out and you will be doing the race a good turn. Negroes, get a religion of your own and stick to it, that's my sense—Amen. H. G. B. S.
Back home when you wanted supper, you just waited to a move and asked for "pipiensum."
"Swigs chasse now yelling in scentlessly," says a handshake. We never know anything else to get the latter of it.
"Grouffalion do the best. Did you spend the mind two weeks' equation as屡次?" "We push a very mind like water."
Each principal is very naive in the management of his own preoccupation, with every situation of any kind. Furthermore, he often falls in love in the same manner, "This big number must not come before my mind," or, "I simply won't follow, the list of talk with my number; why you leave 'em cold and expect me to revive the
THE
Bilbie Rickson, the New York stage beauty, formerly of "Keep Shufflin". She is one of the typical choral beauties who trip a strenuous routine in order to delight the tired business man. She has probably never received one of the "polite notices." house. I should not may," or again, I don't want those steps in that number. If I am to ship, They just don't suit my desires." are typical objections heard.
All of them are finally met by curiosity, or by the candid information that it will remain so, or in some instances, by submitting the chorus to the learning of a new routine. In either event, the ponies pay the price. If the little principal wren her point, the girls learned a new dance. If she last—well—a performer who has reached the stage of doing a number with choral support knows a lot of ways of venting her 'spice upon those whom she judges to 'be the humble instruments of her undating.' If the stage manager thinks more of the chorus than he does of me, I show them that I don't share this opinion," would be the words of such a principal, if she spoke her mind. And, very often she does.
Two, three, perhaps four weeks of this grief passes slowly into memory, depending upon the class of the show. For higher priced houses, more time and a greater effort to attain perfection obtains. The profits at state are greater. Hence the time and care.
Then comes the day of ordering shoes and trying on costumes; these appurtenances have been bought in dozen lots. Each girl is given a set for each number she is expected to take part in. Once tried on and fitted by a wardrobe maitress who adjusts them to the needs of the individual as occasion requires, the set is bundled up and henceforth goes to and from the wardrobe trunks as the chorister's outfit so long as she remains with the show. These costumes and shoes wear out rapidly under the heavy strain of two hours dancing nightly.
No salaries are paid for these days and nights for rehearsal. Managers, when once certain that one will remain with the show, and rehearsal have advanced far enough to confirm it, may advance a little money in small amounts, just enough for more sustenance. This is charged against the payables to be; and, sustenance for energy walks after a show, to be charged for the cost of other work, though they do not require expensity with the management required to expend them.
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any of the great writers at all. Our students are equipped, temperate, in good faith that is all they have previously master the privilege of being taught the additional rehearses every time a new member is added to the east or chorus; or when the producer may determine to change an old song for a different one in any spot in the show.
This routine of hard work is perhaps the greatest reputation of the place stories one so often hours concerning the ladies of the ensemble. No one who cared for the easy road that "gold diggers" comboes would work as hard as those little ladies do for the meagre reward that comes to them. They are first real devotees to the art of terpsichore; and what is more prosaic, they are honest-to-goodness working people.
"Hearts in Dixie" Star Writes Telling of Progress And Achievement
New York, Sept. 23. Replying to an inquiry by Walter White, Assistant Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, about the Negro actor in Hollywood, Clarence E. Muse, star of "Hearts in Dixie," writes that colored people should support Negro actors and Negro motion pictures if they wish real opportunity from the producers.
"It is indeed an exacting problem for the Negro artist," writes Mr. Muse. "He is scarcely considered at present. Only in rare individual cases has he been received as an artist. And striking thing is that it is not necessarily prejudice that holds him out.
"The producers are moved solely by box office appeals and whims of the many thousand distributors and theatre managers who reflect the reactions of their audiences in their weekly reports to producers.
"The recent production 'Hearts in Dixie' was intended originally to be a two real experiment, a novelty; it grew while production was in progress to a feature. It has been received amidst great applause all over the country. But the producers still think that such a thing should not be repeated often, because they are of the opinion that the type of colored pictures that will appeal for the present to single audiences are not of the color used in the previous to the discreetty of 'Hearts in Dixie' by the producers from colored people than praise. This is a game that we must build ourselves into, through the same process that other artists have been compiled to follow."
Players Pinniped
Announcement was made today that the Lincoln Theatre, which has been closed during the summer months, will hold its sale full opening with the new Lafayette Players on Monday evening, September 23.
According to Manager Carpenter, the new Lafayette Players, who come here direct from New York for a limited engagement only, are undoubtedly the greatest cost of race artists ever seen in the west and it is expected that they will create a greater sensation than any company ever seen gone in the past.
Headed by such stars as Abbs Mitchell, who recently returned from a international European tour where he won the World Cup, and Andrew Bishop, New York's manmant in who is generally conceived to be the race's greatest leading man, this company is on its par with the finest in the country.
The management has chosen for the opening production what is termed the most "spectacular play of the age," "Experience," a play which will bring heart-throbs, laughs and tuneful melodies in large numbers to the audience. Supporting the two featured stars is a great cast of actress including Edna Barr, Margaret Hubbard Brown, Billy Andrews, Lionel Monague, Rupert Marks, Alice Dixon, Barrington Carter, Edwin Anderson, Armineh almer and George Brown.
The refusal by the Labor government to admit Leon Trotikov to Great Britain leaves Leon in a bad fix and lets Mr. MacDonald out of a worse one.
Standing, left to right: C. Brackitt, Capt. B. Smith, W. Jones S. Morac, Seety. Knilling Powell Brown, W. Brown., Z. Franch. Sitting: S. Jones, R. Dobson, W. Leary.
In spite of the hardships Jamaicans have to undergo in Cuba, they still remember their old school games. On Saturday the 15th of August, the Elic C. C. XII defeated the Virtintis.
Standing, left to right: C. Brackitt, Secty. Knilling Powell Brown, W. R. Dobson.
Howard Team Faces Tough Grid Card Hampton, Lincoln, Bluefield, Wilberforce, W. Virginia to be Played BISONS HAVE 8 GAMES
WASHINGTON — Facing perhaps the stiff schedule a Howard eleven ever had, candidates for football playoff on the Bison team swung into action Monday.
Coach Tom Verdell is being assisted by Harry Payne and Jack Young, two backfield men who have played their time limit on Howard eleven.
The first game, for which the players will be drilled, will be with Hampton Institute at Hampton on October 6. It has been five years since a Howard team has played Hampton: Athletic relations were severed when Howard withdrew from the Colored Inter-collegiate Athletic Association in 1924 in a row over eligibility rules.
Wilberforce is also back on the Howard schedule after an absence of a year. Howard and Wilberforce met last in 1927 when the Ohioans walked, off the field as the result of a dispute over a decision. Wilberforce will meet Howard this year on the second Saturday in November. The game will be played in the Howard stadium.
Other teams that are on the Howard Schedule, include Johnson C. Smith, Fisk, Morehouse, West Virginia, Dennis Morgan and Lincoln
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which found him jate. He made 4
21 owers. A. Sutherland alias J. K
k came in next, and seemed to be in a
hurry, to score. He was caught in
Long Field for O. S. Jones came in
next who made a fine glove to Leg
and in running W. Jones got run out,
for 6.22 owers. Peterkin came in next
who swung around and hit a fine 4
off Brown 23 owers. S. Jones got a
difficult malden from Barrat 24 owers
was with bowled by Brown for a
mother ower. Peterkin Barratooked
mother malden from Barrat. Jones got
nicely for 4. 28 owers. King replaced
Brown at the south. Jones drove him
for a single 27 owers. Jones used
Barrat badly for three doubles, luckily
for Barrat. he was caught in the
same over, by the wicket kuh for
18. C. Brackett the Skipper came in
next to settle the situation 28 owers.
King seemed to be determined to
dislodge the skipper but he drove him
nicely for 2, 29 owers. Peterkin middle
stump was uprooted by Barrat.
the first ball in the over for 8. Rain
then interrupted and they were compelled to stop awhile. On resuming R. Dubson came in next. He was
claimed bowled by Barrat for O. This
over was Barrat's triumph. He got
into a lily with ball making 4
balls 2 wickets. S. Jones came in
next who finished in style, 30 owers. The Skipper drove
King for 2, making the score 90, and
again for another King in trying his
best bowled a "no ball." His last ball
was scored by the Skipter for
another double, 31 owers. Barrat sent
a nice wide, but William refused to
hit it. The next was a Leg bya,
which released him.
St. Nicholas Golf Club to Hold Fourth Annual. Tournament
The fourth annual club championship of the St. Nicholas Golf Club of New York City, will be held Tuesday, September 24, on the Pelham Bay Park course. George Aaron, pressured champion who has two legs on the championship cup, will try to acquire permanent possession of the cup. R. Hawey, winner in 1926, James McCoy, eastern champion for 1928, Elmer Brent, runner up in the national amateur championships of 1928, and other golfers will try and dethrone Aaron.
Nature is still triumphant. No girl looks as weirdly bank in person as in the fashion pictures.
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(EDITOR'S NOTE: Mrs. Trumball
the Secretary of the Child Welfare
Commission of the State of Oregon,
which position she has held for more
than a quarter of a century. She is
one of the most prominent white
women in the Northwest, in club, fraternal, industrial, political and social
welfare work. She was one of the
very first women to become inter-
ested in Race Relations work and is
one of Mrs. Cannady's most ardent
supporters.)
By MILLIE R. TRUMBULL
(Specially prepared for the Illustrated
Feature Section.)
For a long time, I had wanted to know more about Beatrice Morrow Cannady, or as she is listed in the telephone book, Mrs. E. D. Cannady. She is the woman who leads her race in Oregon; the person to whom we turn for things political, social and industrial which concern the colored people.
I had listened with intense interest to her broad-minded views on the subject of race relations and had sympathized with her efforts to break down the barriers of prejudice and discrimination which my race has maintained against hers. Many times I envied her the police, the patience, the fine spirit of tolerance which was evident throughout the story of her people.
She dropped into the office one afternoon and we chatted for a while of clothes and children, her own in particular, two splendid chaps, 13 and 16 years of age. Then I asked a few questions about herself and this interview began. It started out with my question as to how long she had been in public life.
"Always," she said with a smile, "ever since I was a tiny child, and was stood up on the platform to sing, 'Hello, Central, Give Me Heaven for My Mamma's There,' and then I would promptly begin to cry as I could not bear the thought of my precious mother being so far away. I was a tiny thing and it seemed to afford a lot of amusement for the audience, but to me I lived through what I sang. I was always singing."
"You were born in the South, Mrs. Cannady?"
"Yes, in Littig, Texas. Our family name is Morrow. My uncle is still postmaster; there and has held the office through all sorts of administrations for over forty years. I am one of the fourteen children—four boys and ten girls all born in the same house."
"My father was a very well educated man and, of course, made every effort possible to give his children a good education. I attended school first at Littig, then Houston, Texas, and later went to New Orleans College and then to Wiley College in Marshall, Texas, where I took a teacher's course. You know, perhaps, Wiley College is one of the best in the United States for colored students.
"After graduating, I caught in the Gilbert Academy, in England's country, where one breathes all the significance of Longfellow's wonderful poet. Later I taught in Logan County High School, Guthrie, Oklahoma."
"Was it in the South that you studied music?"
"No, I studied voice with D. A. Clippingen, Kimbail Hall, Chicago. I had great ambitions in those days and dreamed of an operatic career. While in Chicago, I also attended classes at the University of Chicago. But now I am so busy with my home, my boys, the paper and the other work that I have no time for the study of music. I can only listen to other people sing and play."
Mrs. Cannady takes great pride in the fact that she presented Roland
Hayes to Portland audiences twice before he became world-famous and she predicter then that he would reach his present height. The "paper" is the "Advocate, the weekly newspaper, published by her husband of which she is associate editor and manager. The "other work" is everything she is called upon to do for her people from appearing in court to proffer legal aid to some colored man or woman who is in trouble, to arranging an interracial reception at her home in a fashionable residential section of the city where one meets a cosmopolitan group of Negroes, white people, Chinese, Japanese and East Indians.
Mrs. Cannady makes a charming hostess, and it is deemed a privilege to be included among her guests at these functions. In addition to being a housewife, editor and general advisor to the community, Mrs. Cannady is a lawyer.
"Yes, I studied law after my boys were born. That was another of my ambitions, but one that was realised; while my childhood dream of becoming a prima donna floated away.
"I attended night classes at the Northwestern College of Law and never shall I forget the experience which I had as a graduate of that school. I had carried my share of the expenses of the exercises and the class party; I was in the class pic-
reading your Dear
and their needs
Have you ever longed to be a lawyer?
If you have, then study this writing very closely. It is the handwriting of one of our readers whom I have just advised to study law. He has the ability to make a great success in this profession.
A lawyer is the man who influences other people. He must be able to make friends. He must be able to express his feelings, and touch the feelings of other people. This man has just the quality. He feels deeply, either by joy or sorrow, and he can create a similar feeling in the hearts of other people.
A good lawyer must be able to learn quickly. He must think very rapidly because a lawyer many times finds himself in places where quick thinking is absolutely necessary.
The bit of writing which we have here this week shows just such a brain. The writer of this specimen does think quickly. He will not seem to study very much on his law—but he will know it because he picks up knowledge easily.
He has a good sense of humor. This will help him for a grouch never has many friends. This man will be able to see a joke, even when it is on himself, and such a fellow is always popular.
While all of this is true, it is also a fact that this man will be honest and fair with the people with whom he deals. He is not a shyster, nor dishonest. His pride will never permit him to be anything of the kind.
You may not want to be a lawyer, but no matter whether you want to enter a profession or become a skilled mechanic or a builder of houses, you have some talent. You can make a success of your life. You owe it to your friends to make the right start—to get onto the road that will give
図
$500 N1 Fall To Prow Hair
fure and sang on the class program; but after the exercises, when the hall was being cleared for dancing, I was asked to take my friends away so as to avoid any embarrassment. For the first time during the whole course of study, I was reminded of my color.
Of course, I do not forget much experiences, and no one can fully appreciate the distress, unless he has suffered in the same way.
"I do not feel resentment, and be
andwriting Analysis
N. BUNKER
in Grapho-Analyst
them reason to be proud of you. Your writing shows this road. The way you cross your it's and dot your it's may not seem important to you, but in just such things you tell the truth about yourself. You paint a full-length picture of yourself on the paper as you write your name, or write your friend a letter.
You may have a personal report made of your handwriting if you will write a page, using pen and ink. Sign your name, send letter to Dr. M. N. Bunker, in care of this newspaper, with a stamped and self-addressed envelope for reply. Be sure to enclose the stamped envelope, for letters without this will be discarded:
HOUSEHOLD
HELPS
As a general bleaching agent, lemon juice is unsupressed. Fine embroidery, lace and lingerie, which have become yellowed may be made snowy white again by boiling in water to which a little bluing and the juice of a lemon have been added.
Lemon juice for ink spots on a white dress, or lemon juice and salt to take out rust stains, are recipes known to the housewife of grandmother's day and are just an efficient now as then.
The cut end of a lemon dipped in salt is excellent for cleaning copper and brass.
Apple Filling For Laying Cake
Three large apples, grated; mix with one cup white sugar, stirring it in as the apple is grated. Add the juice and grated rind of one lemon, then one beaten egg. Cook in a double boiler until clear—about five minutes.
BORN APPLES
Wash, corne, put do not peel several good apples; cut in thick rings, dip in flour and gently fry in butter and bacon fat, when brown and soft apricot a little brown sugar and a dash of cinnamon over them and let them stand in the hot pan to melt the sugar. Serve with pan curls for breakfast.
JOHN HENRY, by Guy B. Johnson,
University of North Carolina Press.
$2.60.
It is claimed in this book that the
legend of John Henry, the Negro steel
driver, is one of the most fascinating
native to America.
It is a collection of data surrounding
the existence of such a character.
There is a valuable bibliography
Negro folk lore.
Practical People
The movie director who insisted
on using real bullets in his battle
scenes.
Bishop of Tranquility I. M. E. Church, Inc., and Supreme Zain of the Bonevolent Ancient Order of Dharana, Inc.
leve that if we could all know each other better, there would be less antagonism. When I think of all that my people have accomplished in music, art, literature and science, since we have become free. I realize that all we need is opportunity, "Coat skin pigment does not determine superiority of race." Mrs. Cannady's services as a speaker are much in demand by numerous organizations and institutions. She
THE HOLY LAND
"And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land wherech thou art a stranger, All the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession; And I will be their God."—Genesis, 17th, 8th.
Arabs and Jews, the grands, of Father Abraham, are at it again. The present conflict in Palestine is very interesting, especially when you re-
member that the Lord was instructed Abraham to put out Hagar and his son Ishmael, Ishmael, the father of the Arabs, has lived up to prophecy: 'And he will be a wild man; his hand will be against every man; and every man's hand against him; and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren."—Con. 16:12. The present man-power of his race should not cause any surprise, because it is simply the fulfillment of an old promise God made Hagar the Egyptian, Ishmael's mother: "And the Angel of the Lord said to Hagar, I will multiply thy seed exceedingly, that it shall not be numbered for multitude."
If might interest you to know that the Redouta Arabs, and the Black Galas original home is Ethiopia, then more, the Falashes were descendants of Abraham through Ishmael. The Falashes who for centuries lived in Ethiopia, really came from Arabia.
There is nothing new about the periodical clash between the race of Ishmael and that of Ishmael. The only trouble there in the backwoods people of the earth are beginning to learn the truth about themselves. Why should it be otherwise?
Began the mother of Ishmael was a black woman, an Egyptian (Gen. 16:1), Abraham, Ishmael's father, a senile; was of the browning race. Therefore, Ishmael—he was primarily a union in one individual of the races of Ham and Shem. Little has been recorded of Hagar and Ishmael; nevertheless, after they were given bread and water and sent away from Abraham's home, they wandered into a desert place, and as God would have it in a place which no one wanted because of its dryness and poor water supply. God made water to flow, which water-way it is said to be seen up to this day.
Abramah, who soon get out from Garer with herids and servants for Hagar and Ishmah, no doubt, was further instructed by the Lord to give them a good start in life. This desert place was transformed into a very beautiful city in the desert. Abramah had wells dug, temples built, and so on, showing his wealth in evidence everywhere before he returned to his home in Garer. Abramah became fascinated by the wonder city of Hagar's kingdom and he returned
says that "contact" is the key to the solution of the whole problem of race relations. "Contact brings about knowledge; knowledge, understanding; understanding, appreciation, good-will and love."
As I looked at the slender, dainty bit, of, womanhood, not more than five feet tall, with her delicate features and small head with its heavy coil of hair, and with eyes full of glowing pride of race, I could only think: "Here is another Joan of Arc."
to it and made it his home. This ancient wonder city with its temples whose wails were artistically decorated with alabaster, onyx, ebony, gold and precious stones in profusion, is the BEERSHEBA of Bible fame. It was also called the "City of the Oath" because Abraham and King Amidemte after having a few clashes for the water supply, they made an oath not to fight over the water wells as there were enough for all concerned.
The sons of Ismael while having prior to A. D., a form of Judaism religion, they seemed to have had a desire for some other form of worship of the Lord of Lords. They carried this semi-Judaism faith into Ethiopia; perhaps this accounts for some of the admixture of the "COETS" religion (Ethiopia, national faith) and Judaism. The sons of Hism today do appreciate any sect or denomination whose ritual contains a gigantic ceremonial programme; which is due to the Jewish teachings received through the sons of Ismael.
The Arabs for centuries have selected the Jewish holy days for their best raids; sometimes the purpose for these raids is the carrying off of Jewish women, provisions for the winter, or both. The Jewish people are always on the lookout for these during warriors, nevertheless ceremonies have to be carried out, and these attacks can only be countered by the Jews defensive fight. Aside from the minor raids, the major conflicts have been on almost all occasions, that of religion. The Jews and the Arabs are strong believers of, their respective faiths; an civil person may cause an Arab-Jewish conflict by simply bringing religion into play. The Bedouin Arab, a real son of Ethiopia, is the most warlike of the Arabs. He loves a holy fight, especially, a religions one. No doubt, there is some relation between the Bedouin Arabs and the Amalekites, the most warlike tribe of the Gennites.
The Cannanites, the grand children of Ham, were once the masters of Palestine (Gansan is that part of Palestine between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea); only their non-obedience to God and their foolish and unnecessary wars with the Egyptians, which caused their despair at the hands of the Israelites, who were inexperienced fighters, but aggressive and brainy warriors. Christians, Jews and Gentiles are preparing to battle a universal brotherhood into being and you know that this brotherhood shall come only when the price has been paid. Let us pray that the price will not be too high, for in reality, the earth belongs to the sons of Shem Ham and Jacobeth.
[I beg to thank my pleased readers who have written in asking that I continue these "Weekly Religious Talks." Time does not permit me to answer letters received, however. I am willing to do all in my power to help by giving more light. Therefore, please feel free to write to me, and be assured in advance of my hearty cooperation at all times. I thank you. —R. R. P.]
"Your husband says he never deserted you. How about it?" asked the divorce judge of the fair pensioner. "Why, Your Honor, he's an endurance flier!"
Parents Who Treat Their Daughters as Property
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An important element of the blood is the red corpuscle. The pumber varies according as to whether the individual is a male or a female. The estimated number per cubic milliliter or blood in the male is slightly greater than that of the female blood in like proportion.
The principal constituents of these corpuscles is the hemoglobin. It is the pigmented portion of these cells. The color is red. It has its existence in the arterial as well as in the venous blood. By its loose combination with oxygen it imparts to the blood in the arteries the characteristic bright red color. The veins are not so oxygenated hence the color of its blood is not so typically red.
Whenever there is a deficiency in the quantity of the blood as a whole; where there is a deficiency in the number of red corpuscles; or should the defect be found in the hemoglobin, the ultimate result is anemia.
Anemia may be only a local condition. This can be seen if pressure be applied to any portion of the body so as to cut off the blood supply temporarily. The part will be very pale. The brain might be momentarily deprived of its full supply of blood. This might be on a fainting fit giving the individual a great deal of concern. Those who habitually spend a great length of time over the cup that cheers always carry with them the sign of their inability. Pallor, however, should not always be looked upon as a mark of ill health. There are many people who naturally possess a pale countenance with a
Julia Jerome
Have you a puzzling love
matter on which you need友
advertise? Write to Julia Jerome,
care of this newspaper. If you
wish a personal reply please send
a stamped, self-addressed envelop.
I get a great many letters from
young girl from seventeen to twenty-
two complaining of the number in
which their parents from their natu-
ral inclination to have boy friends.
This week I received a particularly
pathetic letter from Leeksville, N. C.
Dear Mrs. Jerome:
I live in a small town with only a few places to go for amusement. I am twenty-one, years old and very very unhappy. Twelve years ago my mother died and left two girls and one boy. My brother and sister have since left home because my father was so mean to us. I have stopped with him because I was the youngest cat and he depended so much on me to keep house. But he raises fault with everything I do. If I speak to a man, he will fuss about it for a week. And if I have girl friends to see me, he insults me before them; sometimes threatening to hit me with a chair, and tells me I better get to work
physical condition which is quite commendatory. It has been roughly calculated that one-fourteenth of the whole body weight of an anemial represents the amount of its blood. Should a certain amount be lost from any cause anemia follows. One might be unfortunate to sustain the rupture of a large blood vessel. A common way which might also precipitate this kind of anemia is by way of an ulcer of the stomach. Spontaneous ceasing of the flow of blood might occur through Nature's kind intervention. At other times the result might not be so promising.
Infections such as typhoid and malaria are capable of reducing the volume of blood. Some poisons can also produce the same effect. Mothers who feed their infants on the breast for a long continuous period generally possess a wasting and anemic appearance. The most distressing anemic conditions are the outcome of a diminution in the hemoglobin and, where there is an imperfection in the blood making organs.
The former condition is seen in young girls generally. In congested areas exercise is usually lacking, there is a deprivation of the direct rays of the sun, and an insufficiency of nourishing food is an outstanding fact also. When all these conditions are combined with an overworked system, the complexion puts on a yellow green tinge. Shortness of breath, palpitation, swelling of ankles are some of its features.
The other condition is fraught with grave results. The decision respecting the cause is sometimes difficult. Gastro-intestinal infection appears to play a great part. Nervous shock is considered a likely contributor. The individual looks well nourished but pale. A flabby frame, with bloodless lips, gums and tongue are some of the characteristics. Whenever practicable one should present himself for a blood count. Some of the conditions yield readily to medication. Others are stubborn. New treatments are being devised which are proving satisfactory so far. A trial for the needful is worth while attempted.
when I am talking to them. My sister wants me to come to her but I will have to leave without telling my father and I hate to do this. But I stay here I will surely commit suicide.
Unfortunately, parents still consider their children as property, especially their girl children. Fathers of the kind described above are a menace to civilization. And yet, such fathers are frequently to be found in the rural sections of the south.
Psychologist say that the underlying explanation of fathers of this type is jealousy. They are jealous of all other men because they regard their daughters as their property.
They strive in every way to keep other men from winning them. And yet these strict fathers are mistakenly considered the most moral. The effect upon the girl is disheartens. It creates a fear in her of children, and makes a happy marriage later, almost impossible. She becomes subject to all sorts of nervous disorders, at the bottom of which lies the dread of a man's touch justified in her by her father.
My dear child, don't hesitate any longer. Leave at once.
The hunter who shot his guide so as not to return home empty handed.
SPANISH SECTION
SECCIÓN EN ESPAÑOL
Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de
la Raza Negra
355 Lenox Avenue
Ciudad de Nueva York N. Y.
Unificación de los Cuatrocientos Millones de la Raza
Negra Con el Propósito de Cooperar a Su Propio
Desarrollo. Futuro Industrial, Comercial y Educativo de Nuestro Pueblo. Los Descendientes de Judea
Constituyen la Palestina; Los Descendientes de Etiopia Constituyen y Progresan en Africa.
Esta organización, el mas poderoso de todos los movimientos de progreso de la raza negra, somete a la amplia consideración de nuestro pueblo su programa del presente; siendo su mas ferviente amble la activa cooperación en pro de una causa comum. Ella persigui a todo transe la unificación de los cuatrocientros millones en un cuerpo organizado, con el gran objeto de laborar por su emancipación económica y política.
Ella aspira ademas no solamente un país donde desenvolverse como a fuerza nacional, sino también para encargar a la raza por el sendero el delanto y de la prosperidad. Realizamos que un raza que es dependiente se convierte en esclava de las demas. En tal estado de cosas hemos permanecido por más de trescientos años. Tiempo es ya para que el elemento negro de luz y de entendimiento haaga buen uso de sus facultades y de sus energias, cooperando a la construcción de una base firme la cual se edifique el templo de la emancipación.
Todo vez logramos independizar industrialmente nuesra raza, tendremos mejor oportunidad para realizar gradualmente nuestras aspiraciones. Con el objeto de hacer esta base industrial del desarrollo de Africa. Las posibilidades industriales, comerciales y agrícolas de aquel continent no estan aún prescritas. La exploitación de estas quedarán a cargo de aquellos de preclara inteligencia entre nuestro elemento y que desen constituiralli su nuevo hogar.
La ambición para asistir en la constitución de un país propio, donde la ya p. la felicidad esten garantizadas, es para nosotros sin igual. Una y otra vez hemos contribuido a la constitución de otros países y de otras naciones, habiendo sido el blanco donde dirigieron todas sus arbitrariades y en muchos casos privandosenos del sagrado derecho a la vida. Los euatrocientes millones de la raza negra deben consolidar su energia educativa, industrial, comercial y financiera en pro del establecimiento de una nación propia.
El continente africano es la cuna de todo el elemento de la raza negra. Esforcemonos por su engrandamiento colocandole en un sitio de prominencia entre los pueblos y naciones del universo. De la misma manera que el anglo-sajon, el galo, el malayo y otros laboraron pertinazamente por el adelanto y prosperidad de sus respectivas naciones, hasta verlas figurar en la primera linea de batalla por su subsistencia, laboremos también nosotros en pro del desarrollo y prosperidad del vasto continente africano.
Constituyen alli una nación suficientemente fuerte, y mayormente respetada, la cual garantice la protección de nuestros hijos la de sus generaciones venideras. Laboremos en tal sentido utilizando todo cuanto esté nuestro alcance, para llevar avante el programa que nuestra organización ha delicado en el presente, de cuya realización ha de resultar la felicidad que disfrutemos en el porvenir.
Las magas del pueblo son por lo general erroneamente informadas acerca de los ideales que sustene tal o cual movimiento nuevo de reforma. Por medio de tal actitud la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra ha visto en varias ocasiones obstaculizada su labor, causando al movimiento tal vez más liberal de nuestra raza en la presente era, el ridículo de paire de aquellos que se satisfacen con mojarse de todo lo que no se vea una solididamente, establecido. Esclarezcamos la verdad; liboremos hacía tal establecimiento.
FINE THANK YOU MISTER WILLIAMS
HOW ARE YOU CHAPPY?
He made it a "big brother" habit of stalking everyone, and then he killed valet, Chappie, by called "Chappie". "Chappy" had given him service for many years.
The secretary himself grudged of thought he had to deliberate the writing of a dark-come hand book on anthropology, which he might and the many holidays, and his brevity.
He was a headliner in Myrtlewood and, and always played an equally brave. He also did this to help startle, and all worthy accusers. It was often thought that his overwork in this manner compounded to his untimely death.
BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Sept. 17
(By U. P.)—Octalized by churns of
her girlhood among members of her
own family, Bernice Secancy, 25, who
learned five years after marriage
and after birth of two children, that
she had been wed to a Negro, has
been granted a divorce by Circuit
Judge Hatch.
dren, who, upon her request, were placed in the custody of Oral Seeney, defendant. Mrs. Seeney said she was married in Bridgeton, N. J., in 1923, but at that time had no intimation that her husband was other than white. It was only later, she explained, when the couple came to Battle Creek, where the Seeney family lives, that she discovered the truth. Both children now show their Negro blood, Mrs. Seeney told the court.
Who can remember the old-fashioned dude, of whom it was said, "Every move a picture?" ^
The biggest four-furcher around town claims it takes two of the new small-sized bills to light a cigar.
We Americans look upon the orientals with pity and they gaze on us with contempt, and so honors are even.
"A western girl has made a fashionable dress out of shaving from the sawnill." Er—and, about the splinters? ^
An interesting sight we haven't encountered in 15 years at least is a runaway team bitched to a watermelon wagm.
"Why do you buy more shoes, at this time? You have 11 pairs in the closet." "We know, but I need the box for a picnic lunch." ^
It is saddening to think that in a little while we small begin to miss the old-fashioned dollar bills, and the new smaller ones, too.
Una divisa immanent; habra al-guían que no lo apelar- Libertad, Igualdad y Fraternidad. Nunca lo hemos practicado desde el 1972 con tanta justicia como la combatinas en elanomento actual. La tomanos abonan con un significado mas completo que cuando fué inventada, formulada a nuestra disciplina interna. Entonces eru una tarea nacional por dos circunstancias primarias; era que nuestros antepasados pretendían hermanos, y, para del impulso que an a ser libres, a ser iguales, a ser nosotros hemos hecho para nuestra propia salvaguardia, este se aplica a todos los pueblos. Es que no quieremos que nuestros enemigos nos crean sumamente egoistas, pues miestra vehementa, nuestra labor es para todos los pueblos; que todos sean aceptados, que todos gieren sobre el mismo nivel y comparten la triple ventaja de igualdad, Libertad y Fraternidad.
Libertad—No queremos que un pueblo por mas fuerte y poderoso que sea se abrogue el derecho de egencia o el dominio sobre otros pueblos; no queremos que solamente bajemos la servia a un rey que domine a un país; no queremos que exista un.pueblo despota y una razza tirámica; que no haya pueblos tiranos y pueblos elayos; que asi mismo la divisa se por igual; que todo tenga un mismo alcanze; que todo este intersado hacia una misma inspiración, tal como lo demás den las circunstancias, acento de arrogantes ambicio. Libertad nacional si, mas también libertad internacional independiente de todas las naciencias, lo que proclama y revindica la primera palabra de nuestra divisa.
Igualdad.—Para que, scan libres los pueblos, deben ser iguales. Si hay desigualdad en materias físicas, en territorio y población, deben ser iguales en derecho. De la misma manera que se ha citado deberan ser iguales ante la ley, y consequentemente los pueblos todos deben ser iguales en derecho. Ningún pueblo projejido por su fortaleza, debe tener autoridad para oprimir al debil. El derecho considerado a los pueblos débiles debe estar en el mismo nivel para los pueblos fuertes, y así quedan balanesados derechos tan sagrados, tanto para los unos como para los otros. Una igualdad y una justicia: una justicia que no admita grado de diferencia entre las naciones; una justicia que reconozca el mismo derecho a la vida en todos los pueblos; que le asista a los pueblos fuertes el prestigio de ayudar y de aconsejar a los pueblos débiles, así como también corresponde a los pueblos débiles el coeduyar y vivir con los pueblos fuertes. Paz e igualdad ante el derecho es lo que debe exigirse a todos los pueblos que tengan una misma justicia. Asi mismo la segunda palabra de nuestra divisa que debe disidentemente interpretada en su sentido lato, con toda su significante humana, debe ser apacada tanto a los pueblos como a los individuos, para constituir una denseracia universal, lo que es lo mismo a decía, el domino de cada pueblo por su propio.
Fraterilidad que traiga por consecuencia un conjunto más integrado de lo que podemos llamar libertad e igualdad. Para que los ciudadanos todos sean libres; para que sean iguales en derecho, doule el nas fuerte proteja y respete el derecho del mas debil; donde un individuo no sea oprimido por el otro individuo; donde establecido este completo entendimiento haya una confianza reciproca, una concordia universal que se llamaria fraternidad. Para que todos los pueblos sean libres e iguales en derecho, para que el debil pueda contar con el fuerte también en ciertas oaciones el fuerte pueda contar. con el debil es para ello, que deberá establisher una confianza internacional que floreca en otras tantas fraternidades universales; para este efecto deberá organizarse una intente
La Presa asociada manifesta que la opinión pubica en Francia esta empestando a mostrar aciales de ansiedad a consecuencia del rumbo que toman las negociaciones anglo-américanas sobre armamentes navales temidas de que esten tratando de flegar a un americano a la negociación de un pacto anglosajos de un carácter muicho, más amplio que un mero acuerdo de desarme naval.
La ansiodad francesa se deja ver clamase en un editorial del período semi-obicial "Le Temps", el que se encuentra reductado en terminos vigorosos, aún cuando generalmente el tono de este período es nesutrado y cauteloso.
"Le Temps" pregunta que es en realidad a lo que aspiran Inglaterra y los Estados Unidos con sus negociaciones.
"La controversia sobre el desarme—dice—se esta convitiendo en confusión. " El gobierno laborista inenta dar una orientación enterramente diferente a la política exterior de la Gran Bretaña. " Cual es en realidad el significado del-mucho más amplio acuerdo naval de que habla la nota inglesa reciente? Las negociaciones en un todo toman un aspecto singular y demanda la más seria atención de aquellos que no desen verse enmaranados en el desvolvimiento de Jos acontecimientos. " La desconfianza general que se está dejando sentir en Francia sobre un posible acuerdo político anglo-americano se ve bien caracterizada esta noche por el periodico popular "L'Intragiensant."
Su director, Léon Bailey, caracteriza el intento de Lord Robert Cecil en Ginebra, por volver a llevar a la discussion la limitación de reservas en condiciones para el servicio militar como anmovimiento atrevido por debilitar la defensa nacional de guerra.
"En el mar existe una supremacia anglo-sajona—dice que se proyecta ahora convertir en una legalidad definitiva, pero en tierra Inglaterra desea una anarquía que le permita reinar suprema mediana la division de los denias."
M. Bailey continua per este sentido su artículo, llegando a preguntar donde esté el nobl espiritu que se dice anima las negociaciones por desarame universal. Par el solo existen antagonismos, intigras y sufíos por una supremacia política.
"Estamos listos para el desarme
—añada— si hay fe en una seguridad
nacional. Pero nunca seremos
tan estupidos que permitan a
otros que se reunan para desarmar a
Francia."
ticela y delarda entre todos los pecuibles que comprenetidas de una misma necesidad y de un auxilio muito, se comprendan en un tarea de solariedad entre todos los desgragiados. Las guerras por la inpleudencia serán así mismo naturales y expontancas "intipidades dictadas por los designos de Dios", según una frase magnifica del gran lamarte. Una libertad y una igualdad bien, comprendida, generamente entendidas, que originen una fratergidad como un sentimiento en flor que de su frutero aquí está toda una divisa. La divisa civia pasará a ser una divisa internacional; divisa política converta en una divisa universal, y esta s la forma por la cual nosotros combatimos.
Seria an honra para la Francia que su divisa nacional se desbroche no en una divisa de naciones; y no sea una divisa nacional; que se venga a convertir el propio espíritu del universo, y que asi unisto como alma de Francia, se truimore en el alma del mundo.
Emilie Foguet!
A police force in South America has nipped a plot to injure the United States. That's more than borne police forces in the United States are doing.
To the Editor Pittsburgh Courier:
Believing as I do in the fairness of your paper to its correspondents, I feel sure that you will allow me space to reply to Mr. George Schyler's answer to my letter of protest against his unjust, uncalled for altru in Marcus Garvey.
Before commencing upon my letter Mr. Schuyler contributes a paragraph on Mr. Garvey. Mr. Let us analyse this paragraph. Mr. Schuyler criticizes Mr. Garvey's "attempt to establish what he (Mr. Schuyler) considers a "Negro religion" without having the intellectual honesty to explain to his readers what Mr. Garvey means by a "Negro religion". Nobody knows better than Mr. Garvey that religion as a spiritual force is not, nor should be limited to race or color. Mr. Garvey's aim is to establish such form and mode of worship as will tend to divorce from the consciousness of Negroes the silly notions of "white angels" the white God" and "white Jesus", with Nordic features, pointed nose, blonde, flowing hair. He believes that if the Negro must have some object to live with worship, such a person should be Negroid features and not the features of Englishmen, Germans and Dutchmen. Now why didn't Mr. Schuyler explain this to his readers? No! This did not suit his purpose. His aim was to make Mr. Garvey look ridiculous by falsely attributing to him religious notions which he (Mr. Garvey) does not hold. Negroes have as much right to "hampblacked Christianity" as white people have to illly white Christianity.
Again, Mr. Schuyler falsely instigates that Mr. Garvey desires to set himself up as a "black Savior." I challenge George Schuyler to point out a single statement or act of Mr. Garvey's that would justify any normal mind in concluding that Marcus Garvey wishes to be worshipped as a "black Savior."
Mr. Schuyler says: "The only religion going these days is Nationalism." Good heavens! Nationalism is what Marcus Garvey has been preaching to the Negro world over for the ten or fifteen years. But the Nationalism that Garvey has been preaching is Negro Nationalism, a kind of Nationalism that Mr. Schuyler does not appreciate. The Nationalism that Mr. Schuyler apparently favors is the kind that bears the white label. Mr. Schuyler further says: "All over the world today, people are more sincerely concerned with the here than the hereafter." In this not exactly what Marcus Garvey has been teaching? Has he not been telling Negroes of the world to make the very best of the here and that he has been telling Negroes of the here that he has not been telling Negroes to develop themselves to the highest point physically, materially, intellectually, morally and spiritually. Why did not Mr. Schuyler tell his renders these things? It is evident that he has wilfully misrepresented Mr. Garvey and thus convicted himself of intellectual dishonesty of the first magnitude.
In replying to my letter, Mr. Schuyler referred to Mr. Garvey's leadership as a leadership of "noise, froth and foam." Woll it noise, froth and foam can awaken the Negroes of the world from their centuries of slumber. Can quicken it pride in themselves, can generate a spirit of world unity, regardless to religion, language or nationality, with the redemption of Africa as an objective, can awaken them to the utter danger and futility of relying on the white powers of the world on justice to them can cause them to be permanently without a powerful central government of their own—then by all means let us have more of Garvey's "noise, froth and foam."
Mr. Schuyler challenges anybody to compare the record of Garvey with the achievements of a number of other Negroes. Comparisons are sometimes odious and I believe this is a case in which they both are opinions and meaningsless. They are meaningless because of the lack of a welldefined, generally accepted criterion of service and the lack of competent judge to determine who measures up nearest to that standard. There is also a sense in which comparison of this case world is obvious. In looking over Mr. Schuyler's list I find that four of the Negro leaders mentioned, signed on open letter to the white attorney general of the United States, telling the white people of America among other things that Marcus Garvey is teaching Negroes to be suspicious and to hate all white people, and requesting that Garvey be expelled from the country. So that if we
companies Carvay with those four Negro leaders we can safely say that Carvay would never write a letter to a white government, "talking to" other Negroes. Therefore, the less George Schuyler says about "comparison" the better it will be for himself and those Negroes whom he wishes to rate above Marcus Carvay.
Mr. Schuyler chose his reply to my letter by saying, "Why do you read my 'nasty stuff anyway?' In reply I will state that I read it for the same reason that movie and book censors view obscene pictures and read filthy books. I am trying to warn the readers of The Pittsburgh Courier against Mr. George Schuyler's nasty attacks on Garvey and wilful distortions of his alms. Au revoir, Monseur Schuyler!
MRS. MARY E. JACKSON,
(General Delivery) Pittsburgh, Pa.
(Consisted from Page One)
the conquest of African nature:
1. Africa must be made safe for the white man to live in.
2. Science must combat the foes which have to be contended with in the development of African agriculture. All too often in the past settlement schemes had been undertaken and ended in disaster in areas unhealthy to man, beast or crops.
3. Africa must harness the great resources of Africa.
Here it was the South African engineer whom they might well expect to assume a position of leadership and inspiration.
In an inaugural address, says an Exchange Telegraph message, the Earl of Athlone, the Governor-General, said the South African farmer and the South African mining industry were becoming daily more alive to the debt they owed to scientists. It was to science that the country was looking for the exploitation of her resources in base metals.
The Prince of Wales sent a message to the meeting conveying his sincere good wishes for their success.
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The Baltimore, Md., Afro-American, which during Marcus Garvey's tournage in the United States had much to say in confirmation of this great leader, under the caption of "Garvey's Magic," has this to say in its issue of nearly forty hero of ancient times stamped his foot and an armed host sprang from the soil to do his bidding.
Marcus Garvey provisional president of Africa, commander-in-chief of the Black Star Steamship Line, and secretary-general of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, waved his hand, and twelve thousand delegates from all parts of the world followed him through the streets of Kingston, Jamaica, British West Indies, in a public demonstration.
Reminiscent it was in color, if not in numbers, of the monster Garvey pageants in New York. Participants in the parade carried flags of all nations; there were uniformed bands, uniformed ranks of Garvey legions, engineer corps, Black Cross furries and boy scouts.
Lading the marchers, in naval uniforms, was the man Garvey, whom Bishop Reverdy C. Ransom has termed the "mightiest prophet who has appeared, among us in fifty years."
In the United States, the Garvey organization was sued so often for debt that no track can be kept of the court procedures. Garvey has been pursued by his first wife, who claims he was not properly divorced. Garvey headquarters in New York is an Elk half.-Garvey, impositioned two years for using the United States mails to defraud, was deported in disgrace.
He was reported as penitless and a prisoner in Jamaica, but soon thereafter, He toured England and France, Returning to Jamaica, he called together his followers from the four corners of the earth to dream with him and plan for political and social freedom for the Negro, establishment of a universal social code, formation of a chain of Negro daily papers around the world, Faising a fund of $600,000,000 in ten Years, opening of Negro defense headquarters in the large cities of the World, organization of a new steamship line, formulation of plans for a Negro religion and a Negro church, and the appointment of a commission to the League of Negro men, chapped his hands, and twelve thousand followers shook the earth as they marched, through the streets of Kingston. Yes, there is still magic in the name of Garvey.
Chicago, Durham, North Carolina, and the South generally have long found this cut. Negro inoney is put into Negro banks, and Negro borrowers can get a hearing when they need funds. Here lies their success.
For our part, we disregard with many things that he said and did, but we always believed that he had the fundamental principles of true leadership within him and that his force could not die and that he could not be side-tracked in his aims and purposes by helpful persecution.
This is no argument, against other pieces, but to preserve the future of our own lo-Italian banks back likewise, and so on. It we take care of our own, others will gladly help when necessary.
They made a martyr of Hon. Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist, when they incarcerated him in the Atlanta Penitentiary and they cannonized Hon. Marcos Garvey when they treated him in the same way. He is regarded now as a hero even by thousands of those who oppose him and by practically every follower, who has expended his cause.
The Victoria Life Insurance in line
with their policy, is planning to place
several mortgages on Hydean property.
The Achely Holding Co. line is
required property located at 47 East
laver Street.
It is a case of "oblivion appearing
weekly." The Richmond Planet.
Title to property located at 217
West 142nd street, has been transferred to the Tivad Realty Corporation.
Commercial News
A report from London states that the land gold mines, South Africa, have produced $9,150 ounces of gold for July and $86,039 ounces in June. The Norriegs work the mines, but get little of the gold.
To insure the future of millions of Negroes throughout the world, we must center more interest in the commercial and industrial fields.
I have often wondered why Jews, Grieks, and Italians monopolize the push 'cant sales of produce on 8th avenue. Can't the Negro go run a push they lay out is small, and the business is there to be had by real dealers.
Lane and Nichols are rapidly working towards the opening of their agents' furnishing establishment on Seventh avenue. S. J. Gottman has acquired a large apartment house on Convent Avenue,
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Alpha Phi Alpha Convention in Atlanta Dec. 27
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 3. The annual convention of Alpha Phi Alpha, national Negro college Traternity, will be held in Atlanta December 27 to January 1 and is expected to bring to the city five hundred delegates from all parts of the country, according to an announcement by Forrester B. Washington, director of the Atlanta School of Social Work, and general chairman of the convention committee of arrangements. A large committee is at work planning for the entertainment of the convention and expects to make the meeting the most notable in the history of the organization.
In addition to the serious features of the program, which will include business sessions and the discussion of the educational and fraternal interests of the race, there will be a succession of social parties, athletic events, and the like. One day will be given to an auto trip to skuskege Institute.
The local committee of arrangements assisting Chairman Washington is composed of B. Warren L. Reynolds, G. Reaves, LeRoy L. Carter, G. Milton, John Hope, Jr. B. Wilden-Myron-Towns, B. C. Baskerville, J. W. Crawford, F. Alexander, A. F. Weems, J. P. Gonillion, and H. S. Murphy, each of whom is the chairman of a sub-committee responsible for some phase of the program.
Alpha PhI Alpha is the oldest Negro college fraternity in the country and has seventy-seven chapters widely distributed, four of which are in the city. This, however, will be the first national convention the organization has held in the South. The people of Atlanta are looking forward with great interest to the coming of the convention and are determined to overlook no feature of typical Southern hospitality.
to be resold as co-operative apartments.
Again, we repeat Harlem needs, a Negro bank to especially care for the commercial needs of Harlem, and assist its business men in financing their commercial activities.
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The Tullahassee Division 841 met at 3:30 o'clock, Sunday, Sept. 15, with Press. A. Jackson in chair. The meeting was opened with song by the choir followed by prayer by Bro. S. Frazier.
We were visited by the Assistant Organizer of the State of Oklahoma, Hon. J. C. Smyers. He gave a splendid talk on "How We Negroes should, and ought, to come together." He made a great impression upon the community.
We feel that his visit in our community has done much good.
Mrs. VIOLA RANDOLPH Reporter.
Rhinelander's Wife Vows to Tell Her Divorce Secrets
Through a campaign of "philisms publicity" Alice Kip Rhinelander, Negro' bride of Kip Rhinelander, promises to tell a few secrets about her husband's divorce action in Reno, which she infers the wealthy Rhinelander clan may wish to keep from curious New Yorkers by taking the case to far away Neyada. The public will not be denied the secrets of that action, Mrs. Rhinelander said today. She will see to it that "the methods used and persons responsible for her husband's present action will be the daylight of New York state." Her attorney, William D. Cunningham of White Plains, says she has been served with a copy of her husband's complaint. The new action appeared to amuse him.
"He lost, his case on substantially the same charges before a Westchester county jury, and that determination will be found to be good for every court in the land," he said. "His charges are ridiculous, and his tactics, presenting the case in fair guidance, prescribing the case in fair court, miles away, will be treated in no uncertain fashion by—the New York court."
SCHOOL NEWS
New students for the week are:
Hilda A. Dickens, Evelyn Morrow
from Summit, N. J.; Elise B. Perry,
from Jersey City; Myrtle Bolt, Ethel
Roberts, Bortha Beanah, Martha
Penn, Mary Emerson, and Juanita
Rogers, of Jamaica, L. I.
Miss Ruth Baylor and Harriette
Copeland have returned to class after
having spent an enjoyable vacation.
Mr. George Stonbar, who has spent
the summer at Camp Swastika, the
Amberwood camp, returned to school
this week to complete his course in
business training.
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Miss Dorothea McLane has been certified for appointment as Second Grade Clerk in the State Civil Service and will begin her duties September 16.
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FREE ADVICE *Valuable advice and tips on Moves $10.00. Black Art Advisor $10.00. Lost Lost Friend Bob $1.00. Lucky Number $1.00. Lucky Number Magnets Sand $1.00. Lock-Up Magnets $1.00. Special Perfume $1.00. Step worrying about the day. Step worrying about the day. My personal advice is free to all. My personal advice is free to all. today explaining your troubles. WTOMA $10.00. Scott St. Dept. Montgomery, Ala.
READING BY MAIL
Questions answered $11.00. Advice given on business and all intricacies of life, take care to be careful until you are called to the spirit side of life. Send birthdate.
MEN AND WOMEN REGAIN YOUTH
The National Women's Health Organization
of the United States
www.nationalwomenhealth.org
The National Women's Health Organization
of the United States
www.nationalwomenhealth.org
prescription. While I left,
I was able to express
my happiness, I
became the mother of a
child, and God only knew
our Joy. I hope we have
your motherhood - will take
your medicine. This is
this letter and picture for
location. That is a gift.
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"Married 15 years
until I would never have
any children," writes
Baby Schleier
"I would never have
tried your medicine."
Baby Schleier
41 months, 171% the mother in October. My
dearest wish realised, based on Glandular
activity, has been used with such results by
thousands of women that for the next 30
months, postpaid, no.C.O.D. no cost, no obliquity,
to every woman I meet. De-Perte
tments for this month, be sure and write
"Children's Marriage Explained."
Simply send name, a postcard will do, and
remedy will be mailed in plain wrapper Dr.
Pew before 10:00 a.m. and lighted. Address Dr. DPew, Suite PC, Coates
House, Kansas City, Mo.
Myrobalan Compound
الميروbalان
A great herb tonic from the East for
the relief of constipation, gastries,
billionaires, and a general internal
system cleaner. Part of per 12-oz.
bottle. C.O. $1.00.
Acents Wanted Everywhere
Write In the Full Particulars
ORIENTAL MEDICAL COMPANY
215 West 147th Street
New York City
and strength, dist
achy, limbic,
inhibition,
neuralgia,
overactive
nismism, stomach,
and bladder trou-
ness, weak seoul
weak seoul
deep deposit for N
minim
minim
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Mail-Order Houses
For National and
International
Advertising
USE
THE NEGRO
WORLD
AND
Get worthwhile results. If you cannot get your copy to us through your agency, place it direct. Write in for our mid-year rates. We advise you to make money and not to lose it. Place a trial insertion with us and test the pulling power of our medium. Sample copies furnished. HAROLD G. SALTUS, Advertising Dept. 355) LENOX AVENUE New York City
Phone Cathedral 0934
OLD WHEN REPRESENTED
or your money returned. Do write today,
or send a letter. Do arrive on opportunity. Don't
send a penny. On arrival, opportunity. Don't
$1.99 and postage. Then keep and enjoy tote-
tops. Take a look at the photos. You take, no risk. We know you will be
satisfied.
ROLANDS & CO., Dept. ARCHITECT
2566 Lincoln Ave. Chicago, Ill.
Negro Dolls
Agents, Dealers, Toy Stores, Drug Stores, Dry Goods Stores, Beauty Parlor, curry Dollies, Dolls are the big money makers during fall. The company, 222 West 133 Street, New York.
CLEARING HOUSE
3 IN 1 COMBINATION
I Can Cleanse House DREAM IN-
DREAM BOOK YOu Can Cleanse House
DREAM BOOK YOu Can Cleanse House
charm. Send 25 cents stamps as de-
sign, with order and pay postman
$1.98 from College Station or Box Y-6,
College Station, New York.
CLEARING HOUSE
BREAKAWAY ROOKS AND BREAKAWAY INCENSE
BREAKAWAY INCENSE, and NICKEL Exchange
Dream Incense Incense
DREAM BOOKS - H. P. Jacky Star, Com-
munity House Dream Books. Agents wanted.
Alexander, Post, 1-50. College Station,
All Three (S) Numbers Dream Books
With new entertainment, the New Spencer Radio
will be the most exciting and enjoyable radio show
of the year. It will be broadcast on Friday
from 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. and on Saturday
from 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. The show will be
held at the New Spencer Radio Building, 200
422, Milwaukee Area, Chicago, Ill.
J.C. STETVEN Co. Dept. NC-2702,
422, Milwaukee Area, Chicago, Ill.
The New SPENCER RADIO
Only $2.50
It surely is a wonder—the latest
thing out. Does not require any
air or batteries, and consequently
all static and other radio
troubles are eliminated. With
ordinary hands and years, the
troubles come in labs and one. Why
are big money when you have
this one for the above equipment.
THE NEW SPENCER RADIO
THE EMPIRY COMPANY
Station C, Box 1610, Cleveland, G.
HELP WANTED-INSTRUCTION
DETECTIVE-TRAVEL. MAKE SECRET
intrusion. Intercept. Participate
partially. Write American Detective
Sport. Broaden Broadway New York.
HELP WANTED-MALE AND FEMALE
MARK $20.00 100-Dimming rooms on lower churches. Sample and instruction. 200-District, Fort Worth, Texas.
Ministers & Preschool 11
DEMAND RESPECT. Today people are not how to be. Be wise. Connect with church which stands for. Preschool first 10 minutes of the day. The first 10 minutes of the day. The first 10 minutes of the day. The first 10 minutes of the day.
BANKCULT AND BORROWAL SALES. Please. We will not provide everything except Deposit, 420, 420 W. Superior, Chicago.
SPIRITUALIST
OCCULTIST NEW Orcule-Presco-Dream Incentive, Candles, Perchment, Collections, New York.
BANKRUPT ALL Borrowers. We are you. Everything everything. CLIFORD CO. Dept. 425, 425 W. Superior, Chicago.
HELP WANTED—MALE
PHEMEN, Bakken, Bapsemen (website
310-250-5280, monthly, Experience unimproved,
700 Railway Bureau, East St. Louis, Il.
WEEKAK MOMOOM, WOODHAM, QUICK-
serry, price plumbling service, Send stamp
w. Thomas, Giff Scott St., Dept. W.
Montgomery, Ala.
STOP, THINK, FINCH $1.00 each. Full in-
come money or money on orders to the P. S. H.
Serve Bureau, College Station, Box 51
New York, N.Y.
IF I SEND YOU A SUIT
I will wear it and show it to your friends as a
sample of my sensual values? Could
time? If so, write at once for my wonderful
Serve Bureau, College Station, Box 51
New York, N.Y.
PARALYXIS - THEATREM Ursula Tonic
Diuretic and Laxative Tablets. Write for
Seine Co. 224 N. 100th St. Philadelphia, Pa.
WOMEN - SOMETHING NEW!
Waren't Lades Aid Capsules. A powerful
yet harmless antibiotic and deodorant and an
proven superiority, convenient in application
and conditioning. You'll be delighted with
four. Free sample on request. Warren
Dewey, Dept. H., Denver, Denver, Cola.
Let us make your feet happy. Barber shop and market. 312 West 127th St., N. Y. C. Phone Monument 6853
BE LUCKY! HAPPY CHILDREN
HAPPY CHILDREN
N531 10 Avenue, colby 14th Bt. New York
N531 10 Avenue, colby 14th Bt. New York
paintent. Telephone: Edgrembore 0544
paintent. Telephone: Edgrembore 0544
WHY WORK FOR LESS?
Write or come to the largest and original
warehouse, or call us at 212-755-2222 to make
wants made, or female, part or full time work-
ing. We will accept orders until they have done
anything. Why not come to our warehouse?
sample case and free delivery. Resume,
you email us. JINDU PRODUCTS CO.
212-755-2222 St. N. Chicago, IL 60611
Lucky Lodestone
C
Carry a pair of Gentleman Ladestones, believe to drive a car. Have money, friends, a LUCKY. Have money, friends, sweethearts.
Lucky Number Book Free
Rolling Lucky Dice. Lucky num-
ber cards. Find the GAME. Send
me your email, for your daily
pollinates, today only $1.88 and
$2.99.
MEDICAL SEX • BOOKS—English or Spanish, Negroes Progress as shown by the stories for children, book of Eleanor, lives of great Negroes, $8 per day easy, write quick for free catalogue and terms, Jenkins Austin Bible Company, Washington, D. C., U. S. A.
MAKE 100% WEEKLY selling comic and food products—full or quarterly, New York Bible Company Corp. 505 E. 91th St. Chicago, Ill.
AGENTS—HAMS STRAIGHTENING PROMAD New York Clerking House Day Book, Advancer, Box 206 Chicago, New York.
AGENTS, DREAMLERS - 160 weekly selling pre-
companion company. 222 West 123rd Street New York.
12 DOLLAR DAILY - Selling new patented
tableau, tablescapes. Wakes life cell clamp. No
mattered. Free sample. Jesse, 602 H.
Glark, Chicago.
12 Dairy - Gourmet. Deposit JIMMYGIRL
Tableau, Lunchroom. Set-to-Table Run.
Runs from 10:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Ski Center. Gourmet Free. DOR-777. 200
WALMART, CHICAGO.
TO LET
BASEMENT STORE
Newly Decorated and Improved
Ideal For Beauty Parlor
234 West 183rd Street
HELVATOR APT. - neatly furnished rooms.
6 and 14 per week. Apply Apt. 22, 578
11th St. Merrimack.
HOTEL FURNISHED ROOMS - Reasonable
LANGKOT private rooms nicely furnished,
Suitable for couple or simple,
Rentals ground floor.
Apply 252 W. 1224 Street, ground
floor.
FOR RENT—Nearly furnished rooms. Private,
oil accommodations.
R. Gauthil, 202 West
118th Street, N. Y. C. Phone University 2641.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM to let. sturdy
street, N. Y. C. G.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMs—Reasonable
apartment, Apartment 24, Corner 165th Street,
Telephone Bradford 8292.
2856 EIGHTH AVE. 1 Night Bear, near 137th
Street, N. Y. C. Cell evenings. Green.
Have no other rooms. Cell evenings. Green.
3-4 ROOMS, 214-181; newly decorated;
not suitable for cars. Bowling. Apt. 3.
423 Eighth Ave. 214-181.
UNION: AVE. 1217 (near 186th St.
Bronx)—Apartment just upstairs;
respectable colored tenants; large, light
rooms, all improvements; 3 and 4 rooms
538, 240, 442 and 464 and 463.
BROOKLYN, N. Y. (Pacific St., 1641)—Four
rooms, parlor, bedroom, bath.
All improvements; 240 rent. suitable for small family.
CILDREN boasted weekly: baby, sip daily. Apply
Apt. 57, 2394-7th Ave.
KPATTY.-FURNISHED ROOMS, suitable for single girls, or man. Mrs. R. Gilbert, 207 West 147th St., New York City, Apr. 8.
254 WEST 135TH STREET
Nestly furnished rooms, suitable for working people; use of kitchen and telephone service; private house. Phone AUD. 10143.
227 W. 123TH ST.-Large and small inside rooms. All private, good home, kitchen privations on all floors. Call University 504 or come in for parties.
277 W. 123ND ST.-Large front rooms, newly decorated, kitchen privations. Come in and call as we seek. Opened. Candles and see the wonderful offer.