The Negro World

Saturday, October 26, 1929

New York, New York

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READ THE WEEKLY ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION The Independent Weekly The Voice of the Abolished Negro Regro World Reaching the Mass of Negroes The Best Advertising Machine A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race U.N.I.A.Makes Appeal To Manhood Of Negro Race C.D. Hilles Heads Delany- For-Congress Campaign Fund Madame Walker Representative Creates Sensation Among Jamaica Women (Special to The Negro World) HINGERON, Spencer, R. W. L. Portsmouth, New York, represents a woman in the election of the first woman to be elected to the House of Representatives in Jamaica. She is a member of the Democratic Party and has been a prominent figure in the community. Her experience and leadership have made her a respected leader. The statement defines the terms of recommendations as follows: "The terms to designate favored candidates are indored, qualified or preferred. The endorsement of a candidate speaks that the Citizen's Union believes his election highly desirable, by qualified, is meant that the candidate is deemed fitted for office, diligently, and necessarily to ensure a family movement and by professionalism. That candidate is deemed fit for office, diligently, and necessarily to ensure a family movement and by professionalism." The discussion of how to preserve and enhance our national unity, health, and prosperity is also highlighted. DELANY-FOR-CONGRESS CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE Hon. Charles D. Hilles, Honorary Chairman; Charles W. B. Mitchell, Chairman. Vice Chairmen: John A. Bolles, Sarah Schuyler Buller, Robert S. Cohnk, Charles W. Fillmore, J. W. Friedman, Hester Green, Valentine J. Hahn, Theresa G. Lindheim, Fannie Microwitz, Margaret A. Sealy, Hamilton J. Travis, Grace D. Vanamie. Michigan C. Brown, Secretary; Samuel Westerfield, Treasurer; Walter E. Clark, Philibriity Committee; William H. Wortham, Finance Committee; William Pickens, Speakerc Bureau; Eunice Hunton, Carter; Women's Committee; Mabel Doyle Kenton, New Voters' Committee. Edith McAllister Alexander, Cleveland G. Allen, Hon. Charles W. Anderson, James Andrews, Hon. Martin Ansorge, Robert W. Bsgnall, Mphie Baumie, Hon. Samuel A. Berger, Tholmia E. Borlack, Harry Bicknard, Hon. Pope E. Billups, Victoria Bishop, Angelina Blocker, Lester Beechner, Roberta Besley, Hon. Clifford Boswick, Hon. William Beauilard, J. Clarence Brooks, Rev. J. W. Brown, Henry A. Capel, Cecil E. Carter, Dr. Lische C. Carter. Elizabeth Chapman, Capt. Joshua Cookburn, Dr. Louis A. Corbin, Hon. Sidney C. Crane, Hon. Thomas J. Crawford, Jane Crolley, Rev. F. A. Cullen, Hon. Philip D. Cunningham, Philip Curry, Hon. Henry E. Darn, William H. Davis, Sadie Warren, Davies, Marion Moore Day, Dr. Bessie Delahy, Dr. Henry B. Delany, William J. Donovan, Dr. W. E. B. Du Bols, Rev. E. Elliot Durrant, George Ellert, Dr. Harold L. Bills, Mone, Estelle, Dr. Charles S. Purcellnigh. Dr. Louis Fairclough, Hon. Benjamin Pish, Jr. Lucy Freeman, Hon. A. Claytoh, Francis, Muel Weller- Two challegraves received this allegation from Johnston, South Africa, and Bunce Ales, South America, protesters in various towns in the "torrorism" in the mid-19th century in the South Africa. The British workers (formerly indicated the mass of world-wide protest on behalf of the strikers, and the revival on behalf of Charlotte. A sum of $12 was received from a group of workers in the South African city, which had previously sent $25. The South American letter was from Triston Macoff, a well known left-wing writer in Argentine stated, "The United States of America, the most imperialist capitalist land of the world, contains the greatest and greatest oppression. The history of capitalism is built upon rivers of blood and corpse of the workers," he writes. "It is enough to record the cases of the martyrs of Chicago, the Haymarket martyrs, the case of Sacco and Vanzetti, for all the workers of the world to readily understand what faces the Southern strikers. "The manner in which Sacco and Vanzetti were sacrificed has not been forgotten by the world. The U. B. capitalists, impetuous and insolent, defied all the protests that were French, Dr. James T. Granady, Ruth A. Mandy, Dr. T. E. Hanson, Jesse Famset-Harris, Mae Hawes, Hon. John Clifford Hawkins, Rev. William P. Haines, Hon. Emmanuel Hertz, Hon. John Edmund Hawitt, Rev. Horatio S. Hill, Samuel F. Helman, Dr. Elmer Imes, Rev. William Lloyd Imes, Roosevelt Jackson, Hon. George M. Jesse, Hon. Edward A. Johnson, Frederick D. Johnson, Esq., Hon. James Weldon Johnson, Grace Hall Johnson, Rev. John H. Johnson, Louis Jackson Johnson, Solomon C. Johnson, Eugene Kunclo Joues, Annis Kalish, Siegfried Katz, Harry Keelan, Rephael Koenig, Hon. Irwin Kurtz, Dr. Bernard Lazarus, Hon. Richard W. Lawrence, Col. Arthur Little, Hon. J. Edward Lombard, A. A. Madison, Esq., Elizabeth Mayfield, Charles Meyer, Hon. Milton J. Mayer, Dr. Ernest MacDonald, Gladys McDonald, Hon. James B. McEovy, Rev. Dudley Ward Nichols, Dr. Adena C. Minott, Hon. George J. Mintzer, Hon. Fred S. Monroe John E. Nail, Rev. Dudley Ward Nichols, Franklin D. Nichols, Dr. Clifton A. Norman, Hon. Israel B. Ocas, Hilda Oscar, Eva T. Parks Hon. Lamar Perkins, Hon. Nathan D. Pearlman, Rev. A. Chayton Dowell, Wallace Reid, Dr. Christian F. Reisner, Ira Dea, Reid, Harry Riskland, Hon. Francis E. Rivers, Dr. Charles H. Roberts, Ruth Roberts, Dr. Alfred T. Robinson, Rev. John W. Robinson, John M. Rothman, Esq., Hon. William M. Russell, Coccelia C. Sanders, John D. Saundard, Emmette J. Scott, Jr., Hon. Edward S. Silven, Aaron Soult. Commander Edward Ellwell Ford, J. Dalman Steele, Watt Terry, Noah D. Thompson, Adah B. Thomas, Mina A. Lola Walker, E. Hortense Warner, Julius Wateon, Walker Watts, Derrick M. Willetton, Wateon William, Dr. James B. Willetton, Richardson, Wilson, Hon. Alexander Woodward, Sasan Payton Worthen mine on that occasion for the palace of those late monarch. But the Kingdoms civilizations, will destroy itself with this ingestion. The working spirit of the Gaulish and Southern populations, black and white, who are embracing together them their employees in the inferiors of their class, will question in a most thin life the invasion that the U. S. capitalists are the most strongly entrenched in the world, and the American protestant will fight, with greater impulse than any other part of the world, for the freedom of the working class." J. Louis Enggdahl, secretary of the International Labor Defence, which suppressed the letters declared that the "latest manager of the Southern bessarab in releasing 16 of the strikers in order to more easily railroad saven to towns of 30 years, has not fooled the workers in any part of the world, international protest will continue inabated until all are freed." City Workers Raised A total of 27,938 city workers receiving less than $3,600 a year 10,000 of whom are street cleaning department employees, were voted an annual increase of $3,881,520 Thursday by the Board of Estimate and Apportionment. The individual increases will range from $100 to $240. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1929 The Hon. E. B. Knox, 1st Asst. Pres.-Gen., is now in Jamaica, B. W. L, attending to business of the organization. He left New York on Wednesday, October 9th on the S. S. Yoro. Mr. Knox is expected, back shortly and it is hoped that his arrival will mean the starting of an active, constructive program for the advancement of the cause of Negro uplift. Long live the U. N. T. A. Negro Business In Test Period, Bankers Told Negro Business In Test Period, Bankers Told Can No Longer Claim Patronage on Color Alone, Declares Insurance Company Head Washington, D.C.—"Banking is the life-blood of business and business is the very heart of the country's activities," declared S. W. Rutherford, secretary-general manager of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company, addressing the National Negro Bankers' Association in its recent annual meeting here. Mr. Rutherford spoke as a representative of the Associated Business Club, an organization of Washington's Negro business men of every class and variety. Mr. Rutherford continued: "The development and stability of banking is best indicated by the success and prosperity of the country. Every head of a family, every business man, should enjoy banking connection, which should be their business counselors. We must realize that in a large measure, the success of banks depends upon the financial future of its business accounts. Morgan University General Patrol. "Negro businesses in passing through a crucial period. It is clearly evident that the Negro in to hold itself in the future. We must take note of the very diverse competition which is now to be on all sides. No longer will it be possible for us to claim patronage on the ground of color alone. There is not burden on us now the duty and responsibility of more definitely preparing ourselves for the conservation and inclusion of Negro wealth—for that is what business means. "In this day of mergers, in this day of Big Business, we read strongly and daily, managed Negro land, so apt to be able to realise the things, so as to extend their influence, counsel and financial aid to legitimate Negro business enterprises." The Citizens' Union announced its recommendations to the voters Sunday and Monday on the candidates for the Board of Aldermen and the Assembly, and it should be genifying to Harrisonites that all regular Republican Negro candidates were "indorsed," "preferred" of certified as "qualified." The recommendations, a statement of the organization says, are based on public acts, the capacity and character of candidates in respect of party, and general ability and integrity. Before the recommendations many candidates were asked to express themselves concerning municipal problems without making specific pledges. Consciousness of Manhood Will Yet Make Negro a Man Among Men-Africa Calls to Negro Manhood Ku Klux Klan Unmasked; Bars Colored Worshippers From Blackshear Church William H. Austin Starts Whirlwind Campaign Chairman of Boys Work of West 135th Street Y. M. C. A.—Stands High in Community The meet daring move -yet made by the Ku Klux Klan to intimidate the race in Brooklyn -was that on Sunday, Oct. 28, when 25 unmasked members of the murder-graft bunch attended St. Matthews Episcopal Church in Brooklyn to back up the announced policy of the Texas born pastor, Rev. Blackshear, to keep colored worshipers from the church. Some of the members of the Klan admitted that they were on hand to their own volition and without the knowledge of Mr. Blackshear. "We heard," said one, "that a delegation of over a hundred Negroes from New England were coming this morning to attend the service at St. Matthew's, and we are here to see that they don't get in. We are going to help keep this a white man's church." The Rev. Mr. Blackshear said he had heard of the possible visit of a delegation of Negroes. Flushing the feen that support of the Republican party can ever suffer the Negro into politics and civic freedom, William H. A. Armstrong Democratic candidate for governor the Twenty-first district, opened his whirlwind campaign Monday after announcing the acceptance of the post of chairman of his committee by Dr. Hudson J. Oliver, prominent physician, cultural man and political leader. "New York City is overwhelmingly Democratic," Mr. Austin said, "and all the departments and offices are filled by appointments by a Democratic mayor. The Democratic party runs the subways, cleans the streets, gives us police protection, guards our homes from fire, provides parks, schools and every other municipal requisite." Mr. Austin declared that no Republican can truly represent the people in the Edward of Aberdeen because the pitifully small group of Republicans in the municipal assembly are shut out of the council and the confidence of the administrative powers. If the people of the community want the continuance of the rent laws, want a five-cent fare and proper sanitary regulations for apartments they must select a man who is one of the leaders of the dominant party, he continued. The candidate for alderman believes that the 260,000 Negroes who are without effective representation can secure more and better jobs, better school facilities, playgrounds and civic content only by throwing their strength behind a candidate of the Democratic party. William H. Jackson came from the west Indian in the United States on July 14, 1861, and the only passenger on a steamboat bound for a port of shipment from New York. We Must Learn to Be Self-Reliant and Self- Respecting - Can Only Rise to Greatness in Own Environment "They would have been ushered to seats just like anyone else," he said, "but my sermon would have been unchanged. They would have seen that merely by the presence of a number of them they could not in any way overweave me or keep me from expressing my true sentiments." Must Prepare to Develop Manhood Qualities, Say President-General The topic of Mr. Blackshears's sermon yesterday was "Sticking To It, and his text was the thirteenth verse of the sixth chapter of Paul's letter to the Ephesians, "Having Done All, to Stand." In another short while the Universal Negro Improvement Association will, in all earnest, undertake, with the co "From many of the pulpits of New York I have been criticized; for expressing my convictions," he declared. "But my critics have judged me entirely without hearing my side of the case. In condemning me they are merely 'blowing with the wind,' following the lines of least resistance, and in doing so they are showing that they have the backbones of jelly-fish." ustin Starts Campaign of West 135th Street Y. M. High in Community Africa · Once Was Gradle of operation of the people, to put over a part of our plans in the higher educational, industrial and commercial development of Africa. The time has really come for Negroes to bestir themselves like other progressive races toward the establishing of themselves as an industrial power. Without industry and commerce the race can show very little way of progress in the materialism of our age. EMBROIDER WORLD MOTHER COUNTRY OF OFFER LUNGE Capetown, South Africa.—A suggestion, that Africa is not only the cradle of humanity, but also the cradle of the physical world, was made at the inaugural meeting of the British associations in Cape Town. For the race to become respected and truly progressive it must be able to point to some industrial or commercial background. Such a background is greatly needed by the Negro. It is unsafe and insecure to build a commercial or industrial foundation in a foreign land, surrounded by hostilities of prejudice, coming from a stronger and numerically superior race; but such a foundation should be quickly and solidly laid in one's own country, and that is why we point the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world so the industrial and commercial settlement of Africa, where we must naturally work out our own destinies. South Australia and Australia may once have formed part of Africa and there broken off and "central" to their present position, according to J. H. Holmeson, president of the South Africa department. In the 1830s, among robbit of the great continent may also be hidden the "inferring link" in the descent of each. "In the past we had Mr. Holmeson, our geologist, have thought highly of the correlation of our formations with those of Europe." Exempla of Will Prodore Evidences "If religion can establish the hypothesis that Africa is the mother continent from which India, Madagascar and Australia, on the one side, and South America on the other, have been dislodged, it will give a new orientation to many branches of scientific activity. Energetic, industrious, thirty, courageous and adventurous Negroes from the western world should now make up their minds to go to Africa and colonize, because Africa is going to be the land of the future. Africa is teeming with untouched wealth...mineral and agricultural. Her oil wells, gold, silver and copper mines, coal and diamond fields are still to be exploited for the good of the country and the Negro race. Why should we not concentrate on doing this? Why should we not take a leaf out of the book of John D. Rockefeller, of Andrew Carnegie; of Henry Ford and Charles Schwab of the United States of America? These great white men, who are builders of the American nation, have used their brains, energy and ability in promoting the industries of America to find employment for millions of their own people, so in like manner our industrial captains and pioneers can exploit the wealth of Africa for the purpose of finding employment for the hundreds of millions of our people for the development of a strong industrial and commercial African commonwealth. "There is also the possibility," he added, "that the exploration of Africa's great wealth in fossil-bearing rocks will yet yield as pains of living things more primitive than any yet discovered. "Africa seems full of splendid promises to discoveries that might verify Dawkins' belief in the probability that somewhere in this landmass was the scene of nature's greatest creative enor. "It would seem to be not without significance that Africa possesses in the chimpanzees and the gorilla those primate types which approach most nearly to the form and structure of primitive man. "Also in the bushman, pygmy, and negroid races Africa has at least two, and possibly three, early human stocks, which are characteristically her own and belonging to other continent. "No less striking is the fact that is Ghanaat, in Malta, and in Palestine—that is at each of the three portals into Africa from Europe and Asia in Papua New Guinea—there have been discovered evidence of the ```markdown ``` All agents who are in arrears in their payments to us for papers supplied will be cut off immediately. We are only interested in maintaining those agents who are honest in their dealings. A man or woman who refuses to pay his or her debts is not fit to do business with. It is a shame the way some Negroes try to do their own out of their just due. And yet they call themselves new Negroes. Agents who owe us money, we want you to pay up and be quick about it, or we will take action against you to recover same. You have abused our good-will-toward you. We are disgusted. How do your expect us to pay our bills? Do you think we get money out of the sky? So beginning with the issue of October 26, 1929, all agents who are indebted to us and show no attempt to clear up their accounts will not receive any more papers. Thai's pinai. Now months have passed since the Department of Health undertook to pass its nursing service on a thorough, modern and scientific basis. Last January, the system was reorganised and in its new form became the Bureau of Nursing. All of the Health Department's public health nurses were assigned to it. The creation of this bureau represents a step forward in the city's endeavor to keep abreast of the times in public health work. The present administration of the Health Department realizes the importance of the public health nurse. Through its reorganization of the nursing service it has sought to integrate the work of the nurses with an eye to greater efficiency. Health Commissioner Wynne hux realized that by putting the work of the nurses on a thoroughly modern and scientific basis their efficacy as a public health unit could be increased. Mayor Walker himself has shown particular interest in the work of the-bureau and this interest is doubtless due to the fact that he has long been familiar with every branch of welfare work. Many and varied are the activities of the nurses. And each one of these activities is vital to the maintenance of the city's health. There is significance. In the fact that, while New York's 600 nurses are engaged to their utmost in carrying out their duties, the cry is heard for more and still more nurses. Is, Hoover Afraid? The failure of President Hoover to give any attention to the appointment of colored men to positions of consequence is causing much discouragement and more unfavorable comment for the administration. The dominating question going the rounds is "Is the President afraid to appoint a Negro to office who must be confirmed by the Senate?" Mr. Hoover has been President for seven months today. He has not made a single appointment of a Negro, that would go to the Senate for confirmation. The question arises. "Has he been informed not to make such appointment unless he wants a fight on his hands?" If he has thusly been instructed, is he surrendering to the warning? On the face of it, weakness is evident. We believe the records will bear us out when we say there have not been more than two Nero names sent to the Senate over the Cohen appointment. They are Judge Cobb, to fill Judge Terrell's place, and Francis, as Minister to Liberia. It is said that President Coolidge A Real Man Now That's What This, Rendown Atlantic City Man Wrote. There are tens of thousands of exceedingly thin men who need more weight and need it badly. Most of these skinny people need better health—more vigor and energy and something more that we all strive to attain—a fresh, clean and clear completion. Underweight woman, exceedingly thin, gained 10 pounds in 32 days with McCoy's Tobias and doesn't have to worry any more about her figure. Mrs. Alberta Rogers, thin, run down and weak, garbled 15 pounds in all ways and is thankful for McCoy's. McCoy takes all the flight—Read this foundal guarantee. If after taking 4 yoy can bounce of McCoy's tablets or 8 yoy can bounce of McCoy's tablets or 8 yoy can bounce of men or women doces gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satisfied with the marked improvement in health-your money will be returned. Just ask for McCoy's tablets at any drug store in America. McCoy's Laboratories, Inc., 62 W. 14th Street, New York City was instructed not to send in Iowa Negro appointments unless he wished to precipitate a fight with the Securities. And he did not even appoint Frederick Free, who has served for eight years under the Harding appointment. Has President Hoover been apprised of this fight and refrained from precipitating it? He has attacked lawlessness and approached the farm situation with commandable courage—why shrink from the race question? If the President is concerned with maintaining his majority in Congress after the election next year, he will do well to give the Negro some consideration. The loss of seven Senators may pay for the neglect. The Washington Tribune. Lincoln School Gives Business Training The time of the year is at hand when thousands of ambitious young people will enroll at some school in an endeavor to gain a knowledge of one form of business or another. It is most important that in selecting a school the utmost attention should be given to its record and the type of teaching which it gives. In this respect we call the attention of our readers to a school which is performing a highly creditable work for the many ambitious colored young men and women of the city. This is the Lincoln Secretarial School, located at 261 West 125th street, and offering a thorough business training which properly equips the students to enter business life immediately after graduation. This school was founded on the ideas of providing for the colored people a place where their children might be, educated in thoroughly modern business methods and it is directed by men who have had years of experience in this field. The results they have obtained stand out clearly in the vast number of men and women holding important business positions who are graduates of the school. Among its interesting features are the free use, by students, of the school's typewriters at home, the disregard of race differences, and the excellent location of the school, in the heart of Harlem's business section. The courses are given by experts in the various phases of business instruction. They are laid out along a well-defined plan which is certain to hold the interest and enthusiasm of the student. American Business Review. Ben Bess Freed by South Carolina Court COLUMBIA, S. C.-By a vote of 10 to 7, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled last Saturday night that a Governor cannot revoke a pardon and send a person bail to fail, even if it was discovered by the Governor that the pardon had been obtained by fraud. An a result of this decision, Bet Beas, convicted fourteen years ago of criminal assault upon Kris. Maude Collins, a white woman, was today enjoying liberty again, when the Supreme Court ordered his "release without prejudice." The case, which re-chewed through the South, when Bet Beas was adjudged a poor victim of a white woman's perjury, will probably not be brought up again, and Bet Beas may enjoy his few remaining years of freedom, probably unmolested by further legal machinery. He served threeteen years in prison and came out broken in health. Gov. Richards issued the petition to Beng after the woman had signed an affidavit that the testimony she gave Stinks: Basins in which dirty, dishes are left until morning. AN EASY WAY TO GROW YOUR HAIR 25 years of world wide popularity have proved that nothing's better to enliven the roots of the hair, enrich the scalp and make the hair grow long and thick than MADAM C. J. WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER. This soothing compound comes in a single package and the remedies required to make your hair grow as long and as thick as you want it and as soft and silky as you'd like to have it. Easy to use by applying with the finger tips at night, rubbing it well into the scalp, it will retard dandruff and surprise you with its good results. Haytina Soed Pike Pet Hajita Heaven Awarding that the league of representative government in Haytina has been abolished and its executive regime substituted, a committee of Haytian notables, seeking from the ranks of professional governmental bodies of the republic, a petition to President Haytina and the State Assembly, for consideration of the ideas of the people. The petition is presented in part for the recommendation of President Haytina to the National Assembly will not elect the president at the opening election. The Council of State, appointed by Boro and known to be favorable to him and the American occupation administration, will appoint the present executive for another term. Garvey, the Flea Mr. Marcus Garvey, campaigning for election to the Jamaican legislature that month, said that if he were selected he would seek to reform the island courts. Corrupt judges, he said, spend evenings in chubs instead of in the study, and often conspire with lawyers to defraud litigants and prisoners at the bar. No names were called, but the entire Jamaican bench, feeling itself affronted, haled Mr. Garvey into court, charged with contempt. The trial was unusual. Mr. Garvey said; (1) that he did not refer to existing judges; (2) that he was misquoted; (3) he introduced sixteen affidavits of persons who said they did not hear; (4) Garvey make any such remarks; (4) he claimed that, even if he had used such language he was no privileged as a political candidate. The court in reply, termed Mr. Garvey "foolish," "hot-headed." The affidavits; the court pointed out, did not state that Mr. Garvey did not utter the statements, but that these witnesses did not hear him utter them. In brief, said the court, Mr. Garvey is trying to make a fool out of us, so they voted, two to one, to send him to jail for three months. Had not Mr. Garvey apologized for his speech, sentence would have been increased to six months. In the United States, Mr. Garvey's political speech attacking the courts would probably have passed unnoticed. In Jamaica, the size of Connecticut, with a population of 15,000 whites ruling a million Negroes, a whisper against the white officials is sufficient to start an investigation. The Jamaican court probably knows its problems better than we, but from this distance, it seems as if the court's summary action is but another step towards making a public martyr and national hero of Mr. Garvey. Following his imprisonment, his constituents nominated him for the legislature, while 5,000 persons cheered. If anything were needed to give impetus to his political campaign, the courts have supplied it. Mr. Garvey will be elected overwhelmingly and will leave St. Catherine's prison for the legislative court where he will—to use his own words—be an overlander in the colony of his enemies. The conviction of Mr. Garvey does not settle the question whether Jamaican judges are tipplers or not, but it makes it very apparent that their Honors are sensitive on the subject. at the trial was not true. After the pardon, however, the woman declared that she had not intended to sign an affidavit perjuring herself but merely forgave Bess. "Go Down-Town And Meet Him" "I don't believe in standing around up town talking big. If that woman man thinks I am not as good a man as he is, every day in the week. I'll go down town and meet him and show him what I am." That's what I heard a. Negro who was apparently courageous and wrought up say to another colored man the other day. Just what he meant I did not, know, but curiously moved me to find out. I draw "nigh" and listened because I could see that the man who would "go down town and meet him" was no ordinary chap. But I wondered whether he would do anything besides, talk after he but down there. I heard the "ina and outs" of it, but the case in point did not interest me very much nor was I convinced that what he would do would amount-to anything. Somehow I could not refrain from turning the thoughts that came to me into another channel and I began to think on the deeper significance and economic possibilities wrapped up in that challenge to "Go down town and meet him." That, thought I, is just what Negro business will have to get courage, sense and standards enough to do—"Go down town and meet him." Preach to Negroes Only Have you ever thought how strange it is that the Lord calls Negro preachers to "go into all the world and preach the gospel" to Negroes only, and, He calls Negro business men to go into back streets and Negro ghettoes, and cater to Negroes only? Until Negro business men set up business in business districts and compete and sell to "whoseover will," our people will continue to spend their "sho" "nuf" money with white merchants and their pocket change with Negroes and apologize for patronizing Negro stores. Negro business men, take this advice: Move out of Sodom and go down town, or up town—wherever the "sho" "nuf" business section is—and open up and "meet em." It in positively pathetic, embarrassing and disgusting to see Negroes wading through department stores, drug stores and the big business sections, spending their money and hugging bundles, eating out of paper bags and can't even get a nickel's worth of anything to eat in nine-tenths of the big stores that have soda fountains, lunch counters, restaurants and dining rooms. Hot Dog Stands Some of the 5 and 10 cent stores have the nerve to serve whites only at their little old hot-dog stands. And a Negro might spend a thousand dollars in some of the department stores and point right in the middle of the store from hunger, but he would have to mugger home to get a cup of coffee with which to rovish himself. "Money" taller, but the Negro's money does not talk the white way. It must cash for 100 per cent of the public services of the store in which it is spent—that means cash in well shelters. Serving public stores in a public service does not a social countery. It is high time that Negroes were either bombarding the merchandise with letters of protest and logging stores that will let them dress up in there but will not let them end in Aspirin BAYER Genuine DOSE: 1 to 2 Tablets with water Full Directions Inside The Bayer Company In 117 Hudson St New York For that Pain Aspirin BAYER Genuine do it easily, just by the simple use of Bayer Aspirin. It acts so quickly; there's real relief from the time you take these tablets. Your own doctor will tell you they are safe to use freely; nothing in Bayer Aspirin could hurt anyone. Try Bayer Aspirin when headache, neuritis, neuralgia, rheumatism or even lumbago is filling your day with agony. All sorts of deep-down pains give up before this tested remedy. Just one thing to watch. Be sure to get Bayer Aspirin! You can tell the genuine by the Bayer Cross on each bottle, package and tablet. All druggists, with proven directions. a "migger-lover" who enters the columns of his paper. The story of the killing quite naturally interests us because the dead man had the reputation of earning a living by playing up racial and religious prejudices. He was at one time editor of the Manace, an anti-Catholic weekly published at Acurora, Mo. When he went to Florida, while still anti-Catholic, the dead man found it profitable to attack the Negroes and play up racial prejudice from that end, as he found a fruitful field in the Peninsular state. Therefore, his chief stock in trade was to turn his "Blue Shirt" wrong side out on those who employed Negroes. He would call all who employed Negro labor, "nigger-lovers and traitors to the white race." Getting away with that kind of stuff for several years, he naturally enlarged his scope of attack until he attacked the wrong man at the wrong time, and, as a direct result, he is dead, physically dead, and the world still moves on. While we do not wish to be rash nor do we in any respect approve of the shooting down and killing of any man for wrong or fanced wrongs which one entertains, but in the death of W. N. Parker, the country is better, off. The people of this country already have been fed up too much on the slime and poison of the Ku Klux-Kian stuff. The injuries, the setbacks and the wrongs which colored people of this country have suffered because of such men, as the dead man down in Florida, have been many and hard to bear. The news of his death brings no sorrow to our souls. Our comment is that a few more funerals of men of his kind, will help the nation greatly. The Louis Ayers. White Man Ordained Ir. A. M. E. Church CHICAGO, Oct. 14 (ANP)—That the Fourth Episcopal District of the A. M. E. Church, under the leadership and administration of Bishop A. J. Carey, does not believe in the preachments of the apostle of "Jim Crow", Christianity of Brooklyn, N. Y., was indicated here Sunday when P. Court Van Woordenen, a white man, was ordained as elder. The white man had formerly been a deacon in the A. M. E. Church at Gatley, Ind. Avoid the pressure of sitting in the House, in the St. Mary's Building, on the street and Edgewood Avenue, on the evening (Sunday, October 9th) and had the pleasure of having the earnest, manful, strengthened and sincere appeal to the Nepal government from the top of the Parliamentary Rhodes, Assistant U. S. Attorney for the State of Pennsylvania and editor of The Philadelphia Tribune. All of the colored candidates for election had been invited, including Col. Chas. Fillmore, leader of the 18th District; and they were in attendance. Coming all the way from the city of "Botherly Love," to give his aid to the campaign, or that brilliant young champion of the rights of the Negro Robert T. Delaney, the youthful editor and Assistant U. S. Attorney for Pennsylvania lost no time in non-essentials, but went directly to the heart of his subject, and endeavored to rivet the attention of his hearers to the vital importance of acting in unison, like men who know what they want, and as willing to go out and fight for their rights. "No man" he said, "ever got his rights by begging for them." Mr. Rhodes cited illustration after illustration of the attitude the Negroes in Harlem should assume, if ever they hoped to win their fight for direct representation, or the respect of other men. This quotation from the late Chief Justice All Divisions, Clubs, or notified that I shall not funds sent to the office my name, for supplies or such orders or reports she retary-General's Department Davis, 67 Slipe Road, Crest drews, Jamaica, B. W. I. All communications relative will receive prompt attention. Only monies belonging to be sent to their office. Mon for supplies, etc., should be General's office, as stated. International Organizer U August, 1929. NOTICE Divisions, Clubs, or individuals are and that I shall not be responsible for sent to the office of The Negro World name, for supplies or account reports, orders or reports should be sent to the General's Department, Lady Henrietta 67 Slipe Road, Cross Roads P. O., S. Jamaica, B. W. I. communications relative to my official co- ceive prompt attention. Monies belonging to The Negro World are to their office. Money for the Parent supplies, etc., should be sent to the Sec- tors' office, as stated above. M. L. T. de MENA National Organizer U. N. I. A. of the 1929. For Bayer Aspirin. It acts so quickly; use tablets. Your own doctor will t Bayer Aspirin could hurt anyone, neuralgia, rheumatism or even lup- tits of deep-down pains give up before. Be sure to get Bayer Aspirin! Yea- each bottle, package and tablet. All All Divisions, Clubs, or individuals are hereby notified that I shall not be responsible for any funds sent to the office of The Negro World, in my name, for supplies or account reports, as all such orders or reports should be sent to the Secretary-General's Department, Lady Henrietta Vinton Davis, 67 Slope Road, Cross Roads P. O., St. Andrews, Jamaica, B. W. I. All communications relative to my official capacity will receive prompt attention. Only monies belonging to The Negro World should be sent to their office. Money for the Parent Body, for supplies, etc., should be sent to the Secretary-General's office, as stated above. To break the cold which comes in an hour, or has hung on for days, depend on Bayen Aspirin. For quick relief if your throat is raw, or for tonsilitis, make a good gargle just by dissolving two tablets of Bayen Aspirin in four tablespoons of water. Try it next time. IRI Merrall of the U. S. Supreme Court was the slain H.W. a distinguished lawyer, Liberty and freedom are was won by man who are willing to fight him, and who have some strength not collectively. If he sold Negroes have some enough to act collectively and maintain enough to use the power clubs to fight for their rights, there is no doubting the result of the election on November 5, and Hubert T. Delany will be sent to Congress to represent the Twenty-first Congressional District of New York. The various candidates for election, Hubert T. Delany, Francis Rivers, Lamar Perkins and Fred A. Moore, were all present, along with Col. Chas. W. Fillmore, leader of the 19th A. D., and addressed the meeting. The audience listened eagerly to every word that fell from the lips of the speakers and enthusiasm ran When everybody is strenuously and intelligently trying to do useful things, everybody is prosperous. LINCOLN SECRETARIAL SCHOOL 301 West 125th St. N. Y. C. SECRETARIAL COMMUNITAL Regents — Mathematical — Languages-Civil Service Open All Year — Catalog on Request Students May Begin Any Time TELE. MONUMENT 3689. ICE Individuals are hereby be responsible for any of The Negro World, in our account reports, as all should be sent to the Secretary, Lady Henrietta Vinton Cross Roads P. O., St. An- ve to my official capacity on. The Negro World should money for the Parent Body, be sent to the Secretary above. I. L. T. de MENA, N. I. A. of the World. acts so quickly; there's own doctor will tell you should hurt anyone. Try hatism or even lumbago,ains give up before this layer Aspirin! You can and tablet. All drug- RIN , oe hae. 3b AE OSE OR RE OES SEE PS oe eer oe SEOs AB eicg i) ; 7 aE aaa ee pe SES BR SS ee Te ae ge Se ‘ or] OR a a re Frit ee Ww oe gh SS Sie es Uwe ECPE ee Se Dek 6 ¢- sae eee eee Ce ih Ron er in eben NTP ME WORLD CEL REPLYING TOLER S eee PRECUROTER ATO MENTION SHE HECKO WORLD WHEN: REPLI INE TO SEVERN SE Enaik:’ Mos Pas SY ee Ps. when the unt o = “bine Oo, Wheres} ete: “aie aOR, Pptadiment of the Hon. Marous-Cler- ‘vey and eourege ‘the members to work for ‘the caus of Garveyiam harder ‘than ever, ‘to prove to ehe peta tat cae opts sf Gorey bbe crushed.” Next came the read- ‘frig’ of the weekly. message of the Prosident-General frou” the. Nogro World by Mrs. CV. Cawley. Mrs, Caiwley:aleo read the platform of Mr. Garvey’s political . speocti, ‘which he made in JamuafBa during the time ofthe convention. ‘The mem- “horship-agreed-tbit such a platform's ‘one which hat been long. needed: by this race of ours. President Johnsen then contintied hia report. of the Great Convention, after which’the members made the following pledges: | “Mz, Edwin McDougal, ¥1,000,. ¥4- ward Bell, $500, Beverly Allen, $500, J.B. Hurndon, $800, Richard Holmes, 3350, Was. Reynolds, $200, Mrs. Bet iw Foster, $800, Mr. Isnec Mincer, $200,: Wm’ Ray. $300, Philip Fianer, $200, Mrs. Li McDougal, $250, Br. ‘Tom Lain; $250, Lucius Wiley, $266, Lemyel: Wynn, $250; James, Petty. $280, George Locke; $200, Anderson Woodson, $250, Mrs. Callte Charles, 4250, Mra, James Newsome, $250,, Mrs. Martha Byoum, $250, Mrs. Addie Sblelds, $280, Mr.-Robert Vall, $250, Jeanie White, $250, Wm. Reed, $250, Joe Taylor, $225, Wm: Woods, $235, Wm. Rhoge, $200, Thomas Johuso, $200, Arthur Butler, $200, Mra. Cary He Taylor, $200, Mrx, Gusanbst For- ent, $200, ‘Mr. O. 8. Saiihders,, $200, J, A, Davia, $200, James, Guest, $200, George ‘Thompson, $150, Will Webb, $150, Mrs. F. G. Moore,” $150, Mrs: Hi. Vail, $150, Mrs. Naxcy Taylor, £120, Mrs. Jn L. Davis, $100, Mrs. Rosebud Golden, $100, Mr. Jobn 3 White, $100, E. E. Roberta, $100, ae Crecle’ Cawley, $150, Mr. *Colll Sinall, $150. SAE YRS BEDOUGAL. + ‘Mavorter, :; Anderson, Ind. Same ULN. TA visited Alexandria ‘Bed., dn August 25, and rendered s Program at the’ A. -M.-E. Church —there.;..The, program was given by ‘the Black Cross Nurses. Mrg, Dore ‘Turner: Bleck "Crosx Nurse. ‘1 The «meeting was opened by sigging, "WEI There Be Any, Stars “In My Crown.” Prayer by ‘Rev. Mose ‘Phosom. Song, “Bloxt Bo: the Tie that Bivds.”. “Scripturo reading by Rey. Turner. Song, “i Sati Not Be Moved" Sermon by Rey. ¥rs. R. Dantes. Ns The progrim was then turned sver to the president of the Zinct: Grozs Nurses. Song; “Objects and ime." by iis, Adelphes, Abromy Zong, “Evers Day"; romarice by 2sa. 5. Townnand;-seleetion vy Bands soto by Mra, Pennie Bern? remarks by Rts, Sen, Townsend; oviection “by band: remarks by Mrs, Mary: Joncas solo by Mire Susann Towsend: re- maths by Rev. Turner; duct by 3tisa Sadié Turcer and Birr Moxgie Hart- ford; sélection by band) vemariw by Rev. B, 5, Soruest; closing rensesin by Rev. 362 Mey R Daniels. Cel lection’ §2.25. . , iiss Maggle Hartford, secretary; ars. Dora Tsuen, president Diock| Groce Num, presiding. ADOLPHUS AZROM, | Rapecter, | Samicd Iomtengio -Urcy| ‘The birludsy of the on. Moreu Garey DootlacstGasbetl of Universa! Negra baprovenrent” ig Paes ee oveaee es sitye of the Dominienn Repesie by ST cane a ee ee eee & ee. BG ug Sugiadl wax ak Iently carried out to the intense wat- iefaction of alf: = . “From Greenland’s Icy Mountains,” ‘ey choir and audience; prayers for eee ogee aes we ee ee a Si TO an oe cea Seat error ty Me Dew Fete nae Quan ib eat aeeticn, SUervay?™ ty ‘Mr. Berrows; a s0l0, by Mr. Timothy fiainea: “Garvev and Negro Leader- abip,” by Rev. F. P. Bryan; solo,.by ‘Miss Hodge; song, “Save Your Pen- les,” by Mr. Borrows; address “Long lave he Prgpient-General” by Me. ‘Mgdert iterbury; solo, by Mr. Samuel’ James; “Owt in the Star ligt," by. quartettl, “Gertiry’ Is Right,” by Rev. D. Henry; ~Some- times,” by chetr; acta, by ete: song, ty Mie Hodge; song, traps, B ‘Temagphent,” by chair; “The Sweet ‘Lateer: Prece Heuus,” by Liberty Piatt | Smet ne eat Sort ne. “a Poa se eeeia diabetes Or spat oy eee oe sae pmo “ Laney Sagrrns ibe eee es. ol ee ee wee § A eas C7 BF, ef ss “whe hee cee seroign petted on ee "ee Es 8 ie Oo ane at 2 eae ton, 4c Un Megrona ‘atthe rahubie perce “tne Megse Week” ‘Ptesident. ¢ ¥. P. BRYAN, ‘Madre de Dios -- | The Madre de Dios division has turned another ‘pie in the book’ of history o¢ the UK 1 A., when ot September ist the tnataliation of i cera for the ensuing"year was per- formed. et AL 3 pi m. the miosting was brought to lorder and the "engtag of ipa ‘“ghine on. Eterna) Light,” along’ with other rituallsticrites was rendered by ‘the acting Chaplain, .. “Lamy who also made’stresa on his subject “here am I seat." He kept the audi. anced spel?bound. ‘The Foil call of the officers to be installed was as,follows: Mr: Charles Barker, Pres: Mi. ¥. Campbell, vice-president; Mra. R. Montague, secretary; Mr. J. Mon- tague, Chap.;. Mr. A: Foote; ‘Tress; Mr. T. West, Ctialrman of Trustes and his ‘associates Mr. J. Brook, Mr. T. Clarke; Mr. E. Gordoa, Mra. E. Clarke, errangeménts were then inde for: tho procession’ dlong. ‘with & convenlent ‘passage which encir- cled the audlance; which was, done two or three times and then they assembled in front of the rostrum. _ The installation. .was ; perfornied with keen Knowledge ando observa- tlon''of the principles of the organi- mation which arrested the solemn. at- tent(on and interest of the audiance. A brief address by the Master of Seremony, Mr: Robert Trant followed. Rec. by Mr. Regenald Sampson, an address by Br. Lamy, ‘addéess” by Miss.S. Thompeon of Sigines, a solo by. Mra..D. Foote, ‘an_addresa by Mii. R. Wellington, an address by Mr. Frelier; a duet: hy -2ra, Foote and Mir. J.’ Montague,’ and’ address by Mr. J. Raley. ‘The closing remarks were offered oy Mr. Chas. Barker,r the installed president ofthe division: | ‘The meeting was brought to « close. vy the singing of Ethiopian Natfonal | Anthem. : -NAAMAN-WELLINGTON, | : . Renevter: | New Haven, Conn. Wednesday atght, Oct..9, will Jong bo remembered y'all thao who at tended the special mond meeting Om sented force beloved Interns tone Organizer, Mime. L. T. De Mere, s j. iha meating borem preciedly a E25. pay our. presigens, 3 Josehis Wane wills the opeaing cl “Srun: “Gresnlend’s Iey Mountains,” followsd by the organization's. oft cial prayer: ‘The preside? then dae Bis isttedectozy semnrico whieh wes vet aieousuginr: ; : The prograss ce arranged: begun BiG n plese colo by atin Syivi Went, daughter "of the precitent Recitation by Hetes Ctaris, <dauchtor of cur lady president. Subject, “Think Weil”. Pieno cote by Sadto wills, Short agdvess by 2ese. Bosal Steplion, Lodyy president of *extvore Division Ne. 72, Bymt, "Sauce of AL Crestion,” wes lusiliy cuag. by tho audience und at its conclusion the priuelpa! opesicur Wau tenmcuced, Words ses inedeuuete' to emprece the esderul anectego deapecten Bunt many willingiy snécertbee to the Sir Mundsed sition Deller Drive pov in: eperation, 5 ‘The mecting adjourneé by: staging our National-Anthem, ‘Ethiopia’. : OD ORAS “Ey zemug; Poplar Bluff, Mo.. | Rhere was & great misss’ meeting held at the ULB. LA, Hal on te st . ‘The opening was ‘Carried ont tn, the }tsual mancer, by auging of the open- ing song. The Juventle program for Which we must give Mrs. Preeman, tod Juvenile Ruth Roar much credit After thelr program was over, then came the discussion of the relation. jahip of the church to the U."N. L.A. byaer. JW. Sanford, | The Bent. speaker war our secre: tary. He explained with much festing the New Mogro. | remerts <{ cur beloved president. anpect unity. - =" ‘ Our inst. opentoer’ wed: Mve. 10% Risa. one COE we $5 pespece ar Tounh Nee gt Wik bo teh ts coume thet Matots Carvey Gir Bent - oomme com te on ne eatin. ovis seaiiiier A eee Se ae ae anes eae aa vitea On et ec sae eee A EEE! se ay ae Pe Be ca aa Ba a ee 4 RR a i aa Naevius: Calin: ees ee a ee eae aes PIs (ae, mal we cone antonio Win ‘propente, such «0 getth: givens by tn r aad Sciam of ‘the vicinity, 4 PR the serdes commmanend ith te acing othe opening bee No. Sd; foUowed byt prayer. and. th collect of the day. “Hyian 206 wers pon was’ read oo =~ “ ae ‘Verses 28 to 30, followed = ‘preached’ by aus Ty vas by qui Musica} structor and Assistant Chaplain, Mr. &. M. Stephenson. Much credit must be gtven him for the efficient. man- per in which he-imparted the words from the’ ‘Writ to his hearers, During: of Hymn No, 309 the offerings fare taken, followed by the dedication offertory, The re- gious side of the program was then brought to a close, : ‘The Preaidant “Mr. “W. Hi.” Boltot acted ax chairmanfor the Social! side of the program. The President Gen- a ae wes sung followed by an from the president, on “Hives.” * ‘The choir rendered. 4, beautiful .an- them entitled, “Sing to the Lord of Harvest” A splendid: address: ty Miss M. Clemenson, Firet Lady ‘Vice President, “We Must Succeed." Bolo. by Mrs! "A. Fraser, address by Bar. J. McLean, Second Vice President. Anthem by “the. Choir, “Harvest Home.” Recitation, Mins ¥. James, anthem by choir, “Go Forth!” ~Ad- dreas by our live wire ME. Henry Chairman ‘of Trustee Board, who was delegated to represent this division at Florida; Cuba-on Sept. 15th, . Solo, by Misr L. McLean, Assistant Treas- urer’ after which thenexecutive Sec retary, Mr. J. C. Pitter, made an~ nouncements. of the division's inten ‘ion of staging & misslonary’ meet- ing under the auspices of the U..N. I. A. Ax anthem by the cholr, “The Seasons,” was rendered and the re-| seipta’ of the evening announced. ‘The most’ enjoyable meeting was prought. to a close by’ the alaging of he Ethiopian Nationel aathem and prayer by our worthy Chaplain, 2. Philemon Milwood 8 — . J. G Pitter, Remortar: ~—Rals So> Baltimore, Md. . The South Baltimora Coapter No. 23-AL Celebrated "Garvey's Day.” ‘We came out in Jarge numbers’ and copened-in the asunt way by singlog “From Grecniexid’s Icy Mountains,” Jthan the chaplain, . Mr. ' Conquest, came forth with the religious exer Claes. Ho then. turned the moeting over to the acting president, Mr. James XC Smith, who cemo for! with the opening rematice. Aee . Mrs, Sephie Wilsca acted as mis- tress. of ceremonies, ‘Tae program ins ax ‘ollows:~ Bice. Sophie, Wilson, the BrigadlerGenerat of the .Acator Saas Soa tvace VAN You Dov” Ehsan ‘ie [bad « télestioa by tie Universal Fous, jCirecte? by ifr. Wezeklas Chavis, Hendon, - Rin Jentiags was. the pext ponies, "ene Syant pane message of tho Nisro World wes rend. ‘Thea the olferfke weg reisqd. Mr. Couch was the next speciten, “Then the acting procideat cama forth with the elesing pean. a We closed by singing, “God Biexs ys Bresizeut? : Bioride, Cam, Qube Wo of the Florida Div. S48 havo boos Golog cur very Beit for the gauze we espouse, “Ene recemaption of our mother lon, Afsico, asd the -cauauelpstion of 400,100,000 Nesrora.” Srenday, Sept. 38, was observed os Htxe lnying: of ove Saracen stones. A proceaiton wac forssee tm rent of the Ripert, ah, anc. roctedy at 2:90 p.m, the Bonde sfiuleiped andor die Btvectesnsin “et Senor ‘Sixt Pinto, food off tho procensiox: ‘Tho Rising Star Legge No. 2648). % 0. A. 8 tio yatle Ross Lodge Ho, 3,1 U. O. 3. (E. £.), the aint Simon Lodge No. §, 5.0. GS. 24D. of ©, and the Nuevites Division 42 of tho #3. N. LA, wore highly ropresented at, tis celebeation. ‘The-procemalon was a>- proximately 10 chaibs long, ard the fine display of colors mide ft a beat!- titel sight to look at" ibfter tke procession reached the pot where the -stonce were t0 be Inid, w heavy sbower of rain that lasted nestly an hour and a half, war the cause of driving the people off the ground. When the rain waa aver Pe nod ae cence the ‘ground, but ‘unfortunately the! nedvy mud’ caused the majority to| go away. ‘The’ main mone wal i830 Meare, RA, Martin, Jo 3, Van- derpeok, Mire. We. 3. Mcinioak, and Mire, Bibel Hutchinson, all being of8- siehe of Div, 343. A next stone was! ald by Ms. Henry, delegate from whe Muevitas Division Ne. 42, while the weer So ones, were Init D7 toe — mania wey San Weert ‘Livesty where the tee _qvesing “wan <¢ar- = ; Ou Me. reir ss Ateac | ma 3 otal sto inaseting, 26 ee mn eat eee ee Se an int aoe ac akg tube ged 0: shiele-20: Cas-orpeitinntine, as. % i haggle bd caer oe Soa. onl ~ Spaniea, will appear. in- thé Spaalee seca BOR. -Wayes ates Saree capente bie panvers the berty Case ees ssa management of lady president, Mrs R F as cen tie very fine anthema Deafe > Kod gtyescht rendition, whlch. cearty chow that-thais aathise were high, ly appreciated my the audience. ‘Aftec a. few anpeuncensesty. were made, the meeting. waa: brought te ite close.in the usual way. iii * A, A. REID, Reporter, - Washington, D. C. On: Gundky, Aug. 18, 1989, th ‘Washington Division No. 183, held tt regular. weekly meeting “at the New Moses Home, 1421 7. St N. W.,. DSC. when a joint programa.waas rendere Dy the division and the Historical Bo. ciaty. “The ‘meeting wax opened ir the usual way, then the President [General's message was read and com. mented on by Mr. Montgomery, fol lowing -which w-7 1. commenstable Program i ‘The following imembers rend inter: eating and timely papers: Mra. El- tzabeth Bizrell (also a member of’ the Social, Historical . Séclety), subject, “Tbe Lite of Frederick Douglass"; ‘Mrs. Lillian Thomas, and Mr. William Btoore (also a member of the Society) aubject,, "Negro Development ind Im- portance-of Training.” Otter, mimmbere of the Soglal He torical Society who contributed num- bers to the prograr were Mins Mar- garet Jacksoo, who read-s paper. on “Negro Development and ‘Training’; Mins Katherine Cavanaugh, who reo- dered.& plano solo, and Miss Flera Cavanaugh, who sang the song "Who oom,” which ig « poem written by Paul Lawrence Dunbar and net: to music. Professor Wheat, who te the special repienentativa of ths U. N. I An, and organizer of the, Soclal, His- TorieeT wad Resear EN SOIBTY, TUE ered a brief eddrees confirming the commfents ‘on the: President-General’a messsje, and other remarks, after whlch Professor. C. Wilbura, "the famous plano genius, of.Chicago, I, who'can play two planos at once, ren- dered several musical number (sang ant play). One of the miost striking Features on the wholt program was the splrit- ed duct, that swas sug. by “Professor Whedt ‘and Professor Wilbura, at- companied iy Binale Bro Wilbur, The dlfiglog of tho Natioi@ An- thom and reciting of the Benediction marked tbe conclusion of the pro- gram, Refreshments were acrved. HENRIETTA CAVANAUGH, Deiroit,- Mich. + On Buncey eventay, September 22 tho ‘Bleck Grose Kufsed of (au De frolt Division No. 125 rendared a,won doxful program of ts mition's pag. chat, represented by cightea inties fly children and two legionpaires. | ‘the leeding Inay' wae “ithtopin," aides Beary Jacitios, Next waa 2%r4 ‘Tinules Aubferds; representing United Staluicas.Amerise, cemandiy jude rest upon Hestopla, hseaiesa Zhe Was flying too high, But tho fiftcen ‘la ier" representing —dacie™ countres, were fer Bthlopic, end cute thot cbc smyat beve.justicc, 5 ‘Bach lady wes vscorted by the le- gions, ag their body-fuard, and wero Prevented to Divopla. While Behe pia. welcomed thera musle wes fur pished by the plenist, Mis, Mattts Ramty. : Leniters sad fvlends who ‘were present were vory much entbused, and sald the program was e& great acces. Teo Bled: Crves musica aio doing asi they cnn to falso funds for Gis organtzation. under the" direction “0 Mrz. T. Ashford. ISAEEL M. DREW, ‘ “heting Reporter “Braddock, Pa. | _ A big mass mecting was ataged at |BiKédock Division Sunday Oct. 2%, at 3 p.m. -The meeting opened in the daauel way with the president,in the chair, + For our scripture Iéason we. re peated the 23rd Paniss, after which re were favored with grand selection Dy. the Heavenngac quarveiie. Mr. A. R.-Dongias, vice president, played a wondentul part in dalivering the welcome address, Then a few brief remarks by our president, Mr. James, Seaith, the reefing of the Ne- ro World~by Mr. XH Durban, which we ware all prout to bess from our leeder, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, Bethel wohected for bie apd aut : wre vychowrtl wus feat we t meso 4 an edi Makes oe we Gt eine ton = eo li oe aie | "Elia; Cant, Cube" Gans, Me Cube, Tie VL LA vis (fs! eet at 9P, UL: on Runtay, Begt ecilsd to’ Grd. Shu" regular’ med n ‘The msmbenihtp was’ fi ‘Ths meeting wis opened: by, the =A Frou treet ats Ay Meme. ‘Mr, W. Mo- splot part 0 036 mating, ead ag he lewcn ph th rzaah gtr andi the. reading of the 6th and Teh ‘ferese ofthe book of at Peter, th + Mr. N.“Lee, Mite 'M. Forrest, Bi-3, J. A, Brown, Mr. C.Reid and Min W. MoNairn made short addresuey re- spectively. Mr. RS. Roterteon then declared all beats vacant: ‘The execu- tive secretary,.Mr. C..G. Allen, then took the chair and announced that the election of officers” would be started. Mr. J..A. ‘Tituy Was elected aa. the firat vice-president. Mra. J, A. Brown, lady president; Mise J. Cagasron; iat lady vice-president; Mr. C: G. Alien, executive aecretary; Mr- HT. Long- Brown, treasurer; Mr. C. 8. MeNel, chairman trustes"board; Mr. R. Robertson, secretary trustéo board; Mr. C. Reid, chaplain. Mr. ©. G. Allen; executive sectetary, then thanked the audience for their patience, and the meeting came to a exwe by repeating. the Universal a 4 | . North Carolina Durkam, N, C—Am Inspiring ad dress by-Dr. Hibert Russell, dean. o} the achvol of religion of Duke uni Yeralty, featured the Aest.of a apo ‘lal series. of lectures by prominent spetkere at North Carolina, College last Sunday’ afternoon at 8 o'clock President 3. E, Shepard es arrapgod Zor some’ well kaown man to apes to the student Body each Sunday af terndon for s. number of wecka, and keen interest, attended’ the -sddress by Dr Russel -.“No_ Man is Crowned in. a Raco until Ke has Woh the game lawfully." was bls subject, and in this. he de- clared that, there ere no short.cuts 1 the race of Ife. The game must be won ‘according to certain precepta and fixed rules, ang. the’ seme prin- ciples apply to ive. Success cannot be won by avoldiog and evading. tho rules of the game, and everything must be dono, falrly and squarely. Camden, N; J. - (~ Division No.-28. of -the..Univerua Negro. Improvement ‘Association hel its regular weekly mine meeting of Sunday, October 15, at 3 p.m. - .Tho, meeting™-opened by ringing “Bhing On Eternal Light,” foliowat by the Lymn, “From Greentand's Icy ‘Mountatzs,"*"the repeating of out moto aiid. tho Lot's Prayer in con cort: “Gol of the Right Our Battles Fight,” waz sung and ‘our choplate Rov. R, H. Jackson, runds 8 very & couraing ed:iress.. The nent pewter was: our ready precidont who dgliveres & soul atirring address, aod caded Wy urging hic hearers to rally, to. che support of tho U. 36. I. Ae : We then Istenod wit’ rant atten- tien 10 the Hen, Marcus Garvey's message i ‘The erro Warld, read by our secretary, Mies Hdaa Greak Bro, Daslel NeDoncia, Svat’ vice pres!- dent, responded te the reading of the Negro Worlé, ond mado some very eneairnctns FOTN ‘The Fricadly Four Quarieite rr gered netection in fine Blyle. ‘Tbe president thea ‘calcd for now" mem- bam: and. four remanded to the cal, twa ion ant two worst. The mestlag adjeumed by cingiig pYaiopie,” the aational anthem. ~ Ths ISARE 2, PAINS, Reporters {tees de Avila, - Ulege ae AvBa, : Uta Ga Sunday tho Ist of September, the Le Arica Branch of the U. N. LA. held Ks regular moss mesiiig at Isberty Hail commemorating Garvey Day. “The members nd friénds turned oot in goodly numbers, From .sev- eral addresses the hudlence Waa €n- thused witis the spirit of Garveyien, ‘Eno hot waa nicely arrayed with the colore of red, black and greén. ‘The meeting cornmeuced as ‘usual with the processional bya, “Shine ‘On Eternal Light," followed with the opening ode.’ From. illness of the chaplain, the ritualistts: service was conducted by the presidedt, Mr. J. Barnes, Scripture. lesson read trom Daniel, 6th chapter, 5 ‘The president dplivered a warm sd- dress, Another address by Mr. P. Young, who asked thet all Negroes come in Hine with the U, N. I. A. and go forward... Mr. A. Reid was introduced "and gaye a stirring ad- Gries, asked tor o-operstion, urxiz ws to get busy with the work which the Hon. Marous Garvey haa put into our hands, The next dpeaker was Mr. Andrews, whe gave ® short ‘and pela ‘acgrem,' Being“ scquainted with Gierent.pesiy of Africn, be por 2 iestedalel ages Vien Hi fod: tn wx. | | EXTRA EXTRA | | caer j's Second Personal Appearance “S| 2 et ee | a . sar ae ' dudge Nicholas Klein. . OR CINCINNATI, OHIO s | = SINCE HIS RETURN FROM EUROPE“. * | UNION, LABUIL HALL, Zim and Waotiugion St. i ° . *. GARY, INDIANA : : | ON SUNDAY, OCT. 27th, 1929 AT 3 PLM. | ‘The Judgg Has Just Completed «Tour of Europe ‘sid, Africa ~ “Subject, “Tragedy of White Injustiod* | :- cf <The Maras Garvey vn U, 8 AV Cae 9 7 “UL IN, LA Tenipo ‘Sear Band. ia’ Avendince = 5d SUBSCRIPTION: -'- ADULTS. 30¢ + CHTEDREN- UND, 22.204 CHARLES 1, JANE Prag IL i ER tad wih (ete tate dlacrytion ih 08 the Us Ke TA, ately Be ‘tot able th: curry. rtf Se Iai cnet en oe nc ‘A Quet was rendered by lr. Bailey and-company: The x-president, Mr. ore ee er aa Se et wn caw z Reporter... Youngstown, O. , The Youngstowm’ Division No, 123 ‘bold mass meeting, Sunday, Octobe 13 at 3 p.m a * ‘The meeting was opened by the chaplals, Br. W. 2f. Bock,” who aiso reported the 23rd Psalto,, which’ was followed by the congregation, afte which we were led io prayer from je Ritual” and Tolipwing Vast we sank “From Greenland's Tey oun: tains” é : ‘Owing to the lateness of the oour thé reading. of ‘the preambles was omitted. + a ‘The Negro World’ wais read by Mr. E.'D. McClain, which Is always’ in: splriog to" us:~ “God Bless Our Preal: dent” was sung. .Then the program wad tursed over 10 the president, Mr 5. H. Bryant, -who then called: for 18 few remarks from ‘our Major, J. R. Coleman, whose aubject was "Leader. nlp." Tn bie remarka he sald .we must first learn to folly In order @® learn how tolead. =a The most vutetanding feature of the evening waa a solo entitled “The Lord is My Light” by Professor Norman ‘Tilman. We Were brought to our feet by oie-president, Mr. J. HW. Bryant, ‘a noted orator, for 45 minutesewith a wonderful ‘mesnage’from the Sixth International Convention of the Ne- gro Peoples of" the World. Ne, held the audience spellbound. Hie made all glad tq henr from that, the groatest event of the negro peoples ‘of the world, “ E The meeting. was closed by the singing of” the . national anthem “tethtopian” eeeutae Chicago, Hl on Sunday, September 4, 1929, DI vision $23 of Cateago, nk QuaDr Msion_aR8: of 1Ubing, TM, united $0 @ parade, meas mecting snd plenic atRobbing ‘The mass meeling wns ia Goleen Gate’ bark, The" welcome, address was given by Mayor S. H. Nichols, a Nepro. .Ho mentioned te.neces- ‘$y of cooperating on-tha -part of the Neproca of Robbin, with tho U. IN. I. A. and (ld of-the posalbilities hotore tie Negroes of Robbins. He being « member of the, orgatl- zation himelr, sald we must Lice the Task couraeourly. - Sie. BSL, Grimom, extiegt view president ‘of Div. 319." nzkde 2 “heart- Pete address on tho"ainis and objects Br, James Pliers, president of Div. Gis wan nest, Ze mentioned how iad he was to he in Roboine wero there ts a Negi mayor, nnd Nero chief of police, i¥e drove home come~ thing to bd remembered. The’ Gary band amd the Div. 213 chole ren ered mule. whe lowing FoREKs were made Sy ip. Henry Johncon, president of Rob bino Div. 428, in whieh be stressed the ‘ceurare ‘and determination of GarvS¥ites in tanks quest for. freo~ dom. ‘ne ycotiny- closed with a deep fmpivaricn, on the mindy of fore prgsent.. "The. plente celiowed, eo ogenvame insti heed oe - “4: YAR aC penal ic Chotetant rota 6a ee ay es St a fica ss co Sa ee Th wes fl Comm oat b meme ‘emoba spss: meeting: od the. oil Jepeaicer’ pe tis-.o9e) Xai delegate, af -odemiese= Hy AER ‘Mr. Christian yeh signe ext thasher to the Gud forthe tear derful way. type ale attained ty Big ‘want's while tes at the Son vention ta-Kiegstox, Jeatakes, ‘the month of Aligust. hoot the -membera for the: jo" works they did, thougs mall ‘shumnbiee. He delivered a clear: od -epperécia~ tive report of the doings of the ‘can- vention, and the large number of Gelejyates present fram all parte of the world, : ‘He showed how Jithados Was we Ing up since the Hon. Mareus went. back home, and .tokt of tw ‘great crowds that “attended: eviry Tmecting—beid-during—the-entire-oome- vention, eed A pantie peeling. was held in the Masonic jl at Long and 19th streets, Oct. 3rd. Because'of the rah and short ‘notice, the attendance was short of expectation, but the speeches delivered and the further .ropert of the: delexgte_sieré of a very hig onder, and everyone felt it: was-good to be’ present. Oct. 6,, 1929, Garvey Day, will De long remembered’in the club, Mem- bers aod friends were out in full force. oe ‘This‘was: the. day set apart - for. the Negroes of tho world to aubscribe to the $600,000,000 Fund to carry on the work. \Naatly every one prea ent, subscribed. The total ‘nubseription up to date was §3,500. Our delegate again gave further reports of the doings at the convention. weevers! of the officers and mem- be¥s made interosting addresses, and a beautiful meeting clined at 7 p. ro. ELLEN AKIN, Reporter. Ciego de Avila, Cuba ‘The above named’ division “had a fine gathering on Siméay, October Sth. . ‘The meting” stirtea mr tes pecat form with the opening ode, "and prayer bythe vice. president. The Fplritual part of tho mectiog wos carried. through by the ueting cha Inia, air. Pred J. Archer. ‘Tao mect= Ing was afterwards furned. oven to ‘tio president, tie, i an osu Ro tle way, expoundtd to us the bap- [Petiings tortie: Presicant-<Generat-ta ‘Jamuica, and asked that we give more ime to this caugieo thet the plat Thid, down nt the 1020 convention can Hho ensied out to success. Fao next cpesiers were 36. Hur hailler, Ber... Burke, ara~ats. Nor~ [man Turner, ‘These gentlemen spoke ‘on the leadership. of ours president= fertral and waped. tho merbership to beartendiars. At thin the cottee- ton was taken, Gien Mr, J, 2, Bakter gave a warm address, entzeating te members to hold fast. Mr. RT) Webley, presideat, cove tho losing” remarks ‘Too meeting came sto sts eless at 10 p. m, with the national anthom, and prayer. S'PERGUS HUGH ATEEER, =) Reporter. a tc Have you ever tried working 19° projran ive fe feast one moRt? Ane Eoticed tig remit? A tril at wate ne ee Cotten and liten clothes to not ‘hold dust in the xame wey tht wool and sili: do; therefore, it te aumelent Brushing tends to rub the dizt-intc tha thor. The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are earnestly requested to invite our attention any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained in a Negro World Advertisement. BUSINESS AND THE NEGRO'S FUTURE ANSWERING those among us, as well as those in other race groups who question, and who might be inelined to question our reason for harping on this string-of the economic needs of the Negro, we are impelled to call their attention to the activities of the aged Roman statesman, Cato, as time after time, almost unremittingly, he reiterated the ominous phrase to his fellows in the senate at Rome, "CARTHAGE MUST BE DESTROYED, OR ROME WILL BE!" Students of history will remember that the constant repetition at length took-hold and bore fruit, all too sad to remember, for Carthage. The truth that the constantly repeated suggestion will at length have effect, is what encourages us on to be continually calling the attention of our fellow-Negroes to the economic needs of the times in which we live. The Negroes of the world, in any country you may choose, need a safe, sound, and secure economic foundation, upon which they can anchor all their plans, and build their projects for the future. Just as it is in every other realm of human endeavor, if we Negroes are to be saved from economic strangulation; if we are to be able at last, to stand upon a firm, financial foundation, and be able to take care of all the dreams that will come before our mental vision, we will have to take our destiny in our own hands, and create that safe, sound and secure foundation for ourselves. Let experience and common-sense be our guide. Viewed in the light of the Twentieth Century, we will have to go forth and do as other races have done, and have been willing to do for themselves, if we are ever to reach that place among the races, of mankind which our hearts desire. It is an indisputable law of psychology that the mere fact that the desire exists within us, is proof that it can become reality, if we but have the courage, the persistence, the patience, the faith, the foresight, the unyielding determination, the unswerving loyalty, and the resistless effort that will be needed for bringing abstract things into physical existence. We can be what we/want to be; and we have decided that there is the urgent need of a safe, sound, and secure economic foundation for the Negro Peoples of the World. All that is left for us to do is to suit the action to the word. Let us realize all that it requires for the tasks ahead. Let us pool our interests. Let us learn the lesson of true brotherhood; and then, working shoulder to shoulder, imited in aim and purpose, seeking one common goal, (the all-round betterment of the Negro race) let us begin to delve into the various avenues of commerce and industry; learn everything that the world of knowledge has to offer, in these and other fields; then tackle the problems of the day, and make them our servants instead of our masters; and the day will surely dawn, (sooner than we can realize now), when the Negroes of the world will not only have amassed wealth sufficient for all their needs, but will also have all that goes with the acquisition of the power that can make the wheels of industry hum. The sun of hope is shining. The voice of destiny is calling; and Dane Fortune points the way with a jewelled finger, tempting us forth to a greater economic structure than mankind has ever reared before. Shall we need these signs? The resounding voices of our brothers and sisters all over creation answer "Yes." Henceforth, then, joining hand in hand, let the Negroes move forward to the pooling of their interests, and the buildings of all kinds of businesses, and the projection of every conceivable form of industrial enterprises, all with an eye to a SOUND ECONOMIC FUTURE. SHOULD DELANY WIN? THIS is the question which presents itself to the voters, of the Twenty-first Congressional District of New York; and will keep coming up before us, from now on to November 5th, when, in man fashion we walk up to the polls, and cast our votes for that spreadid champion of the rights of the people. We, as Negroes, who are in the majority in this district, owe it to ourselves to see that the question is answered in the affirmative; and if we fail to so answer it, one can hardly realize how again we will be able to look ourselves in the face. We take it for granted that the Negro voters of Harlem are fully aroused to the needs of the hour, judging from the way they poured out to register, so as to be in readiness for the battle on election day. Negroes owe it to themselves to be men; to be self-reliant, to be courageous, to be true. We will not be able to claim these attributes if we fail to do our duty by Hubert T. Delany, on Tuesday, November 5th; with all the partisan pleading to the contrary, notwithstanding, he is the most outstanding figure to which the Negro hope has been attached in this neighborhood, for years and years. We must not permit to remind our fellows that Robert T. Delany has all the requirements that go to make a good and trustworthy congressman; and if the Negroes of Harlem are ever again to look the world in the face, they will walk up to the polls on election day in the same numbers and with the same vim, and enthusiasm as they did during the registration period last week. And let we forget: "DELANY'S FIRST". THE OTHERS FAIL TO FOLLOW. THE.GREAT ETERNAL "NOW" IN laying our plans for individual or racial betterment many of us are inclined to put them off till tomorrow. Wise men know, however, that the inspiration that is allowed to take off is more than likely to die. They take the inspiration when it grows, and begin at once to lay plans for the carrying out of their dreams. An all-time wise say that on the great clock of Time there is but one hour. "NOTHING." This is something for us to learn and remember. Let us not go to bed with the inspiration that comes to us from now on, but let us remember the memory to us from in motion, with a view to their accomplishment, which physical reality, which things we observe, admire shows the stories connected with of even was a blessing in his life, and our NOW. The fortunate to ask his inclusion to put his plans into motion many times, and opportunities arising, and brought him abundant success. We can learn from this great lesson of a great day. We can adopt the motto for the concession of our plans. Let us not daily with the mottoes so the great eternal "NOW", but let us put them to service for the attachment of our minds alone, but for the fulfillment of all the righteous desires of our hearts; for the bringing out of the clouds, out of the regions of the air, for the realistic materialization of all our dreams, and for the producing of thoughts, of deeds, and of condities that will enrich the human race, that will win for us fame, honor, and riches; for the allowing of the burdens of a weary, careworn world, and upliftment of humanity. Let today be our starting point. Let "NOW", the great eternal hour, inspire us with great thoughts for noble deeds, and rising up under the sunlit heavens of God, go forth to make the world a better place to live in, so that generations coming after will revere our memory, because we paid attention to the calls of the great eternal "NOW". "Forward brethren!" "REFLECT ON THESE" "REFLECT ON THESE" Herrick Says, " Carry Word of God to Them" Warns Baptists of Danger to Church From Too Many Side-Door Pastors The heathen in the rural communities of New England" used missionaries worse than do the native darkest Africa, Baptist ministers were told today by the Rev. E. C. Herrick, president of the Newton Theological Institute. Dr. Herrick declared the churches would do well to recall their foreign workers and send them to carry the word of God to villages here. In the State of Matte alone, the speaker assists the 260 new towns, the children of which are growing up in ignorance of Christian teachings. Dr. Herrick also warned his hearers against preachers who "get into the ministry through the side door." There are too many pastors, he said, and the preachers are "put merely by getting the key, to a closed church." Dr. Herrick was a principal speaker at a meeting of Baptist leaders at Chipman Hall. —The Boston Eve. American. Sept. 30. Call to Duty Soldiers of the Black race, you are called to duty. Your motherland, "Africa," needs you. It needs you in influence; 400,000,000 black sons and daughters of her soil. The land of our forefathers, the land of peace and happiness, is now calling and bidding you to come home and enjoy that freedom for which you are longing. "Ursge by Carvey Since the advent of Marcus Carvey, the greatest spokesman for the Norwegian in the twentieth century, the Norwegian who, have had the greatest urge of all times or so I know you will agree with me, has witnessed the greatest of all sacrifice ever made for the redemption of the race. The that dam steep towards nationhood was made by the Norwegian Carvey, the greatest automatic of thoughts, now living in the twentieth century, who is now moulding millions of men who cannot win this time. They don't know that every member is going to give Carvey a guarantee and show them that they can't win this time. The reason they carry Garvey is because he warns the Negroes of the danger; yes, this greatest danger of worshipping foreign gods. Oh Negroes, if you would only heed the urge of Marcos Garvey, and return to the God of all creation, the God of Christianity, then He shall be for you, you shall be his sons and daughters! Not till then, and only then shall Africa be redeemed and Negroes be emancipated. Fours for Nogro Uplift, Priv. H. H. McPhee. If you are interested in the growth and development of your home town, it is your duty to boost for it at all times. And if you cannot do this, you ought to hunt up another place of abode. The way to prove your interest is to work on the area are working to that end. No man is a good citizen who allows himself to tag; the slugger is a liability to any community. He who does nothing to better the community in which he lives is fit only for the undertaker, Why we should become hypersensitive because a narrow-minded Brooklyn roster suggested that we would and would feel more at home in a colored street is beyond this writer. Thoughtfully, a man if a Christian should be free to visit and disguise, but at any time a church group is so the devotion up to support their purpose is insufficient. We would be the prudent and responsible to what it brings us together. What is there in the church people may not see. People care and hate but they are proud to be on the team of the church. We should be hospitable to all people in our area despite differences. Former German War Flyer Here to Seek American Aid—Interests Atlantic Airmen—Would Take Gospel by Air to Pagans of Ovam Boland Conversion of the pagans of Ovam Boland in southwestern Africa to Christianity by airplane aid is the ambition of Father Paul Schulte of the Oblate Brothecibod of Colgene, Germany, who arrived here yesterday in the Hamburg-American liner Deutschland. He hopes to interest wealthy Americans of the Romans Catholic faith in his project to charter a big airplane and land missionaries in one of the least known inhabited sections of the globe. Already about $100,000 has been raised in Germany to spread the gospel by air, but this is insufficient for the plans Father Schulte has worked out. The priest was an air pilot in the German Army during the World War and believed that he can enlist the services of Captain Herman Koel and Colonel James Fleitmaurice, who flew the airplane Fitzmaurice across the Atlantic, in his venture. He has studied crude maps of the section and thinks he can reach it by air and teach the natives his faith. Father Schulte said he was but one of many German wartime pilots in the Oblate brotherhood and that for some time they have been using six small planes in their work. All of the long journeys in the interest of their religion were made in ships from the brotherhood's airfield, he said. The priest, who is thirty-four years old and two inches, more than six feet tall, promised his old confessor, while still a student, that some time he would go into Africa to spread his doctrine. The Rev. Otto Führman, an old man when Father Schultze met him, urged the student to take up that work, and when the older man died in 1823, the young priest began making his plans. He has talked to teachers and saints and says they are much interested in his project. While in New York Patricia Schultze will stop at the Leo House, C02 West Twenty-third street. Aboard the same ship was Knotte Fenken, son of Eckhart Eckhart, the Grief Zappelin. He is here to work for a year and a half for the Goodyear-Zappelin Company at Akron, Ohio—The New York Herald-Tribune. Miss Iris D. Freitas, B. A., B. Sorrier-at-Law, was recently admitted to the bar in Barbados. Miss D. Freitas is the first lady West Indian lawyer. If reading makes a full man, as a great scholar has said, then we know many men and women who are positively emply. Yet very few colored Americans are taking to the air. We have been singing "Goner Take My Wings and Fly" and "On, That I Had the Wings of a Dove," and "All God's Children Got Wings," long before the white man thought it possible to fly. But that is all we have done—is to sing about flying; and now some of us will not even sing about it. Now is the time for Negro boys to get into a great field for the future. Half of them who are planning on becoming doctors and lawyers will go in for aviation the next generation will be on the road to better things. Our expressions like that of other editions often carry a somewhat often saddened and sadly often afflicted. This is the joyfulness of love rather than the disappointment before it that there was need and don't always gave are present in the poem of the character and resonance of the latter edition. As the poem is a poetic narrative of the character's life in the past, it is not a literal account of the events of the past. The poem is in effect the poem of the character's life in the past, and the poem is in effect the poem of the character's life in the past. Forward Represent, however, the given objection. That the bill not be passed by your vote. Let the bill be shared by the conqueror on the battle for the right. Dunnard, till the course is finished. Like the ransomered on beginge. Keep the faith, though persecuted. Never give the battle over. Forward, forward, till victorious. Thou shall lay fines armor by. And thy loving Saviour bids thee. Take the land, its tine by right. HANNAH H. REID. Florida, Cuba. October 11th, 1929. Editor of the Negro World. 335 Lenox Ave. New York City, N. Y. Dean. Attached please find documents sent to the Governor of Jamaica, and the Prime Minister of Great Britain, respectively. In our attempt to secure the release of our leader, we of New Orleans cannot finch under any strain, despite its hardship. The Governor of Jamaica, H. W. I. Five thousand Negroes, representatives of various Civil, Social and Religious organizations, in Maa. Meeting, hereby voice their protest against the imprisonment of Marcus Garvey, who was railroaded into jail on account of political differences with the judicial system of that Island. To us Garvey's imprisonment is nothing short of runk persecution. We seriously request his immediate release. Further imprisonment is an insult to the white man's will deserve our respect for the white man's system of justice in Jamaica. JAY J. PETERS. Chairman. P. S. Moved by Mr. Hartzell Hawkins and seconded by Mrs. O. P. Kelley. Editor of the Negro World, 355 Lenox Ave. New York City Dear Sir: Please publish the follow- ing in the Negro World; The Right Hon. Remsay Macdonald, Prime Minister of Great Britt- Care of British Embassy, Washington District of Columbia Honourable Sir: Viewing with grave concern the exceedingly important mission upon which you have come to the United States, the undergained, all members of the Negro race, desire to extend their warmest greetings and salutations to you and the British Government, and sincerely pray that your high mission will be a lasting pillar upon which the Peace of the world may secure, reign. Our primary motive for addressing you, however, honourable sir, is one of racial justice. On the 25th of last September, the Supreme Court of the Island of Jamaica, P. W. K. sentenced Mr. Marcelo Garvey to serve three months in prison and to pay a fee of $505 on a charge of "contempt of Court." The charge, according to the record, grew out of a political speech delivered by said Mr. Garvey while a candidate for the legislature of that Island. It is not known whether Mr. Garvey imputed by voice the disinterfaction with the methods used by some of the courts in dispensing justice to natives in that Island, and registered his desire to ask for a change of curral judges if he be elected to the legislature. To us it seems like helpless persecution for the court to pursue a candidate in jail merely for criticizing the judicial system of the country. Precise speech and freedom of the press are two principles of democracy upon which the sachet of organized power of the judiciary is organized. Mr. Garvey at the instance of certain influences and powers is becoming increasingly distasteful to the majority of organized Negroes. It is our judgment that Mr. Garvey had no criminal design or motive when he made the speech for which he is being held in jail. We feel that the court was oppressive and unmerciful in passing sentence on Mr. Garvey and for these reasons, sir, we whollyheatedly pray that you, honourable sir, will for the good of the people of the Garvey school of Thought, exercise a degree of interest in this case to the point of granting clemency to black man who means so much to the Negro race. Anticipating a favorable reaction, we are, honourable sir, P. S. This letter was adopted by over five hundred (850) Negroes from various organizations. Members of the Negro race and sympathizers with Marcus Gayray. in the means and use of communication the place to which he belongs. He ought to be, in knowing the meaning Negroism necessarily, the chief aim of the world are possess all opportunities him the Pride of origin and origin of life. It was wise, then, to have him known that a Negro was established in the Compass of the United States, where Sitten millions. African descent the African pillow of whom are a kind demeanor the stalk of whom ber of their racial origin to abolish voice in the making of laws he publishes, this all other citizens, they are governed. Mr. De Priest, is my judgment, occupies the greatest position of Negro leadership within the pur- view of the United States today. *Widem and, Courage.* By what acquire the right to *j* for that Mr. D. What does Mr. Gray want the Congressman to do? Does Gray want him to get on a house, top and yell his fearly to the philosophy of Garveyism? If my memory guides me correctly at this time, I think that Mr. DePriest has done very much for the U. N. I. A. in the city of Chicago. I recall quite well the time when Mr. DePriest was an active member of the Chicago mission, hence I was no calico rescue mission, at least I was. Mr. DePriest. I certainly hope that the Congressman will not consider anything that was said in that letter as having the least official sanction of the U. N. I. A., or its leaders. Finally, I desire to warm "hot-shot" members of the U. N. I. A. against jackass methods of attacking other folks and organizations, without cause. We must practice more tolerance if we wish to unite the race. We must know, in reality, of what we speak, or write, before pretending that we know. Vicious and unwarranted words can mindless hurt most of those who hurt the attacker. We have nothing to gain by trying to deyery every leader, who happens to be actively outside the arena of Garveyism. Mr. Do Priest is not only courageous and intelligent, he is loyal to his race and does not seek to disguise his identity. He practices the right type of race consciousness. He is the leading figure in the field of Negro leadership in this country. No one can deny him that place—it is being held by virtue of its importance. Let us note that New York will send Mr. Delaware to Congress to join in the good work carried on by Mr. Do Priest. Everything being done by the gentleman from the First Congressional District of Illinois is wholly in order. JAY J. PETERS. New Orleans, La. The Editor of The Negro World: Grant me space in your grand and noble journal, "The Negro World," which in unconspirantly championing the course of Universal Negro Emancipation and African Nationalism to make a statement. Long ago, of our intolerable and distinguished leader, the then, Marcus Garvey, the U. N. L. A. And A. C. L., there was a certain white philosophy which vitiated the negro race throughout the entire world, first, it cheated our forepatrons, took away the civilization, robbed the land, emancipated us and finally sentenced us over the four corners of the world. The vicious white in dispensing such philosophy compounded of *Istfist*, *Specific* (Religion) and gave the anaesthetic maximum dose of the mixture to the Negro race, which some how had succumbed our consciousness of the terrible injustice and fraudulence they met out to us; hence, the race became seemingly unfortunate. When we suffered and boared the seldom palms of the vernomous stinging of the oppression, poverty, sorrows, disgrace and shame probably we would cry out for justice, but we were told a dresful lie, that "God will it so" and it will be made right in the next world to milk and honey in an indestructible future state" hence religion as it was commonly taught—was the chief medium to keep the poor and black peoples of the world garranted with their conditions, who became so common throughout, the unyield, from beingwicked and prophesied management of the white race. How could it be, that that--God will be so--when one is starting to wear another who is making another who always having too much of it? How it is an artificial life? How it is 'artificial life.' How all God created all human life. Hell All! The future which they hold no doubt about, it will work, no doubt right, in right here now, the laws of nature, and have been established, after the laws of poetry, discipline and gold or the works of poetry, discipline and gold. Then, inhale one honored, imputed liberator, a Moses; the indomitable Marous Garvey, on the 10th Centurye seems with cancled-slogan, "African for the former," a Universal Warrior, a Narrative. For awhile let us reason it mathematically. If England for the Englishmen, France for the Frenchmen; Germany for the Germans, Rome for the Rumans; and Jerusalem for the Jews; therefore, Africa must be axiomatically for the Africans, whether they are Christians or not, to get under the leadership of the inyinc Hon. Marcus Garvey. On August 1 to B1, 1929, the Chifftain, with his undisturbed forelegnt conjured thousands of Negro atlaterman and politicians from all parts of the civilized world who convened at Kingston, Ja. S. W. I. The greatest conclave of Negroes in the sands of history, the world's record-breaking demonstration. What.for? Proving to the world with a colossal programme discussing and sentimentalizing Negroes, Negroes though scattered are uniting and seriously thinking and imagining a redeemed Africa, and freedom among ourselves. On the principle of right against must have it. To conclude, let me say to our leaders, brothers and sisters, let us, without finching or looking back to adhere to the Clarion: Cry of our leader to unite in one body and fall rigidly behind the gigantic programme and give service in every possible capacity in the big drive for African Nationalism and universal development. Nepalese, the expiration of a decade we may start to count our blessings, name them one by one, and realize what the Lord has commanded Garvey to do for us. Let us be courageous, brethren; faithful, honest, loyal and be determined to accept no other compromise but liberty or death, and in such struggle for the survival of the fittest; if needs to shed our blood and kill, and be privileged to say as Nelson when he fell at Tartagal: "I have done my duty." Also, in the meantime, see from the mind's eye aountful harvest on the Radiant shores of homeland, Africa. Thanks for space and patience. Youra for, the cause of "African Redemption." PATRICK E. ST. J. HALL, Camaguey. Rep. de-Cuba. Dated 23-9-28. To the Editor of the Negro World! Please to allow me space in your valuable journal. The Negro World to express that on Tuesday the office mentioned date the Nipe C. C. met and defeated the Tanamo C. C. in a match and defeated the Tanamo C. C. in a match. The latter batting first, made 13 runs for 11 wickets, the former painting the bat, scored 82 runs for 11 wickets but defeating the Tanamo C. C. by 9 rups. Should these teams meet again I predict a defeat for the Nipe C. C. at the hands of the Tanamo C. C. I am young for rapid advancement. Lord K. Greene. Thanking you for space in your column, I beg to state the following: In behalf of the members of the San Blas Divisions of the U. N. N. A. I am thankful to C. Cabrera A. Stump, exwithe of Steamshipmen in and the Tankers of the San Blas, very loyal and unselfless assistance in our behalf, from time to time. During Mr. Stamp's time in these parts, he manifested unusual interest in all masters of finance relative to our several divisions here, receiving, transporting, and mailing funds to the Head Office and other divisions. Without such assistance we would have suffered a great handicap in handling our finances, and too much cannot be said regarding Mr. Stamp's continued efforts along other lines relating to his work, especially Division 820, Farm 3. We genuinely regret that other duties, have taken him from this rute, and using this opportunity, we state that Mr. Stamp has our sincere wishes for his weirs wanderer he may travel. Sincerely for the cause "Afric. STEPHEN WILLIAMS, Secretary, Division 820 Farm 8. Fayetteville, N. C., Route No. 1, Bore 107, May 19, 1923. Editor of the Nage World. *I'll have to ask for your subtitle* *because I don't know during those last months, that I have damped to the Nage World, more diligently than I have shown in the way to try to handle the program.* Delany Candidacy Boosts Harlem Enrolment 1925 Registration Record Broken-Increase of 11. 177 Shown by Five Assembly Divisions Where Voters Will Cast Ballots in Battle to BEWARE THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON Notice to Contributors Make your report clear and light, all copy must be duplicated. All must be typed, or written to him, in a clear, legible hand. Michigan writes in lead pencil, or high-spotted, will not be accepted. For all correspondence must return. Contact the Secretary so as to see us at the office and their information. Please they and more than one copy of this form furnished. You must submit with us. The Negro world is published in the pages of this page. We want to be in touch with the Negro world. The page print and we will do our best. Fitzsimons Boston In Tiefe Encounter By Neil Olishy Nell, Cliffey, Los Angeles heavyweight, made his Eastern debut before a fair owd at the Olympic. A. G. Saturday night, and made it a successful owd by winning Bobby Fitzsimons, of Newark, N. J. in the featured event of two rounds. The tilt was much clearer than much else but run throughout the tilt. At 18, Cliffey had a three-ound advantage. But failed to use it to advantage. The boys did not like his showing very much and demonstrated same. They evidently wanted film to add another victim to his record of K. O's. Delany Candidate Harlem 1925 Registration Record 177 Shown by Five Ass Voters Will Cast B Elect I Smashing the mayoralty registration figures of 1925 by 11,177 as thousands of new voters flocked to the polls with the determination of putting over Justice to Delany as congressman and erecting the entire Republican ticket, the five Harlem company districts settled down today for the final drive which ends when the deciding contest Nov. 5, with scores to pay and volunteer women stranding every effort to increase the registration in their districts in order to overcome the democratic road in the Congressional district, every section where Negroes are in the minority moved educational action, the total environment in the Five Assembly districts is 98,370. This figure is only 38,188 less than that of Iowa, when the presidential campaign moved many otherwise initiative voters to register their choice. The entire 86,800 enrolled voters in four districts, however, will not cast their ballots at the polls in Iowa because of the estimated political observers that follow persons on the books in the Thirteenth, Nineteenth and twenty-second districts are not in the national political division. Tacco must also be deducted about five per cent for persons who registered and will not bother about going to the polls. About 80,000 to Vote This will leave approximately 80,000 who will decide the contests among local and national candidates. In the Twenty-first Assembly district, where the eastern section in under Negro leadership, with Charles W. B. Mitchell at the head, the total registration is 15,976, an increase of 2,976 over 15,975 that was effected in election district they made by the Tammany election board. It is estimated that 21,155 of the total registration are Negroes and 4,782 white. The leader and his associates foresee the election of the entire Republican state and impressive majorities for the mayoralty, county and national candidates. For the first time in history a Negro employed the most advanced method of pusbling his campaign when Kusut T. Dolany, appeared in a movistone speech at the Renaissance Theatre through the courtesy of Chloephia Charity, manager. Mr. Dolany was seen and heard in a speech urging registration. Congressman La Guardia candidate for mayor, appeared in the politician's retina with him. The Delany Campaign Committee used one hundred volunteer workers to also escort them to the polling. BEWARE THE COUGH COLDS Congress from cold may lead to perilous trouble. You can stop them now with Cromerian, an unmistakable cross that is pleasant to take. Cromerian is a medical discovery with two-fold action that helps to ease the strained memory brains and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for the greatest number of clinical infections. Creosulation contains, in addition to creosote, other healing amino acids soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the irritation, while the creosote gas on the skin causes the skin to bleed, smother the spot, of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. CREOMU FOR THE COUGH FROM C Notice to C Make your report clear and he appeal. It must be specified, or hand Matthews written in lead engraving. Do all your permanently capital in the way of things, and then think the way, dignity them plum- ment. You must respond with us. In the absence of the people. We This is Rufus Dempey, the boy we introduced to you last week. Lacy Boosts Enrolment Broken—Increase of 11, Assembly Divisions Where Ballots in Battle to Delany places. This was likewise done by the Harlem Registration League. The organization had thirty-six full-time workers in the field, according to Samuel F. Holman, president. The Central Republican Club, the regular organization of the Nineteenth Assembly district, charged the Democratic forces of the district with importing 1,500 white "floaters" and registering them. The statement issued by Col. Charles W. Fillmore, leader of the district, called upon voters to use their full strength in November and insure the defeat of the Tammany ticket. Congressman L. Guarda, who appointed U.S. Attorney Charles H. Tuttle and other Republican speakers Sunday at the Battel A. M. E. Young People's Lycium, assured his audience that Harlem's candidate would not lose the election in the Twenty-second and Twenty-third districts in Washington Heights, where most of the voters are white, The Twenty-third showed a total registration of 35,581. Of this number 13,207 were enrolled on Saturday, the final day. This impressive total, which is double that of any other un- town district, Republican observers believe, is an indication that the people are thoroughly aroused to the task of outlining the present administration. Tabulation A complete tabulation of the registration follows: A.D. 1920 1925 1928 13th 16,031 16,045 22,743 15th 14,026 13,182 16,678 19th 15,677 15,557 21,688 22nd 16,058 16,146 24,152 23rd 35,351 23,285 62,197 Total 98,370 67,192 657,159 City Registration Borough 1925 1928 1929 Man. 267,676 648,667 309,933 Brown 156,715 355,098 251,555 Blyth 436,655 710,875 836,831 Queen. 176,082 336,154 258,155 Rich. 26,410 56,015 47,025 Totals 1,231,638 2,029,678 1,585,110 Catarch-Sinus Diseases Yield to New Treatments Blood Filtrates Employed to Restore Widley G. W. Blanchard, Gabrielle Kinnan sufferer for more than twenty years, never used anything that was to be hit like Dr. Blanchard's treatment. Ex- perience in the Kansas City, Mo. Specialist and former instructor in Catarrh Diseases, has just published a copyrighted book, "Catarrh and Its Treatment, which writes the BEE treatment, which Write Dr. D. H. Bellack, 216 Westport Station, Kansas City, Mo. Groomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of coughs from colds, bronchitis and minor forms of bronchial irritation, and is produced by building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Send coupon for free sample. GREOMULSION CO. Atlanta Go cough from colds that hang you. Name..... Street..... City..... One bottle to family. Write plainly. ULSION COLORS THAT HANG ON contributors white, all copy must be double In last Sunday's World Lester A. Walton gave a wrist picture of Negro commercial advertisement in Chicago in the great Negro district of the city an aggressive campaign led by the Chicago Whip, had been carried on to secure clerical jobs red-colored men and women in stores supported by Negroes. The slogan of the campaign has been "No jobs, no patronage," and the Negroes have lived up to it. The results have been brilliant. As a result of a year's agitation from 0 to 100 per cent of the clerks in the retail stores of the district are colored. One large store has a Negro manager and sixteen other Negro executives. The largest retail drug firm in Chicago has a chain store employing fifteen Negroes as prescription or soda fountain clerks. Thirty-three Negroes work in a five-cents-to-a-dollar store, and in a large furniture store half of its sales force is colored. In the new Sears-Roebuck store, selling radio supplies, there is a Negro manager and three Negro assistants. In all these places and others Negro youth and girls are behind the counters as sellers, clerks and cashiers, and though many of the white employees are from the South there is no racial friction. This is just what. The Amsterdam News has been trying to accomplish in New York City for the past five years. The Chicago Whip has stolen The Amsterdam Newn' thunder and is perfectly welcome to it. It is to be expected that the Newn' which, is one of the outstanding fents in the history of Negro journalism. The Chicago people who rallied to its support are also to be congratulated. The People of Harlem have the same power to achieve this result as the people of Chicago. Time is time. The Negro World has called upon them to do so. The result of this district, the chain stores, the plant department stores, all would go out of business tomorrow if they were deprived of their Negro support. But why should they go out of business? Chicago concerns are employing Negroes because Negroes are proving to them that it is good business to employ Negroes in Chicago's South Side; and that is what the Harlem Negroes should prove to the owners of stores of every description who depend upon the Negro for their support. Wherever possible, trade with stores in Harlem that do not practice discrimination in the selection of their employees. To have plenty of fish flesh and the ability to do a big day's work and feel "like a two-year old" at night, you must eat three good meals a day, roll your food and properly digest it. If you can't eat, can't sleep can't work, just give Tianla the chance to do for you what it has done for millions. Mye, J. W. Tete, 1802 Maple St. Rome, Ga., says, "For 19 years I missed unbelievable ministry from indigence, toxic depression and chronic headache. I give my better health entirely to Thailand. Now I eat everything and go all day without getting tired. I make it wonderful for indigence and constitution — one pulse, numerous, diminished and headache. It brings me joy and happiness. I hope you digge your food, and gain strength and weight. It contains no mineral drugs; it is made of roots, herbs and herbs; nature's own medicines for the sick. The cost is less than 2 cents a dose. Gave a bottle from your druggist. Your money back if it doesn't help. STRAIGHT BLACK HAIR YOURS IN 30 MINUTES Men and Women ```markdown ``` No matter what the color of your hair it will many red or white strokes that make no matter how kinky it becomes application of this treatment will give you beautiful, lustrous, hair. This preparation is used in a more new eye color in a combined hair straightener and hair color restorer MOORISH STRATE-BLACK is made from natural herbs and vegetable extracts from the foliage. HAMPTON vs. LINCOLN POLO GROUNDS Saturday, November 2, 1929 Game Called at 2:30 P. M. ADMISSION, $9 RESERVED SEATS, $2.50 BOX SEATS, $3 Tickets on side in New York City at New York Giants' Office, 101 West 42nd St.; Ray McCarthy, 551 Fifth Ave., Room 2101; New York Age Office, 220 W. 135th St.; Johnnie Jackson's Lunch, 2235 Fifth Ave. ATTENTION Every unit of the Negro race domiciled in the Island of Cuba is called upon to give its support to make the U. N. L. A. missionary meeting, the first of its kind in Cuba; a lasting success. On December 1, 1929, delegates from every U. N. L. A. mission and other societies in Cuba will be in attendance, "May's swell the storm of Gettysburg!" "Africa must be then." (Names) W. H. WORTON. The Inagrette The management of the Labyrinth Theatre presents to Harlem Theatre-greens another subwayagama this week of unusual features which will usher in the new procedure of beginning shows on Saturday. Thus the show will only stay for five days including Friday. The stage show, is the creation of Edgar Dowall and George Stamper. Willie Jackson, Billy Cortez, Johnny Lee Long, the Oriental Serenaders, Loretta Falcrold, Sawdust and Sand, John and Al Virgil and "Derby," the wonderful dancer are included in the cast: Lulu Belle in Rehearsal LOS ANGELES, Cal. (ANP)—With a cast selected from a list of local actors submitted by Spencer Williams, famous western actor, scenarist, and assistant director of Christies' Cohen Sims, rehearsals have begun at the Belasco Theatre for "Lulu Bells." Evelyn Preer, who was understudy at one-time for Lonene Ulric, is expected to play the title role. LOS ANGELES, Cal. (ANP)—With 185 actors and extras at the Lasky ranch on location, a number at First National, Universal and Fox Studios, employment was given to over 400 colored performers the first week in August. Chas. Butler, casting director for Central Casting/Burke, has been refused a vacation so great is to be the demand for colored actors during the next two months. Miss Kathleen Kirkwood, producer of "Bare Facts of 1829," now playing at the Triangle Theatre in Greenwich Village, is directing an all-Negro comedy-drama, entitled "Mollida." The play is from the pen of Dennis Denahue; young Negro playwright, and is scheduled to open on Broadway the latter part of October. Among those taking part in the production are: Ida Bennatt, Collington Hayes, Mercedes Gilbert, Beatrice Freeman, Rosa B. White, Harrison Blackburn, Harry MacDaniel, Fay Rutledge, Edward Pugh, Ida Forsaye, Emma Malland, George Lynch, May Barkley, Walter Thomas, Theodore Howard, Montero Noget, Peter Jackson, Corn Parker, Dainy Pilgrim, Louise Whecall, and Jim Richardson. "Cock Eyed World Will Play Roosevelt And Douglas Pal. "Cock Eyed World," the daring and dynamic regimen to "What Prince Glory," will be broadcast at both the New Douglas and Revere theatres beginning Saturday. This decision was made by the management of the two Harlem theatres to accommodate the large growth, expected to turn out to see this remarkable picture. "The Cock Eyed World" has action, drama, fiction, romance and, hard-holled soldier comedy. Sergeant Fitzgray and Quirk are at it again. As members of the United States Air Force, they go looking for **Figuratively**, if not logically, the National Comedic Players are taking their lives in their hands, and gambling with chance in next week's production of "The Gorilla," at the West End Theatre, the club of the most important props of the play, one of the most important actors in the cast is nothing less than the shilal, juju, juju, the french with which its titles. This animal wanders through three of the most exciting acts of the most thrilling mystery play ever staged. At times this fearful animal is seen, at others, its presence is felt and always there lurks the fear that it may break loose. Still another underworld play made its Harlem debut Monday evening, when "Crime" was presented at the West End theatre by the National Colored Players. This three-act drama, however, offers little or no mystery (which, heaven knows, is a blessing), but the ensuing action in packed with thrills, furnished by a high class gang of crooks, led by an unusually savve and clever gentleman who is faced eventually with the electric chair for the justified murder of a fellow gangster. Sex Pictures at The Lincoln Draw Crowds The Star View of Life" as portrayed in a gripping motion picture drama and by two doctors with the aid of charta, models and silies is continuing to draw surprisingly large attentions to the Lincoln theatre. There is no doubt that the value of these pictures. They have opened the eyes of many men and women to the most vital part of their lives. The presentation of these pictures was originally suggested by a prominent church. Both from the educational and strictly entertainment point of view the performance given at the Lincoln is decidedly worth while. Incidentally, it ran for four months at the Times Theatre on Broadway. On account of the delicate character of the subject portrayed and discussed, the attendance for the first four days of the week (Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday) is limited to women, while men are admitted on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. At Renaissance Sat. That sensational all-air mystery picture, "Dr. Pru Manchez," now playing at the Renaissance theatre until Friday is proving itself to be the most mysterious and ever glued to the crowds that it is attracting. If you have not yet seen and heard this thriller, do so. It is one you cannot afford to miss. Commanding Saturday October 19 for five days, Montreal Chateau, in the outskirts of Paris, centers on the Renaissance theatre, Montreal Chateau, in Paris, to bring what Bodie Cutter and Al Johnson are to America. Trouble and for women to Rush, to the tropics, and back again to Brooklyn. Their gained interest is in the "legs of nation," their bifurcated digits over pretty, glitter. The two servicemen are of course, played by Victor McLaglen and Edward Love, while Lill Dumitres, Jean Eury and Lilla Carneill enact the roles of some of the nominate believers over whom these two-tailed, hard-built leather necktie and equitable. ROBERTA DYSON Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe Mixed at Home Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe Mixed at Home Here is the famous old recipe which in millions of ourselves have found to be the most dependable means of breakfast, and which is not only a moment to prepare and cook little, but it gives real relief for those prolonged courses that follow severe cold epidemics. It dries up dough, gets 25 ounces of flour, pours it into a pit bowl and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup or parched honey. Thus you may make cold milk ready-made for three times the old. It never spoils, and fastes so good that even children like it. The only dose of this simple sugar syrup is the best in the morning, and it is good and easy to prepare upon the beautiful tables, then filling the which system in throwing off cold milk and cocoa cream, and cocoa cream and cocoa cream, that is really astonishing. Pineus is a highly concentrated command of genisteine Pineus, containing the enzyme creosin, in a reaction with Sodium hypophosphite in medicine to make lithium in the course of treating counting obstructed and bronchial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Punxsu. Do not accept a prompt relief or money refunded. FOOTBALL Dunlane, N. W. The second North Carolina Wildcats team last season was defeated by the North of the strong Wilkesboro, Uniessville eleven from Ohio. The final game was 45 to 0, and the Badgers won horribly-fighting and outstanding line of ground, their team scored in the first and third quarters. The game, a home-court event for the local institution, was largely attended, with many people here from all sections of the North and South. Hampton Institute HAMPTON INSTITUTE, V. Oct. 12.—Playing a solitely defensive game and gaining only two first downs, the St. Paul Tigers attempted to hold the mighty Hampton Ironman apresert, and did it until they were out in the last quarter. St. Paul kept her hands off the ball during most of the game in attempt to keep the supporters in their own territory, and it was only after a day of punting, plunging and hard driving that Hampton worked through the brilliant tackling of Wells and past the solid Orange and Black line to win by a score of 20-0. It is reliably reported that "stockingless" lega have been the cause of several very serious accidents recently. A man actually ran into his wife "head-on" while he was looking back at a flapper groomed in a pair of slippers and a towel. The Power of Mind "Your meddition has come out and I'm going to tell you friends the wonderful treatment and how it is helping the sorrow in my life." Pleasant has a range of silent great entertainers at the Renoeser Discussion Theater, Western North Carolina, Norfolk, Indiana, and Nashville. Theater staff will entertain you with a variety of treatments, with underwear and perfume. If you find it hard, or need for free theater tickets, please call the theater office at 212-755-2222. MINT MISSEHAVY'S CONNIE'S NEW SONG AND DANCE HITS HOT Chocolatee HUDSON'S closed. Find tickets at www.mintmissehavy.com MIDNIGHT SHOW EVERY MONDAY Only $ PerMo. Don't go around unprotected another person. Read the table, at left, and find your insurance card. Check the card and tell you how much insurance is received for $1.00 per month. Note that you get twice as much if death is due to travel accident, because death is due to travel accident. Once insurance is secured at the present age, the cost never goes up. It is your duty to embank or hire to give your family protection or to give the coupon with $4.00 TODAY and be safe. Real What Others Say Too much cannot be said concerning your wonderful Insurance Co. Your prompt settlement of my cision me for Johnson, 523 W. 80th St., little Rock, Ark. Underwriters Insurance Service is most prompt and courteous. I recommend it to every one. I. B. Williams, 488 Inns. We pray that the Underwriters Insurance Co. may ever go on being successful, for we are highly pleased with its excellence. Elizabeth Marshall, Indiana. Ind. Carried His Money in a Cart Thru The Street—So He Was Robbed Of A Big Fortune Make your hair lustrous Banish gray hair this quick course from here. Keep your hair hair. Lustrous will do it in 12 minutes. Keep it up. Only a minimum of hair will do it. A minimum of hair will do it. A minimum of hair will do it. ery Lustrous is best. Will make you look your younger. This advantage—small oxygen state. Give yourself milk (Cx). Give yourself milk (Cx). Give yourself milk (Cx). Perhaps Frank Will Bank His Next Fifty Thousand Dollars By DONN BRYAN. After he had earned a fortune by his own ingenuity—having started life without a penny—he lost faith in banks and decided to keep the money where he knew it would be secure. But somebody tipped off a gang of robbers, and they took advantage of the opportunity. This, Frank Carroll, of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, awakened one morning to find that he didn't have a cent in the world. Built Large Fortune Frank Carroll is well known in and around Cape Girardeau. He is easily well known to the steamboat captains, the pirates, and even the crews. He used to sell fruit on the river front in the old days when steamboating was a novelty. And he would hold up his fingers and say in a way which has never been successfully imitated—"Many many" Something in his voice attracted attention, and people flocked to him. So much so, in fact, that within twenty years, he built a large fortune. Everybody knows that Frank Carroll was very rich at one time, and that he made it all himself, and since he has that reputation there are several theories as to how he lost his money. Today he has not a penny outside of what he makes peddling hot tammies to the people in the streets. Sometimes he makes two dollars a night, and sometimes he makes five. But he sold him, if ever, makes more than five. One of Frank's dearest friends is George Walls, on the hotel staff of the famioca old St. Charles. That is the hotel at which General Grant had his headquarters during the Civil War, and George is about as well known as Frank Carroll. They have been almost inseparable since youth, for the only time they have been apart for any considerable time was when George tourned the country with the famous Georgian Ministers, which was produced by Richard and Pringle. But George, after he had admired his exhibition to see the world, returned to his home, to Cape Girardeau, and to work at the same hotel where he had worked when a boy. Suffered in Paurenti. George does not exactly understand his friend Frank. He doesn't think anyone completely understands him. Frank Carroll is an original character; in more ways than true. For instance, he is a self-made man, and made a fortune, after being born in an impoverished home. His parents were very poor. His father worked by the only for a living, often not-finding work, during which brief period the children were likely to go hungry. Perhaps his bitterness of poverty was what turned Frankish mind in the direction he traveled. An any-night acquaintance. Frankly, he explained enough of this sort of privation so he resolved to come easy acquire a fortune. How well he lived up to his exaltation remains to be seen. WorSi Over $100,000 Frank began in 1922, working for himself, and when 1926 came, he had forty thousand dollars in the bank, with property valued at about twice that much. The bank went broke, but eventually Frank had drawn his cash out the day before with the exception of a few hundred dollars. This money he took. But he moved the biggest part of it, and he believes to this day that God and something to do with having the bulk of his bank account — the $100,000 he blim: "Frank Carroll, take your money out of that bank while you've got it. If you don't, you won't have any to take out." And that is exactly what Frank did. He followed the dictations of that hidden yet honest power. Time brings many changes, and after that bank failure, Frank Carroll feed a new day. He made up his mind that he wasn't going to risk any more banks. He rolled his money up in a guanny sack, and crammed it down into the corner of his pouch cart, in which he carried his fruits about town while seeking to dispense of them. Who would ever have thought of looking in a guyan sack to find forty thousand dollars in good hard money? Nobody. Therefore, some A man in a white shirt and hat stands beside a rickshaw, holding a bag. The background is a dark, indistinct area. This picture shows Frank Carroll and his push cart. Here he has a full supply of hot tables, and is about his daily business. From this cart that the bandits tool: the $50,000. This is a rather dilapidated means of carrying fifty thousand dollars. Frank traveled the streets at all hours of the night. He made it a point to sleep in the mornings and to remain on the job from dawn until daybreak the next day. The thought of going to bed while he still could sell a hot tamale never entered his mind. One had to remain on one's feet all day long, and the job was good. So Frank stayed on the job, and added more to that already substantial pile in the gunnyback in the corner of his push cart. Day by day this grew, hence Frank must have had pretty close to fifty thousand dollars at one time, although it is hard to believe that a man would carry that much money about with him in an old greedy gunny sack. However, since Frank says he had that much, who in there to dispute the fact? Then it is, a well known point that Frank Carroll is faithful. Therefore, when they held him up in the streets of midnight of the point of a point and dispossessed him of his money, the handis made a good haunt. Frank is firm in his conviction that someone tipped them off to his safety deposit vault, although he firmly admits that as to the identity of the account he be a total stranger. It happened this way. Frank was young and ambitious, no naturally, he was not unresponsive to the wills of beautiful women. Such as Violet Rawson, for example. Violet Rawson was an uncommonly attractive figure. She bailed from the Smith and but blood gushed from the Smith and but blood gushed and she possessed a way of expressing a tired business man that made the latter forget everything but her. She made it a point to impress Fearful Parent Makes Timid Child Many forces not upon the child, some of which the mother tools are beyond her control. A more or less constant atmosphere of anxiety hews about the majority of parents. In the clinic opinion, the doctor's or dentist's service to the child are lenient often, by the effort he must mind to satisfy the necessity terms of the mother more than the child. The young son's first day in school is often made miserable mainly by a deep anguish and fear of the depression. For much parents, life is just a series of decades which not only restrict usefulness and happiness but cause parents to hand them down to the next generation. So it is well to stop and consider this whole question of fear. Fear is one of the most important forces working within us. We do upon the mind of her victim—she was a siren, of course; the cuteness of her original mannerisms. Frank met her and succeeded to her dangerous charms. But most any man would have done that. She often said that she could captivate any man that came into her presence. She was always fashionably clad, energetic, vivacious, thrilling; and Frank began by spending small amounts of money on her, which he took from the huts roll in the burp each. But someone tipped the snail's tail and that night, when he went along the street, crying his wares, two men walked out from the shadows of a darkened storefront, throw their pistols on him, and seized the burglar who was crying, who could not save it and he offered no assistance. However, as soon as the desperate and the money had vanished, Frank ran away; left his car, and put the police on the trail of the ghost bandit. But the money was never recovered. Rieth then and there, Frank Carroll should have gone about his business of protecting what he had left in the way of properties. But he didn't. When it was all over, Violet Rawson jitted hint, consequently Frank lost money and girl. He had nothing left but a sack of clothes, and that was on his back. One of Frank's mates in "Trunk your friends," but cut the garb. This has been his policy since. Now, after having carried out a fortune by his own ingenuity and lost it, he is baby trying to get back to where he once was. Maybe he will. But there are a thousand chances against him. He was a brilliant man in his day, and is still very clever. Tidy Frank Carroll is trying hard to once more acquire a small fortune despite his age. much or refrain from many things, because of fear. Ey actual agreement with new-born babies in a maternity hospital in Baltimore, Dr. Wilson, a physical and psychologist, has proved that we are born with but one or two legs at the most. One of these is fear of sudden withdrawal of support or falling — another is fear of a loud noise. All other fears, he maintains, are taught to us or acquired from conditions around us. I can hear the average mother who dislikes giving up ideas which have been with her for years. "But," she argues, "do not some fears serve a useful purpose and keep the child out of danger? Must a child fear nothing—not even fire, or say an open window?" To which I make answer: "What then, shall we do about fire, etc., asks the still unconvinced mother. My answer is: Have baby in a play pen, bought, or home-made. Give him toys which allow him full play for his instinct for curiosity. Allow no one to call his attention to fire and later, when he can understand, deliberately teach him the uses of fire stressing these rather than the horrors and dangers which should be told without alarming detail. As for the open window, bar up scream it. By Shirley W. Wynne, M. D., Dr. P. H. Commissioner of Health, City of New York Out of the conglomeration of historical dates reminiscent of our school days, there is one that we are almost certain to remember. We may be a bit hazy as to just when the shot was fired that "was heard round the world," we may try valiantly to recall the exact date that Fort Sumter was fired upon—but I doubt. If there is anyone of average intelligence, from the smallest school child to the oldest man or woman, who does not know that Columbus recovered America on October 12, 1492. On Saturday the fourth and thirty-seventh anniversary of the day that Columbus first sighted the shore of is strange new world. It was a great achievement. It required an indomitable courage in those days of quixotic belief to sail into the unknown to discover strange lands. William T. G. Morton, a New York dentist, administered ether the extraction of a tooth, and a weeks after demonstrated it of banishing pain during an attack at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Because this operation was formed by the famous surgeon Collis Warren "this marked the ignition of the general use of an anaesthetic, but it also marks beginning of a controversy, the of which has not died away ever day. For other claimants came ward to share the honors for the prediction of anaesthesia. wrangling with the hesitant man to come to the shore was Long and Morton who played most important roles in the disc of the anaesthetic properties of it and I believe we are fair to be them when we credit Long with The world's Hall of Fame is filled with many another. Columbus—many another man of indomitable courage and superb faith who has sailed into the unknown and discovered other strange new worlds. There have been a most unbelievable achievements since that far off day when the white man came to disturb the serenity of the Indian. I want to tell you about some of these other Columbus-like men who discovered our present day world no medical science. I want to tell you about some wonderful discoveries and self-sacrifice and unimaginable ingor of these brilliant men that made these discoveries possible. I cannot, in this short space, attempt to review, for you the progress of medicine since the last Columbus. I shall have to be content to tell you the contributions of medical science to humanity in the last hundred years. After all, it is to these last hundred years that we owe our greatest progress. I recall the words of a dissatisfied college girl who recently gave vow to the fervent exclamation: "How I wish I had lived in the Middle Ages. Life was so much more interesting then!" I am not prepared to argue on the more or less interesting aspects of life at that period, but if prevalence of glauces, onslaughts of deadly disease with no means to combat such diseases were "interesting," I believe you will agree with me that the so-called commonplace of today's existence is much to be preferred! Although it comes a little bit outside of our hundred-year period, I cannot speak of my experiences without recognizing Jennifer's life-giving contributions to mankind, in Krus, with the introduction of vaccination And now, let us journey backward one hundred years. If the newspapers of 1888 had used our modern methods of journalism, important headlines would have blossomed across the pages at least twice that year. For it was just one hundred years ago that an Englishman, James Simpson, engineer of the Chelsea Water Company, introduced the purification of water by sand filtration. London was the name that year of the construction of the first filter for a public water supply. A mathematical theory of disease was still unknown, the filter was built to perform the offices of a mechanical sterilizer for the purpose of removing turbidity from the water. It was also in 1829 that Pierre Louis, a distinguished French physician, described the difference between typhoid fever and typhus fever, two diseases that had always been confused with each other. It was not, however, until 1850 that the causative agent of typhoid was discovered by Eberhard. For your information, typhoid fever is a disease of the small intestine usually carried by infected water, milk or food. Typhus fever, also known as spoiled fever, yet, is a disease of the small intestine solely by life, and is a disease usually associated with fifth, overcrowding and property. With the year 1842 dauned one of the most important advances in medical surgery. A Southern physician, Dr. Crawford W. Long, used either for the first time during an operation for the removal of a small tumor from the back of the neck of one James Venable, for forty years later. One of the most successful colored business men in the country is Mr. C. C. Spaulding, president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. He did not get there by influence any more than he holds it by good fortune. A man to hold a position of prominence must have talent, must know what it is, and then must use it. There are hundreds of men and women who have ability to lace up pants as Mr. Spaulding is doing but they do not reason their own ability. You may be one of these, you may have natural ability in the something with which you are going to do so because you must have knowledge of your skill. William T. G. Morton, a New England dentist, administered either for the extinction of a tooth, and a few weeks after demonstrated this means of banishing pain during an operation at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Because this operation was performed by the famous surgeon Joseph Collifliss Warrier this marked the beginning of the general use of ether as an anaesthetic, but it also marked the beginning of a controversy, the echo of which has not died away even today. For other claimants came forward to share the honors for the introduction of anaesthesia. Bitter wrangling marked the insistence of each man to the coveted honor. It was Long and Morton who played the most important roles in the discovery of ether, and in the introduction of ether, and I believe we are fair to both of them when we credit Long with having first operated using ether, and Morton with having brought the possibilities of anaesthesia dramatically before the profession. Another epocalyptic contribution to medicine, and one which together with the introduction of anaesthesia has made our modern surgery possible came twenty-five years after the possibilities of other had been demonstrably realized in the field of antiseptic surgery by Lord Lister of England. The discovery of anaesthesia had brought with it blessed freedom from pain—it had brought relief to women in childbirth—but without Lister's contribution, based on the observations of the brilliant Pasteur, the wonders of modern surgery would have been lost under the tragedy of infective gangrene that was the Waterloo of every operation. Before Lister's time, pus was supposed to be the necessary accompaniment of all surgical wounds. The English surgeon, impressed by Pasteur's studies on fermentation and subsequently appreciative of the vital importance of cleanliness Before, during and after the operation, devoured his anaphilic wounds. He was also the first to treat wounds. It is the germ-free surgery of our modern day that makes possible the many delicate operations on the abdomen, the chest, brain and joints. A hundred years ago, surgeons could attempt no more than the setting of broken bones, amputations of limbs, tying of blood vessels and the removing of superficial tumors. We give all honor to Lord Listen for his important contribution to the progress of medical surgery. But let us turn now to that greatest of all French scientists Pasteur who laid the foundation for Listen's contribution when he announced to the world the relation of germs to disease. The existence of germs had been recognized for 150 years previous to Pasteur's discovery but the origin of their shroud in infection. The thought had been prevalent that germs developed out of decomposing filth and rubbish. Pasteur demonstrated conclusively that germs are distinct living organism and that certain types of germs cause disease. I wish I could go into more detail here about the man Pasteur—inspired, enthusiastic, indeterminate in his work, searching ceaselessly, experimenting endlessly in a dangerous little world popped by geo-shaped, tiny living organisms that could wreak havoc with mankind. Pasteur investigated and cured the disease of sloth worms that threatened to ruin agriculture. He studied the formation of water and he discovered immunization against anthrax, and he gave to mankind the means of preventing hydrophobia. Experimental work done by Pasteur showed that germs could be killed by heat, and this discovery found wide application later in what is now known as pasteurization _____ (To be continued) When ever you tell one to remind you of something you are almost sure to remember it yourself. Properly, like happiness, comes not from cooking it directly, but comes us a by-product of the pursuit of good ideals. can find some success, if they will use their own abilities, cultivate them, and make a real effort to win success. Mr. Spaulding thinks very quickly. It takes him only a few seconds to make decisions. He is very practical. He has persistence. When he starts anything, and difficulties, good advice, he just sets his teeth tight together, and GOES THROUGH. He isn't a starter. No one is permitted to make or sell pictures of the Hon. Marcus travey, president-general on the D. N. A. of the world, published written consent. Divisions and Garvey Clubs please take note and govern yourselves accordingly. ALL DIVISIONS, CHAPTERS and GARVEY CLUBS that have been issued charters of the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ABSOCIATION, kindly forward correct name and address of PREDIENT and SECRETARY, to the Negro World office, 335 Lenox Ave. New York City. EVERY MONDAY Makes the opening of a new term for someone at this school. We prepare young men and women for offer work and business. Printed Information. Easter Mondays. NEW YORK ACADEMY OF BUSINESS AND PREPARATORY SCHOOL 677 LENOX AVENUE NEW YORK Robert W. Justin, Director Telephone: 212-262-2622 No, race of people has been anything worthwhile without the hearty co-operation of its women. From Eve down to the modern Whoopee Girl, women have been the world's best inspirationists. Throughout the scriptures you will find the records of women. However, they have not received a "square deal." If the recorded facts about women and their achievements, were not written by prejudiced men, who were simply carrying-out the unwritten-law of their predecessors, you of today may have known more about the fair sex. The annual feast day of the Jews, known "to Purim," is in reality, a day to commemorate Queen Esther's noble stand for the Jewish people against the evil wishes of those who were openly opposed to Jewry. Women have been always God's messengers. They have saved nations through their constant and unceasing desire to make the world a Treaven. From prehistoric days to the present time, nations whose women were the under-dogs, have never remained in the van for any length of time. Aside from the Chinese, East Indian and Arabian women, the women of African blood have not received the right respect which they are entitled to from their men folk. The dark races, while they are oppressed, they have for centuries allowed their, greatest asset—the fair sex—to be a heavy liability. The Egyptians, themselves, made a few serious errors, which were handed down to the Jews, who in turn passed them on other races. How interesting it is to note the progressive nations and the respectful way in which they care for their women. No doubt, their successes may be traced to the real success of life, "peace in the home." More respect for colored women, if God is to be on your side. Almost all small colored ventures, whether in business, educational or social, have been failures. These failures primarily were due to passive opposition by women whose relatives or acquaintances were the operators of such ventures. Do you believe that an honest minded, ambitious woman would like to see her father, husband or brother fail in business! Every woman, in business, is the center of life. She knows her working for others, with few exceptions, does not pay. The colored woman, like the woman of the white or other race, would like to see her made dependent in business for himself. But she has been taught a lesson in the school of experience, that the men of her race do not respect her that in spite of the desire to go into business, they lack the will to make a sacrifice to stay in business. And, an usual, she has to be the chief loser in the transaction. This is why most colored women prefer men who are in steady jobs, with small, but regular salaries. How could women see otherwise when they have never received any business training? There are thousands of young women who with a little training along modern business methods, may be able to go into business for themselves. They need help. If there a colored man who would be willing to help without having to copy the results, where would he be? in the colorado that who really responds the colored women? You say you are a woman who make relatives that which you can afford. Very well, no one doubts you. What about other women of your race? Would you help to educate or train a colored girl who is not a near relative of yours? Are you aware of the fact that the girl of today is the woman of tomorrow? What advice could a woman give you when she is not qualified to render such services? You are flattered when you hear someone say that the Are you conscious of the fact that within every colored girl's breasts be the heart of a queen in the making? Do you expect God to come down and help your colored sisters? God has a fixed way of His own when it comes to helping his children; and they must be governed by His law. To help others, especially women, is in harmony with the Divine plan of the Master. Jesus was a strong defender of the fair sex, and His masterful talk on the treatment of women at the "Portico of the Palaces of Women" in Jerusalem one day, no doubt, fired the proud and wealthy ruler; to pay Him a midnight visit. Women: were the first to meet the Master when He rebuilt the body in three days, and they shall be the first to greet Him whenver He comes again. We know that we simply cannot keep them down. Let us learn to respect them. From now on we will use the fair sex as our greatest asset rather than our liability. We car and will do so. May God help us to do it. Inflammation There are many causes of inflammation of the grims, chief among them being microorganism, trauma and diet. Microorganisms act by the process of fermentation of carbohydrate foods lying beneath the free margins of the grims, forming acids which irritate the delicate epithelial lining of the gingival crevice, producing an inflammation, and when a tissue becomes inflamed the viability is lowered, the pathogenic bacteria gain a foothold and infection gets in. The same condition may contain from traumatic occlusion, only that the irritation is caused by the trauma; again inflammation is set up and consequently the vitality of the tissue is lowered and it is subject to infection. Diet may cause inflammation of the gingiva reflexively through the pneumographic nerves and by polygermal injury in the blood stream. Other agents applied to the gum tissue cause inflammation and overhanging edges of crowns and fillings, bridges, but fixed and removable, dentures improperly placed, poor contact points absence of contact, hot drinking, or excessive smoking, improper breathing and a vacuum produced in the mouth from swelling while the lips are closed during sleep. Another great cause is the neglect to replace teeth on room or the grims have broken after extinction. In preventing this condition, first the mouth should be properly cleaned and teeth thoroughly sealed. Overhanging edges of fillings and crowns should be finished off to proper contour. The occlusion should be examined to see if any tooth is in receiving too much stress during the process of dissolution, relieve this stress by grinding until the tooth is completely removed. Replace all missing teeth with artificial ones to resolve ammonolytic efficiency. To keep the tissues healthy they must have exercise as we recommend a diet of course foods such as apples, into celery, lettuce, apparagus, raw cabbage, watercress, whole wheat, graham, rye or corn bread, and toast fruit of all kinds. These foods besides exercise to the structure, polish the tooth, massage the grims and on account of their thorough content prevent constipation. A man isn't licited until he begins to complain about the interpretation of the rules. 1954 72A Avenue, carruth 125th St, New York pointillism, paintbrush, paintbrush pointillism, paintbrush 80 PER CENT BETTER! HOW DO YOU FEEL? Husbandes de la universidad e las cuales han pasado que no se guarde; Si el siguiente fue su amor mutuo de la universidad, la anilo de la naia, el llamado de las ofenas, la paz universal, el frigor de las batallas trocado por el himo tanto de la concertia y la indulgencia para las fallas de nosotros amantes, el "Auroros los muesa a los otros" del Divino Mestre que predica la fraternidad por el mundo en las Sinagogas y en los templos. Nosotros, que nos llamamos con orgullo hijos de Jeaux, que aceptamos su dogna y su doctrina, que estamos compenetrados de la elevación de ideas que encierran las sublimes maximas ejercidas por El no llevamos a la practica tan alto ejemplo. La unificación de miestro elemento se impone. Protejamos los intereses de la raza. Distinción de clases forzada por los tal llamados intelectuales. Anhelamos un sitio donde vivir en seguridad. Iniciación de reformas. Fraternidad y humanidad son calabras sinönimas: la una va ligada a la otra por misterioso induja porque la mente no concibe tu auto fraternal en la soberbia, en el orgullo; no puede abrigar sentimientos de fraternidad el vanidoso engreido con sus riquezas; no puede abrigar sentimientos de fraternidad el que alardea su sabiduria y desde au omnipotente solio lanza rayos como Jupiter, dios del Olimpo, sobre los mortales, para cegarles con su brillo. Al considerar que la intriga y la malicia han influido en cierto de nuestro elemento, hasta el extremo de intentar destruir la gloria de esta organización, introduciendo subterfugios en el programa de nuestra raza; y cuando mas adelante consideramos que aquellos a quienes poco les importa nuestro futuro, han patrocinado otras agrupaciones con el objeto de minar la utilidad de nuestro movimiento, llegamos a la conclusión de que un algo sobrenatural nos ha acompañado en nuestras horas de amargura y esa misma influencia nos ha de guiar hacia nuestro destino. No puede alentar sentimientos de fraternidad el egoista que se aisla del resto de la humanidad sin llevar su, concurso al concierto del progreso universal. Fraternidad, santa palabra que debiera pronunciarse de rodillas, tu enseñas en tu sublime esencia que significa tu nombre! Vienes del cielo flotando con una vestidura de luz, como una llamada, y la fimbria de tu manto orlada de gota de rocio que el sol abrillanta con sus rayos. Tú encierras todos-los tesoros del amor; llevas al lecho del que suire, el consuelo; compartes el heroismo en las batallas, encerrado en el humilde saval Toda esa artimaña a nuestro alrededor no nos ha de confundir. Permaneceremos tranquilos y con nuestras miras en la realización de nuestros mas altos ideales. Los programas enunciados por otros nos dicen que tendremos un futuro mas brillante. No hemos de discutir ese punto pero si hemos de manifestar que hemos estado escuchando lo mismo por mas de cincuenta años, estando aun tan lejos de nuestra felicidad como lo estabamos entonces: Notamos para mayor desgracia que nuestro elemento se hallá dividido en dos clases; aquellos que se denominan intellectuales y aquellos a quienes los primeros señalan como la masa común. Los que integramos esta organización estamos satisfechos de pertenecer a la masa comun del pueblo. Hemos de indicar al grupo que se denomina intelectual que está muy equivocado al creer que ha de obtener grandes resultados del uso de la clase de política que otros sabios de otras razas han practicado en las masas de su propio pueblo. Debieran darse cuenta de que las masas despiertan actualmente al toque de llamada del clarín del progreso. de una injuer; mueves el corazon de los, que sienten tu divino halito, y llevas la esperanza y el pan a los nogares pobres. Eres tu la que bendice las. butenas obras; la que, desdejando tronos deslumbrantes, marquere conriente como una enducha de amor; admira, cuando el sol caje pleno sobre laurtida frente del honrade labriego, las gotas de sudor que singen liquides diamantes, y ve en sus harapos cierta incognita grandea. Tú visitas los talleres, sanitarios donde el hombre toma en sus manos la herramienta del trabajo que enmueblea y dignifica. Tú visitas las nulas donde la infancia aleta como alondras canoras, degliando al aire el velo que cuente en inteligencia, y que apostolos de la humanidad ilustran. La era del grupo privilegiado va de paso y muy pronto ese mismo grupo se dará cuenta, de que el viejo orden de cosas no ha de repetirse. Cual paráditos abominables ese grupo ha existido extrayendo la savia vital a las masas. Son tan inteligentes que siempre han tenido que depender de la misma del pueblo para poder vivir. Y es tiempo que cese sal avejación. La mama del pueblo esel en camitio de dominar todas las situaciones, dispontendose a realizar un cambio en el estudus de la sociedad humana. La fraternidad es una de las virtudes privadas que más honra al miembro. La fraternidad supone, la fraternidad entre las personas que la probaron y cigno la liquidarse en el superioridad, violenta, ilegible de lo que no lo pido, la dominancia, por virtud de la profunda hijo de la filiagua voluntaria, se han unido en la excesión de las hermosas "filiagua voluntaria". La fraternidad "que fujid propuesto por uno de los países más cultivos del mundo", por Francia en 1789, como la formula simbólica de la empeción de los problemas, y como el credo de la nueva humanidad. Los cal Jardinados Intellectuales por regia general no han hecho otra cosa que openerse a todo movimiento de reforma, porque sus ideas son extremadamente conservadoras. La mama del pueblo que tanto ha sufrido por centares de años ha die introduciris medidas beneficiosas, las cuales serán de muy pico agrado a esos parásetas sociales. Qué nos ha de importar el desagrado que a ellos ocasiones cuando nosocros, la mama del pueblo, nos votemos bien servidos? Por consiguriente, la flareguidada resuscita en sí mismo, un principio de liberación y de igualdad. Dengue urgente que tremella como diviren un pobre libro. El cristianismo la proclamó y el transgreso del trierque lo in tecnicidad. La Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra es la calzap a nivel pari todos aquellos que, como parte inegreance de la raza negra, hayan de realizar el que bajo cirunstaurcia alguna no extirirá ni dirección ni superioridad asumidas por influencia sino por medio de servicios beneficiosos. Hoy mas que nunca nuestra raza necesita de sus hombres serviciales en arte, en ciencia, en industria, en comercio, en política. Cuando el grupo de nuestro elemento a que nos referimos se distinga de ese modo y en beneficio para su propio raza, entonces y solamente entonces hemos de calificaries no solamente de intelectuales sino de verdaderos patriotas. ¿Qué immino que todavía no me un hecho? Puede llegar a cero; las tendencias democráticas propan a hacerlo un sentimiento sodial; el progreso y la civilización en encerración de lo denial. Mientras tanto, ese hermano sentimiento hace latir al unión los corazones. Es tierra y anida en el corazón, es luminoso e invade el cerebro. La fraternidad es el amor a nuestros sentimientos; es prochamar la igualdad no con palabras, sin con litchos; es compartir nuestro bienestar, con el desvalido, consolor el Al Hincerado del Distrito No. 19 En pas de comparación apelaciones a 141 distrito del Distrito No. 19 para que contribuya con su voto al triginfo de una causa justificada. La misma competencia de más gran estad de demanda una administración hotirada. Ello puede obtener eligencia los hotirres que constituyen el ticket republicano. A quién se debe la abrumadora mayoría de las pasadas elecciones? AL PARTIDO RE-PUBLICANO. Esa misma organización defiende los principios de los candidatos que somete a la sanción del electorado el 5 de noviembre proximo. Demuestre gratuidad especialmente a tres de esos candidatos. VOTE POR LA GUARDIA, RIVERS Y MOORE. Vote candidature republicana integra el 5 de noviembre. COMITE EJECUTIVO DEL DISTRITO triste, amparar al que lo ha menester. Es el amor al nifo, al pobreces el amor a todo lo humilde, a todo lo debil, a todo lo que raclama apoyo. Es la negación, en fin, de quebro ser individual en aras de nuestros semejantes. Requisitos Para Ser Miembro De La "Asociación Universal Para El Adelanto De La Raza Negra" Con la cantidad de sesenta centavos todo el elemento de nuestra rua puede ser miembro de la "Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra." Esta suma incluye quota de entrada venticicino centavos y pago del primer rues, trencinico centavos como miembro. Todo miembro debe ser provisor de una Constitución, o Libro de Leyes de la Organización valor venticicino centavos. Si hubiera en la villa, pueblo o ciudad donde Udv vivo una División autorizada de esta Asociación, hafu su aplicación en ella; en caso contrario, mantea su aplicación al Cuerpo Directivo de la Asociación remitiendo la cantidad de un dólar. Al recibo de esta cantidad le card envidio por correo los artículos antes. Moncionado de la Asociación. La aplicación debe ser dirigida a: Sr. Secretario, Oferta General del Cuerpo Directivo. "Educivos para" (G. Sipe rural St. Andrew, Jamaica, d. W. F. Acecunefemos a aquellos que cuvieron sus cueidos de Gigero Directivo lo han enchid, seminario o cedida tres meses, para evitar la constante transmission, de la tierra en cada oficina todos las meses. Aporté en tela para el gran movimiento de todas las epocas por le redemption de Africa y el adelanto del negro en todas partes. ALLEGORY — Thomas M. Lynen, Commissioner of legislation for the State Commission, announced today that he had directed the State Comptroller Mary E. Thorne and his designation for brain to resolve a majority of state general fund money. The link comp- piled M. Lynen's widely distributed throughout the state. Trustees, be- lief of the Comptroller joins in the designation, will receive a total of $3,800,000. The State Income law provides the designation of banks by the Commis- sionary of taxation and finance and the State Comptroller. The amounts allocated to the bank in Commissioner Lynne's designations State bank deposits are secure, generally less by banks and the Commerce Commission felt there should be a wider distribution. This money belongs to the people generally and should not be concentrated in a few of the larger banks, and the Tax Commission head. "It is money collected by the State in taxes but which the State is not yet ready to spend. Pending its disbursement by the State I feel it should be placed where it can help the credit attention for the largest possible number of people." "Many of the banks in this list have never before received a penny of State deposits. There is no reason I can see why the small town banks should not receive the same consideration as the big banks in New York City, Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Albany, etc. "These banks have been selected without regard to the political affiliations of their directorates and independently of the suggestion of any political leader." Commissioner Lynch sent the following letter to each of the banks on the list: "As you are probably aware, the finance law provides that the Comptroller shall jointly name depositories for general fund money and the custom is for them to agree upon the amount of the deposit. It please me to say that I am proposing to the State Comptroller an additional deposit of general fund money with you and have suggested money with you." The first regular full meeting of the New York Urban League Executive Board was held Monday evening, October 7th. Executive Secretary James H. Hubert declared that the organization was never in a more healthy condition; that the activities for the past summer months have been more far-reaching than ever. In addition to serving as a cleaning house for other agencies using Green Air Work, over 500 boys and girls were sent away to camp at the expense of the League. Since July 1st, a radio broadcast has been conducted over-Station W. N. Y. C. weekly, with prominent speakers, dealing with various phases of Negro life. Mr. Hubert also reported that the financial response thus far has been the best since the organization was founded. For the first time it was possible to go through the summer months without making loans. 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