The Negro World
Saturday, February 8, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
The Interpretable World
The Voice of the American Press
Negro World
A Newspaper Designed Briefly in the Language of the Negro Nation
VOL. XXVII.—No. 28
NEW YORK; FEBRUARY 6, 1930
Africans at Home And Abroad Awake to Need of the Hour
Race Realizes the Hypocritical Designs of Alien Exploiters in The Land of Their Fathers-Reaping Africa's Wealth Under Guise of Teaching Christian Principles-Justice for Black Man
When Africa Calls Four Hundred Million Sons and Daughters of Ham Will Stand Together — "Africa for the African" Is Our Rallying Cry
"We Love Peace and Justice; We Must Build Our Own Nation" Says President-General
Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting:
To us has come the news of Africa's gradual awakening. The news but augments the steady growth of the spirit by which we hope to conquer:
At last the natives in Africa now realize that all European
Coppigni
Burberry
London
exploiters are the sanie, whether they be English, French or Italian. There is only one thing for four hundred million Negroes to do, and that is to unite and give the alien robber exploiter and gospel-grinder hell in Africa.
Religious Campaign
Under the guise of religion they have made their inroads into our native land, telling us of Christ, while they busy themselves looking for gold, rubber, oil, coal, diamonds and other minerals. Now, that they have discovered these things, they are endeavoring to establish themselves permanently on the land with the hope of making it another "white man's country." It is truly said that "fools rush in
Housewives Organize To Demand More Jobs From Business Men of Harlem
Blumstel Store The First Break
That a concerted effort has been made to secure jobs in the local stores, in Harlem by Negroes is evident to anyone who attends the weekly meetings on Monday evening of the Housewives League at the New York Urban League. These women have organized into sub-committees such Committee on Chain Stores, on Prison, Fair Weight, etc.
the New York Ruban League ferred with Mrs. Ellen Blumgarding employment of Negra saleswomen. Mr. Blumstel arranged for a second conference tended by other members Blumstel family.
At this conference it was only agreed to begin the program in 1890. "The amusement of
the New York Ruban League, conferred with Mrs. Ellen Blumstein regarding employment of Negroes as saleswomen. Mrs. Blumstein later arranged for a second conference, attended by other members of the Blumstein family.
At this conference it was definitely agreed to begin the program early in 1880. "The employment of elevator, starters, operators and doormen," said Mr. Brown, "in the initial step in compliance with the Depot League's
Howard University Closes Its Week of Prayer
A persistent and militant campaign for the abolition of all forms of race discrimination, against Negro workers and police.brutality against Negro and white workers, will be started in full swing by the International Labor Defense.at a mass protest meeting to be held at St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th Street, New York, on Friday, February 5, at 8 p.m. sharp.
Today, with the conditions of the workers beeping worse and worse, unemployment, wage cuts, long hours, low wages, speed-up and many other miserable conditions which the workers are forced to bear, the besses are increasing their attacks upon the workers as the workers show more and more determination to struggle against their unbearable conditions.
Howard University
Its W
Rev. Howard Thurm
Stresses Importance Upon Studen
WASHINGTON, D. C.-The Week
of Prayer at Howard University was
observed from January, 19 to 27, with
a series of five sermons delivered by
the Rev. Howard Thurcan, college
preacher of Spelman Seminary, Alkanta, Ga. It began with the regular Sunday morning service in Andrew Bankin Chancel.
On Monday Rev. Thurman addressed a faculty luncheon at Foon, at which time he called attention to the importance of faculty influence upon the students' spiritual life as a means toward enabling them to synthesize the various elements of truth discovered in their quest for learning.
Frank Crosswaith to Debate Geo. Mann At St. Luke's Hall
All roads will lead to St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th street, on Thursday evening, February, 6th, when what promises to be a very interesting debate will be staged.
The question at issue is: Resolved:
"That Under Socialism Men Will Be
Afforded a Better Opportunity for
Self-Development Than Under Capitalism."
The principals in this debate will
be Frank R. Crosswalt, prominent
Negro Socialist writer and 'orator, organizer of the United Colored Socialists of America, affirmative, and Attorney Geo. Hiseam Mann, white Republican, for the negative.
An silver cup will be awarded to the winner of this debate. The winner will be designated by popular vote.
The debate starts at 8:30 p. m. sharp.
Hon. Fred R. Moore, editor of The New York Age, and member of the Board of Aldermen, will the chairman for the occasion.
The City'
BY SHIRLEY W. WYNNE, M.D:
Despite the changeable weather
during the week ending last Sat-
tuary, January 28, there were only
467 new spots at precaution re-
ported, and only 770 soothed, a eight-
decrease in soot, but a drop of 48.
The widespread race discrimination which is utilized by the bosses to keep the workers divided, the shooting of Steve Katovis, a militant worker who was active in organizing Negro and white workers in the building trades, the repeated ratios by the police upon the homes of Negro workers in Harlem, all these testify to the growing attacks of the bosses upon Negro and white workers which must be fought against.
The I. L. D., a working-class organization of Negro and white workers, fights against all these persecutions of the workers, for full racial, social and political equality for the Negro race.
Every Negro and white worker of Harlem must attend this meeting and voice their protest against race discrimination and persecution.
ersity Closes Week of Prayer man of Atlanta, Ga., ace of Faculty Influ- nts' Spiritual Life
On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Rev. Thurman presented three affirmations of faith. He affirmed his faith in life because in its highest reaches it calls to goal which are never reached, and to answer demands which are never satisfied. He affirmed his faith in mankind because today mankind is fundamentally an increasing revelation of a high moral purpose in the universe. Finally he affirmed his faith in Jesus of Nazareth because he found in Him the "yes" of all the deepest affirmations of the human spirit.
Discussion groups were led by Rev. Thurman, President Johnson and Dr. Chase R. Wesley. Assisting the questions suggested for discussion in the several groups were the following: What attitude should the college take in reading the Bible? Does college tend to change the religious belief or the attitude of a student? If so, why?
(Continued on Page 198)
Fishermen
To Celebrate
Anniversary
Friends of the Thomas Maylor
Lodge, No. 76, Independent Order
of Gillican Fishermen, Inc., are in-
vited to attend the celebration of the
first anniversary of the founding of
that lodge, which will take place
in room I, Lafayette Hall, 165 West
131st street, New York City, N. Y.,
on Sunday, February 9th, 1930.
A very interesting and attractive
programme is being prepared for the
occasion; and it is expected that there
will be a large number of friends
and representatives of the various
other fraternal organizations present
to join in the celebration.
Proceedings will begin at 2:30 p. m. and a banner time is anticipated.
's Health
new cases reported. The general death rate for the week was 18.23 per 1,000 population, as compared with 14.30 for the corresponding week's average for the last six years. There was a jump in the number of births there being only 2011 many babies, as compared with 2010.
Henry Street Settlement Opens Music School
We are starting a Sunday evening course from 7:30 to 9:30, conducted by Taylor Gordon, who is to train a Colored people chorus for one hour and give individual instruction for the other hour.
The purpose of this course is to help preserve the original spirituals and to inspire people who come to learn to sing them in the right way.
This is the first school to start a course of this sort, and we are very anxious that people should know about it and have an opportunity to join:
India Opens Independence Move Today
British Fear Violent Outbreak; 15 Leaders Jailed; Giant Bomb Plot Uncovered
By DAMOUDAR V. GOKHLAE
(Copyright, 1830, by Universal Service)
LAHORE, India—The Indian declaration of independence from the British Empire, conceived by the executive committee of the Indian National Congress, will come up for acceptance or rejection by the 300,000,000 in India tomorrow, which has been proclaimed "Independence Day."
On the eve of the demonstration, which authorities believe will change from the campaign of civil disobedience to open and violent thunderstorm, British officials today arrested fifteen of the leading militants in a house-to-house search of Colombo.
Jolice unearthied documents indicating an indie-wide conspiracy for
(Continued on Page Seven)
Race Relations Group Cites 10 Year Gains
Educational and Other Advantages Follow
ATLANTA, Ga.—A decrease during the past ten years of 88 per cent. in the annual lynching record is cited as obvious evidence of improving interracial conditions in the South, in a statement just made public by the Commission on Interracial Cooperation on the completion of its first ten years of work. The steady decline in the number of lynchings, from 83 in 1919 to eleven in 1928 and ten in the year just ended, the Commission considers a significant and encouraging index of changing public sentiment.
Another evidence of progress which the Commission counts equally im-
(Continued on Page Eight)
Negro History Week Begins February 9th
During the celebration of Negro History Week, beginning February 9, the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History will hold in Washington, D. C., a mammoth meeting to do honor to the living ex-members of Congress of the Negro race and to the present representative who is now a member of that national body—H. P. Cheatholm of North Carolina; Thomas R. Miller of South Carolina; John H. Lynch of Mississippi and Oscar DePriest of Illinois.
Commissioner Wynne in Radio Talk Assures City Can Be Made Smokeless
Health Department's Vigorous Crusade Against Excess Smoke Has Backing of Mayor Walker Certain of Public Support
New Orleans Division Stages A Monster Mass Meeting
For the first time in New York City's history smoke as a health problem has been recognized by the city. The Department of Health last winter succeeded in establishing a Smoke Abatement Committee. And in the 1930 budget money has been provided for twelve additional sanitary inspectors and three engineers who will work to eliminate smoke throughout the city.
New York can be made a smokeless city. Those of us who are directly concerned with the welfare of the city have determined to drive from New York every vestige of excess smoke. We of the Health Department are fighting the city's smoke, because it is a health menace. But smoke abatement work appeals also to both the aesthetic and the business sense. Smoke endangers the health of the population; it obscures marsh the beauty of New York's buildings and takes dollars from the pockets not only of New York's business men, but those of
New Orleans D
A Monster
Dr. Klienberg of
Speaks on "Africa
BY IDA THOMPSON
On Sunday night, January 20, the New Orleans Division of the U. N. I. A. August, 1929, of the World, held one of its uniquely large mass meetings.
The procession of the Legion, Motor Corps, Black Cross Nurses, Juveniles, U. A. Chief and Officers made a beautiful and spectacular appearance.
"The President, S. J. Patterson, called the meeting to order with the singing of the opening ode, "From Greenland's Ice Mountains." A very brilliant and stirring address was then delivered by the president which was received with thunderous applause. His address injected a new and more determined spirit into all who were present to continue up the heights of success. A beautiful selection by the U. A. Clich, entitled "If Garvey Goes With Me I'll-ge" won great praise.
The rending of the President General's weekly message by Mrs. Ida Thompson, assistant secretary, came next followed by the singing of the President's Hymn by the congregation and the offering was lifted.
The president then introduced the
Excelsior Divis
Enthus
Everyone who visited the meeting
of the New Excelsior Division, U, N,
I. A., August 1929 of the World,
agreed that its meeting held in Room
No. 4, Lafayette Hall, 165 West 131st
street, on Sunday night, February
2nd, 1900, was a most enthusiastic
obe.
There was a large turnout of the members of the division, as well as of old members of the U. N. I. A., who were visibly pleased to be able to come once more under the name of the great organization, of which the Hon. Marcus Garvey is the founder and President-General; and enthusiasm ran very high.
At precisely half past eight o'clock, the first vice-president, Mr. J. Sams, neal, called the meeting to order. After the processional "Walk On Eternal Light," came the singing of the opening song "From Greenland's Jay Mountain," followed by prayer from the gates by the disbanded B. K. Burton, and the sermon "Of the Sage, our Mother Region."
Assistant in the preparation
of the president, Rev. J. K. Bentley,
J. M. Bentley, Rev. Vera Pryorbaugh,
J. K. Bentley, general president, Rev.
K. M. Bentley, chancellor, Rev. K. C. Pryorbaugh,
president, and Rev. K. Wheeler,
bach. Gilbert, minister, president,
Mr. Bentley, William Pryorbaugh.
even the humblest dweller in the city.
We speak gibby of civic pride. We ask visiting celebrities to comment on our skyline. Then we permit a heavy layer of soot to tarnish and deface our finest buildings. We allow the trees and shrubbery of our parks to wilt beneath the soot which chokes the delicate pores in their leaves.
If civic pride means anything, should we not do all in our power to restore to the buildings of the city the beauty which inherently is theirs? Should we not give our parks the chance to become the oases of green which they were originally intended to be, thus affording joy to those who behold them and rest to tired men and women who seek shelter in their shade?
The economic waste incidental to a smoky city is evident to all who investigate the matter. This waste affects many classes and conditions of citizens. By filling the air
(Continued on Page Seven)
Division Stages
Mass Meeting
Columbia University
a for the Africans"
speaker of the event) in the person of Dr. Q. Klenberg of Columbia University. The Doctor took a his subject "African for the Africans." The speaker said that he would give his personal ideas and beliefs about Negro social problems. He stated that it is true that the majority of the whites do believe that the Negro in interior; but that there is no proof of any infertility of the Negro, and what makes the white man feel superior to the Negro is his long strides in progress ahead of the Negro. He has had more opportunity, better schools and colleges, and therefore has a right, as he thinks, to be superior to the Negro.
Dr. Killenberg's address was very lengthy. The thinking audience listened carefully to every word that he said, and weighed them to their own satisfaction and understanding.
The president then rose for a minute's talk. The audience was swayed with enthusiasm to hear him in his usual manner—make a plain to those who ralsunderstood the objective of the U. N. L. A., its real significance.
A roaring time was had by all. The meeting adjourned with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem.
vision Holds
asiastic Meeting
retary; Miss Selina Davis, corresponding secretary; Capt. Robt. Chambers, treasurer, and Col L. Thompson, chairman of trustees. The opening address was made by Mr. Samuels, who in an earnest, impaining manner, cailed his hearers to a realization of the duties that confronted them; then in a few well-chosen words, introduced the presi-
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THE NEGRO WORLD
900 ELSEM, PARK
New York, N.Y.
Telephone: 212-755-2000
Email: negro@thenegroworld.com
vast throng gathers in Liberty Hall for the carrying on of racial uplift and betterment on Garvey's Day. Speakers thrill audience and encourage followers to make 1930 a banner year of success. Lt. Thornhill and Capt. Alleyne urge necessity of swelling the ranks of the U. A. Legions. Miss Collins, Vice-Pres., says President-General knows no defeat—400 Million Negroes with him. Juvenile C. Corps presented unique program at 3 p. m. meeting. New members swelling the ranks through efforts of Rev. Green, giving away Negro World papers weekly. Big program at Liberty Hall for Sunday, February 9th. Installation of officers at 3 p. m. - Hon. Mme. S. V. Robertson and other speakers.
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Sunday Night, February 2nd, 1920. New York City, N. Y. A very lively and interesting meeting of the Gagvey Club, Inc. was held at Liberty Hall, 2687 Eighth avenue.
The meeting opened with ritualistic services by the Rev. C. P. Greon, chapain, after which the gavel was turned over to the vice president, Mr William Rivers, who presided. A selection by the band under the able direction of Prof. Ulric Hassell, and the choir led by Mrs. Dumer, simply excelled themselves. A solo was rendered by Miss Grace Culmer of the Motor Corps, and a recitation by Master Williams of the J. C. Corps entitled "The Bugle Sound." Much credit is due to Master Williams for his splendid exhibition. The new members inspired us with their "sunritual songs" (Meadows Brown, Hap hill, and others). We are expecting some more treats from them now.
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that they have linked up with us for service. The President-General's message was read by Mr. L. McDonald, Bugler of the U. A. Legions, then cause the chairman's opening remarks. Mr. William Rivers (Vice Pres.) Lady president, vice president, chaplain, Col. of the U. A. Legions, members and friends, brothers and sisters: It affords me no small degree of pleasure to be among you, and to be about my Father's business—to take orders from my undaunted leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey.
As a young soldier in the ranks and a new student, I am endeavoring to climb the ladder of fame and success, and be of some good to my race. My dear friends, let us stand behind the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Let us keep him cheered...Let us keep him pleased; for he has said—"If France and Italy can fly the Tri-colors! If America can fly her Stars and Stripes; if Japan can fly her rising Sun; then 400 hundred million can fly the Red the Black and the Green.
Prof: Theophil Salnave
Lady president, officers and members: Tonight the leader of this great movement is planting his footsteps on the sand of time. Footsteps that shall never be erased; footsteps that shall urge us on to follow to the goal of success and victory; footsteps that shall give fresh inspiration and cour-
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years. The next abbreviation (called by
some) means to open the eyelids and
blinks of his eyes. So he goes the
dreamless, that he are plunged in fear
that he shall fall, and there are not
any of us going happily by, nor
certain of them, until we understand,
the timelessness of their pastity.
If we are too old to learn, then let us turn our attention to the young, who must be the man and woman of tomorrow. We need take off our hats to our leader, who is in the same man since the death of Thomas L. Overture to have come to us so holdly in defense of his race and people the world over.
Rev. C. P. Green (Chaplain)
May it please the lady president, officers, Colonel, members and friends: We are gathered here tonight as nation-builders. Your mind then must be on building a nation.
If we expect to be of use and service to our race, and to the cause that we serve, then there must be perfect harmony in our ranks. We must learn to obey the dictates of our leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, for he it is he who is at the helm of the ship.
I want each member by now and the next convention to help in-bring in hundreds of members. If anyone wants to join hands with you let them come in and help to redeem our motherland Africa. Every black man and woman should be found on the roll of the GARVEY CLUB books, for this is a black movement. Since you honored me by electing me as your chaplain, I shall serve you to the best of my ability in the cause that I love.
Miss E. M. Collina
May it please the lady president,
vice president, Chaplain, Colobel of
the Military-Units, Black Cross Nurses,
choir, members and friends of
the Garvey Club of the Universal
Negro Improvement Association
of August 1929: I feel happy at all
times to be able to speak to you
for a few minutes on the cause that
is nearest to me.
I want to inform those who were not present this afternoon at the GARVEY'S DAY PROGRAM that was given by the J. C. Corps, that you missed a wonderful treat: I sat among the young artists of my race, and I felt like becoming a young juvenile if I could become a child again. There were singers, violin players, electrochists, poets, and piano artists who made us, the older ones, feel inspired to know that those young minds find hearts that are being prepared to take up where we may leave off when the time comes. Each child did its best in a manner benefiting the occasion. They were highly appreciated by the audience that listened to them.
Much credit is due to the officers of that corps, and to the colonel that is taking interest in them. They are our tender plants, and we are responsible for them; so, care and tend them while young for the best interest of the race.
At this time one and all of us are very much interested in the legislative campaign that our leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey has been engaged in. We note by the papers that Mr. Garvey and two of his candidates were defeated in the general election. We want to let the world know that Marcus Garvey known the defeat. How can a man be defeated, when his cause for the betrayment of his people and race is a righteous one. How can he be defeated when he lives in the hearts and minds of four hundred million Negroes of the world. Why should he be considered dangerous? Why should he be considered undesirable; when he only wants
We would like Mr. D. E.
Thorpe, formerly of Teila,
Spanish Honduras, to get in
touch with our office at once.
THE NEGRO WORLD
355 Lenox Avenue, N.Y.C.
When ordinary duties leave you tired and worn out; when pleasure and recreation seem "flat" and dull; when mere trifles cause worry and depression—don't go on until you deplete what strength you have.
Follow the example of thousands of women. Begin taking St. Joseph's G. F. P.! This good tonic will help to restore energy and vigor, stimulate the appetite steady
John Allen, Sr. (Gatesville, Presidency)
Mr. Christensen was president of
fourteen presidents and friends. I am
very easy to be here tonight. I am
great to see my people in large numbers
here. I am sending you into
the folds of the Garvey Club, for
we have been the "star in the dark."
We have a leader second to none.
He says "If you follow me I will deliver you."
I am convinced that our leader is the right man to follow. I want to remind those that; try to lay
stumbling books in the way of Garvey—that awful shall be the woe of
those that try to impede his work.
I heard him say in the Madison
Square Garden, the: I shall visit unto
the third and fourth generation
that stand in the way of progress
for the Negro peoples of the World.
Let not this fall upon any of us, but
rather let us work together with
might and heart in the pushing
forward of an African redemption.
The meeting was brought to a close by the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem and the Besediction by the chaplain.
Don't forget the African Picture Show on Tuesday night, February 4th, at Liberty Hall. Admission 25 cents.
Newark, N. J.
The meeting of the Newark Division No. 888, of January 15th, was opened in its usual form, with the singing of "From Greenland's Icy Mountains." All officers seats were declared vacant, except the president's. The lady president rose and asked when did this happen? The president's answer was he was appointed. The members said no, he was elected by the membership. Heavy argument began. The members fought the question for two hours. The president picked up his book and laid the gravel down and walked out. He was led to the door by his friends in enthusiasm. The meeting was reopened by Major Thumley. The offices were held open until we hear from the Hon. E. E. Knox.
Mine. M. L. T. De Mena, International Organizer of the U. N. I. A. (Aug. 1929) of the World, is now in Jamaica, B. W. I. She sailed from New York on the S. S. Favorina, of the DiClorgio line, on Wednesday, January 29th.
Andrew Johnson, 17th president of the United States, was a tailor by trade during his early life.
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Concerned leadership is an urgent need of the Universal Negro Improvement Association at this time. Trifles or persons who do not realize the responsibility of guiding the destiny of 400,000,000 Negroes should refrain from accepting the duties of this tremendous task.
The individual who claims that he cannot be "bothered" should remain in the ranks, for service in the direction of our organization demands sympathy, tolerance and patience. It is disgusting to note the apparent disregard which some of our officers have for their constitutional oaths and obligations.
Service in the Universal Negro Improvement Association means the dedication of one's whole life to the cause of the redemption of our Motherland, AFRICA. And until this obligation has been completely realized—duty claims the attention, time and sacrifice of every registrant.
SERIOUSNESS OF LEADERSHIP
Heat what the Hon. Marcus Garvey, our peerless leader, says concerning the seriousness of leadership: "There is nothing in the world as serious as leadership. We can all follow, but we cannot all lead. The leadership of this age must be of the soul and not only of the head, if we are to be just to our fellows and win the love of God."
The above excerpt is taken from "An Analysis of Warren G. Harding," and from Vol. I, Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey, we find this significant epigram: LEADERSHIP means everything — PAIN, BLOOD, DEATH. Let all those entertaining ambitions of elevation in the ranks of the great G. N. I. 'A. ponder well this vital interpretation of service to the NEW ETHIOPIA. Count well the cost before aspiring for the honors.
Having once enlisted our service in the fight for Africa's Redemption, there should be no turning back. Crit-
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ticism is merely a test of one's strength and self-confidence. Who one is convinced that their stand is a right one, criticism serves to increase that conviction.
* To desent the cause under the fire of criticism denotes weakness of character, and is equivalent to treason to 400,000,000 trusting souls. Cowards quit under difficulties, and quitters have never won any struggle of consequence. The world despises a coward, irrespective of his excuses.
No greater honor can come to a member of our ranks than to be chosen for leadership in the service of the U. N. I. A., because the U. N. I. A. represents the restoration of Ethiopia's ancient glory, and the emancipation of her scattered millions. Such an honor calls for all the deyotion, loyalty and faithful-
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Sewanhah, Ga.
Mr. Sewanhah, Dumaine,坐, the president of the Dumaine school, will give the regiment some news of the Military Hall, West Mary and Alton street, at 6:00 p. m., with the president, Mr. J. A. Boltman, providing.
The meeting we expected to its usual form by our chaplain, key, "A. B. Curnegia. The President-General's weekly message was read by the general secretary, Miss Mary L. Mitchell, "I Am Coming Home," was sung by the congregation.
A program was rendered as follows; Mrs. Lillie R. Swans, the lady president, acted as mistress of "ceremonies. A welcome address by Mr. R. Jinkins, chairman of trustee board; solo by Mr. N. Lewis, a reditation by little Miss Minnie Lee Swans, an address by Rev. G. B. Oprior, a paper by Miss Mary Mitchell, subject "The Negro Will Win"; a recitation by little Sarah Lee and remarks by Mrs. Lucille H. Gzaham. Some very instructive remarks were given by Rev. Hayes. Three beautiful selections by the "Jubilee Quintette, and remarks by Mr. J. Singleton. A noble address was made by the president, Mr. J. A. Boltram. His subject was, "The Contribution of the Black Man to Modern Civilization." It is needless to say that the speech coming from Mr. Boltram was enjoyed by every one present.
The singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem "Ethiopia" and the benediction brought the meeting to its conclusion. MARY L. MITCHELL, Reporter.
Columbus, Ohio
The Garvey Club held a very enthusiastic and interesting mass meeting on Sunday, January 12.
Among those present who made addresses were the president, Mr. G. R. Christian, S. F. Gumms Wm. Washington, Ross Crowell, Mencer-Cunningham, Martha Hudson, Rosetta Bell, Oliver Williams, Frances Williams, Lena Myers and Lela Smith.
A letter was received from Mrs. M. L. T. DeMeens, International-Organizer, telling us of her intended visit to the club to speak to the people of Columbus on Friday night, January 24.
The club decided to give great publicity to the people of Columbus, and it was agreed to let the admission to the meeting be free so that all who want to hear her can do so. We are looking forward to a packed house.
The unemployment situation is still acute in Columbus. There has never been such a state of unemployment for the last ten years. Hundreds of people are to be found at the employment offices every morning trying to secure work. We sincerely hope that things will change soon, so that the people will have some work to do.
If the Democratic party was in power one would be tired, to hear that they are the cause of the slump
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We can glad to know that our leader is once again holding the first war, and the Army Chief makes continued success in every line of endeavor that he puts his hands to.
Atlanta, Ga.
Sunday, Jan. 19th, the Atlanta Division No. 623 assembled at Liberty Hall, 323 Edgeworth Avenue, with a large number of friends and well wishers in attendance. After the ode was sung and the ritualistic service performed by the Chapkin, Rev. J. Jason Rakestraw, the president, Rev. J. Hockett; turned the meeting over to the 2nd vice-president, Mr. Lonnie Cross, who was chairman of the meeting. The program was in charge of Mrs. Mary K. Peavey, and Miss Naomia Brown, the latter presiding over the juveniles. After a lovely selection by the choir, the president-general's message from The Negro World was read by Mrs. Katie Jones, and commended by Mrs. Mary K. Peavey. Solo by little baby-Willson. Address by Rev. James Rakestraw, who impressed on his hearers the vital need of Garveyism. The juvenile's program follows: first the welcome address was delivered by little Beatrice Carter, who doesn't seem to be over four and a half years, held her little head high and in making her welcome address said: you are welcome to the pulpit, you are welcome to the floor, and if you do not like our program, you are welcome to the door. Others on the program were: Miss Naomia Brown, Robert Lee Gather, Earnest Brown, Duet, by little Beatrice Carter and Perce Carter, little Miss Margaret Kate Jones, Jahes Stroud. The complimentary remarks were made by the president. The meeting, closed with the singing of the National Anthem and the benediction by the chaplain.
MRS. KATIE JONES,
Reporter.
Rosemont, W. Va.
Rosemont, W. Va. Division No. 465,
had a mass meeting on Sunday, December
8th.
The house was called to order by
the president, who made a few
remarks, then turned the house over
to the recording secretary to direct
the program.
The meeting was for the purpose
of raising finances to help the Paren-
tent Body. We haven't many mem-
bers, but the few that we have are
100 per cent Garveyites.
There was a song by the class, then the program started. A paper was read by Miss Arroma Hollyfield, subject, "It Pays To Sick; paper by Miss Laura Holyfield, subject, "The Voice of Marcus Garvey;" song, No. 8; paper by Miss Minnie Owen, subject, "Patenting;" paper by Joe Hollyfield, subject, "Organization." Vice president W. H. Owen made an interesting address. He used for his subject, "The Negro Is Sick and What It Will Take to Cure Him." When he ended he said it would take Marcus Garvey and the U. N. I. A. to Cure the Negro. This ended the program for the day. The secretary then turned the house over to the president.
The president called for a collection. The meeting closed with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem.
JOE HOLYFIELD, Reporter.
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All Members and Friends of Nearby Divisions are Cordially Invited to Attend A Monster Mass Meeting
Sunday Afternoon and Evening at 3 and 8 P.M. FEBRUARY 2; 1930 To witness the Installation of the Newly Elected Officers at 3.00 P.M.
Special P. B. Representative, August 1929
HON. M. E. KELLY, Pres., Brooklyn Chapter
RT. REV. R. R. PORTER, N. Y. C.
HON. E. CAPERS, Pres., Garvey Club
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Missouri, Ohio
The Department Station No. 6
moved the request to meet in
Boston, December 28 at 5 p.m.
The military department lead the
procession followed by the chair. The
devotional exercise was conducted by
the chaplain, Net. A. G. Ellenburg.
Hon. Garvey Garvey's message was
heard by the secretary, Mrs. Louis
Edwards. God Bless Our President
was sung by the audience who stood
at attention and faced the Hon. Marc
Garvey's portrait on the wall. The
president of the Cleveland division.
Hon. S. V. Robertson, again delivered
another inspiring address to a
packed house of interested listeners.
The meeting closed with the singing
of the National Ethiopian Anthem.
The Cleveland Division No. 59 held its regular Sunday afternoon conclave, January 5, at 2200 East 40th street.
The military ranks lead the procession with the choir singing Shine On Eternal Light. Rev. A. G. Ellenburg, chaplain, conducted the spiritual part of the services. A selection by the choir followed with the opening address by the third vice president, Lieutenant Parks.
The assistant secretary, Mrs. Wilbert, read Mr. Goveye's message from the Negro World. God Bless Our President was sung by the audience. A quartette of four, Mines. Edward, Hudson, Townsel and Goldsmith was met with much applause. Rev. A. G. Ellenburg delivered an enlightening address along the lines of a free and redeemed Africa. A selection by the chief—Stand By Me was greatly appreciated.
The Hon. S. V. Robertson, president, was the principal speaker on the program, he spoke to a crowded house. The meeting closed with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem.
On Thursday, December 26, the Cleveland Division No. 59 lost one of their most faithful members, Dan Davis. The members of the Cleveland division mourn his loss and offer his bereaved family their sympathy and condolence.
*Sleep on, dear brother, sleep on!*
Till the day when Africa is redeemed
On that day four hundred million Negroes
Will give a loud cry of thankfulness And you, too, Dan Davis, shall be esteemed
And help us rejoice.
E. WILBERT, Reporter.
Boston, Mass.
Sunday, January 19th, will long be remembered in the history of the Boston Division, U. N. I. A. This being Children's Day, the program was remarkably rendered by the children. The meeting opened with the processional "Shine on Eternal Light" and prayers by the acting Juvenile chaplain. Then followed our opening ode, "From Greenland to Tey Mountains." The President General's hymn and the Ethiopian Anthem followed: The program rendered was as follows:
Opening remarks by the chairman,
Master Darnely Corbin; selection by
the juvenile choir, reading by Mrs. E.
Davis of the juvenile department,
piano solo by Master Louis Gurins,
reading by Master Roger Foskey,
piano solo by Miss Floria Sileyne,
reading by Master George Bynice,
selection by juvenile choir, vocal solo,
Master James Stuart; piano solo,
Miss Edna Bynice; violin solo,
Master William Howard; reading,
Miss Elma Lewis; offering appeal,
Miss Elma Lewis; piano solo, Miss Leonora Griffith; reading, Master Clarence Corbin; address, Master Victor Bynice; vocal solo, Miss Jane Medley; reading, Mrs. Annette Lewis; address, Mr. Ormie Jordan.
The meeting closed with the recessional by the juvenile choir and the benediction pronounced by the acting Juvenile chaplain, Master Vernon Blackman.
CLAIRMONT LEWIS.
Active Member of Boston Division,
U. N. I. A.
Guantanamo, Revived
By H. Stnowall Jackson
It has been a long time since the outside world of the U. N. I. A. and A. C. L. has heard anything of Division 164, but once again we can inform the others that Quantanamo Division 164, has undergone a great revival.
On Dec. 1st, 1929, we held our election and on the 15th we held our installation. This was carried out in fine form and spirit by the retiring president, who performed the duties amiably.
A special program was prepared and was indeed enlivening. With a few well chosen remarks, the expresident, Mr. Alexander Fredericks, formed the officers-elect together, and performed his duty in a very stirring manner, imploring the officers to protect the dignity of the chairs in which they will be seated; and to uphold the traditions of our forefathers, and solely bend on the U. N. I. A.
After the ceremony was over a very interesting program was handed to the installing officer to continue. The Liberty Hall was packed to its utmost for the first time during two years. There were addressed by the various elected officers, but nothing so impressive, nothing so soul stirring, nothing so invigorating and full of pathos, as the address by the lady president Mrs. Adina Sexton. She touched the hearts of her hearers and gained quite a few new members. May she be spared long, to live to fight for Africa's redemption. We hope that the other ladies of the Division will with one heart rise to her assistance, in the work for the division and for the Caucasus Africa.
Some of our "Nightingale" also appeared. A most melodious solo by Mrs. W. Ritter, and a duet by Miss Phillips and Mr. Campbell were certainly the talk in the hall; but the first vice president, Mr. Samuel Johnson charmed the congregation with as tuneful a voice that ever could be anticipated. Others who assisted in the program were Miss Downer, Mrs. McLeannon, Miss Lewis, and the Missen Iva and Chara Hillhouse.
Where are our Carveviteen of the future? Please parents, send them out again. Come on out young and old, our Liberty Hall needs you. Though cannot be sold of our redeemable organist, Miss Winnifred. She can be found ready at all times. Great praise is due to her in bringing off such a successful musical pro-
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Bahrainian run high and fly for us all to attend our leader, to put this great program open, and not to cease until the green tree, the roots and the sands of Africa be covered with the Black, the Red and the Green.
Fellow men of this race, Sir Harry Johnson told us that we have not got race affinity. We do not know even how to revenge those that do us wrong.
This is the hope, the blissful hope, which Jesus' grace, has given, that from Burmah's shore, from Asia's strand, from India's burning plain, from Europe's cold, and Columbia's land, we will meet in and form one Africa band.
Kinston, N. C.
The Kinston Division No. 757 met on Sunday evening, January 5, at Liberty Hall.
"From Greenland's Ice Mountains" was sung by the members. Prayer was led by Mr. M. C. Harris. The hymn "God of the Right Our Battles Fight" was sung by the members. The seventh chapter of St. Luke was read by Mr. M. S. T. J. Moore, and the front page message of The Negro World was read by Mr. M. S. T. J. Moore.
"God Bless Our President" was sung by the members, and the meeting closed with the Ethiopian National Anthem.
M. J. NEWBOURN, Reporter.
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The chapel, however, has no room for the new book on the history of the church. Mr. J. Ewen, chaplain, took care of the religious presiding, Mr. C. A. Howitt, presiding, read the brinkage of The Negro World to the delight of his hearers. The literary part of the program was as follows: Song by the choir, "Beautiful Words of Jesus," followed by a recitation from Miss W. Peters. Address by the Second Vice-President, Mr. G. Thompson; Solo by the Third Lady Vice-President, Mrs. E. Hutchinson. Hymn 69 from the ritual was sung, while the offering was lifted. At this juncture, the chairman, Mr. R. E. Whyhn, gave a very eloquent and inspiring address, driving home to his hearers' the importance of supporting the U. N. I. A. a beautiful duet was rendered by the Lady President and Mr. Dawes, followed by a solo from Miss May Kennedy, "Farewell, Dear Beautiful Day." Little Miss McKenzie, a juvenile of the division, gave a fine address to the astonishment of her hearers. Others numbers were rendered by Miss K. Whynn and Mr. C. A. Howitt, followed by the closing song from the choir, "This Festal Day." After the announcements were made, the meeting was brought to its close with the
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Other speakers were our first vice president MF J. Parker, and Mr. I. seph Darry, Jt.
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"Making Our Dreams Come True."
PSYCHOLOGISTS tell us that we can make of our lives whatever we can desire to make them; and that the things we think of constantly will manifest themselves in our lives in the days to come.
That this is true is evidenced by countless thousands of earth's mortals. Many are the souls that have developed themselves, and made masters out of what formerly were mere wrecks and derelicts on the sea of Time. Many a man, beginning life in the obscurity of the desert has ended it on the summit of renown, because of the fact that they had each a vision, had sublime faith in themselves, and in their purpose to make something out of themselves, faith in their God; and would not allow anything to dim that vision, or turn them away from the course they had mapped out for themselves, or to keep them from endeavoring towards the goal of their achievements.
Our dreams can be made to come true; no matter what those dreams may be. Providing your desires are just and righteous, and your soul prepared for any trial and test that may have to be encountered in the upward climb to success and perhaps greatness, you will eventually bring your dream into realization, if you will keep unfalteringly, and unswervingly pushing forward to the attainment of your aims.
Think great thoughts. Think righteous thoughts. Think high, lofty, and righteous thoughts; desiring them to bring into your life a reality that will match them physically. And no matter what happens, even if the heavens fall, keep pushing every day of your life towards the great objective you have set out to attain. You will eventually get there. There is no power on earth, or in the waters under the earth that can keep such an earnest, eager, persevering and determined soul from reaching the goal he has set out to reach.
This is an unalterable truth. This unaltering faith married George Washington and his ragged and ill-shaded troops from their cheerless livance at Valley Forge to success and victory over the British forces at Yorktown. This same faith and undimmed vision, and unaltering pursuit of the goal of their desires led Whittington from a nameless home in the country to become three times Lord Mayor of London, then as truly the sacred shining light, in the British Commonwealth of nations. This same sublime faith will enable this race of Negroes, individually as well as collectively, to carry out any of their plans, no matter what those dreams, those plans may be if they are tempered with justice and righteousness. This is equally true, if this applies to grave-digging in Timimeteon, or rearing an oxen, or a republic, any kind of government of Negroes, for Negroes, Negroes in the fatherland Africa. Forward Fellowship!
NEARS DISPATCHES coming from Haiti keep us reminded of the fact that something is needed to be done to remedy the situation in that unfortunate land.
All is not as quiet in Haiti as one would be minded to think because of the lack of scare headlines on the front pages of our daily. It is no secret that there is still a great deal of dissatisfaction, and unrest in Haiti, and that the fear of the treatment that may be met out to them by those who trample them, as it were, is all that is keeping this unrest from manifesting itself in violent form.
For the honor of America; to take the stain, the stigma that would be bound to remain, if justice is not done, and done quickly, it behooves the President to speed up the work of the commission for the investigation of the conditions in that Caribbean republic, and do what common decency and plain justice demanded as a crying need. Haiti should not be allowed to bleed to fatten the whirls of greedy capitalists, as has been charged.
The sense of fairness of the American people will revolt against anything but giving a square deal to this little island republic. Haitians, like all other people demand, the right to govern themselves, and to say by whom they shall be governed.
"Subscriptions Keep Rolling. In"
HERE THEY COME! Subscriptions, and more subscriptions.
The great interest that is being awakened in our big subscription drive will continue to grow and grow for we are going to leave no stone unturned to make this drive a great success.
Negroes all over creation must be brought to a realization of the fact that The Negro World is a bearer of hope and inspiration, and a voice crying in the wilderness, and calling to our fellows and saying, "Rise up and be men; for the year of your universal freedom is coming soon. Therefore prepare for that great day."
The Negro World is the mouth-piece of the Universal Negro Improvement Association August 1929 of the World, and as such is the bearer of glad-tidings of great joy to the millions of our brothers and sisters, now sitting under alien dominion, in the fatherland, giving them courage, aspiration, inspiration and hope, against the dawning of that day, when the Negro will come into his own.
Send in your subscriptions "Now"; and that of your friend also.
"Pure Stupidity"
THE HARD TO imagine the lengths to which some people will go to justify and some per theory of theirs, no matter how collections that may be. The following quotation from "The Nature" will give an idea of the integrity "Racial integrity has long been a phrase to analyze with a special purpose continues to be invested in because it represents the United States courts. The city of Milwaukee, Virginia, is one of the preparation of racial integrity, understood by established, in 1908, to designate the parts of the city in which whites only
The Supreme Court will almost certainly set aside constitutes a kind of moral contempt of court, for which unfortunately there is no legal penalty. It is taking an unimaginatively long time for the South to learn that discrimination against the Negro simply because he is a Negro is unconstitutional.
This needs no further comment. We bring it to the attention o' the reading public, and leave it there for their judgment. It is just pure stupidity.
"Negro Business Has a Good Outlook"
JUDGING FROM the reports coming from various sources, there is every reason to expect that the outlook for Negro business during this year is very bright.
This means that Negro business men will have to be alert to take advantage of the opportunities that are coming their way, and to cement friendships for their trade, that will show a balance on the credit side of the ledger, when the books are balanced at the end of the year. There is no doubt but that there will be a great need for earnest co-operation among the people of the Negro race, wherever they may happen to be, to foster, and aid, and support the various business enterprises that are conducted, and will be established during this year, if the race is to make a representative showing, and to even begin to take care of the employment needs of a small percentage of the people of our group.
Negroes everywhere also ought to realize that the future, of this race depends, to a considerable extent upon the economic foundations which we lay today. It is high time that we all come to an understanding of this fact, and set ourselves to do our portion to bring into realization the existence of strong commercial, and industrial organizations within the race, which will be a guarantee for the future economic stability.
The campaign that is being waged by this organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association, August 1929, of the World, The National Negro Business League, The National Urban League, and other groups ought to receive a great deal of attention, encouragement and cooperation, from all our people; so that when the year 1930 goes down into history, we will have reason, not only to be proud, but we will have the sweet consolation of having shared in the profits that have accrued to increased business for the Negro peoples of the World.
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
(With apologies to Edwin...
Markham, Benjamin B. Lind-
sey and George Greel.)
We are the little people.
We work from dawn to dark,
Our Master's the Jesus.
They His Sass the Heart.
To hundred billion Shinies
Oh, myriad of toys.
We flithy politicians.
Your golden girls and boys,
Lecherous dough boys,
Ye gonorrhea marines,
These hungry baby fingers.
Put the money in your jeans.
Ye small and great alike
the wisdom of a priest
Ye other burgers nor
But the sweetness of the
Thus speak from Echt to West.
So send from North to South
And the heart will be consumed
By the Spirit of His Mouth.
Before We Now Depart
A Parable
By
Chaise Newland
Once upon a time there was a great sage who lived in a fair city up in the mountains.
One day a great detective appeared before him and begged of him to interpret a dream which he did not understand, and which merely pungled him.
The sage took pity on him and said, "Be seated, listen closely."
"The men which you say, in your dream represent the deval of God, the army, the navy, capital punishment, child labor, free thought, etc.
The Spirit of the Anti-Christ, knowledge of whom you are seeking.
"May I ask," said the detective, "how do these men deny God."
"In thought, in word and in deed," said the sage, "they deny that he is omnipresent, that he is omnipotent
Editorial Opinions
"I GOTTA SONG"
Negroes are supposed to be a musical people. Are we fast losing this heritage? Negro music has been acclaimed one of the real conributions of American civilization, but it took the white people to make the discovery and give the appreciation before we would admit it. Roland Hayes would probably be a bellhop today if he had to depend on the support of big races. None of us became admired of the spirituals because they were born of slavery. It was a false pride. But we are getting over that.—The St. Louis American.
The Right has never been opposed to wise leadership, but laments the fact that past history records too many self-styled impurposed leaders, when always unwilling whenever they had taken it, was in the majority of cases compromised by aggrandish that they didn't know about. Fragmented bureaucracy hindered up by inefficiency and history in its 11 may governments, hindered to the wind.
and that he is omniscient. They deny
his word, his work, his law, his promis-
e, his justice and his mercy."
"And the bleeding heart which I
saw, what of it?" said the detective.
"That is the heart of Christ," said
the sage, "by whom I am justified."
"His judgments are just."
"If we deny him, he will deny us."
"And that I may know that you
speak the truth," said the detective.
"By the testimony of God," said the
sage.
"But who are those in white?" ask-
ed the detective.
"They were those who had washed
their garments as white as snow."
"Farewell," said the detective.
"Adieu," said the sage.
135th St. Library
Notes
Due to the great interest in the Malatian exhibit of books, manuscripts and prints, which are on display at this library in the Division of Negro Literature and History, there was held a discussion on Haiti in which H. P Davis, author of "Blink Democracy", Arthur Rulal and Arthur A. Schoomburg took part. This meeting was held on Thursday, January 30, at 8:30 p.m. and was open to the public.
An exhibit of paintings and drawings by S. Filla Blount, a Brooklyn artist is being held in the Division of Negro Literature and History.
I would like to say that we of the Southwest Division No. 228 are living some very valuable property and we want it known everywhere so that our few members may be numbered among those who are still on the job. All concerned must keep it in mind that we are not going to lay our arms down "full Africa is free." Yours in the cause of Negro Uplift.
H. U. KOSS.
414 Walker St.
Kansas, City, Kan.
will not sell our birthright to advance their own interest.
"Young men for war and old men for counsel," should be so constituted to mean "young men for leaders and old men to follow."
Our educational institutions are grinding out capable young men to be the must look for our Moses. The editor is an old timer, but augusts this, because he believes to our prepared, pure hearted, young men, we must look for leadership. So we should be willing to accept without bringing in play one of our favorite section: "Opposing and fighting."
The proper kind of shrewdness among us means our salvation. The Old Testament Eagle.
HONESTY MOST PREVAIL
Whether a mobile or private life
beaky is the best policy and even
the most important reason by your
own side is always and always
by your side or even along the line
of government. We believe that
your safety and well-being will be
the most important factor in your
life.
What manner do we see in superstition?
That we see not superstition kill;
But as we look on further
We see them lynching still.
What we see them lynching,
What we see them lynching,
And say we see pederas,
Great God! what do we see?
We ask, What is the matter?
A voice said "something wrong!"
To find this don't go batter—
Your brain—how 'eer strong.
Because the Gospel preaching,
In holding back some points;
But if it still lacks reaching,
Twill never mend those joints.
We look close to the altar,
'Way in the house of God,
We note that something falter,
And something looking odd.
So bing us clearer tiding,
for dark-days rend in twain.
Bring forth those parts you're hiding;
Lest you shall toll in vain.
The morning sun is shining.
So wake! lest ye forget—
Must millions go on pining
And constant trust you yet?
No—see the church there falling,
I said "you have been told."
And hear! God's voice is calling
"Why laying chill or cold?"
But God's mill grinding slowly,
Against the mighty foes;
Those wrongs lent to the lowly;
Shall pay back fold to fold.
Editor of The Negro World:
Please permit me space in your grand paper to express my appreciation on your subject, "The Force That Moves the World."
It makes our hearts rejoice when we read between the lines the lesson of the sober-minded Negro who has been so graceful and able to scatter the ceremonial seeds among the race which has now taken roots the world over.
Suffice it to say, it is a blessing to have leaders of such who can teach, and give to the world the right thing, at the right time. Yes, at this time, we are responsible as our future depends on us to make it what we will, and that can only be done by supporting the U. N. I. A., which is the glorious Negro, the only solution of a free. "We at this time do not mean to waste time over selfish individuals, who are trying to deprive us from our glorious organization for the betterment of themselves. If we must work for self-government, and to be president, and governor, we must do so gracefully.
We have lost confidence in our brothers. We have been fighting with them politically to free and govern ourselves. But what has happened when our brothers saw that we got the honor and everything was ever they turned and shot us down for the presidential position or honor that they should have bestowed on us, and forgore that they made a pledge. We now hear another cry of self-empowerment for the Bentley West Indies, but what change will that bring to the four hundred million Negroes of the world?
G bless the leaders of our race, Long Live Marcus Garvey. Yourr in the cause of Africa. In ROPER. Cayo Manabi, Oriente de Cuba.
A Brazen Shenic
1633 Exington Avenue.
Dec. 16, 1929.
New York City, N. Y.
My dear Mr. Editor:
I crave an opportunity from you
to let me air my resentment to the
British for their recent action in
slaughtering defenseless African women.
The news was flashed from the Labor
Government in England that the
British were experiencing serious
unrest in Nigeria, Africa. Yes, it may
be so but what is it all?
It seems to me, though, that
the Bank of England is getting dried
up and the only means of reselling is
to tax those poor unfortunate people's
food.
In my life, I was never, never no shocked and, so touched. My blood ran cold. Ah! it is pure barbarism. The like of it surpasses the history of Julius Caesar. Blackmen and women what must we do in a situation like this? This is terrible! It is terrible! Our backs are to the wall indeed. If we cannot do anymore now, but let us organized strongly, to bring our influence closer to our brothers and sisters, because this situation is absolutely deplorable. It is, moreover, over-riding the patience of blackmen as never before.
To assure myself of this state of affairs I reread the news report twice, to fully ascertain the fakehood displayed, because if it puts me in a position to understand and know why little-of-South Africa raved as if she stealing in America affords to me a chance to hide her, which news he had to prove more
George M. H. Cox
Editor of The Negro World;
Kindly give me space in our indispensable weekly. The Negro World, to say that:
"As we look far back in history, we see where such narrow gauge man, as Alfred of England, Frederick of Prussia, and a few others were called great. And what have they done? They have done but very little in comparison to the Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General of the clation, Auguste-General of the World, Universal Negro Empire.
"Now think of such qualifications. If Marcus Garvey is not honored in history as Marcus Garvey the Great, or the world in general would consider that the esteemed gentleman was robbed of his rights.
"There is no movement in the world that has got the entire globe in confusion as the N. U. I. A. It has taught from the aged down to the suckling, 'Race-Pride.' It is a movement for a just cause, and that cause is Nationhood.
"Marcus Garvey has got tremendous Will-Power, and that's why he is great.
"Thank you, Mr. Editor for your space, so that I am able to express my mind to the entire world."
"Yours for racial uplift.
J. R. THEO. LEWIS,
Black Smith.
Dear Editor:
We have just set foot on the threshold of the year 1830, a path we have not passed heretofore, and we do not know the way. I am much enthused in the way the Kiddies contribute to your corner. Therefore as you are the way for the aspiration of us kiddies permit me a space in your valuable corner just to say a few words.
Nearly three hundred years ago our forefathers were taken from their African homes and scattered in the U. S. A. and the various West Indian Islands to salgify the walls of a dominant race. Thanks be to God to give the kiddies this age a path bright, so pure, so inspiring as your-corner that we ourselves our minds to higher ground. Who can tell—at the close of this year some of us who are now in our embryo state may be great statesmen and statesmen for a new and redeemed Africa.
Therefore I congratulate you for
your beautiful work. You are the
cloudy pillar and the fiery clouds and
therefore we will continue to keep
the path that you are leading on the
busy line. I believe that every boy
and girl of our race is proud of you.
Therefore I will say to those who
have not seen the light yet:
Africa's sons, why will you scatter
Like a flock of frightened sheep?
Africa's sons, why will you wander
From a love so pure and deep?
Was there ever kindness, hope,
One so loving, one so more?
Come along like little love birds,
Lay thy troubles at her feet.
Mr. Editor, Dear Sir:
After reading the Negro World,
and noting its contents, I think it
is one of the leading papers of the
world.
It advocates the great movement and organization of the U. N. Y. A. Mr. Garvey should be called the great leader of our race throughout the world, not for what he may do, but for what we have all done.
The words of Jesus to the people were "Believe me for the world sake, not for what he expected to the Lord and to send one man to lead Lord and to set Israel out of Egypt. Moses led them out and the Lord had given us a second Moses to lead us out.
If we consider the brotherhood of man and fatherhood of God, we have done our duty.
Mr. Garvey has put his life up in stake for the Negro race. Can we afford to throw down a man, like that? No!
I am a minister and some of the biggest knockers are preachers, and why, I can't tell, except that all want to lead, but none want to follow.
I am requesting a small favor, one which may be of help to others, as well as to myself.
When Division reporters send in their reports for publication, as some shown on page three of the World, kindly request them to give the address of meeting place and publish with report in The Negro World. Nowadays, meeting this is that I am at some time, each in a different city, several times in the year, and I am unable to find the meeting places in some of the cities I visit.
Hoping for The Negro World and
U. N. I. A. a happy new year, I am
respectfully yours.
The area of the world that allowed him to make the impact on the world was the European continent. His perseverance and ingenuity were in a public school and a rigorous psychology were in a private school and a generous psychologist was in a private school at his home in the simplicity.
Such a case is that of the National Geographic Society which recently issued a new map of Europe. It was revealed that Europe has now begun its official language. White Christian missionaries, the vanguard of western commerce, until recently, take notice!
It used to be an axiom that whatever the area of a country it must have one language if it is to be considered a civilized country or a capable country for self-government. This fallacy was invented during the Victorian days, and it was instantly taken up by our brethren missionaries who discovered innumerable languages and dialects in Africa, in China and India.
Then the politicians and missionaries alike sang in chorus that those countries were fit for neither, self-government nor redemption unless they were able to adopt 'languages' and adopt a civilized European language, preferably English. Other European colonists, of course, wanted their own national language.
It thus came about that China had 199 languages, India 300 and Africa over a thousand! The poor politicians had a very romantic hallucination, but poor critical faculties.
If official languages were to be recognized in China, India and Africa, we wonder how many there will be in reality! And reversing the process if we hunt up the dialects of each official language of Europe how many languages and dialects will Europe possess? It is our bet that Europe will surpass all other geographical areas of equal population in the multiplicity of tongues.
—To take the latter question first. It is said that the dialects of no two counties in England are understandable to each other. They have to converse in their lingua franca, The King's English. Therefore, in England alone there are more than forty "languages" and dialects. Add to them the Scotch dialects, Welsh dialects and the Anglo-Celtic dialects of Northern Ireland.
Take France, if you please. Parisian French differs from innumerable dialects in various parts of France. The Normandy, Gascony, Provencial, Pyrennese, Southern or Marseillais, Swiss and other dialects would make, "languages" in the haliculation of our "politicians and our missionaries". The case with Germany, Italy, Spain or any other country is no different.
What these gentlemen do not understand is that geographical differences as to pronunciation and usages of a language do not split it into "dialects" or other "languages" unless such branches evolve in the course of time a literature of their own which differs materially from the other. English, German, British and Scandinavian languages and French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian (known as Romance) languages illustrate our viewpoint.
Taking up the former question, China has for practical purposes only one language and India only twelve. The letter has an objective and very widely spread (not only in India but in Central and Western Asia and in Northern and East Africa) linguas framed in Hindustani.
Coming to Africa, the entire North Africa and the major part of West Africa is saturated with Arabic as a common language. Of the indigenous languages the Swahili, Bantu and Kru language the most of the rest of the population. The latter are now trying to develop a literature. In time to come Africa will have not more than a half dozen "official" languages.
The Geographic gives worthy reasons for adopting the new spelling according to the language of the country, with which we readily agree, and for the same reasons, we condemn it for not doing the same thing with non-European countries.
"Every person," says the Geographic, "expects others to spell his or her name as he or she may spell it, wherever he or she may happen to be. Courtesy and custom will soon require that when we write to our friends in Europe we spell the names of their cities as these names are spelled at home.
"The National Geographic Society has 50,000 members in Europe. Communications coming to these members from the National Geographic Society addressed to Rome (Roma), Venice (Venezia), etc., would probably seem to them as illiterate as we regard letters coming to us addressed Nova York, Fladelfa, Slaeedestadt (Salt Lake City), or Wassyngton, which is the manner the names of a few of our cities are spelled in some European gazetteers.
"Forseeing the ultimate desirability of according to each nation recognition of its own approved geographic names within its boundaries, the National Geographic Society three years ago began to assume the data for and to construct the present new map of Europe." —Alan, it's a pity that the Africans and others have not got their own
On the day of the Jeffries-Johnson fight, the as was wolely hot. But this is no way affected the crowds nor the actual ring battle. At no time during this battle did Johnson lose his "golden smile" as he decisively put an end to the last "white hope."
Smith Outpoints and Out Slügs Krieger In One Man's Fight
Smith Outpoints and Out Slügs Krieger In One Man's Fight
Johnny Krieger just refused to fight last Tuesday night at the Broadway, Arena, at which time and place he met the uncrowned Middleweight Champion Harry Smith, sensational colored fighter.
With all the "come-on's" and "show him up's" that the gang asked of this Krieger boy, he just bluntly refused to get going.
You hear talk of a boxer fighting in his shell. Well, that's just what Johnny did. He would fold up, and hold on for dear life. Was he seized? I say he was! He did not want to taste the stuff that Harry totes out in his right mitt, at any rate not on the jaw.
Did Harry sink his right in Krieger's ribs and kidney on the right wing side? I ask, did he? Answer: "He didn't miss it!" Under Krieger's right arm down to his hip was as red and raw as could be. It would have been better for him to have taken one on the jaw and gone out rather than take the bruising about the body that he received.
Another white middleweight hope has failed to stop the onward march of this faint, clever, hard hitting, collected boy.
Al Brown Meets Johnny Erickson Saturday, Feb. 8
Al Brown, world's bantamweight champion, has been signed by Blood Davenport, matchmaker of the Olympic Sporting Club, to defend his title against Johnny Erickson. Hattie Lamb beaten, in a fifteen round bout at this club this Saturday night. This will be the first time that a championship affair has ever been staged in a small club. Erickson is the fellow that gave Mid Chocolate two of his hardest fights in this country, and although he lost on both occasions, Johnny gave the fights Cuanan man anxious moments during the encounters. Erickson has fought all of the leading fighters in the country, having met Vidol Gregorio, Archeil Bone, Benny Schwartz, Teddy Ealdock of England, who he had on the floor Blas Rodriguez, American champion and Pete Sempal
This will be Brown's first appearance in a New York ring since he won the title from Ceregori at the Queensboro club last summer. Brown has been doing most of his fighting out of town, having fought in Hawaii last week, where he defeated Pinty Silverberg.
Abe Yager, 2nd
If there is a publicity man that knows his onions, that man is Abc Yager, 2nd.
The Olympia A. C. and Broadway Arena are indeed fortunate to have such a character to handle the publicity for their boxing shows.
Wiger gets the dope on the fighters as he is often around to the training camps and supplies the local papers with good, snappy articles in the form of releases. This helps the sporting news department of a number of papers, as it is very hard at times for them to have all the clubs covered.
Extra ! - - - Extra !
ETHEL O. CLARK
New York's Beloved
Coloratura Soprano
has returned from Europe where she successfully appeared in concert at the Royal Albert Hall, London, England, and other Music Hall in France, Belgium and Germany, and has invited big tribes, admirers and all male hosts
RECITAL
Tuesday Eve., Feb. 4th
8:30 p.m.
ELK'S AUDITORIUM
769 W. 129th St. New York City
10th Avenue, Flatts
Marvin D. Alburn, Accompanist
Saturday 11:30 p.m.
Music and Choreography
Our Policies
This column will at all times champion the cause of the race fighters. They are badly in need of all the assistance they can get, with the matchmakers and promoters passing them up for forgetting that they have to eat regularly as well as sleep.
Another thing, I think that since there are just as many colored fighters as white in this state, that a race man should be appointed on the board of the boxing commission. There should be race men appointed to the staff of referees also.
Why does everything have to be done by the white race? Colored prize fighters have brought just as much money into the coffers of the state as the white boys through the process of taxation, and quite a lot of money has been spent by colored fightants to see these fights. So why not give the boys representation?
Come on now, let this be a year of just configuration in the right channel.
Baby Joe Gaus Meets Andy Divodi At The B'dway Arena Tues.
Baby Joe Gaus Meets Andy Divodi At The B'dway Arena Tues.
Matchmaker Tory Martello of the Broadway Arden is hard at work on what he calls his February "Invitation to Client," during which he will match only star performers at no advance in prize.
Martello has pitched Day Joe Gans, colored westerly weight contender from Los Angeles, against Andy DIVodl of Brooklyn. In theTexture contender for this Chicago night.
In his first time there, Gans knotted out "Nail, Knaker" on the strawnay, defeated Harry Kid Brown in Philadelphia, Martin Grown at the Olympha, and impelled out Jack Kid Marto in Baltimore.
DIVodl in his last three nights has knotted out Murray Rath and Jacob Phillip and even is confident over Elmhurst.
74
A light, soft skin makes you
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Dr. Fred Palmer's complete line
Mrs. Whitner Ointment; Skin
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Powder; Hair Dresser and
Hair Bowl; Bed at all drug
menses for the men; or even pus-
ture from urine of patients. Dr.
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After the famous Jeffries fight, Johnson, his wife, then the former Etta Duryea, sailed for London and Paris. In Paris there were limousines elegantly fitted. Jack's appearance at music halls and other houses of amusement. At these places he often made short speeches.
Joc Jeanette 2nd Visits the Office of The Negro World
Joc Jeanette 2nd Visits the Office of The Negro World
I was indeed glad to receive as a visitor last week Joe Jeanette, 2nd, who dropped in to pay me his respects, and thank me for whatever little I had done for him in the line of publicity.
Joe is quite an intelligent young fellow and states that lack of work in his professional line caused him to lay off for a year or so. But he has decided now to stick to the game and make them like it.
Jeanette has a very good record and now with his deep-rooted intentions to stick and give the best in him match makers should give him a break.
Therefore, I am openly asking the match makers of the Olympia A. C. and Broadway Arena to give Jeanette a booking, as the boys want to see him in action.
The Night of Action Galore Comes Up
"New York fight fans will be given a carnival fight night at Madison Square Garden on Friday, Feb. 21.
It is on this occasion that Kid Chocolate meets Al Badgeway in the final bout, and Black Bill, premeil Madjel Walgast in the semi-final. Do I need to say more?
I know there will be a full house on hand, no, Harlem boys, you had better start early if you want to secure a spot.
Dilkes I am off my balance, I push Chocolate and Bill to win.
Now I am not telling you to lay your arm on the line, but Steve Brady took a chance and came out on top to enough said.
Harry Smith, the foremost contender for middleweight winner, who meets Connie Jeseno, Texas cowboy, in the star encounter of ten rounds at the Jonathan Arena, Monday evening. Foh II, possesses the greatest knockout record of any performing today. Since according to theilon peru ranks, where he captured the men, intercity and Canadian crown, Smith has scored twenty-three kyears and Monday evening he will endeavor to make it all even two dozen when he squares off against Jeseno.
Middleweight Gives Promise in Fight
Archie Burrows. "middleweight from Chicago, is a sure enough mixer. He fought Paul Gulotta at Broadway Arena last Tuesday, and made a good impression on the film. Although Gulotta was heavier and taller then he it made little difference as he tore in and made him fight." Burrows should be given plenty of work, as he likes the racket. This can be easily observed from his imprint and style.
They Are Coming
Well boys, two of our suggested fight matches that should be made have been sewed up.
You will recall that this column made eight selections two weeks ago and so doubt fight fans will be treated. to some good bouts before long. The two bouts that have been already made are Kid Chocolate vs. Al Ridgeway and Bigchill Bill vs. Midget Walgast.
They are now working on a match between Larry Johnson vs. blaxxie Rescobium. Again, we say, "Don't forget to give us them."
Harry Smith vs. Mitchell Walker
Bobby Joe Gum vs. Jimmy McArdin.
George Gorman vs. Big Boy Carrara.
Al Ribow vs. Frangie Giovere.
Cuban Kid La Raguel vs. Al Mugger.
When he went to London, the Coronation of King George was in progress, but despite the fact where he was appeared on the London streets, the King was forgotten by the crowds as the, struggled for a glimpse of the black champion.
---
Flornoy Miller Home
They brought Flonoy Miller, the noted comedian, producer and race benefactor, home from Philadelphia this week—an sick man. Taken sick in that city two weeks ago, suffering from pneumonia, Mr. Miller had been confined at the home of a doctor friend and school mate. Mr. Miller's condition at that time was considered too grave to risk the journey to his home in New York.
The popular comedian has been a busy man in his profession for several seasons. Besides appearing with his old partner Lyles regularly, Mr. Miller has taken special care in directing others where they might be employed. Harlem's big Negro population little knows that Mr. Miller is among the largest yearly donors to charity for needy Negro children and their parents. He gives his aims without a band wagon ballyhoo or trumpet blasts. He is constantly coming to the aid of men and women the theatrical profession.
"HALLELUJA"
COMING
The great acting sensation of the screen depicting Negro life and sectional history of a great people, by King Vidor, "Halleluja," is coming to the Lower 7th Ave. Theatre Feb. 6. end.
In the principal roles will be seen Daniel Flaynes and Nune Mae McKinney. Victoria Epivey, Fanny De Knight, Diverte McFarrarity, Allan Carglion and others. Negroes but the picture - white cries, clam it best acted
In calling the dramatic offering
"After Twenty Years" at the Alhambra,
this well great, we mean just that.
The good unfolded a carking
good story and was enclosed by a cast
a way that skirt it home to the
want impiement.
Pedley Verneybyle, one day, away
from "Peregrine," the two-year run play
of Negro life, augmented an already
notable cast consisting of Tom Mee-
key, Hida Oilley, Ted Blackman, Al
Watts and Josephine Campbell, "After
Twenty Years" is the story of
three college país leaving school to
make their marks in life. Two climb
—one being governor, the other a
noted actor, the third a murderer
finally paraded by his pet the governor.
Play will postpone.
If you want to gravel your family
hides laughing at genuine Nigro,
comedy, the land that no white man
can initiate, the land that will always
draw the laughs where the intestinal
crewds assemble, go see these
two boys: Johnny Lee Long and Pigment Markham.
They are starring weekly in com-
Brown Specialty House
186 St. Nicholas Ave. New York City
MEN WANTED
To Learn to Operate Motion Plans
Negro motion picture operators all of
South America, Florida, South Sea Isles
BIG OPPORTUNITIES: Easy to I
WRITE FOR PA
The International Negro
2397 10 AVENUE
MEN WANTED AT ONCE!
To Learn to Operate Motion Picture Machines. We must have Negro motion picture operators all over America, Cuba, West Indies, South America, Hawaii, South Sea Isles, Hawaii, Africa, Australia, India. BIG OPPORTUNITIES: Easy to Learn—Position When Qualified.
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NEW YORK CITY
Jace soon returned to Chicago and opened an club in West Chicago. I was the owner of the Cabaret de Clampton. The opening was one of the most spectacular ever seen in this country. His friends from all over the world look part in this event.
ady, song and dance at the big Alhambra Theatre. One will get here from these boys longer dialog, more comical situations and by far more original fun than is given over any radio by white men blackened up. When Negro people learn that theatre managers won't give Negro men the chance to do this easy work before white audiences for big salaries they will appreciate their own sons and fathers, the originators of American fun.
Connie Mack
In a deal last week that will take away from Negro ownership one of the most colorful baseball teams of our times, Connie Mack, Te. bought out the Hildale Club from the Darryl Negro organization headed by E. Bolden.
Young Mack plans to put on the playing field at Shige Park during the Athletics' absence, one of the strongest Negro teams since the old original Cuban Giants headed by Sliter.
The country has been ignored for the best. Negro players in America and Cuba. It is to be regretted that Hildale has pleased to white ownership. But credit must be given Bolden for owning the most prosperous outfit in the game.
Money remains a favorite with the big sporting public. He always given his best. Like the late Taylor of Pennsylvania and Dinga of Illinois, in Phil's atelier performance of Thursday night a record wager hung up for all time that will give the colored youth entering New York University inspiration.
BASKETBALLERS
LINE AND FIELD
Among the continuing work records among professional and collegiate players follows the following:
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CHIEF RED FEATHER at the head of his powerful tribe of IROQUOIS INDIANS always camped near running water. He was a shrewd medicine man and his warriors healthy and strong. Running water, he would say, "Never stagnates." When the INDIANS took slick, CHIEF RED FEATHER nested them with certain herbs. He would never disclose the secret of their discovery. This disciple would protect himself and the MEDICINE MEN. This secret-long cherished by them, is now youn, if you are sick and want to get well. This secret is composed of many herbs, seeds, roots and flowers which you simply boll and drink. It is called IROQUOIS FAMOUS INDIAN HERBS. Thousands who were sick have regained their health after using this DER remedy and it will do no harm for you. If you are sick and need a rest, rheumatism, kidney and liver trouble, loss of sleep, swelling of the limbs, palpitation of the heart, litching of the skin, diabetes, poor blood, gonorrhea or an acid, sour, bloated and troublesome stbmach, here is a remedy that will help you out of your misery and add many more years of health. This DER remedy is called NATURE is calling you and will help you. Send for the IROQUOIS FAMOUS INDIAN HERBS. Prior is $1.00 in U. S. $1.50 in foreign countries. Your druggist will get it for you or send us money and we will ship to you parcel-post.
MONKEY ROUND
Vocal with Ouijar, Banjo and Clarinet
by JAKE JONES
with the GOLD FRONT BOYS
Brunswick race record in 7130
ELECTRICALLY RECORDED
Jane's feelin' mighty provish'. His woman just won't stop two-crimin'. Every time he learns she does it he begins to woo me. The Gold Front Boys mountin' with some jelly hands of the guitar and clarinet. On the other side they give us 'SOUTHERN BLUES' which you'll like too. Hear this regal sound!
MONKEY ROUND Vocal with Ouijar, Banjo 7130
SOUTHERN BLUES and Clarinet
JAKE JONES with the Gold Front Boys
Brunswick
RACE RECORDS
Go 'em' cause thug!
broke into press as winners and losers:
Howard, with a smooth working team, trimmed Humpton 34-19, and Union 47-29; St. Paul defeated A, and T. 27-12, Shaw 21, Bricks, 0. K. C. 30, Talladega 19, Tuskegee 32, Ala. State 30.
Bus Moore, Phil
Edwards Beaten
In Boston Games
BOSTON - Two race athletes suffered defeats at the Knights of Columbia. Gamed here Saturday. 1:34 Edwards, running his last race for New York University, was paced out in the 1,000 yard run by Russell Chapman, White, of Rates College, the time being 2 minutes, 163-6 seconds. Gus Mourne, University of Pittsburgh, star, was beaten out at the tape by Ray Conger in the invitation mile run.
B B E R E D U M A S
Running his last race for New York University Thursday night, Phil Edwards, with his long, sinny legs, ran rings, around Ray Conger, of the Illinois A. C.; Harold Cutbill, the man who in 1922 ran the fastest 1,000 yards ever clicked off by a human under his own stealth, and Ed Blake, of the Boston A. A. It was a quarter mile distance, clipped off by the wonder Colored flyer in just 2:144.5 on a track laid out on the squeeches floor of the Brooklyn Armory. Edward was never pressed by the field of select runners. From the gun he was in (in the lead and kept it all almighty)
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EXAMPLE
Very recently Mrs. Maggie Mitchell Walker engineered the merger of Richmond's two banks and, thereby became chairman of the board of directors of the combined institutions. She's the native daughter of Virginia, Richmond being her home. The recent merger of Mrs. Walker's own bank, in no way detracts from her romantic and extraordinary achievement in building the St. Luke Bank and Trust Company.
BY MARY C. TERRELL
Woman bank presidents, in the United States are very rare indeed. It is quite possible to go through a whole lifetime without seeing one. The reason the subject of this sketch deserves special mention is because she is the only woman bank president in the United States who had a drop of African-blood in her veins. And there is every reason to believe she is the only one in the whole world of her racial persuasion who presides over a bank directorate. When an individual happens to be one in 15,000,000 to fill an unusual and difficult position with brilliant success it is natural and fitting to call attention to his or her career.
As you pass the corner of First and Marshall streets in Richmond, Virginia, you may see the St. Luke's Bank and Trust Co., of which Mrs. Maggie Mijchell Wilkier is president. Twenty-six years ago, at the suggestion of this woman, a bank was started under the name of the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank. She was then secretary of the Independent Order of St. Luke (grand secretary treasurer of the order, she was called), and she persuaded the directors and officers of that organization that it would be a good thing to establish a bank which could invest a part of the old times of the order and add to its wealth. Later on, the legislature of Virginia notified a law which forced the separation of secret orders, and these murky, and the name was changed to the St. Luke's Bank and Trust Co., because the presidency of Mrs. Walter the
Once
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If you will dance to the ballad
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bank is conceded to be one of the best managed financial institutions in the United States. When the bank was established it had a deposit of only $8,000, which has increased in size till it has reached $500,000.
Her Father Murdered
When one sees Mrs. Walker sitting in a solid mohonny chair in her beautifully appointed office at the bank, it is hard to visualize her as the daughter of a washerwoman daring clothes which she and her mother had laundered, to the apotheocracy of the capital of the Confederacy. Yet this woman bank president's early life was passed amid humble and unpromising surroundings.
'When Maggie Mitchell was born, however, her condition in life was far better-than was that of many a child whose parents had been slaves and but newly-freed, as hers had been. Her father, William Mitchell was the head watter of the far-famed St. Charles Hotel of Richmond, which was about as high a rung on the ladder as men of the colored group could then hope to reach. He provided a comfortable home for his family, not far from the house, said to have been occupied by 'Migur Allen Poe when he was a boy living with John Allan, his adopted father. And at no great dis
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tance from the two-story frame house in which Maggie lived was St. Paul's church, where President "Jeff" Davis received the news that the cause of the Confederacy had been lost. But a tragedy occurred in Maggie's girlhood which made life for her much harder, than it would otherwise have been. Her father suddenly disappeared. For five days his family, his friends and the police of Richmond searched for him, and then found his body in the river. There was little doubt that William Mitchell had been robbed and his body thrown into the James River.
Helped With Washing
After her father's death the daughter's condition in life was completely changed. A heavy responsibility was placed upon her shoulders. Her mother had her two children, a son and a daughter, and herself to support. She knew she could make more money taking in washing than by organizing in anything else, and this she resolved to do on as large a scale as possible. Maggie was an invaluable assistant. She helped with the cooking and the washing, the ironing and fetched and carried clothes. But in spite of the hard manual labor she had to perform, Maggie Mitchell graduated from the high school which had been established for colored children in 1883. After the young woman taught for three years in this school in which she had formerly been a pupil and then married Armstrong Walker.
Her husband was the son of an expert brickmason and building contractor. By whom some of the finest buildings in Richmond had been constructed.
While Maggie Mitchell was only fourteen years old she took a offer which influenced and shaped her entire life. She joined the Independent Order of St. Luke, whose headquarters were then and still are in Richmond. It would be an impossible to tell the story of Maggie Walker's life without referring to this organization as it would be to give the history of the St. Luke order without telling the role its right worthy grand secretary-trainer played. She made the order and the order made her. While serving this organization the opportunity was presented to Mrs. Walker to display these rare qualities of head and heart which have caused her name to be known and her professions to be sung in every section of the United States where the colored American lives.
Founded to help
The Independent Order of St. Luke has an interesting history, indeed. It was formed in Baltimore, Md., in 1867 by Mary Proust, who had been a slave, shortly after the emancipation proclamation seized her, free. All around her she saw the newly emancipated
slaves in their poverty and ignorance groveing in distress and need. The condition of those who were well and strong was bad enough, but it was pittable beyond description when they were stricken with disease. Deeply moved by the scenes of helplessness and misery she witnessed, this ex-slave conceived the idea of establishing a fraternal organization which could minister to the sick and bury the dead. While the benefit to be derived from such an organization was apparent to those whom it was designed to help, nevertheless its growth was painfully slow. Many were the times when the founder and her assistants feared the St. Luke order could not surmount the obstacles to success which blocked its path.
But the straw which seemed to break the camel's back was the sudden resignation of the man who had served it as secretary for thirty years, from 1869 to 1899. When he handed in his resignation and refused absolutely to serve another minute, the members of the order feared that its last days had come. The reasons assigned by the secretary for refusing to hold office any longer were sufficient to discourage the most confirmed optimists among the membership.
In the first place, he told them that there was no money in the treasury. The order was not spreading fast enough, he said. He complained also that there was a fatal lack of cooperation between grand officers and those of the subordinate councils. And last, but certainly not, least, the salary of $300 a year was too small, he averred. As if that was not enough to make the stoutest heart quail, the abdicating secretary informed the order that there was only $31.60 in the treasury, and unpaid bills amounting to $400!
Maggie Walker Unafraid
If a bomb had been thrown into the meeting at which the information was furnished, it could scarcely have caused more terrifying dismay.
In the midst of this chaos and confusion, while innny were predicting that the order could not possibly survive the fatal blow which the secretary had dealt, Maggie Walker was elected to succeed him. To make the office just as undesirable as possible, the salary was reduced from $360 to $100 a year.
Nothing daunted, however, the new secretary buckled on the armor and went to work. No sooner had she entered upon her duties than the organization took on new life and began to grow by leap and bound. The new secretary's personal magnificent her consciousness, her marked ability in ladder, forcel, persuasive speaker and her keen business acumen enabled her to work wonders in building up the organization in a very short time.
The $24,000, which Mrs. Walden found in the treasury, when she was elected thirty years ago has now increased to more than $600,000. And that, too, in spite of the fact that nearly $2,000,000 in death claims have been paid, the membership man grown from a little more than 3,000 to 105,000 men, women and children. The old building which formerly was used as headquarters has disappeared one a handsome modernly constructed four-story brick office building has taken its place.
Moreover, the order employs sixty man and women in the office and has a full force of one hundred and ten. It is chartered under the laws of the State of Virginia, but it does business in twenty-three states, including New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Connecticut, Michigan/Wisconsin and the District of Columbia.
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The Wiley-Walker Institute, the center for the study of printing with ink, the order has spread all over the United States. It was she who urged the organization to establish its own printable department and this was done, although it represented an initial investment of $100,000. She felt the necessity of having an official organ to express the aims and ideals of the organization, to report its success and outline its plans. As a result of this suggestion, the St. Luke Herald was founded, a colored American newspaper.
A Fund of Money to Help Others
An educational loan fund is an another child of Mrs Walker's brain.
She has been instrumental in having the board of trustees recommend the establishment of such a fund so that the young members of the order may "complete a practical education," provided they have been members of the organization one year, are recommended by their teachers and by their local circles also. "The loan will not be granted for a term longer than five years and the amount loaned may range from $50 to $300, provided the applicant signs a note to repay the obligation, so that some other young man nor woman may receive assistance in the future."
One of the greatest services Mrs. Walker has rendered the order of St. Luke was to found the juvenile department. That was done in 1895—one of the first things she did after joining it. Having started with 8,000 children, the membership has increased to more than 20,000.
The celebration of the twentieth anniversary of Mrs. Walker's services as the "Right Worthy Grand-Secretary-Treasurer of the Independent Order of St. Luke" was one of the most remarkable ever observed in the United States. The resolutions read on that occasion declared that Mrs. Walker "has brought the organization to a state of prosperity beyond the fondest dreams of its founders." "There bath not arisen a greater soul nor abler executive than our present right worthy grand secretary-treasurer." was one of the declarations made. The members resolved further that "in order to show the depth of appreciation which this anniversary represents, we remove from her heart the embarrassment of rejection quadronially, and hereby recommend the suspension of the rule bearing on the election of secretary-treasurer during her natural life for the good she has done and for the good we believe she will do to the last moment of her earthly existence. No other person in this order has no unqualifiedly earned this reward, this exception to our history, and we give it in the name of God and her devoted co-workers. Amen."
Then, to give tangible evidence of their gratitude and appreciation the order increased Mrs. Walker's compensation to $500.00 monthly, "which if but fair" the resolution states, since the work under the new plan is doubled and the responsibility is greatly increased over the former years. Another reason for this increase in salary is the high cost of living. The preservation of dignity of our ground order demands that we keep our honored leader in comfort without pecuniary worry that she may give the host energy of her mind and spirit to this work. If any questions as this too magnanimous an action or as setting a dangerous precedent, we plead that we hustle as an exception (although bishops, judges and generals have life terms in offices) and we acknowledge this to be an act of gratitude. It is beyond our present law but not beyond our love.
And there reservations were approved both by the executive committee and by the organization as a whole. Auditing. 19. 1840.
MINOR TRIGEMINAL NEURALGIA
Quite different from the sudden brief, severe attack of major trigeminal neuralgia, with absolute pain following each attack, this minor symptomatic type of neuralgia is characterized by a continuous pain with exacerbations or paroxysms. There
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CARE OF THE NEW BORN
Infantile mortality assumes a very high percentage in every part of the globe from some immemorial. Crowded localities, however, offer a more ruftful ground for the perpetuation
of the condition. A lack of understanding on the part of the parents is a factor which must be taken into consideration. The delicate human frame cannot be comprehended by false notions. There are many individuals who participate in the practices of the older generations when dealing with these new arrivals, even though such customs were attended with fatal results. Very often one comes across a mother who has lost are no real periods of remission during which nothing hurts, but a period of, relief during which burning, throbbing, boring, grinding are sensations which are always present in varying degrees of intensity.
Minor trigeminal heurialgia may be due to intracranial or extracranial irritation of the trigerminal nerve. Intracranial irritation may be caused by a tuberculous syphilitic cancerous, or other lesion situated at the base of the skull or of the brain. Tumors of the sheath of the Gesserman ganglion or its branches may give rise to trigerminal neuropathy. But involvement of the ophthalmic division is here more frequent than that of the maxillary or mandibular divisions. The diagnosis is established by the history, hypesthesia of the skin which is often present, and cater herpetic scars in the distribution of the ophthalmic division. Injections of alcohol are of no value in trigerminal neuropathy of intracranial pupil. Such patients should be referred to the neurologist. Extracranial irritation may be caused by tumors of the maxillary bone particularly or by neoplastic invasions of the soft parts of the face in the immediate vicinity of the divisions of the trigerminal nerve. The pain is here common, without permissions, although subject to violent parental action in certain hours of the day, or certain movement of the face or minor influence of atmospheric irritations. Injections of alcohol are very satisfactory in the palliative treatment of such conditions, provided there is no associated involvement of other nerves, in which case relief is only partial. The anesthesia thus provided however facilitates the application of medical therapy. Among other pathological conditions that cause periparal irritations giving rise to a neuropathy may be mentioned defective teeth, root infections, nasal and adenoid cuneal infections. Whenever possible, the source of pain should be disappeared and removed.
Love of the St
care for thorny hair
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as many as six of her children at infancy and on making interrogations the alert mind is able to discern the chief reason for the fatalities.
It has been stated that the first hour of the child's existence is the most important in determining its chances for life. The chances increase as the child grows older. Not one half of the children born are alive after the first year. The blow falls heavily on those of indigent circumstances. The well-to-do are better able to make proper provision for the newly arrived guests and they are also more willing to break loose from unworthy traditions.
At birth very careful attention should be given to the cord. It must be securely tied. Suitable dusting powder should be provided and a suitable amount dusted over it. The powder should not be of the very strong-variety as this would cause anxiety owing to the delay in the separation. At the end of the fifth day this falling off should take place. Do not handle cord roughly as a premature separation might take place resulting in an infected wound. A piece of gauze might be placed over umbilicals and held securely by bladder as a protection against future annoyance. The eyes ought to receive special attention likewise. The attendant generally sees to this in the first instance. If any inflammatory process should set in then have the child attended to early. In many cases it is a fore-runner to blindness which intervenes through unskilled interference. It is always a delight to see the child open its eyes. Such an action should be avoided in the presence of strong lights.
The infant should receive a thorough cleaning all over its body in order to facilitate the removal of secretory deposit. If bathing is done after this the temperature of the water should be a little above body heat. Follow this with a sponge, bath and a full bath daily after the cord has fallen off. The bathing should be according to the weather. Keep the child warm. Too much clothing is unnecessary and the looser it is the butter it will be for comfort. Heavy beddothes are undesirable. Clean the child's mouth often with clean water. When teeth appear they should receive daily observation. Mastication becomes difficult when the teeth are bad. Irregular teeth can be straightened by the dentist.
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S. D. LANE
la Independencia", de acuerdo con la decision del congress celebrado en Lahore durante las Navidades ultimax.
Naveo lugar en las olicinas centrales del conjuñ, congressional un gran mitin, durante el cual se embarbolaron las banderas nacionales, en medio de estentores gríticos de: viva la revolución, viva la bandera nacional y abajo con la union. Los oradores recomendaron a la multitud que llevara a cabo un intento pero no violento movimiento, para obtener la independencia.
6. El hecho de mirar retrospectivamente hacia la profundidad de la cual surgió esta nación norteamericana, nos inspira confianza y esperanzas en la realización de lo que actualmente es calificado como un sueno; el que surja una nación africana goderosa en la cual las generaciones futuras miren con tanto orgullo y respeto, como actualmente mira el ciudadano blanco norteamericano a su admirado país progresista.
Decimos ciudadano norteamericano blanco, porque el honor y el orgullo a el perennecen, y cualquier contribución que nosotros como raza hayamos aportado al progreso de esta o cualquiera otra nación, ha sido genetalmente forzada por medio de las circunstancias; y si bien es verdad que en casos muy raro hemos contribuido voluntariamente con nuestro óbolo a la gloria de esta nación, sus ciudadanos blancos no lo conceptuan como un ritulo a los derechos que reclamamos, basados en el espíritu de su Constitución.
Después de la reunión se formo una manifestación que alcanzó más de una milla de extensión, desfilando por los distritos indios de la ciudad. Llevaban banderas y rotulos alusivos a sus ideales. La policía estaba apostada a todo lo largo de la carretera.
En Alumadabad, una ciudad amurralada a 319 millas de Bombay, Vallabhati Patel. Iider en la campaña con los impuestos efectuada en el año ultimo, presidió la ceremonia de elevar la bandera nacional exhortando a la audiencia para estar dispostos a morir por el hnor de la patria. Todos estos actos fueron presenciados por la policía.
En Bangalore, las autoridades prohibieron el llevar todos los instrumentos que pudieran convirtiérse en armas así como también el reunirse en las calles.
Ya se ha manifestado clara y terminamentemente que Amijería es un continente exclusivo para blancos, descubierto; explorado y desarrrollado para beneficio de sus propias generaciones. En la faz de este sentimiento presentamos nuestro reclamo; pero con una fuerza de competencia preponderante en nuestra contra presentimos la detrofa. Por tal razón nuestra organización, ameniza el programa de la constitución de una patria en un sitio adecuado, donde lejos muy lejos de toda oposición, de toda competencia y de todo prejuicio, nuestro pueblo tenga la oportunidad de desarrollarse y progresar en todas las esferas.
La procesión de *bomba* ha se repasagado cualquier otra de las celebraciones en dicha cidad hasta ahora: La mitindidad despló por toda la cidad, cantando cinciones parióticas y ostentando banderas.
Al contemplar el panorama de un nuevo mundo; al contemplar las maravillas de esta civilización occidental, aregida por medio del genio y perseverancia del hombre blanco, nos sentimos seguros que en no lejano dia, y en posesión de las mismas dotes, podremos duplicar esta misma civilización en la madre patria de nuestros antepasados, el vasto y rico continent africano. El aspecto del gran número de ciudades progresistas de esta nación en particular, nos inspira la fundación de orras ciudades con igual o mayor progreso en una nación exclusivamente para el desarrollo de nuestra propia raza.
Finamente se reunieron en una ribera del río, donde la la presidencia de Patel, se adoptó unamiento una resolución demandando la independencia.
Debido a las grandes precauciones torradas por la policía no se produjeron disturbios. Los malmetanos se abusivieron de tomar parte y todos los establecimientos indios cerraron sus puertas.
En Nueva Delhi, cuatro nines resultaron jergas a consecuencia de una exploción de una pequeñaobaoba ocurrienda en una escuela libre en Shrirupa, a 50 millas de distancia de Poma. El cobrador de adhinas McMillan hacia pecos niños que había abandonado el edificio. Dos personas tuieron arrestadas, sigiendo libertadas por falta de puertas.
En la persecución del objeto habrán multiples problemas que resolver, por lo cual todo elemento de la raza negra anime de su progreso, debe procurarse un sitio en el senio de nuestra institución. Su programa es suficientemente extenso y abarca todas las fases de las actividades humanas, habiendo en el un puesto adecado para todos y cada uno de los elementos de nuestro grupo. Con un propósito uniformado podremos marchar hacia adelante cansando una gran impresión ante un mundo observador, al colocar nuestra propia correligia en la immensa constelación de los acontecimientos humanos.
Filipinos en Estados Unidos
Los animales facultas de California, en los cuales contengen de resistentes tijolones himsides perdigidos y maltratados por multitudinarias unyndias contra los "intentados" destacan, una vez pasas, la análisis situación en que se contengan el archipi略ago de Magallanes dentro de la patria nacional; que para el pueblo filipino, constituyen los Estados Unidos. Aquí en efecto, los dipínesos ni ti dejan de ser ciudadanos. Y, con ello, no pueden de las venusjas de la contención de extranjeros sin conseguir las injuerentes a la contención de mecánicos.
Los que formanos parte integrante de esta organización, ubriqamos grandes esperanzas y nos sentimos orgullosos de vivir en esta era de grandes evoluciones y, de mayor progreso. Milentras elementos de otras razas se esfuerzan para promover sus intereses, por medio de los cambios requeridos por el caso, nosotros también estamos determinados a promover un cambio que nos eleve al trono donde la humanidad progresista mora. No es de esperarse que hechos de realizar todo cuanto ambicionamos sin afrontar resistencia y toposición. Las buenas obras han sido siempre realizadas por medio de la perseverancia de aquellos con un propósito determinanado. El progreso y la felicidad de otros pueblos adquiridos por su ingenuidad organizadas se presente ante nuestra vista como un ejemplo práctico y un aliciente a la vez, para los que como ellos, luchamos al presente por la realización de un cambio en nuestra condición actual, con el gran propósito de escalar la cúside de un bienestar solidificado.
Nada más absurdo que tal situación. Al margarito de sus nebulosidades, es la falta creciado en el oeste de este país —specialmente en California —un ambiente de hostilidad y un impulsoersion contra la inagrupación filinosa, que constituye el mayor y más injusto de los aburdos. Como explicar que los ciudadanos de una región sometido a los Estados Unidos sean perseguidos cuando van a establecerse al territorio de la metropoli? Va a diarque franquecimiento dividida la población de los dominios de la Unión dividida en categorías, en casas, en clases? Puerito Rico y Filippinas; ciertanamente "difícem una intergrupación llena de siguerencia en la perspectiva política-nornal de este país. Y la situación, y esto se lo más manipulado, en vez de solucionar al paso que va, ni impariendos. El fondo de la hostilidad california contra los filinios hay, a la vez, razones de empleo económico e impulsos de orden espiritual, entrúcer, hasta esté diriende. En primer lugar en oracel tiapino, sonor, resistente y humilde, desplaza al competidor blanco—a de aquí en las labores agrícolas del oeste: "struggle for life". ... que ya ha conducido a cerrar la puertas de la Unión a los emigrantes europeos y tal vez a los del resto de América. Mas, en seguida, ha la cuestión racial. Como justificarla, como consensuria sin desmirarla las más fundamentales y belas tradiciones de esta tierra de libertad y democracia? Por el momento, lo más urgente es evitar la repetición de las salvajas ocurre la trabajadores filininos de California. Pero-himitarse a impeder las agresiones, a proteger
Esta institución de progreso nuestra abrita la esperanza de un renacimiento, en la raza negra, el cual haya de incluirle como un pueblo enarle los progenitores de las actividades nacionalistas. De ese modo nuestras generaciones futuras heredarán nuestra gloria, dando a la raza negra una perpetuación de tal honor; producto de los elementos mas progresistas de la gran familia humana.
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puerperia hará una sufishería de los
desenfriados que se acuman de domestica.
Forque no se afroma supermen-
menta la relidada?
Esta es que el prejuicio racial aquí, en vez de disminuir, gana en intensidad. Es también realidad inducible que el nacionalismo económico va teniendo qui expresiones cada vez más incintroladas, que se traducen en el criterio de que el extranjero sólo puede aspirar a compartir las oportunidades de la vida de producción, y retribución, cuando y hasta donde no afecten o compitan en el nacional . . . Y por unica, es una realidad papítilante que interpretando el lema monteviano "America para los americanos" estrecha y egiostamente, mucilagos así sienten que esta zona del Nuevo Mundo, que tanta parte de su prodigios grandeza debe al escierzo, al sacrificio, al talento y a la lealtad de los extranjos, no debe y tener para astos nada. Absolutamente nada que no sea lo indispensable, lo restrictante indispensable dentro de las leyes más squeras de la humanidad . . . y cuando no muesten; estorben o irriten los intereses, los prejuicios, las fantasias de los del pasi. La Prensa, N. Y.
Aumento de Pblicacion
La población de los Estados Unidos se calcula, según la Oficina del Censo, en 121.951.856 almas.
Durante el curso de las sesiones del Comité de Immigración, el representante John-on, cuando se está considerando los proyectos de restricción de immigración de Johnson y Box, encontró que era necesario el saber las cifras ectas de la polícia de los Estados Unidos. Immediatamente trasmitió un mensaje a la Oficina del Censo, pidiólebil los datos que giseaba. Cituro la información siguiente:
Un nacimiento cada 13 segundas; un nacimiento cada 23 segundas; un immigrateo entrado en la oficina cada año y medio mínimo; un immigrateo abandonando la oficina cada cinco minutos.
31 premio de aumento en la población de la nación se calcula, de acuerdo con estas cifras, a razón de un pico nacional por cada 35 segundos del tiempo, con el exceso de la crecimiento sobre defunciones ascendiendo a un total de 900.000 al año, llegando, en conjunto, a calendar la población de 165 Estados Unidos en el total mensual.
Gonadal death rate corresponds
week, average preceding and years
=14.25.
Number of births last week =2311.
Cases and deaths from important
communicable diseases reported last
week:
Diphtheria -100 cases; 7 deaths.
Scarlet fever -218 cases; one
death.
Molluscs -71 cases; one death.
Epidemic Corebospinal Meningitis
-10 cases; 5 deaths.
Typhoid fever -several cases; 2
deaths.
Pneumonia -447 cases; 170 deaths.
Influenza -24 cases; 14 deaths.
Dysthesia from autopobliter -24.
Diphtheria immunization, treat-
ments -13,617.
Howard University
(Continued from Page 027)
Is there anything inherent in religion, the church, or an education which of necessity must eradicate an educated man from the church?
The complaint seems to be that students do not get anything from sermons. What should the college student look for in a sermon? What should be the standards of conduct for the religious leaders?
WASHINGTON, D. D. On Wednesday, January 29, at 8 p.m. the School of Religion at Howard University observed the formal opening of the Theological Building at 2460 Sixth St. N. W.
Dr. M. O. Dunn, member of the Board of Trustees, acted as presiding officer. Prayers was given by Dr. D. W. Wiseman of the class of 1884, minister of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church of Washington. Prof. Albert I. Cassell, university architect, made a statement concerning the renovation of the building, after which it was formally presented to the department by President Mordreau and accepted by Dawn D. Butler Pratt. Dr. Acquita Bayes, president of the Theological annual association, greatest the assemblies on behalf of the alumni, and A. L. Criader, a member on behalf of the senior body. Fellowship, the previous membership were served. The building was given for inspection from 8 to 9 p.m. The Release of Religion in the original part of the university and in the only supplement instituted by appropriate of the Federal Government.
Mortgage insurance companies are not always aware. Finally an smoke smoke means wasted fuel. A smoky city is a city in which that bill is higher than that need be. An improperly constructed and cared for firehouse in which the street is grunt and the temperature sufficiently high, will burn fuel cheaply, giving off colorless gases, but little smoke. If however, an insufficient amount of air is admitted to the furnace or if the temperature is not high enough, certain substances in the fuel will escape in the form of smoke. These substances are valuable constituents of the fuel. Their escape means that money is literally going up in smoke. Excess smoke therefore presupposes faulty furnaces or careless management of boiler rooms. In demanding smoke abatement, we appeal to the "business sense of those responsible for New York's furnaces. We remind them that belching smoke-stacks prevent bulging pockets.
New York's excess smoke is due in part to outdated-heating equipment. There are many instances in which heating needs have outgrown the capacity of furnaces. The attempt to make these furnaces work beyond their powers results in wasted fuel and smoke. The only remedy is reconstructed furnaces. While the initial expense of this reconstruction may at first seem high to the owners of such furnaces, the saving of fuel will more than compensate them. Further, the health of the city demands that every smoking furnace be made so that it no longer smokes, whether the cause be faulty construction or inefficient operation.
I speak of economic waste. Yet the Health Department is not concerned with waste. It is concerned, however, if that waste pollutes the air without which we cannot live. The city has realized the necessity for fresh air. It has spent millions to maintain ventilating systems in schools and public buildings. The expenditure is ineffective if we all get a polluted air. The Health Department feels the point where clean air may be guarded only by calculating the cooperation of property owner and private citizen. It seeks to gain this cooperation by appending to the private citizen on the ground of health and to the property owner on a dollars-and-cents basis.
Excelsior Division
(Continued from Page Our-
dent, Page R. T. Brown. On ins-
neding the chair, the president thanked
the friends and members for tun-
ning out in such numbers, pointed
them to the program before the or-
gination, and before the division,
urgent organization present to equip-
himself like a true hero and con-
tinuous dedication of a great an-
tector, because we have a great and
glorious cause.
"The hymn "O Africa Awaken" was sung, and the audience were entertained by two splendid readings by Master Daniel, and Mrs Mary Sammoh, entitled "The Pathway of a Nation," which received the applause of the friends in the audience. Ay address them the lady president, Mrs. A. Cooper, in her usual attentive, and sincere manner, was well received; and was followed by renditions on the piano and violin by the Masters, Maynard. These youthful musicians were highly approved. The reading the President-General's weekly message from The Negro World, by our executive secretary, Mr. Bailor Williams, who gives expressive to the theme of the hymn, with careful attention, and evidence seemed easier to digest all that the governor intended to convey to his followers. The President—Hymn was next sung, then a series of short timely, instructive and inspiring addresses from Mr. Oscar Biggins, Mr. J. Huxtable, Majors Woodley and Grant, and Mr. S. Kelly, second vice president, were received with great response. All expressed their desire and determination to help make the division something of which not only New York, but all the world will have reason to be proud.
The offering was raised while the Brothers Maynard again at the piano and violin tuned the musical strains of, "Onward, Christian Soldiers." This was followed by announcements, then the president, Rev. H. T. Brown, gave a short, instructive, and stirring address on the subjects, "the tasks at Hand," pointing out to those in the audience the great tasks that are confronting us, impressing upon our hearts the qualities we need to meet and master these tasks, and any others that may present themselves, on our journey to nationhood and complete emancipation.
The audience listened with eager attention, and were visibly moved as the speaker brought to their mind's eyes, the things that awaited the race if we would become, and prove ourselves, vultant-hearted honest men. The singing of the Philippine National Anthem, and the preocupation of the Benedictines and the repudiation of the motto, "One God, One Apostle, One Dear Brother," brought the most passionate meeting to a close in 1475.
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Applications for admission will be based on January 20. Watch this column for dates and other information.
February '15, the date set for the next Post Office Clerk-Carrier examination for New York City.
The Municipal Civil Service commission has ordered the following examinations: Nurse (female), Clerk, Gr. 2, with knowledge of the compometer.
The examination for nurses, of course, calls for technical training, but the examination for clerk is an excellent chance for our untrained girls and boys. The salary is good, and appointment is rapid on this list.
Watch this column for dates for filing applications.
A Three-Day test for Patrolman-a total of 3,355 candidates for patrolman will be examined on three successive days at the Central Opera House, on East 67th street. 1200 men will be called for each of the first two days, and 995 for the third day. The examination days are February 4, 5 and 6.
2,899 applications were filed for the examination for Stenographer-Typist, Gr. 2. Watch this column for information on this examination.
Only 188 women filed applications for prison-matron. Applications closed on January 16.
258 file for crime prevention jobs. Applications closed January 14.
This was a week of appointments rather than of examinations.
15 Court attendants were appointed at $2,000 a year, to the City Magistrates Court.
No. 168 was the last appointment made from the Stenographer-Typist list, Gr. 2, for permanent work at $900 a year. 8 driftshifts were appointed at $1170 a year to the Board of Educator's fief, of Finance, on January 21 tion. 40 clerks, Gr. 1, were appointed to for temporary service at $4 a day. 3 Law Examiners appointed from list to the Law Dept. at $1600 a year. 100 drivers and 100 sweepers were appointed at $6.22 and $5.83 per day respectively to be appointed to the Dept. of Sanitation in the Borough of Manhattan, Bronx and Brooklyn. 5 dentists were appointed at $1220 a year for work with the Board of Education. 50 Castellian-Engineers were appointed from the List at $225 a year. 7 Stenographer-Typist, Gr. 2 were appointed to the Dept. of Health at $1200 a year.
12 Cleerza, Gr. I, (Male) were appointed for permanent work at $800 a year.
A civil commission will need to order for lay Sunday Inspector, Gr. II, if there are at present many vacancies, and no existing eligible list. This position pays a salary of $1200 in your minimum salary.
This column is especially prepared and edited for your benefit. 1988 failed to reach it every week. It remaining valuable news. Remember, 1980 is going to be the biggest year of Civil Service history.
as well as daguerre and voyeur, were conflated. British fear, a fictional scale, revolt, and 18,000 Indian raids of India that the Japanese are reported in rendition to grant the rebellion.
What may be the nucleus of the revolt is the parade of 50,000 National volunteers, dressed in home-spun, at 2 p. m. tomorrow, in Calcutta, where Mayor Sequoia will officiate at the demonstration.
In compliance with the Independence Day Plans, 750,000 cities, towns and cities tomorrow will turn out to vote in the declaration of independence.
The declaration of independence set forth the right of India to be a free and independent nation, placing the blame upon Britain for the present condition of the country and its people, and ends by saying peaceful means will be used to bring about separation from the British Empire.
INDIA INDEPENDENT,
TO HOIST FLAG
CALCUTTA, INDIA, Jan. 25 (A.D.) The municipal corporation today adopted a resolution to boost the Indian nationalist flag on all municipal buildings and institutions tomorrow. Independence Day—and all ceremonial occasions in the future.
Sen Fupa, nationalist leader and presiding officer of the municipal corporation, said the Union Jack was an affront to Indian national honor when flown by themselves over their own national institutions.
Do You Know
What well known lake contains more than thirty thousand islands?
What western city has the greatest area of any city in the United States?
The five largest industries in the United States?
What product is several hundred times sweeter than sugar?
What was used as money in the early days of Canada?
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GOOD MILL, NIGHT
New So. Station of New York, N. K
And all day long to break the gloom
a candle burns on the table.
He wears his coat when the winter
wind blows till satters chatter—
A ragged coat but he doesn't mind.
When so many other things matter.
A jagged array of icicles glean
From the caves to the window sill;
He looks at them and begins to dream
Of a singing bird and a hill.
He dreams of a bird, a hill and a girl;
His pencil fittily scribbles.
The night crowds close. The snow-
flakes whirl.
Somewhere a gaunt rat nibbles.
Morning comes. The room is cold.
The window has frost etchings on it.
The poet smiles, strangely old,
Content with his perfect sonnet.
Be Bright
Who likes everything good and bright,
'Tho he often does things for spite,
Yet he is always right.
One day Mr. Wright said to me:
"You are lazy."
"Mr. Wright, if you can show,
In what way I am lazy,
I will say your name is Wright,
And whatever you do or say--
Is right."
So Mr. Wright said painfully:
"What am you doing for yourself
and your race?"
Get up and be bright!
Send your light in the Kiddie Corner.
And you'll be with me;
For that is right."
* President-General*
(Continued from T
where angels fear to tread" an
Africa. The ancients have left
of men, with the exception of
alone, but the present one seen
and gold, and they will get a
for in Africa when the time con
Crazy Europe
In French, English, Italian et al.
cry if they think that four hun-
President-General's Weekly Message
where angels fear to tread, and this can well be applied to Africa. The ancients have left Africa alone, all generations of men, with the exception of the present, have left Africa alone, but the present one seems to be gone; mad for power and gold, and they will get all the hell they are looking for in Africa when the time comes. (Crazy Europe) dred million black men are going to in recent English, Italianes et al. sit down and fold their hands for all they it they think that four hun-time and allow them to rob and ex-
OBEY THAT IMPULSE!
Read 1
Prince President of THE
G. O. H. BREWER, JR. HON.
MORGAN, A. A. BREWER, JR.
MORGAN, A. A. BREWER, JR.
The Old Purge-Sink—Death Orders are put
will be answered by every member, not a
Whitley link and Death Orders are allowed
unless they be answered by every member.
No other orders and others in the Right
from Distinguishance handle.
The Old Purge-Sink are organized in Kirk
Council, Cote Litch, and other counties.
Death Orders called Court.
For notorious offences you may be
set out for serious and form a
Court.
The New Purge-Murder are used in I.
and impersonal Gates, and 5100 for
I. and impersonal Gates, and 5100 for
If you are telephone, we are run by an organizer. Men, Women, do not walk,
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But I couldn't agree.
Although he was right
So I said:
INDIA
1950
All things are new again.
Yet important is Wright.
He has been stated,
and with written grace.
Until everything is right.
LOLA STUBBS, Cuba.
Tell me the stories of Garvey.
I is the one I love to hear.
For there are things I would ask him to tell me.
If he were here.
Scenes of dear old Africa.
And tales of the sea.
Stories of Garvey; tell them to me.
Oh! How I wish I could sit on his knee.
I would fancy his blessings resting on me.
Words full of kindness, deeds full of
grace.
Always shining in his face.
And, as I would follow, I would sing-
Hosannahs to Garvey, our king!
Marie Yarbrough.
Little Mary, was out in the yard
taking up some clothes when she
heard a strange voice.
Stranger: Say, kid, get out of the
rain.
Mary: To whom are you, speaking?
Stranger: 'Ta you, kid.
Mary: Now, don't you do that again.
Stranger: What have I, done?
Mary: You called me a kid. My mammy ain't a nanny, and my pappy ain't a billy goat, so I ain't a kid!
Hermit Anderson, Cube.
I am going to sign off now, kiddies, and will broadcast next week at this very hour over the very same station, which as you know is Station NYNW, don't forget to pick me up!
It's Weekly Message
and this can well be applied to
it Africa alone; all generations
of the present, have left Africa
to be gone mad for power
all the hell they are looking
mes.
dred million black men are going to
cut down and fold their hands for all
time and allow them to rob and ex-
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Baltic-Austria. Both countries. They have maintained their independence but have not been taken back by their enemies.
International Society
The League of Nations and the group of international railway may play due to the powerful appeal of the major groups of the world, swaying that justice be given the black man, and that he be restored to his country as a national entity; but the sin of retribution shall fall upon the heads of those who could have saved the human race and failed to do so when the appeal was made.
- Arch-Pictures in Europe
Again we warn the arch-plotters of Europe to stop their foolish game of plumbing and to put them nothing to continue in the war they have adopted, for, indeed, they are plining up only sorrow and remorse for their children. The oil that they are going after today, may be oil of tears in the future, for native Africans will yet speak with a voice that not even heaven and hell will forget.
World Gone Mad
The world is gone mad to think that black humanity has forgotten itself. We are here, and here to stay, and like all other peoples to create of ourselves a nation with people of great importance. It is sincerely hoped that no black French soldier will turn against his own at the call of France, or any other nation in Africa. The time has not yet come, but when Africa calls, we hope to see four hundred million black men, women and children standing together.
"Dvine Confidence"
Indeed, our cry has not fallen on deaf ears. At last we have succeeded in disclosing the "divine confidence" that the native African once had in the pale-faced missionary and trader. Thank God, Africa has awakened to see the deception of the centuries. We feel sure that the little incident of defeat for the French around Timbucto will help to lessen the awe of the black man for the "divine robber." Let all Senegal, Morocco, Gamla, Togoland and other French-African foliars come. Keep the propaganda and "give them hell." If oil, gold, coal and diamonds are good for Europeans, they are also good for the native owners and their brothers.
Hunting for Trouble
What right have France, England, Italy, Belgium, Spain and Portugal to be in Africa? These European roamers and plunderers are still on the path to war and rumors of war. They are still hunting for trouble, and, by God, they will get it! "The race is not for the swift; or for the strong, but to him that endureth to the end; so that the black world is not to be taken by the blessing falls upon us in the prophecy of His Psalmist, that "Princes shall come out of Egypt and Ethiopia stretch forth her hands."
Appeal to America
We would appeal, however, to democratic, liberal and great white Americas to save crazy Europe from the doom that awaits them in the continuation of their program of colonial robbery and exploitation. In fact, white Americas, yellow and brown Asia, and black African should unite to curb and prevent Europe from connecting the greatest of wars that will wreck our civilization and destroy our humanity.
200,000,000 Barrier Peoples
Again I say, Europe is crazy, if they think that 400,000,000 black men and 700,000,000 yellow and brown people are going to allow them another quarter century of headway to steal and plunder in the name of Christ; Lloyd George would go well to tell his people to stop rooing themselves about the "guardianship of native peoples." These native peoples know them to be charles, pioneers and gospel-grinders and we have all lost confidence in you. You have sold Christ beyond the redemption of your own souls and we have purchased Him with the hope of light, truth and justice.
Negro Needs States.
The Negro needs more than the things that are his, and for these we now ask the League of Nations, Europe and the rest of the world.
The Negro believes in and loves peace; hence, our appeal to reason, but in the name of God and our race we shall possess the land of our fathers.
Native of Africa
The demonstration of the natives around Timbuctoo suggests to us that we need a great deal of scientific preparation, for the test of combat will be purely on scientific lines. Let every Negro prepare himself scientifically for Africa, for when hell is again let loose on earth, we will have to hold our end in the Motherland. Let us praise God for this awakening; and let us march steadily on till Africa is free.
With best wishes for your success,
Bhave the honor to be
Your obedient servant,
MARCUS GARVEY
Founder and President of the Universal Negro Improvement Association,
August 1929, of the World
Eldewalt Park, 67 Slipe Road,
Cross Roads P. O. St. Andrew,
Race
portent, though less spectacular, has been the rapid increase of educational facilities for Negroes during the last decade. This has taken the form of larger public appropriations, longer school terms, better prepared and better paid teachers, construction of thousands of modern schools, multification of high schools, and more liberal support of personal and collegiate institutions. This has come about, the Commission believes, for a result of the South's increasing property, but even more, because of a growing public confidence that educated the Northeast nation for all.
distance and good diligence, but in the case of white people. Other important gains of the deeds involved in the statement are a developed improvement in Negro health and a longer life span; the better support of Negro welfare agencies through public appropriations and community budgets; the establishment of theology; the organized church women in programs of interracial study and betterment; the introduction of the study of race relations into hundreds of colleges and high schools; the publication of many excellent books and magazine articles by and about Negroes; the mobilisation of several thousand men and women in interracial committees which are working a larger measure of public opposition for the Negro population. The statement accords to the newspapers of the South a large measure of credit for these gains.
The Commission on Interracial Cooperation, composed of a hundred Southern men and women, was organized in Atlanta just after the World War in the effort to obviate the danger of wide-spread race contests and to execute at that time. To this end it set up interracial committees across the South through which misunderstandings were cleared up and confidence
The miracles that Jesus the baby wrought
the Lord with the children of Eden, and the last book
The forgiven books of Eden, and the last book
Out of the Garden, and the last book
Out of the Garden, and the last book
A-Reference Teachers Bible, 35.25.
A-Reference Teachers Bible, 35.25.
printed with the New Testament, 35.50
printed with the forgiven Book of the Garden of
Eden.
D—The History of the Negro Race. $2.50.
D—The History of the Negro Race. $2.50.
F—Book of the Prophet Knoch. $2.50.
Booker T. Washington. $2.50.
W—Book of the Prophet Knoch. $2.50.
I—Book of how to be healed of all sickness
and all disease. $2.50.
O—Old Bible not printed with
the old Bible. $2.50.
P = Common Prayer Book. $1.50. 75 you are Mirared by seafaring my books tell others. P = Personal Prayer Book for order. He covers his sins shall not proper. Beek ye loath. Q = Book on how to entertain. $1.75. B = Book on Brightness in Money Making. $1.75. Book of penns. $2.00. Book of poems. $2.50. Book on the forms of Biscuits, Lectures, Addresser. $1.10. page 32. Business letters on pages 10 to 8.
PERTUSSNIN relieves coughs quickly by getting at the immidiate cause.Itisfreefromdope.
Pertussin For Coughs
RAIN TALK
TO MEN
Do You Want
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Walther's Won
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Kalispell, Indiana
Kleo Agate Perman
was visited. They presented them
retained, input the data, and history
family congregation to the family
hospitalized with the family
achieved results. They attended
favored attestations throughout
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or
$-ALWAYS HAVE LUCK!-$
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Depa. 8. P. S. BURKAU, General P. O.
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NOTICE!: We absolutely GUARANTEE these genius Mystics Brahma Lodestones are what you want, for these are the Real Power-POWERU, BIGLY MAGNETO!
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If you have Epilepsy, Fits, Failing Sickness or Convulsions — write me today without all about convulsions. I will describe 353 individuals—estimated 353,000. Dr. C. M. Johnson, C.I. 1848, C.414, Cleveland.
Life Worth Liying Since Asthma Left
Thought Her End Had Come, But Has No Sign of Trouble Now
Sufferers from asthma and bronchial coughs should read this message from Miss Jane Cunningham, 621 Charleston Ave, Port Arthur, Tex. She says:
"I had asthma for 7 years. I tried finally the attacks become so severe I thought my time had come. In November and after that, I never had a bad attack. After taking two-bottles, my asthma disappeared and has not returned." For years from asthma and bronchial coughs, state that their trouble left and has not resolved. vital information will be sent free by Nacor Medicine Co. 721 State Life Bldg, Indianapolis, Ind. Write for this free information and we will send thousands in found relief.
GERMAN-PEP
GERMAN-PEP
A discovery of a famous German
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S
COMBINATION DISTRIBUTING
COMPANY
with W. 11th St. New York, N. P.
These teachings are trained under the
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* Royal Fraternity. Association*
111 West 10th St. . New York City
BOWIE
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applications of algebra, equations in
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5,000 PAIRS OF ASSORTED
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G. FRASER
QUALITY USED CLOTHING
$88 WEST 145th STREET
NEW YORK CITY
No C. O. Doe. Your name and address
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PASSION FLOWER
COMPANY TABLETS
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PIZARO MEDICINE CO., Des Moines, Iowa
CHICHESTERS PILLS
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SOLD BY DRUGGINS EVERYWHERE
We start you in the shoe and hosiery business. Inexperienced workers earn Big Money yearly.
of actual shoes and hockey; 82 styles.
Send $4 Free breezes. Getting Ahead!
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493 C S, Dept. 22, Boston, Mass.
LOOK, BOYS AND GIRLS - Farm School
money selling six lars of our Hair
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PETTIF PRODUCTS SALES CO.
Erg Harbor City, N. J.
RHEUMATISM
Remarkable swolls are beaked above from remnants of the wafers of the western SOAFL LAKE, where realers of the famous SOAFL LAKE, were buried, suffering with Rheumatism. Gout, Lakrane and other or Rheumatical conditions? RHEumatica? Rheumatica? recover. If other remedies have failed, we are in need of a new treatment? DAILY treatment cost $1.25 per mail postal包裹.
Veterans of World War
Good pay to represent national organization collect members. Spreading like wildfire. Intelligent negro worker can secure permanent appointments. Organizing Post's everywhere. Write: ADJUTANT GENERAL, N. C., WORLD WAR. VETERANS. Box 111S, St. Petersburg, Florida.
EyeTroubles
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Cleaning fouse
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FREE with this offer SEAL 54 of Spiritual Service, and Good Luck in your eyes in cth and the books of Rose, Song 26 in stamps with order, Pay postmaster 52.28, Alexander, Box D-06, College Station, New York.
IF YOU WANT
Money, Love, Easy Life
SUCCESS
Write today. Send us money.
I guarantee to give you a start in life.
M. WILLIAMS
001 Borgen Ave.
Jersey City, N.J.
GET A MYSTIC LUCKY KING
Be lucky. Have money. Sweethearts, sweetwife. Wins the magic ring symbol. This mystic ring symbol is the Black Luck. Made of Black Cotton composition with white linen, lifetime. Odd and attractive. For man or woman. Send. For man or woman. Send. Pay Postman $1.88. Satisfaction guaranteed. If not guaranteed. $1.78. $2 for $4.00.
Morganes
at gamer, business, love
my mystery, symbology
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ing, gembling, Good
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Send no mail just rint
invoice plus postage.
Satisfaction
plus cash - $17.50.
cash - $17.50.
for $3.00.
W. SUTKIN, PENNENTON, N. J.
Strong's Express
Moving and General
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DELIVERIES MADE TO
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811 League Ave. New York City
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LYING TO ADVER
666 is a Presidential Invoice for Collar, Glove, Flat, Dampens, Billions Fever, and Malaria. It is the most popular remedy known.
Poppy Cush, 2144
The Alpha Bade
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2148 Seventh Ave
New York City
America's Landing
Collar's Formal Body Wear
Trade With Joe-We Gingerbee Satisfaction
Under-ground
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Find Them
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Alexander, Box 7-96 College
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BLOOD BLEAKS
HOSPITAL HOME OR Old Case
or What's the Cause and for FREE Book-
let about Dr. Painters' Treatment used su-
ccessfully and chronically. Write now.
Treatment mailed postpaid to foreign countries free of
charge. 127 W. Washington St.
Room-D 486, Chicago.
MEN AND WOMEN REGAIN YOUTH
On the sun with the slow of youth,
Gina gives him a new PAPR
Gina is amazing new PAPR
for those who are waddling waddl
for those who are waddling waddl
for those who are waddling waddl
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arrangeth box. C. G. D. Fo
box if not satisfied.
box if not satisfied.
FOR SALE ON LEASE - The Dunbar Center,
605-257 Herkimer Street, Brooklyn, N.Y.
605-257 Herkimer Street, Brooklyn, N.Y.
perfect condition, appraisal location for
Church, Apply to M. K. Scott, 1336 Dean
St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Phone Haddingway
7084
THRINKY HINDERING business for sale on
account of poor health. In business 29
weeks of opportunity for one
wing business, handyman, chapel, complete. Office
two baths, handyman, chapel, complete. Office
two baths, handyman, chapel, complete. Office
fire insurance, one service, garage, gas
space for 9 cars in a wonderful location.
Brooklyn, N. Y., Phone Haddingway 7084.
JOIN OUR NECKLE CHAIR. The lattice uses
every month. Durability Free. Universal
St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Phone Haddingway 7084.
Renewal Vapor for men over 40. Wonderful
scientific discovery gets amazing results.
Information by coated mould, 2 cents
sampel.
256 PROFIT ON EVERY 300 SAE-Teaming orders for Pair-Perfect Hair Dressing and Beauty Creations, Pair-Perfect Co., Memphis, Teen.
600 PROFIT under than inspection. Price: $25.00. Participate in, Medi-Care Co., Depth 303, Brandon, FL.
GANDY WORK FOR SALE--Good business corner. 1 WEST 300th Street.
SPIRITUALIST
OCCULATED JF = Magdalena, Attra. Ocultate
COLLEGE JF = Magdalena, Attra. Ocultate
TOLLETT Articles, Alexander, Box 621
College Station, TX
PERSONAL
PARALYXIS CHANCES, Chance's Topics, Topics
Disease and Laxative Tablets, Write 100
Pages, 724 N. 10th St, Philadelphia, Pa.
Coe 62, 724 N. 10th St, Philadelphia, Pa.
Agents Wanted
AGENTS-Hir. Money, Selling, Money Cal-
culator, Banking, Banking, Banking
-Dock-Standard Company, 222, West. 1353rd
Street, New York, New York.
SERVICES-510 to 15 per day selling
Michigan Tortoise. Need to be a
wonderful repeater. Write for free per
participant. LABORATORS, Box 200, Pre-
ference, Illinois.
Help Wanted—Male and Female
HIPP WANTED—Man in Lake
160, trolling name on an inshore
Site and instructions, SLC DITAG CO.,
P.O. Box 160.
EOTTICS—Travel, make secret investiga-
tions. Experience, unexperienced. Particula-
tion in Electronic System, 2190-D
Henderson, New York.
FIREMEN, Nakagawa, Baggeness who
are colored. Sleeping car train partiers (colored,
red, blue, green). East St. Louis, TN.
200 Railway Hunters, East St. Louis, TN.
TO LET
3 LAROE 1180 MROOMS-Electric. White
Rentals 818.00 up. 168 Lincoln Ave. Bronx, NY.
254 WEST 135th STREET
254 WEST 135TH STREET-Nestly furnished
rooms in private house. Telephone and
kitchens in the building. Working
people. Phone. Edgecombs 6239.
237 W, 1257 ST.-Large and small in-
side rooms. All private. good home
kitchen spaces on all floors. Call Uni-
versity 3824 or in person.
729 W, 1257 ST.-Large front rooms,
natively decorated, kitchen. Small
rooms also. Call all call. Just
opened. Come and see this wonderful
offer.
TO LAROE-Purified room, respectable home,
for people. Also a lil W. (1254
Street.)
NO WAY INMA BROOK. NEATLY FOR
REINED BOOBS IN PRIVATE HOUSE.
SERVICE OUTSIDE FOR REFINED PROPERTY.
WARNED
Large Print Distributed Boom for Business
Operations. Opened Floor Will Not Watch.
Closed Floor Will Not Watch. White Box: K
B. W. 9788 St. K. K.