The Negro World
Saturday, July 19, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
The Independent Weekly
The Issue of the Authorized Press
Regro the World
A Newspaper Drawing School for the Instruction of the Negro Kins
VOL. XXVIL—No. 25
NEW YORK, JULY 19, 1930
Negro Intellectuals Now Agree With U.N.I.A. Program
55 Negro War Mothers Cancel Trip, Write Hoover of 'Insult,' Resent Deeply Jim Crow Policy
Uncle Sam Forgets Death
Knew No Color, Race
or Creed
Hurt and angered by the treatment
accorded them by the War Depart-
ment, fifty-five Negro Gold Star
mothers, who lost sons or husbands
in the World War, have cancelled
reservations, on the American Mer-
chant, which was to take them to
France to visit the cemeteries, and
have sent a protest to President
Hoover.
In this letter, signed by fifty-five
women, they point out that the War
Department, forgetting that war
took its toll & deaths regardless of
color, race or creed," has seen fit to
segregate them from the white
mothers. Another accusation being
made by these women is that inferior
accommodations are being offered
them.
At the United States Lines, the company taking care of the transportation of all the Gold Star mothers it was learned that the Negro mothers are sailing on boats which are smaller, slower and cheaper. Whereas the Government is paying $175 for round-trip passage for every white mother who is going over, it is paying only $100 for the round-trip passage for the Negro mothers, officials of the line revealed. The white mothers were accorded the courtesy of first class accommodations all the way. The first class being the best of everything were at their disposal. The Negro mothers are being housed, while wailing for boats, in the Haram X, W. G. A., in boarding houses and private homes. And as a result, though there are 500 Negro mothers eligible to go and 150 originally intended to go, only
Too Much Spent on Buildings, Too High Salaries to Americans
EMELLE. Ala. - The killing of two more Negroes brought to six the number killed in discovers arising from a Fourth of July argument between a white garage operator and a Negro family. Two Negroes shot two white men had been slain previously.
Both of the Negroes killed this morning were shot by bandits of white men who have searched the vicinity since Friday when three Negroes involved in the original argument fled. One of the two shin was a woman, who was shot when her husband, James Eyer, failed to halt his automobile at the command of a group of men riding through an Emelle street in another car.
The other was a Negro man, as yet unidentified, who was shot in a house near Narketta, Miss., ten miles west of Emelle, to which he had been followed by a pose. He fired at Clarence Bush, wounded him in the elbow. Bush returned the fire, killing the Negro.
The four killed previously:
The four killed previously:
Grover Boyd, white garage operator.
Carne Smith, white police man.
John Robertson, Negro.
Jacob Robertson, Negro.
All were shot to death except Jacob Robertson; who was lynched by a
(Costinized on Page Eight)
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THE NEGRO WORLD
IN GREAT AMERICA
Baby Each 13 Seconds Is Birth Rate in U. S.
WASHINGTON.—According to the Bureau of the Census an American is born every 13 seconds.
At bureau headquarters here electric lights on a great map of the United States flash every 13 seconds theoretically indicating the birth of a child. Other facts that make vital statistics are flashed by lights as follows:
One death every 23 seconds.
One immigrant every 1½ minutes.
Net gain, one every 23 seconds. The display also notes the la- est estimated population of the country. 122,438,800.
Open Congress Or Face Attack, WafdUltimatum
Nahas Pasha Threatens to Start "Secret Plan" Unless Demand Is Granted
CAIRO, Egypt. — The Egyptian Wafd, or nationalist movement, attiring nation-wide resistance by against the closing of the Constitutional Parliament by King Fudd, approached a critical stage today with the growing threat of violent disturbances. Colored by the dynamic personality of square-jawed, aggressive Mustafa Nahas Pasha, tinged with bloodshed in ripping yesterday at Manurah, the World campain will reach its climax on July 11. The date on which the party has demanded that the Kingpaw now Cabinet peopn Parliament and approach of a vote of confidence or those consequences of the powerful Wafd campain.
Charged Against Reynolds
"The tension to which former Premier Nahas has raised the entitlement of the country by the slogan of "Defend the Constitution" was dignified by the Manushai stolls wherein a shooting, cheering mob charged the fixed bayonets of soldiers when the World leader appeared in violation of a police order against political meetings.
The strength of the World party campaign, Rifu in Nihai, Pasha, & (Continued on Page Seven)
Viceroy Slaves to Conciliate India
Result Uncertain—London Amazed by Lord Irwin's Speech at Simla
LONDON. --- Announcement that the forthcoming round table conference on India will meet "with liberty unimpaired" by the Simon report was one of the chief features of a speech made by Viceroy Lord Irwin in Simla. The speech was delivered before both houses of the Indian Legislature and was simultaneously made, public in London. The Viceroy also stated that the British Government's declaration of November last that dominion status was a natural completion of India's constitutional growth "still stands." The evening papers in London feature" of the speech. The Evening Standard, referring to "Lord Irwin's strange words" asked if the Simon report was to be shelved.
The Evening News said the Vicroy's announcement regarding the place of the Simon report in the conference would cause immediate discussion among Conservatives and Liberals who already have expressed disappointment at the Laborite Government's apparent lack of enthusiasm for the document.
"I see no reason," the Vicroy said, "why from frank discussion on all sides a scheme might not emerge for submission to Parliament which would compel the punishment of those who fall on that it is imposed for breach, and make it for wronging in those or similar circumstances."
The Vicroy referred to the own demonstrations campaign of several families and states said the Government informed in court only a temporary economic measure.
"All these are not the same," the
Those That Blindly And Spitefully Opposed Marcus Garvey's Splendid Ventures Now Pining For Them
Never Too Late to Come Into the Fold of the Followers of Garveyism and Espouse the Cause of the U. N. I. A.
Our Strength Lies in Our Economic Independence—We Must As a Race Form a Formidable International Solidarity—Let Us Stop Gahbing and Unite Our Forces Through Co-operation and Harmony for Action
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
Sometimes those of us who are really serious about the future of the Negro Race become almost shocked and disgusted at the attitude of some of our ordinary intellectual leaders
DuBois Agrees With Garvey
Just recently we have been reading the statement made by Dr. DuBois at the commencement exercises at Howard University, where among other things he stated that the solution of the race problem lies in the establishment of some economic base upon which we can build successfully, and that we should look towards that end and hope for some one—to bring this about. If the thoughtful of our people will reflect they will all remember that this was the programmes of the Universal Negro Improvement Association ever since it was started. This was the very programme that we laboured and in which we were opposed by Dr. DuBois and other short-sighted leaders among the Negroes.
The Black Star Line, the Negro Factories Corporation, and the African Communities League were organizations brought into existence to give the Negro an economic place. This was not hidden, it was not secret. It was loudly declared by the founder and leading spirit of the Organization, yet Dr. DuBois greatest planner in the years gone by now to oppose and advocate it. Now that he has done the bloody work, he comes forward and tells us that there was and are the things needed for the salvation of our race. How does we regard this? Either that, he was not capable of leading five or ten years ago or that he will not remain when he did an much harm in proceeding the Negro from being pages on the economic base. Nevertheless we are glad that he is converted and more grit, that the press, another influence in American Negro life, is pointing the people in this direction. We routine that it is only when the Negro has successfully established himself economically that he can right politically, socially and otherwise.
The economic principles for the Negro going forward are now before us. Yet, even in this we have been opposed by the narrow-minded and ignorant of the Dr. Dillard type. We statesbefore that the American Negro should link himself up with the West Indian Negro, and with the African Negro, to build up among themselves a world trade in commerce and industry. The American Negro should look forward to manufacture for other Negroes the things that they consume and need, he should look forward to purchase from those Negroes in foreign parts their raw materials, so that they will be able to turn out the products that are needed by the worlds millions. The American Negroes should get interested in countries like Haiti, British Guiana, British Liberia, Honduras, Jamaica and other parts of Africa and help to develop the products of those countries thereby establishing a trade like that of the United Fruit Company. We should unite our financed to put ships on the oceans to take these raw materials from the, foreign parts into America and the same ships could remove the finished products of America back into the foreign parts. It is only a Union like this that will save the entire race.
Du Bela Learns From Garyey
If Dr. Durbole had the inspiration
twelve years ago he would have
fallen in line and would not be repeating
new that the Negro has not
found a programming to save himself.
We are not prejudiced against how
he espouses the ethics of the Black-
Negro community and how he
instructs the instruction. We know
he has no ambition to know how to
become the Black community's leader
who will become the community's leader.
CHINA
RUSSIA
EASTERN
12 Ways of a White Politician To Endear Himself to the Negro
Judge Esther Tucker writes with mild and the conciliatory anecdotes of the late Judge William H. Hines, an African-American lawyer, who was the first African-American to be admitted to the United States Supreme Court. He describes the court's decision in the case of the Plains Indians, which he wrote in a letter to the Supreme Court.
"In the case of the Plains Indians, the Court ruled that the Indians were not subject to the laws of the United States, but were subject to the laws of the state of Missouri. The Court also ruled that the Indians were not subject to the laws of the state of Missouri, but were subject to the laws of the state of Missouri."
The Court's decision was a significant victory for the Plains Indians, who were the first African-American to be admitted to the United States Supreme Court.
settle down to some line of action and we recommend to them the programme as set out above. Holding protests meetings, making 1 or 2 speeches, raising positions, all these things are contingent upon how strong we are continuously, how reinforced our influences are to reach out to our demands. We are asking for unity, we are asking for cooperation, to help us to put over the programme of the last convention. Photographs must be built in America, our industrial marts and cleaning houses must be financed, for shipping our products to Africa. The American Negroes must link up their forces with the Negroes of the West Indies so that we can develop certain industrial enterprises to supply our factories and mills with the products needed for the consumption of the millions, products that must be re-shiped to our people all over the world. Let us unite in this. Let us not quarrel or bicker; but let us with one accord unite and put this programme over.
With very best wishes I have, the
honor to be
of the Univered Negro Improvement Association I have to request the Divisions, Branches, and Chapters of the organization and Survey Cities that it is incumbent upon and every Division in well outreach and every method to lend in and pay in the Annual Assessment Tax which has been discussed January. The Division on members can be not paid in this amount to the Parent body. The Divisions are requested to lend in the financial report. In another couple of weeks the report of the financial Divisions of the Organization, that is, those who have sent in their reports regularly, will be published in The Negro World. All non-financial Divisions shall be cut off from the Parent Body and shall not be regarded as a part of the movement in working out this great plan for the good, of the Negro race.
All members should remember that it is on the Parent Bid, that all responsibility rests. When local Divisions dissipate and squander the funds of the Parent Bid it is unable carry out its programme and its usefulness. So any member who encourages the local Divisions not to report to the Parent Bid can not be regarded as being in good standing with the Organization. Let every one see that this is done. Reports must be sent addressed to the Secretary-General, Universal Negro Improvement Association, "Edelwil Park," 67 St. Road, Cross Roads P. O., St. Andrew, Jamaica, B. W. L. M. G.
Knox Now Enjoins U.N.I.A. to Reinstate Him and to Get Control of The Negro World
British Confiscate Mahatma Gandhi's Press
BOMBAY.-The government of India confiscated the press on which Mahatma Gandhi's passive resistance papers. Young India and Naviyan, were published. The confiscation followed the editor's refusal to furnish security required under Viceroy Lord Irwin's revival of the press restriction laws.
500,000 Congo Natives Serfs Of the Belgians Are Subjugated to Inhuman Treatment in Darkest Depths of Africa
BRUSSELS...Half a million Negroes are forced to work in the Belgian Congo, whether they want to or not, claims a prominent Belgian statesman, M. P. Ortis, president of the Red Cross of the Congo and member of the League of Nations Mandate Commission.
Killed Off Like Bats
Because the Belgians develop industries too fast in their Congo colony and insist on compulsory labor under the modern term of "white recruitment," the native population in the vast Belgian equatorial colony has decreased steadily during the last 40 years. First warfare and portage, but more lately underfeeding and overwork have demolished the Congo Nation, the says. Accounting for it.
"Children and food from our mums and children and often are sent to foster or orms some three or four days away from their village" (in John Girta, "There are, in cancer when women and young children have been called to help in incarceration. Homeless in the change of food, and the change of mums."
New Health Clinic
Opened in, Harlem
Only Children of the Poor will be
Attended Tp—All Care
Given
A new health service come to Harlem last week. On Monday, July 7,
at 3 o'clock in the morning, the first pre-school clinic to be operated by
the Department of Health in Harlem
opened its doors at 108 West 136th
Street to the very young ladies and
little men between two and six years
of age.
This new service is intended only
for those children whose parents are
too poor to go to a private doctor.
"Every endeavor will be made to ascertain whether or not the child's parents can afford to pay a private doctor," declared Dr. Arthur L. Blau in charge of clinic activities, today. "The parents who can pay a moderate fee are expected to send their children to, the private physicians. Such children will not be served at our clinic."
"The purpose of the pre-school clinic is to give the little child an opportunity to have physical defects discovered and corrected early enough in life so that there may be a more than even chance for a healthy manhood or womanhood.
Hon. Garvey. Instructs Mme. DeMena by Cable, "Fight Knox"
E. B. Knox, who recently burst into disloyalty to the cause of his organization and tried to steal the recaptus of The Negro World is not again on another "hunting trip."
On his last trip Mr. Knox landed in the police court for his gun-mass tactics. There are now two charges pending against Mr. Knox at the court of New York, one on illegal possession of gun and the other on assault charges, and he is out on bail of $2,000.
Now Mr. Knox is enjoining the Universal Negro Improvement Association, asking the courts that he be reinstated as the First Assistant President General' contenting that the President General has no authority to depose him. He also seeks control of the Negro World.' The case will come before the Supreme Court on Tuesday, July 15th, at ten o'clock in the morning. Mr. Knox will be tried under Sullivan law on charge of illegal possession of gun on Thursday, July 17th, at General Sessions Court. Mme. M. L. J. DeMena, the International Organizer, who is now in charge of the American shield of the U. N. J. A. has issued the following statement of this latex Knox affair: To the scattered members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association of August, 1929, greetings
Again we are confronted with difficulties which have unfortunately surrounded our group in the Universal Negro Improvement Association for the past eleven years. During the month of August, 1929, the Honorable Marcus Gar
PUBLIY AU PRINCIPAL HISTORICAL
first week of information in the
conventional edition of Heart of the
Melan Educational commission
collection, there is a note to
encourage that the informant the school the
Bishop the educational is of interest.
The first type of educational
in Huntington, Amherst, and
Rosemary Catholic Administrative
schools, in comparison of the facet-
layages to the curriculum, the physical
equipment and the main general of
the Huntington national grade-12 the
Roman Catholic schools, and the
sociated "warm" schools of the Amer-
icans; the second type of information,
volunteered by Huntington officials, new-
spaper men and the leaders of various
Italian societies, in the data of
criticism in connection with the
operation of the American school.
It is important to point out here that all of the public moneys of the Republic of Haiti are controlled by the so-called treasury or American officers and that by virtue of that supervisory relation the Americans, through budget control, determine the scope of practically all Haitian activities.
Thus there is supposed to be a Haitian system of national schools. These schools are planned to take children at the kindergarten and to release them when they have finished
L. W. McCartney urges all to "Press forward to the soul"—Mr. Mudgal, Editor of The Negro World said "The U. N. I. A. has achieved much in 15 years"—"Learn to be disciplined and success is bound to come"—"Hon. M. L. T. DeMens brings greetings from East Brooklyn Division, accompanied by Major Woodley—Made stirring appeal—Rouses members to their sense of duty—Mr. E. B. Knox sues U. N. I. A. August 1 and its officers for restoration to his former positions against instructions of Marcus
NEW YORK, Liberty Hall, Sunday night July 13th 1920. Members and friends gathered in mass meeting of the U. N. I. A. August 1929 on the occasion of the weekly mass meeting held under the auspices of the Garvey Club. Hon. W. F. Rivers. Vice-President, occupied the chair while on the platform, were the local officers of the organization and the visitors, including Mr. B. G. Mudgal. M.A. Editor of The Negro World and Hon. M. L. T. DeMora, International Organizer of the U. N. I. A. August 1929 of the World.
The concert programme, which preceded the speech making was as follows: Selections by the band under Prof. U. Hassell, which was great applause and merited it; artithem by the choir which also won applause; recitation by Master. Karle Maxwell "Honest Men Are Wanted." The President General's message was then read and the anthem was and sang "God Bless Our President."
The notice was read by the chairman. Mrs. E. M. Collins, vice president and secretary then read some news that appeared in the "Blackman" newspaper of June 28th. The "Infer-Truth" movement in Africa for independence. Petition calling for Marius Garvey presented to President of Lilienna and the reply of Mr. Garvey on receipt of cable that reached him out of town.
Pricilla Johns Snyder of the U.
A. Legions of the Garrison Club and
her first expedition of gold mining in
a aeroplane through the Allegheny of L.
A. Butts. She is from the Warwick
for her flight. She hopes to become an
aviation among the Negawo, women of
the race. We are proud of Lady Mary
Banachy. Negro parachute jumper,
who made a proud of over 2,000 feet
at the Boston Columman airports today
opened by Atty. Tate Alicia, vice
chairman of the Industrial and Com-
mercial Bank. Lail. Old Court and
Ogroma. West Africa. Weigh man
once more, man will die.
Mr. Macquarie President, Other members and trustees. I wish the members and trustees of the Board a timely and a plausible recollection of your following me into the Whitburns. It was a wonderful THIRD MOVEMENT in ARKANSAS. INDEPENDENCE IN INVESTIGATION CALLING FOR MARY MARRYA DEPENDENT TO PRESIDENT KING OF LIBERIA. This is for your encouragement and guidance in your work. I will call on you today, then, your fellow members in yug. A little white ago, Mr. Macquarie Curvey said in that Address was pierced from centre to circumference, and what we might have lost in this western home, there miraculously held community, which we our path in our posthead. Let me say, never grow tired in well doing, for reward is bound to come.
Hon. L. W. M. McCarthy Speaks
Mr. Christman, President, Officee.
Editor of The Negro World, members
and friends; Tonight there has been
a spate of untold happiness in hearing
the late information that has reached
us through the columns of the
"Blackman." The freedom of
Africa will come from within, and it
has proven so through the steps that
they now are ready to take. Mr. Carvey's message is very striking this week. He is asking a very serious question. DO THE NEGROES WANT LIBERTY? THEN BE READY TO DO OR DIE! This question must be answered by ourselves. It is enough that constantly we are jim-crowed, lynchd and burnt. This act alone should drive it together for UNITY OR PURPOSE. Let me say to you, "PRESS FORWARD TO THE GOAL" for it is in sight and give this program your financial and moral support at all times.
Key. C. P. Green
Mr. Chairman, Officers, members and friends. For a few minutes I want to call your attention to a recent happening, and it is this. Today a pastor who had spent about three thousand dollars to repair a building which was to be dedicated by himself and his members, found that the numbers were padlocked. On making inquiries why this was done, he was told the, this place was a beer premise, and that orders were being carried out to have it padlocked. This is all the respect that our people will get in these times, if we continue to depend on other peoples for our welfare. It is plainly seen that the Mogera and the church are not respected. Unless we link up and stick together as one man, then our efforts will be in vain. We must save ourselves and our community from him. Mr. H. G. Mintgal, Editor, The Negro World.
Mr. Chalkman • President, Officers and members, ladies and gentlemen. From what is happening today, it seems the darkest clouds are hovering at the skies. But let us not less courage. This is a meaningful cloak indeed. But in this opinion a new strap is brewing. The o is no reason why we should allow this cloud to drench us. There is a watchful ship that is steering this ship of our own port, and that in your hands. Do not be discouraged of the few directions that may arise among you. There are other movements that are hurrying further experiments. The lessons learned from these experiments are not forgotten for future use. We do not encourage our young men, and the young women, to be intellectually stimulated. We encourage them to mind one U, N, L, A. Actually, young old, and you have done well and well in creating this new movement of the hopes of our Negro, and in a wonderful development. We must learn to go this new movement that are in the way, our progress internally, and meet the trouble will disappear.
Today these are very taking contempo-
rationally, and these the Neys should watch. There is
franco-Italian rivalry. Muscolini is trying to create a Roman Empire in North Africa. It is the same at-
temptation that prevailed not long before the World War. If we are not
preparing to arrive for freedom then we shall lose our opportunity. Can't
all beieres, for there cannot be individual liberty we are all slaves. When we are all free then
we can talk about individual liberty. We must learn to be disciplined. It
would have been in chance, if it was not for discipline and Garamondi's
work would have been lost. It is enough to have such a noble leader as the Men. Marcus Garvey.
Let us watch the British policy in Pakistan and South Africa, Tanzania, which was German territory, was handed over to Great Britain by the League of Nations, Great Britain has only governing powers and by propaganda they are trying to form a federation of, Tanganyika, Kenya, Uganda and the present Union of
Mr. Chairman, President, Officers,
mammara and friends. I bring you
greetings from the East African
Division of the U. N. I. A. August
1929 of the World. They are making
very good program, and very an-
thuslastic in the program in which
we are all engaged. In three times
when we are passing through these
serious times, we should not be moved
by sentiment, but should be firm in
our minds and hold steadfast to
the truth.
I want to call your attentions to the many happenings in the world today. How many can realize that last week 800 Negroes were routed from the homes and 6 were murdered including a woman, for meagre sum of $2.50, resulting out of repairs on an automobile, because the Negro attempted to collect.
The half has not been told of the conduct against the Negroes in this country. The Yankee Negro is talking of social-equality, sending anonymous letters to. Alabama, which is enough to have the race 'ostracized, lynched and burned. White people are murdering our people for the foolishness that is going out from Harlein.
Garvey said the day would come, when the white man would be hungry, and he would kill to get food for himself and family. Last week a white man went to a sawmill and asked his white brother for a job. He was refused work on the grounds that there was none. On looking around this man saw a Negro at work. He told the man in charge that he would not stand to see a Negro at work and he starved. Consequently he shot the employer dead on the spot, then turned to the Negro and told him he was 'not wanted. The Negro on leaving his work, was also shot to death.
Yesterday few black women whose sons died in the war came to New York to make a pilgrimage to the graves of their loved ones. They had been placed on different ships from the white mothers. If was an infiltration ship on which the Black Mothers were placed. Our influential and leading characters in New York have been hacking, talking, telegraphing, wringing, hot-speeching, doing everything, but the war department went on with their program and took the Negro Mothers as war planned.
In 1992 Marcus Garvey, the known leader, started a shipping program and held a beautiful steamer, spacious accommodations, large state rooms, black officers and crew on the Boater T. Washington. When this war started the same group said "Unarmy must go." He was then lined up in Alameda, and the ship was lost to the tree. Find we were allowed to keep our ship, today we would be in Alameda. In more encounters with the Negro man. But we are dumped on our own.
With our long臂, arm, million we want and type upon all of us we want a family for our family. Yes, Black Mothers, we are after you want, and we hope that you will be born the same kind of woman that you have won on Phantom. Third, Black women shall show that there is no inferiority in women or motherhood. If Black Mothers have to go again, we hope to shall be an African's soul for complete cooperation of the 400 million Negro people of the World.
Coming from the Bohai Coast to visit immigrant, Japanese, and to be entertained by the Bion, Maran Gersh, and top Belgian Crinchoppe. A repressive child, an Axis Group who aims to hide, will in a few years land unseen out for Independence, Japan, China, now India, fighting, who next to follow but the African's I may carry on until the dream of an African Empire be realized and materialized.
I am here before you tonight, to inform you of the action that Mr. F. B. Knox has brought against the Universal Negro Improvement Association, August 1922 and its officers and those of The Negro World. In all seven charges have been made against him. The U. N. L. A. and African Communition League August 1929, the Negro World, the Parent Body of all have been called to the Supreme Court of New York for the restoration to his former position as against the instructions of our President General, the Hon. Marcel Garvey. The fight is on, and, we must all play our rights to safeguard the interests of the association and its leader, by giving our cooperation financially, morally and otherwise.
Mr. Garvey has sent me a cable, and I shall carry out his instructions to the best of my ability with your cooperation. The hearing will come up on Tuesday, July 15th, in the Supreme Court at 10 a.m. On Thursday the 17th, the gun case will come up in the Criminal Court.
The meeting then adjourned with the playing of the, "Star-Spangled Banner," and the singing of the National Anthem, "Ethiopia," and benediction by the chaplain, Rev. C. P. Green.
of 25-month calendar, might make
a lot different for the sheep who
talks in a half up to 31 days to get
taught the Book of the Bible.
Imperfectly twenty known as the Negro World to express my feelings as touching the attitude of E. B. Knox and R. T. Brown. As a constant reader of the paper which has awakened me, I always came across the many congratulations published in behalf of these two men. B. B. Knox, who has reached a position which no other Negro has ever reached (1st Assistant President General, an office which has never been filled since the advent of the U. N. I. A.) has left the 400,000,000 Negroes to count him worthless by degrading himself in such an office. Having the chance to be the Director of 15,000,000 Negroes and a subdirector of 400,000,000 had tried to doom them through want of faith, courage, and the true principles of the U. N. I. A. Reading the address of Mr. Knox at his arrival from Europe, and also one in Jamaica, B. W. I., who could believe that the intention of a traitor was ever in the mind of such a man.
In an address by him he states, "I have drank to the very last dregs the teachings of the Pion Marcus Garvey ajd. could answer time turn my back on my race." What has become of these words? All fails to the ground. Sir, your race mourn with you, weep with you, lament with you, for ere death calls on you, you would, wish that birth had never been your lot. Don't forget that day after day the cries of the 400,000,000 Negroes are gone to the "Great I am."
The congratulations tendered **R. T. Brown** also falls to the ground and will never rise to bless his days. Promotion is no value to such men, honor and respect was never made for them, shame, and disgrace shall be their lot. Negroes take hand of your ways, look straight on the "Guide Light" for victory is near. Don't try to weep over failure; be of a soldier and take the place of your officer when he calls. Take the warning of your Negro, friend the Hon. Marion Garvey, and you are sure to overcome the horrors that await you. I desire to conclude with the following poem.
Knox and Brown were two noble men. Knox was a. London. Brown all Fiction.
Brown leaped on Knox and both fell
then.
Went into the Office and changed the lock.
Stopping a "Vigil" and a brave Negio man.
Planned his work and, then worked his plan.
Short gun was of no use to Knox.
For Strong was on him this day on a fox.
He called to his mate to come and
for her he had his horse power in them to resist.
Shooting to his help was double after Parker.
Did Strong with her back for a throw
of the pawn.
The police sent in and no longer strong.
Who was mounting hard against the wrong.
We crown Strong a "Hero" brave and true.
Noyro men like him are but very few. The U. N. E. A. would have may its hearsen Mr. Strong was on hour more "loud."
Know free & where and old jour to town. Thinking art of his dream and fearful mind.
Noyro, left join to hall Strong high; Give thanks to our God that he was right.
Thanking you for your space Mr. Scoten.
Surprising Thing
Mr. J. J. Thomas of Mobile, Alabama, writes as follows:
"My dear Mr. Strong, honorable
hero of the skirmish duel! The loyal
message came to me through the
Negro World, the remarkable stand
that you are taking today 14, 1930,
to protect the 'month-piece of
FREE TO
A week's trial of the Marvelous Munich Method
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To The Negro World Defense Fund Money is needed to protect the interest of this your newspaper-you know of our troubles in New York. What can you do to help us is the question? This is the time for action-answer the call with dollars. Send us whatever you can. Men are noted for what they do and not what they say. This is the time to do! Bring or forward your contribution at once to our office, 355 Lenox Avenue, New York City.
A foster father you are great
mature individual and learns good
wishes. A foster father you are great
life and you learn in health and
massage so that you will be able to use
those good gestures at any time to
protect the cause of Africa redemption.
The cousin of Mr. E. B. Knox is not a surprising thing to me. I sailed with Mr. Knox on the steamship Lady Rodney to Kingston, Jamaica, just July on my way to the convention. Knox held conference with Mr. Garvey's adversaries.
Mr. E. B. Knox's conduct on the convention ground proved, him amit for the office to which he was elected.
Knox collected $23.00 from this district, $8.00 sent tb him by mail, $15 G. A. Creagin collected. Mr. G. A. Creagin told the people hee that Mr. Garvey had appointed him to the office of Secret Service to the Parent Body. I. J. J. Thomas told Creagin he was untrue. He asked the people to put me out of the hall, but he saw I was another Mr. Strong, and he decided to let me be. The quicker we drop such leaders as that group, that is lying and stealing from the people, the better it will be for the 1929 program.
I am the delegate that nominated the Hon. Mr. Ford of Mississippi against Mr. E.-B. Knox. I was defeated by a majority of votes, but I was wide awake in what I was doing."
Excelsior Division
Excelsior Division battling its way up through insuffice and ridicule to a position of unassailable vigor. On Sunday night, July 13th, the membership though small, mettled tiger new ball at 132nd street and Lenox avenue. The religious ceremony was performed by Mr. Acting President Hon. J. E. Samuel's. Selection by band reading of the Alms and Objects of the U. N. J. A. followed.
The speakers were Mr. J. T. Govis, first vice-president; Mr. Sam Kelly, Mrs. Blackston and Chaplain Baxter. The speakers were all very enthusiastic and made stirring appeals to the heart and minds of the members and friends. The every day happenings should be taken curiously by the men and women of our area and prepare themselves for the coming conflict that is bound to come. Our people are constantly pressed to the walls; our lives are being taken every day by the news that reaches us through the papers of the country, and the insults shapped upon us as a people. The offenders and members are endeavouring to raise the standard of the division, come and help. The meeting was brought to Kobe at 11 p.m. with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem, and conclusion by Chaplain Baxter.
Poes War Munichphile
HITLER - The Seconds today discussed not only four times within the British Empire, German agitation in Lithuania, opposing the motion, perhaps it was a song wily to create an atmosphere leading up to a moral war with the United States.
Milner or Commander McHilligan and the Iron Pride State would go to the Imperial Conference with an open mind. The motion was white-crown.
The local Jubilee Commission of the city of Chicago whose business is the strategy for the entertainment of the small Baptist family and their guests in the forthcoming Fifth year Golden Jubilee Celebration of the National Baptist Convention of America, is now ready to state to the publ- ob at large throughout the country that the city of Chicago is now about ready with open doors to entertain the thousands of Baptists who will assemble here in the Golden Jubilee Session of the Convention Aug 14th—25th.
The Commission has been hard at work since last October and now all things are about ready. The entire Christian family of Chicago, regardless of race, denomination or convention, affiliations is wholly given over to the task of helping make this Jubilee session of the convention the greatest event of the race since emancipation.
The place secured by the Local Commission to hold the convention is known as the Coliseum, located on Wabah at 14th St., is the largest the most spacious and accommodating building which the convention has ever been able heretofore to secure. Everything is being arranged so there will be no want for food, shelter, drink and the necessary things for comfort. The Local Commission is asking that all persons who attend the convention, when you arrive at the various stations in the city, if you have your assignment, you can secure a taxi and go straight to your home. If you have not your assignment be sure to see the transportation committee which will be on hand at the various stations, so you can be properly assigned without getting into the wrong company. It is the purpose of the commission who is arrangement for the entertainment to see that every person coming, to the convention is safely intelligently and comfortably located for the ten days stay. Dr. L. A. Weaver, Chairman of the Baptist Convention; Dr. J. H. Branham, Dr. J. H. Brown, and others who have charge of the principal committees are asking that persons planning to attend the Golden Session of the National Baptist Convention, the Sunday School and E.N.P.U. Congress and the Ladies Auxiliary Convention at Chicago, Ill. August 16th, 2010 will please send in their applications for homes immediately to the Jubilee Headquarters, 3001 South Parkway, Chicago, Ill. We cannot afford to slacken our interest and efforts to carry out in detail every plan and arrangement for the Golden Jubilee Session which has been so wisely outlined by our great President, Dr. L. K. Williams and his associates. This is the year of Jubilee, a time of freedom, rejoicing, exercising a spirit of friendship, loyalty and cooperation; a time to free ourselves from the guiling chains of malice, revenge, hatred, strife, and
All persons returning to attend the College Session of the National Public Health Conference, the specialty school, and H. H. P. K. Curtiss and the Louis Waddell Conference at Chicago, H. H. Argent Health, will please send their applications to the following: Illinois State College, Illinois State College, Illinois State College, A. H. St. Johns, Christian State, J. H. Grisham and J. H. A. Moore, Executive office.
RAILY
THE AID
NEGRO WO
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The Rip Grande Valley Division 119 on receiving every issue of the Voke of the Awakened Negro—The Negro World—and members, learning of Knox's conduct in trying to steal the records of the Garvey Club, Inc., and subscribers lists of the Negro World had caused members and sympathizers of the U. N. I. A. in this section to be very much upset and very anxious to see or hear that something had been done with that material. Black race with a proclu- tion for race will be as long as he runs loose he is dangerous—(very dangerous) to the U. N. I. A. We say this for the simple reason that we have so many weak ones among our people.
We have many that are not altogether race-conscious, and on the other hand we have so many so-called ministers of the Gospel who will get up and preach to the people against the U. N. I. A. and Mr. Garvey. And we have many school teachers who will talk to parents against the U. N. I. A. and Mr. Garvey, and these weaker people believe in these bootleggers of the Gospel and these teachers who are bloated with the white man's propaganda and are feeding it to the weaker ones, and until we give this race of ours cured of that disease, a man like Jesus is very dangerous as long as he remains loose.
A man of his type should be dead.
He is worth more of the race dead
than he is worth alive, because 'as
long as he is alive he has a chance
to nab a hole in this great movement.
It seems like it is up to the young
awakened Negro to take up the
responsibilities of the race and help
to put over this great program as it
registers our older buddies, tends
to join the weather member of our
workbook, keeps them in the dark
with the pattern-matching woman,
to be humble and submissive, prays
and doesn't steel and be a good Christian,
and if the other fellow treats you
wrong and kares you up grey for
him, and when you die you will go to
Heaven.
But I declare unto you that this the new unwokened Negro has longed that he might watch, light, as well as pray and make preparations to live here on earth, trust the other fellow eight and see that he treats your youth well in unplightness of heart with love touched in each other as a race and in truth Before God and it will have nothing to be spray for then be clean and when all of our needs be filled that we will have nothing to do unless the nation
One God! One man! One destiny!
The Biro Grande Valley Division,
U. N. F. A. & A. C. L. of 1929 of the
world shall not rest until it rids the
country of these bootleggers of the
Cape and pulls lumps who tend to
lead our people wrong and fight the
spirit of Carvayism.
Carvayism means: Freedom—and
we don't have any respect for any
man or woman regardless of who he
is the professed to be, if he or she
has accepted the profession.
Thanking you for your much appreciated
services in the past, we have
the honor to be
GARVANCIER & SUPPORTERS
OF THE CAUSE AFRICA, R. G. V.
Div. 18 U. N. L. A. & A. C. L. 1929
of the World. By W. A. Ogborne. Secretary.
Omaha. Nebr., Div.
Omaha, Nebraska. Division staged a monster mass meeting Sunday, June 29, 1930. The feature of the program was exhibited with music from the U. N. I. A. orchestra interluded with two or three spicy addresses which were greatly inspiring to the large number of friends and sympathetic who witnessed the demonstration.
The colorful part of the program was led by the I. N. A. L. and Black Crown Nursery.
We received notice on all divisions and juries of the University Night Improvement Association that the Omaha Division is not yet.
The meeting stood with staging of Bishop's National Archives and ceremonial led by the Omaha Bureau.
MISSING
At eight o'clock in the evening on July 6th, the Tiger division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association held their regular weekly meeting at their hall, 73 West 133rd Street.
The meeting was called to order by the President, the legion marched into the hall in preparation for receiving the Hon. Lady International Organizer, Madam M. L. T. DeMeana, that nary little field general of the organization. The hall was packed with members and visitors to hear that peerless little lady deliver an address on Garveyism, a subject on which she is always eloquent.
The opening ode was delivered with much enthusiasm the president then introduced the first speaker in the person of Mr. Thomas, who spoke on the hesitant attitude of the Negro and regards his position and condition in this country. Mr. Thomas stressed the importance of the people of the Negro race getting their small differences settled and work in harmony with each other for the common cause of Negro Nationalism.
After the speech of Mr. Thomas the audience sang "Shine On Every Light." The fighting Colonel of the Tiger division, the Hon. St. William Wellwood Grant, that little replica of Joe and only, the real Tiger of the Negro race. Horn. Marcep Garvey now took the opportunity of saying a few words concerning his Tiger division, the fighting unit. He spoke seriously on the crookiness, to be found in all Negro organizations, and a large part of which was and is due people outside, sending spies into the organization to break down the morale he said, had been formed by higher officers in whom they had had implicit trust and that was for any organization. He, further said that if all President's and Officers would adopt the method of his division they would in a short time eliminate these murders. He suggested intimate measures for these, people when discovered, the animal after whom his organization was named, he claimed, would be tried with such a person in commission to the treatment that would be administered by the Tiger division of New York.
the honour was next stirred with the famous "Ob Africa Awakenen." The next speaker, the ex-svc-president, was the Vice-President of the division spoke on the condition of the Nairobi country over. In conclusion he contend the Negro that he would in short space he exterminated unless he linked himself with the only organisation that could carry through the war that would mean Nairobi independence.
One of the principal speakers of the republic who now introduced in the parliament the little Tiger team, the first Lady Tiger team, the first Lady Powell. Oh What! it is a splendid lady. She simply lifts one out of her curvy coronation belt as all that she desired, her speech in show even and her voice has a carrying power quite unassessed in conversation with her.
An instrumental solo was now live by Mr. Winters at the piano, "Motivation," that sweet humming melody. Magic Woodley gave in a talk on colonial France and France during the War and armed. How black soldiers were forced to fight their blood brothers for the rule of moneymanages of the white race.
The army of spectators showed plainly the formidable possibilities for the "Tiger Division in this city." It seems that they have what in no necessity to the success of any division, the right leadership and supporting officers. Before the final treat of the evening, the Colonel spoke on the local program of his division for the coming winter. He explained the mission of the Tigers to help as many Haiti Negro children, as possible to secure, and shoes during this coming cold winter, whose mothers are in darknessiness circumstances, that he said, was the urgent need of the community, something that would aid the needy at home instead of going abroad to find needy cases.
During the playing of an instrumental duet with piano and violin the Legion marched out in preparation to DeMens. The Legion entered the hall, marched down the right aisle, erect and soldierly every one of them, from the fighting Colonel to the newest private. The line of march led down past the speakers and officers station, and a line was formed double rank facing each other making an arch down which the President, followed by the Hon. Lady who in turn was followed by the lady officers' and guard of honor. At the command of the Colonel the audience arrose to their feet and stood at aulate while the procession came down to the speakers station.
Mrs. Caucci, Miss Peace and older index presented the Hon. M. L.-T. Dikma with flowers and the Lady President, Hon. Colleen presqueed her with a bracelet from Africa, the lady President making the presentation to the lady President Dikma asked the ladies to make a thank you, then after she had made her talk of the evening.
The Hon. President and Colonel of the English Army introduced the Most International Organizer, Madame M.
So I say to you here, fight and die if necessary to carry on the program laid down by that perfect honor of Hon. Marcuss Garvey, to seek no rest until the Red, Black and Green shell wave on the seven seas and Africa in reveredness. I thank you. To wish at this time to take the extreme pleasure of thinking these kind indies for their floral enclosing, as I am a lover of flowers which I can smell and see them, yes, bring in all the good things while I can appreciate them. (Prolonged applause.) The Colonel then had the audience give three cheets for the Hon. Lady and for the Hon. officers, as leader and the organization.
Wilson here has given a thank you
came as a surprise. Miss Pares gave
us a never-to-be-forgotten solo, and
what a voice that young lady has,
there are no notes that she cannot
reach. The crowd simply wilt and
what an ovation she received. She
was accompanied by Rabbi Ford, who
torn took a few minutes to say a
few of the division. He was
followed by the and only Steam
Boat Bill who kept the crowd in a
continuous upward. The meeting closed
with Miss Pares singing "God Save
the President."
Watch for the programs of the
T.1.7 Division" for something, differen-
tion and diverging, while we are un-
care of African redemption.
It is an extraordinary thing in the life history of the Negro race that we have made a tremendous progress within the span of only fifteen years. These fifteen years are full of romance, strife, achievement, failure, and again a brilliant, future ahead of us for a more solid achievement. The fifteen years we are talking about commemorate the BIRTHDAY of an IDEA, the idea being that of launching the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Since then what an impression the Negro has on his consciousness and what an impression he has left on the consciousness other races? While the birth of this idea, the Negro organizations, led by blindfolded intelligence, engaged in petifogical local politics, here came this great organization called the Universal Negro Improvement Association, oh what a name, and with what a program!
In contrast to other Negro organizations, the U. N. I. A. stood for not only the national rights of the Negroos, but also for our international rights. And even something more: The Negro, even if he gets equal rights in countries like the United States and elsewhere he would be still in an "object minority" and without a HOMELAND.
And to have a homeland of and for the Negro the DYNAMIC CONCEPT of African REDEMPTION was visualized. Has not this concept proved unrestricted and captivating? Ask any Negro and be convinced.
And the man whom it was given to entertain this concept, this great vision was no other than that great Negro, Marcus Garvey. Indeed he will go down in the history of the Negro race as the real LIBERATOR of his people from universal slavery.
Like every other great man he is excomminated by his own people. But what does it matter? Mr. Garvey is ready to serve his people. He serves the Negro people, the entire MASSES, not merely the educated few. Hence his troubles are many. But it does not matter. For his leadership is great enough, more than great to cope with any and all difficulties. Well then, here is a man who has put the impress of his very name upon the times he is living in - GARVENISM is as essential a word to movement as Marxism is. And will this Garvovism ever be anything more than a symbolism? Will it ever materialize? The answer to these questions should be clear. The politicalities of Garvovism are so very rich that they only avoid emobiation by the infidious, steadfast and loyal.
If we only are determined to achieve what Garrettus had told us we will. Why? Follow president of the Negro League for the year over in any fight for liberation, a new war on GARRIVISM IN OUR OWN WORLD.
San Gerritus, Calif.
On Sunday, June 28, San German Division, No. 722, held the popular meeting. I was also observed for the celebration of since inducted officers of the division term. The Rev. H. A. Garrettus Division, who happened to have been among us conducted the ritualistic rites. He preached a beautiful sermon entitled for the occasion taking for his subject "Whitman," which was widely applauded.
After the religious rites were complained to turned the remaining part of the diaconate to the supporter, Brio, J. A. Johnson.
The president at some time got to the business of the installation personnel, and acted in the security of installing master with the assistance of Brio, J. A. Jackson. The officers who voluntarily responded to their cathars were as follows:
Eno, J. H. Archer, president; J. A. Chipman, chief vice president; J. H. C. Chipman, chief vice president; Lady Division: Sisters I. Iron Lady vice president; L. Mighty, first lady vice president; M. M. Higginson, second lady vice president; Josephine Cummings, secretary; E. Cummings, treasurer.
The Ethiopian National Anthem was then sung and the installed officers took their seats.
The newly made president, Bro. J. H. Archer, addressed the assembly,恳请 for the honor that were conferred upon him in making him president. He solicited the loyal support and cooperation of the people within and without, which is the only means, he said, by which any administration can prove a success. At this juncture a new member was received and took his coat in the person of Bro. Othneal guvans, and was welcomed by the president into the fold of the U. N. I. A.
The ex-president gave a brief talk instructing the new cabiget to be steadfast, vigilant and courageous in their duties.
The weekly announcements were made, and the enjoyable meeting was brought to its close at 11:25 P. M. with praises.
Sydney, Cape Breton, Dyv.
Holds 10th Anniversary
On the 18th of June last we are
receited in a fitting manner the 10th
anniversary of our Division No. 0
of the U.N. P. A. here in the City of
Sydney under the direction of
W. Kulga. Furnished the evening pro-
gram. Refreshments were served at
intermission. The committee com-
posed of the following ladies:
Mrs. A. Coward Mr. I. Eliteene,
Miss A. Lynch Mrs. A. Lucas and
Miss D. Lynch
We heartily thank Mrs A. Coward for providing our Anniversary cake; also her co-workers who so nobly donated to make the occasion a success. The following is the program: Selection, by Band, "O Canada"; address by S. Beekes, President and Chairman for the occasion; selection by Band; address by A. Lucas, Vice President; recitation by Master Vin. Nurse, "Sweetheart"; selection by Band; address by Gerald Herbert, Ex. President of our Division; selection by Band; address by W. Helloway, and selection by Band. Note of thanks by the Chairman. National Anthem by Mand. Dancing followed which lasted until the woe hours of the morning. S. BENKLES. Reporter.
Oakland Division
Oct Tuesday evening, June 6, Corkland Division No. 188, U. N. J. A. held its annual election of officers at Liberty Hall, 5th and Chester Sts. Ms. Wm. Jackson, veteran chairman of the Trustee Board, held in the capacity of Moderator. Mr. Wm. Woods was reflected president. Attorney L. J. Kearn, recent graduate of Howard University and a stalwart Garveyville, was elected first vice president. Mrs. Ella Matthews, one of our oldest advocates of Garveylam and a conscientious worker, was elected lady president. Mrs. Prisla Scotten, a budding genius, was elected first lady vice president. Mrs. Lee Kinley, a willing worker, was elected second vice president. Mrs. Erik Spirea, a recent member, was elected third lady vice president. Mr. William Jackson we selected chairman of the trustee board. Mrs. James Coulter was elected member of the trustee board, as was aps Mrs. W. J. Deane, Mr. Felix Biechfeld, was projected treasurer, Mr. L. G. Young was elected associate secretary.
On Tuesday evening, June 17th the doors of Liberty Hall were thrown open for a public installation. After the officers were duly installed by the chaplain, Rev. C. Chalmers, the throng that Cloak Liberty Hall to its seating capacity, followed the newly installed office staff staffed to an elaborate sign of posturements. B. PENNICK, Resorter.
Tolodo, Ohio
Our Division No. 101 held the re-
president's morning meeting, duly
at 6:30 at the Associate Avenue. The pres-
sident, who opened by the eminent
chairman "From Great Bend" by Mo-
taintain,
This first vice president, Rev. Howard,
mrought light on Lincoln at the
Lady President Mrs. Byrd with
Morton's encouragement.
"The Negro World was read by Mrs.
Howard.
The President's fromm, "God Save
our President," was sung. Little
dolphin song "Who Loved the Planet."
A reading on the subject, "The
Negro" was regaled by Little Cath-
lina Porter.
The whole staff of officers was on
duty. Many members were with us.
We were glad to see them. Mr.
Bergenon was with us. We were also
Kurz's sister joined on Nurse Bran-
gain.
The minister for the evening was the Rev. Valentine from New York, who spoke on "National Uphold." The entire audience was invited to keep in touch with our worthy leader, Mr. Garvey.
Collection was raised and Filipino
Anthony was sung.
HATTIE STEVENS, Reporter.
Knoxville, Tenn.
The Knoxville Division No. 184 met at Liberty Hall at its regular meeting hour, on Sunday, June 29. The meeting opened with the singing of the openingode, followed with prayer and softwear reading in the chapel, after which the program was conducted as follows:
Reading of The Negro World by
Mr. W. R. Wakin, followed with the
singing of the President-finale's
hymn. We had a wonderful address
from our Advocate, Mr. W. R. Wakin,
which was enjoyed by all; also a
line speech from our chaplain, Mr.
W. B. Singleton, Miss Mary E. Welson,
our 1st lady vice-president, read
a very interesting paper, on the
subject, "Delay Not." This was followed
with song from a trio composed of
Miss Mary E. Welson, Mrs. Susie L
Lattimore and Legion Harvie Harris,
attitled "Crying Holy Utho the Lord." A
recitation by Miss Helen Malone
(1831) received, as well as the
recitation coming from Bert. Malone.
We had talks by Mrs. Johnson
and Mr. O. Ellis. We were favored,
with the address and a soft
from our lady president, Mrs. Best
Wakin, both of which were well
applauded by the matrastate and
science.
The meeting was brought to a close
with the singing of the Ethiopian
Anthem and the beating ticker.
Mrs. W. R. Wakin.
At exactly 3 o'clock Sunday, June 22, the Chicago Division 23 staged a "record breaking" mass meeting in the Pythian Temple, 37 Place and So. State Street.
The uniform rank led by Captain Gus Reed was an outstanding feature for the day.
The multitude of old and new Garveyites (regardless of past misunderstandings) sung from Greenland's Ice Mountain" and repeated in unison the Universal prayer. Hon. Robt. L. Ephraim, president presided. The vast audience stood and sang "Oh. Africa Awaken" which seemed to raise the foot from the temple.
Hon. Martin Garvey's weekly message was read by Hon. Robt. Ephraim. Song, "Marcus Garvey started the movement in the City of New York" was burst forth from the mouth of a happy sister. Elder M. Nelson and the ex-President of Robus Division entertained the gathering for a brief moment, followed by a song, entitled "Garvey he the world in his hand."
Hon. Robt. Crim was then introduced by the President. He began by singing /Garvey's going to set this world on fire/ (applaud). In closing he assured Hon. R. Ephraim his over increasing loyalty.
Hon. R. L. Ephraim told the History of his administration in the Chicago Division. And said, "I counted the cast before I took this dream and intend to follow through to the end. He, Hon. R. Ephraim, recited the poem, "I want you to know" which he had recited to the Hon. Marcus Garvey during the convention. In closing he said, "I extend to you the Olive Branch or Rose" (Meaning to those who had gone out under the wrong impression). The gathering stood and sang "God Bless Our President" after which Hon. M. L. Breeding apolysed and promised us that he will be with us once, twice and ever.
At the sound of the novel everybody stands to greet the principal speaker in the person of Mr. Hen Grove C. Ford, High Climber. He removed his uniform gap while the audience still applauded. Our President has made a favourable impression on the High Chancellor. "I don't have such a favourable impression of Mr. Epiphany when I left him in New York, but now he has convinced me since visiting his home and your division, that he is in doing not want to elevate the people that he is in the office to the head. Hon. H. C. P. Pope is subject for the day was "The Forge of the Road." He pictured the Hon. Morton Carpentry at the front of the house where he will be in the office until the day he leaves. Within the house and the garden the morning must have been spent. Hon. Ford's address, closed by the posted in poem praising One God One Alm! One Dearly (quoted applauded).
The Chishan Social Club gave a short晨读讲座 in which Mrs. D. Horstmann, Mrs. C. Browep, Mrs. Rowen, Nelly and possibly Mrs. Up the Chapman were attentively listening.
The meeting terminated with the opening of the Ethiopian National Artemis and Babadum from Hon. Graver G. J. Foul.
Indiana Nelly, Deposition
The Tulane Division held its regular most recent Sunday, July 6.
The meeting continued with the opening of the ode followed by a prayer and Scripture by Mrs. M. W. Wilkens that were problem.
The program was conducted by Mrs. Jeanne Jettec, reception by Mrs. Sina Elashburn and reading of the front page of The Negra World by Mr. J. M. Wilkens followed.
After the anthem was rendered by the choir, the Hon. President gave the closing remarks and the meeting closed with the singing of the national anthem.
At 8:45 p.m. the meeting opened with the singing of the song "From Greenland's Ice Mountain," which was followed by prayer. The program was under the auspices of the Roland W. Hayes Musical Club. The program was as follows:
* Firing by Miss Susie Blackburn, "Toukaa and Ouveture"; vocal solo by Miss Mary Berry, reading by Miss, Hudson, Life of Roland Hayes; piano solo by Miss, Eileen Clarke, recitation, Miss Claiva Clarke, "To Our Boys"; solo by me, well known Jewish tenor, Mr. Zimmerman, address by Mr. E. L. Cross, LLB. "The Importance of a higher Education for the Race," in which the speaker / stressed and pointed out to the young boys and girls the need of a higher education.
The meeting closed with the singing of the Ethiopian national anthem.
Since the boys and girls of today are the men and women of tomorrow, on whom we depend for leadership, in this great race of ours; and since the successful, honest and efficient leadership of our group, is measured by, and depends on the thought and wisdom of our youth of today, we can, with certainty look forward for efficient leadership in the youths of the East Brooklyn Division; and we take great pleasure in presenting our prospective Lady President of the East Brooklyn Division in the person of Miss Agusta V. Jackson, member of 1930 graduating class of Girls' High School. The only student of the high school group to win honors is Miss Agusta. V. Jackson of 884 Greene avenue, Brooklyn, graduate of Girls' High School.
She won the "Ameda Sprague Memorial Award" for good citizenship, "Silver Medal" for excellence in Latin, 4 years work, "Alfred Bossom Medal and Diploma" for cooperation in government.
Miss Jackson has also written the graduating class's song and, was, also elected to the Arista, a high school honor society. She is now 18 years old. She is graduated from Public School at the age of 11. She has in every sense of the word attained a record in her ecological endeavours, which is worthy of the highest, commendation. She plans to enter Hunter's College in the fall, and in behalf of the East Brooklyn Division we wish her success in all her undertakings, and trust that she may be Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and our Judi and Miss Jackson is an active member and president of the Dupuy-Drummond Club, an auxiliary of the East Brooklyn Division of the U.N. J.L. A.
On the evening of her graduation in a surprise party was given by the Daisy Dramatic Club of which she is president, under the direction of Mrs. Inez Mickelson Lady Vice-President of the East Brooklyn Division and Director of the Daley Dramatic Club. She was directed with awards in *business*, presents and *dress* not excluded. A delightful hostess he was given to her by her mother, Helen Jackson Ballon who stamphiliptly with a smile as she looks with satisfaction on her four friends, all of whom are Midgets of Hunger Children. Those girls prove the honor to their mother, not to our race and a blessing to humanity.
You are cordially invited to attend the Daisy Dramatic Club second appearance, in their comedy sets on Sunday evening the 5th of October Club Hall. They will meet the filly, Teresa and two significant room in their performance, in more than four productions.
Contributors To
The Defence Press
THE PIGEON IS ON SHELL. THE
SMALL PUSSY IT IS THE ORIGINATION
OF ALL. THE TWAINING NURBSHIPS TO SAVE
THE DEGENERATION AND THE
NEGRO WOULD FROM THE
DEGENERATION THAT A WORLD
POSITION. IF YOU ARE WITH
THE PIGEON, MARK GARVEY, GEN
DEGENERATION AND THE TWAINING
THEN CONFIRMED WE EXPLORE THE
CAUSE AND HANDLE OF RECOMMENDED IN THE DEFENCE WORLD
ROLE.
THEREFORE WE TAKEN GREAT
PLEASURES IN CHANNING THE
FOLLOWING DIVISIONS FOR
THEM VERY TIMELY CONSIGNMENT:
GARY, IND. DIV.
James, President
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Back to First Principles
THESE are times of great importance. The world is witnessing a great many rapid changes. It is evident more than ever that humanity is once more at crossroads.
What action, if any, is the Negro going to take in these trying times? Is he merely going to complain as usual of the oppressions heaped upon him by the white man or is he going to strike for his liberation? Is it not a fact that nobody else but the Negro himself has to fight for his redemption and for his race?
Looking back the Negro race has made a glorious attempt in trying to free itself, from the yoke of tyranny, rape, oppression, lynching and other humanities and that attempt was the organization of the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. This Organization came into being with a definite, clear-cut program which if followed by every Negro with unswerving loyalty, good faith and honesty, would have placed in the hands of the Negro sufficient power to further improve himself not only in the United States but also in the West Indies, South and Central America and Africa itself.
It is a pity that there have been in the past men and women both within and without the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION who saw fit that it was proper for them to put their self interest above that of a great race, but such men and women will come and go they are mere, shall we say, evil-eyed ogres and should be dismissed as an unworthy though cumbersome baggage and left behind on our onward march to reach the goal we have set before ourselves.
But we are not going to discard even these that try to hinder our progress. Those men and women who have tried to oppose the only constitutional program ever put forward before the Negro race—the program of the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION—do not know what they are doing. We still soak their loyalty and cooperation in this great cause knowing full well that one day light will dawn upon them and convince them that what they did was in sheer ignorance. We hope that that day will not be long in the coming.
While we are standing at the crossroads on our onward march let us back to our first principles and derive fresh inspiration and courage to MARCH ON!
Shop-Keepers' Statesmanship
IT IS QUITE interesting to know that the British representative in submitting his report on the Tanganyika mandate to the League of Nations' Manifestation Commission took great delight in stressing the point by the "Nativity" and taken to continue more clapping. He 2001 the commission that the support of cotton goods had vison from 25,000,000 yards in 1924 to 37,000,000 yards in 1929.
As time passed on the hypocrisy of the white man's imperialism is becoming more and more evident. "No longer can the white nations continue to profess that they are holding scaffold backward peoples under subjugation with a humanitarian identity of civilising the native. The prime factor of present day imperialism is not to cater upon anybody the benefit of civilization, whose current might be, but to exploit the manual resources and the plight power in countries like Africa, India and China. Let us look again at the policy commented by Sir John Simon in his recommendation on India to the British Parliament in which he so ardently piends for the separation of Burma from India. The passing he gives there are not the real reasons. He recommends the separation of Burma for an economic region which is, according to the foreword by a New York Times correspondent, to take Burma out of the path of Indian tyranny so that Manchester fellowers may continue to derive profits from Burma as they have no longer to seize India.
But can the white race, which is less than one-quarter of the present inhabitants of this globe, continue to exploit three-quarters of mankind solely in the interest of themselves? The answer seems to be certain. Whether for good or evil, the so-called backward peoples have made up their minds not to submit to their exploitation by the whites. It may be that this revolt may strike at the very roots of the white man's civilization as the whites fear, but will it be an unmitigated loss? Who can tell?
The African policy of the British is worth being watched by every wide-awake Negro. In a recent issue of the NEGRO WORLD we drew attention to the Franco-Italian rivalry in North Africa; now we are drawing attention to the rivalry between British imperialism in East and South Africa and the powers in the League of Nations.
The few British colonists in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda have made up their minds to have a federation of said territories and the present Union of South Africa. If the project goes through we will have another appalling experimentation which will commit the destinies of scores of millions of African Negroes to the no-no-constantly mercies of the low fired whites there.
But the British will find it not easy to carry out their project for the reason that Tanganyika, being a mundated territory, is still under the control of the League of Nations. Great Britain can not dare to swallow this territory for fear that she will lose once and for all her prestige and moral leadership in the League of Nations. It is also possible that Germany, who used to control Tanganyika forgerily, might seek secret alliance with Italy in order to defeat the aspirations of the British imperialism. If this were to come to pass we shall have some of the former rivalries that were present before the late world war and that should give us an increased impetus to muster our forces and be ready when an opportunity presents itself next.
The need for UNITY among all Negroes of whatever locality and of whatever political thought is greater now than ever.
Zionists Learn Unity
THE Negroes should learn a lesson from the Zionists who largely harbored all their differences and pushed to fight for their own, the establishment of a independent in Palestine.
Although we differ from the Zionists on the methods they are using in the establishment of our nation, we have shared but sympathetic love.
000 to the cause. And yet they are so few in number compared to the $400,000,000 Magnus of the world, and their land a tiny desert compared with the vast expanse of Africa.
Will the Magnus learn to rally around the effective leadership of the race, that of Marcus Garvey? Is $400,000,000 too much to invest in a cause which means absolute freedom for all entire race?
SALT OF WISDOM FROM AFRICA
Wisdom makes no distinction of the color of skin-A modern Hindu Poet.
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Riches are the pillar of the world.
Nothing in the world loves its young more than a she-slave and an ass.
If thou art poor do not make a rich man thy friend.
A princess never makes a slave her friend.
A hippopotamus exceeds an elephant by one basket of flesh and an elephant exceeds a hippopotamus by one basket of bones.
The tongue kills man and the tongue save man.
A man does not fast without a cause; if he does not suffer hunger, he is in debt.
If by bodily strength violence were committed, an elephant would come into the town.
If you do not praise me, do not apoll my name.
A poor man has no friend.
Poverty makes a free man become a slave.
When a fool eats your neighbor's corn, drive it away; another time it will eat yours.
If you are good-natured you will not give away your wife.
If the child doesn't honor the aged, it will call a palm-branch "ha-ba."
One Bitter Lesson Learned
Immediately after the administration failed to get Parker confirmed because of the opposition of Negroes to him, the prophecy was made that it would seek to regain our good will by giving us several major national appointments. One such place have been given a place in the post office department a few weeks ago, and David E. Henderson of Kansas getting one under the attorney general last week.
We with the administration had made these appointments, before the Parker episode. It did not delay for lack of urging. Men who did great work to elect President Hoover have planned for this recognition nearly two years. It is an important tradition within a few weeks—other Negroes placed making appeals, and changed over to demolition. We with this place and come sooner for the sake of Squatter Henry Allen who is making the case for reevaluation in Kansas, after having been an outstanding amputator of Judge Parker's confirmation. We would like to feel that the Republican party gives places to Negroes because it recognizes the justice of their claim upon it. We would like to feel that Squatter A. cefers to lead Henderson had no religious motives in them.
This paper has long had the suspicion in midtown Nyeregg into politics all wrong. Provide our earliest connection with it. Come when either mischiefness but the republican party to make us for you, we have never tried to drive hard bargaining with the other American do. We have gone on our way observing and hoping and enjoying when we were disappointed. The Parker confirmation night and its consequences, these major national appointments—to touch a different lesson.
Nyeregg are as much needed, for morbidity as any other similar number of people, and should put just as high value on their support. If we do not ask, we need not expect to be given our deserts.
It is very possible that the administration would long ago have turgged a more attractive car our way, and we exhibited the purpose which now animates us. We have learned our political lesson, and these appointments indicate we grade 100 per cent on it. Kansas City Call.
No honorable substitute for work has yet been discovered. Every successful man owes his success to work. The early history of any successful enterprise begins with the word "work". Were everybody to stop working the world would no longer produce and the people would die of hunger and exposure. Work is just as important as sunlight.
It would be fair to say that 80 per cent of all the people are workers. This 80 per cent represents the law abiding, honest and thrifty element. These people are kindly employed working out their own destinies, and being busy day because busy citizens in the community as well. They good.
Among the occupations in our country are many, but the most common are teachers. Teachers are responsible for educating children and other young people in their daily lives. We would like to see more teachers in our community.
Vulture! Thou eatest anybody's
egesta, but nobody eats this.
String added to string, will bind
even a leopard.
When a man is coming, you
will not say "Come!"
Fire and gunpower do not lie together. The moon doesn't become a full moon in one day.
Though you are hungry you do not eat with both hands. Nobody jumps for joy on seeing a strong slave or another. If you surpass me in eating I surpass you in sleeping. As the sword is, so is the scabbard. Though an elephant be thin, yet you will not carve it on a palm leaf. If you want to tell anything to Heaven, tell it to the wind. One tree receiving all the wind breaks.
If you yourself are sold, you do not buy a gun.
Though strong you will not do the work of two.
Though a mouse were as big as a bullock it would be the slave of the cat.
to pay out millions for police protection, courts, prosecuting attorneys, detectives, judges, prisons, orphan acquaints and retreats. The desire of one fifth of the people to live without working makes criminals of many who might have become good citizens, had they been willing to work for their living. When a man swears to get his living in this way, he becomes a moth on civilization—only the law forbids the extermination of the human moth.
Once in a while one of the 20 per cent makes good for a short period of his success is alluring to others. Jesus told them time and then stopped a bullet with his heart. Ponzi succeeded for a while and then went to prison. Pritzler made good health over-obtained by revenue cutters. Political practices well well exposed. And so it goes with all those who endeavor to find a substitute for work.
JOHN D. HOSTEFELTER, Henry Ford and many other successful men started in at two dollars a day, and not one of them would be where he today had he not worked. A small lunchhunter bid, who had a difficult task getting into this country, worked his way up until he became the highest salaried mechanical engineer in the entire United States.
Looking for I, substitute that will pay us well as work had been the number of many. It will never win any more than slow morning with the race. Work with leading victories, shakes real men, builds homes, erects factories, and makes peaceful communities.
Looking for a successful substitute in like prospecting for Captain Kidd's treasures, so many have tried it and failed that work still looks like the best bet of all of us.
-California News.
It is claimed that within the past five years the American Negro has become more commercial minded than ever before in the story of the race in America. It is also true, according to J. A. Jackson, business specialist, attached to the United States Department of Commerce, that the American general business which for so many years gave but little consideration to the Negro as a market, for conditions, has more and more, come to recognize that the earning power of the Negro represents a constantly growing market for the sale of practically every known commodity.
The latter two facts taken together, says the commerce specialist, denitely indicate progress in race relations, one filled with possibilities for mutual respect and harmony.
Business contracts founded upon benefit and profit to the parties involved carry in their wake understanding and appreciation. These create friendly attitudes instead of antagonistic notions. "Until the census of distribution has been tabulated" says the statement, of the specialist for the Association Negro Press, one may say with certainty just now for the Negro has advanced in business."
It appears that the outcrops of Jealousy, rage, and fury in the affairs of the U.N.I.A. are again prevalent and very active. In the ppt it has resulted in reckless defamation or attempt of defaming the characters of honest men, who were and still are imbued with the principles of race consciousness, and working for racial uplift, but who happen not to agree in toto with the theory and practice of the Hon. Marcus Garvey."
"On May 6th," said the ex-assistant President-Garvey, "I called a conference of presidents of the American branches in Chicago for the purpose of formulating a more tangible and effective program. This move will have enraged Garvey. In the past the President-General has confined the activities of the association to making speeches and lifting collections, every penny of which was sent direct, to Garvey, and by him the millions of dollars so collected has been squandered. Today the organization hasn't anything, anywhere, but Garvey has several palatial properties in Jamaica and automobiles and servants. He is now endeavoring to collect $600,000,000 mostly from the American Negroes, but it is rumored that it is only a matter of time before the U. S. Government is going to bounce down upon everybody in the country who is now aiding Marcus Garvey to treat the government with impunity, in his attempt to continue defrauding American Negroes." Mr. Knox declared that "whenever a member or officer in the movement attempted to do something constructive, Garvey immediately labels such person as traitor, vagabond, crook and some other name that will contort the minds of the more less ignorant and fanatical element of the membership."
"In the past," said Mr. Knox, "Garvey has done nothing but make speeches and lifted collections," but he seems to have forgotten that the Black Star Line was started by the Hon. Marcus Garvey, that made kings, princes, emperors and statesmen sit up and take notice. The Black Star Line would have succeeded had it not been for the unprincipled men That the Hon. Marcus Garvey had to deal with. I, for one, am quite well pleased with the activities of the Association—with the odds against us. I think the Hon. Marcus Garvey has done wonderfully well. Mr. Garvey loves this race too much to even think of exploiting it. Quite to the contrary, he is trying to prevent others from further exploiting us. I would say in conclusion Follow Garvey until the goal of Negro Nationhood is reached.
LISSLIE BISHOP.
Stone' Almed in Carvey
It is my desire to be on the help that I can to the cause of the Negro race which is so truly championed by the President-General, Mr. Garvey, who is being assisted by traitors and enemies on all sides. I wish every Negro that is honest to bear in mind that the cause is for the down-trodden race thrown out in the world with no thoughts of personal aggrandement; and any stone thrown at Mr. Garvey and the University of Negro Imposement. Association is not meant for him, or at least, does not object him. Their idea is to hinder him and block the way; the only way that will lead to ultimate freedom of the African race.
I am sorry to see so many of our people indict and litle minded to this great and sacred cause. Remember, a stone thrown at Mr. Garvey is not aimed at him—it is aimed at you, and the tentative freedom of all the Negro race. I am for Mr. Garvey and national freedom. Let's help ourselves by standing up for his leadership.
W. A. COLLEMAN
Fairmont, W. Va.
Mr. Hoxie Is Loyal
Editor, The Negro World:
We, the members and wellwishers of Division Uo. 156 of Los Angeles, beg leave to publish this article by way of correction to an inappropriate, and yet more, untrue article, written to you and published in "The Negro World" of June 28th, concerning the disloyalty of our past President, Mr. H. Hoxie, by some unscrubulous person unknown to / this local.
In defense of this gentleman, and also for information to those who may not happen to know of his work in our great organization, we wish to state that Mr. H. Honis has served this local as president for the past five and a half years during which time he has proven every lach a real man in the defence of this division. The refrain, and up and down in withstanding, for his unprompted勇气, he is regarded as a champion by the great cause of African-Americanism.
But the past course of the recent government which Honis and Honis have been involved in, he is now aware of, and is therefore able to understand that no doubt he will be a great asset to the great cause of African-Americanism.
this and the membership demonstrated that the president gave his opinion, costuming the college of math, philosophy, and theology, and that he was not interested in it. B. A. Moseley, the school's chief at that as he was not interested in and did not know that it was called unknown to Mr. Carvey. Could not give a definite meaning of the whole, affair which was not satisfactory to the minority group from which sources it is expected. The discreditable article appeared; but remember Mr. Critic, what you sow, you shall also reap. Your's for Africa's Redemption, U.N.L.A. Div., No. 106. JAS. A. MOGANN, Act. Pres. B. A. WILLIAMS, 2nd V. Pres. F HYDES, Fin. Sec.
Our Children's Welfare
Dear Editor:
Please allow me space in your most valuable paper to say that I am a member of the Detroit division No. 10. I am the exporter of your soybean. I consider the investment as one of the greatest ever conceived for the liberation of Negroes and I am with it to the limit.
It is evident that we have traitors in our numbers, but did not Christ have a traitor in his number of twice? We have traitors of a diabolic nature who are trying to undermine the very heart of the Association. We strong Garveyites can successfully stave off the attack and carry on with the hope that these traitors will see their mistake before it is too late. Let us who are strong Garveyites show to them that they cannot be successful because they are undermining their, own, liberty and freedom, as well as their children's.
"Wise Guys"
Editor. The Negro World:
I believe that the Negro World should carry a column captioned, Wise Guys, thereby giving its many readers the opportunity to view and review the activities and proclivities of this most destructive element. These obstructionists are to be found equally among the ranks of the ignorantus and so-called intelligencea. They claim to know everything, yet close scrutiny reveals them as knowing little or nothing.
It seems to me that Mr. George Schuyler, columnist of the Pittsburgh Courier, is making a gallant effort to become the foremost of these jokers in the deck of Negro progress. Without logical explanation he jokes at the Catholic Church, Mahatma Gandhi, Marcus Garvey, the Negro medical practitioners and what not. His comparison of the Russian revolution, shows him to be ignorant of the intellectual ability of men associated with Gandhi, also the amount of time it took to permeate the Russian revolution and the amount of improvement ordered by his leader. Had Gandhi could have been an Indian, would have been an American quantity. Knowing that the power of the Caucasian regime was inside of Russia, when seized by the proteristist the Caucasians were lost, but the power of Britain is outside of India. Therefore keen students of revolutionary strategy realize that any other mode of operation by the Nationalists would be useless.
By his remark about Mr. Garvey's pocketbook, he would have his readers believe Garvey to be an opportunist. He calls the people maniac, who require to redeem the land of their forefathers, to establish a Government to consolidate the Negro Economically, Socially, and politically. Did he read Paul Kelly-Miller's article, "After Garvey What?" or Bishop Ranson's "characterization of Garvey of the opinion of the majority of the Negro press recently"? With men from the leading universities of Europe and America endorsing the program of the well-known internationalist, if they are all maniacs, then there is every logical reason to also doubt the sanity of the very Wisa-Guy, George Schuyler. Yours, for Racial uplift.
MILKORD A. LEVY.
Information Wanted
Dear Editor:
I. being a member of the Negro race, read with interest the many good things published in your wonderful paper. I want to say that you do not fail to pour it on them when you get started. We need now, most of all, men with big hearts, broad minds and brave men. I would like to get some information from you, or some of your readers.
I would like to know if there are many countries in South or Central America where there are Negro voters that are voting and holding, or permitted to obtain any branch of office in legislation, and are they permitted to obtain or to progress any class of job or position? If so, are there any laws there of segregation of Jim crowds? I would also like to know if there are any laws in Central America where there is largest population, and what are their chief characteristics. And these poverty lines are the same for new immigrants.
ing under a chapel. Transmountable
carson filled the attached barn on a
heavy scale in which wears a coat.
Americans in such chapels are tolerated
as slightly "cracked." Small boys wear jackets and keep them on
in the school. The workman moves
the Palace lawn "en coat," the farmer
hacking down wreaths with a machete
has a coat on over his overalls. Even
the beggar at the entrance to the
Cathedral is shy on shoes but long on
coat.
The temperature hovers around 92
degrees, except after the sun goes
down, and around three a.m. it has
chilled sufficiently to sleep under a
sheet.
The commission has suffered from the heat. The sun bolls down with tropical force all-day long. Ice coats fifty cuffs for forty pounds and there is not a single electric fan in the Excelsior Hotel. A life-saving breeze blows from the sea during the day and from the mountains at night.
Haiti occupies one-third of the island, the other two-thirds is Santo Domingo, where there is a revolution.
. . .
Haiti is about the size of Maryland consists of two long peninsulas with a bay, like the Chesapeake between them. Port au Prince, the capital, nests at the apex on a small plain. Mountains rise from the plain on all sides. Fifteen miles from here is Kenskoff, 4,200 feet up, where at night two blankets are needed.
Coffee grows wild. Natives pick bananas and plaines from the trees. They grow sugar cane, and sea-salt cotton which is of long fibre and takes three years to mature. The cotton is rated by experts as a finer grade than that produced in Egypt. Coconut palms grow everywhere.
Except in the Haitian White House, which they call the Royal Palace, there are scarcely a dozen buildings in downtown Port au Prince with windows or window panes of glass. The Excelsior Hotel has doors only usually four to six feet wide and ten feet high. These slatted doors in reality are shutters, the slats of which may be opened and closed. Haitians form them la jafousie. Ceilings are high, usually 16 to 18 feet.
The typical peasant woman is bare-footed and basalegged. But two garments cover the rest of her body as she walks through the streets carrying everything from a five-gallon can of water to laundry, fruit and live poultry in a wicker basket balanced on her head.
Coming a long distance from the outlying farm she uses sidewalk on a donkey slightly smaller than a Shetland pony. In addition to its human burden, the beast also carries considerable plunder from farm or shop.
- - -
Two bath rooms serve the entire Bachelors Hotel which is the headquarters for the Moton Commission and which also housed the Fokken Commission. In keeping with the European custom a bath is something to be tolerated not enjoyed. Nearly everybody has outside privies. Although located practically on the ocean, Post an Prince has no bathing room and no laundry. Usage perhaps prevents the use of the island of Gonare, located between the two peninsulas, both off the second.
Aceet Gandhi and India
Let us keep our eyes fixed upon the central issue of the Indian revolution. It is not that India wants independence. In this question she is only reproducing the experience of mankind. What India seeks today is only what Switzerland, Italy, Hungary, Poland and scores of other nations have sought before her. Americans, whose forefathers fought and died for independence from the same Empire that now holds India in thralm, should be the first to understand and sympathize with their Eastern brotheren. No, the remarkable thing about India is not her desire for independence, but the unique method which she is using to gain this independence. Under the exalted leadership of Gandhi, the Indian people are writing a new chapter in the unruoting story of mankind. Deliberately, by the exercise of sublime patience and self-restraint, and at the cost of gifting greater than the censored news dispatches permit us to know, this heroic people are undertaking to fight a battle for liberty without resort to violence—History has never seen anything like this before. Non-resistance has been tried by individuals like St. Francis, and by religious groups like the Friends; but the revolution in India marks the first time that a nation has endeavored to lift the struggle for freedom from the plains of armed force to the ruins of so-called form. If there has ever been any greater friend of the ninth hour than any other, it is the people of India.
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Lee Ie He et ite wats tay Neglo: Hepes
"JACK JOHNSON
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red thousand grand to mingle with
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where the foul was perpetrated. So
why frown whéa: we learn that
‘George, who is.ané af ‘us, “gets go-
ing"? I hope be will continue to
we active and coin all the ‘dough
he can, beoause they sure have given
him a’ run atound. One good fea-
gure tbout te Philadelphia, afta it
at if he was too: loos, he did not
Hilow Carnera to take & good sock
at bis jaw, and instead ahowed ‘the
“Big ‘Truck of Forefgn ‘Make up #0
much that be bas failed’ to be 8
drawing’ ‘card any longer. f
‘K™. CHOQOLATE,: the “Kid of
Kids” mm Oitage fistic, went up
to Buffalo last Thuraday $0 carry out
& pressing engagement with one Vic
Byrrone. He %8s_jn no mood to lin-
‘ger'in the town of the Tamous. But
faloes and told Mr. Vic that he did
not have much time as he intended
to take an early train back to the
Big City. Well, ‘Vic did not like
to acknowledge to 8 hasty discussion
of thelr affair and tried to stall off
for time*so that the Kid would miss
hie train, Chocolate, sensing this
{rick ou’ the part of Burrone, stepped
un’ and said, regardless how you miay
feel about it; "Tam going back to
ew York posf-haste.” ‘this was
about “the third round of the ‘argu-
meni. They feinted.for = few s0c-
onds and out went’the Kid's right
amacker and caught old Vic on the
Vutton, Down goes “Mr. B.." and a
gentleman leaned over him counting
for tey seéonds and at the conclu-
fon waid to "Mr, C.": You may re-
tnin to your clty now. that the dis-
cussion has ended quite abruptly and
you,bave won the debate.” So “Hot”
Kia" Chocointe chalkseup another vie-
tory to bis already Tong string of aue-
cereful. encounters:
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attun, when he sides through te
Popes. todo a packing acd. steppes
act with “Sammie:”. Risden in one
Se eee ee
oo hots bia’ ak tober
Heveves. ble gui neue. si
een Sate ae a Ne
Pea $E_-AR WH SOE Sette, en
Sad goed ba Seu ares
‘young fellow and very. 201
Sy ee ge eS
a
Black Bill-Davis:
. . In Return Bout
Fight fan gre wiresdy bubbling
over with enthusalastic anticipation
over the coming refiira match between
Black Bill, the Cuban,-and Wee Wille
Davies. Ciiarlerol flyweight.
‘Tho phir met not long ago here ip
Bradock Bow! and put up.one of the
fastest. most brilliant battles in the
bistory of tif local Sgbt stadium,
Davies was given the decision after
ten gruelling rounds, but whole lot
of Yqns apd critics felt that Blatk Bill
had the edge.
In Monday's battle each is deter-
mained to stiow -conclusively that, he
ia He master of the other.
K. O. Kelly Wants -
“Crack at Thompson
BARBERTON, Ohlo, uly 12.—K.-O.
Kelly, the hard punching welter-
weight, who’ just beat Sam Bruce at
Akron, Ohio, is ready for the best at
from 147 to 154 pounds and prefers
Yong Jack Thompson, Young Cor
det, ‘Tommy Freeman ior Buckey
Lawies. Kelly has: beaten Gorilla
Sonos, Jack McVey, Tiger Weat, Nick
Palmer, Alex Simmy Mickey ‘Fedor
and others, <0
“Rugged Road”? Still
Hanging On Ropes
The Rugged Road,” written by
Madame Robinson in 1025 and wich
Nan been in rohenreal. foc the Ghat
two months. and has been reported
more than que time going down town
for {ts epening, haa not been put on.
‘After “three mmoSths in rehearsal,
duting which time the play underwent
few. changes, n0 definite date has
been reached,
Mrs, Freeman, ‘wife of Harlem's
noted iinpresario, was the latest wo-
man to be called to do the lead. Fanny
Lane, actress of many dramatic parts,
previously hed the lead.
Phil Edwards Is Defeated
In 880 at Yankee Stadium
Phil Edwards, former track captain
of New York university; waa beaten
fa the baltemile run et Yankee te
Jdiuts totay My Bred bets «2 the Se
haisk 2. Cone NAG hee piven a
acded tenure to the envet. for ube
Brotherhood of Sleeving Car Porters
stayed it Yankes weit
Sel Forth covered the ciatamce ia
she 100,yard <onsh in 10 seconds to
sein by. 2 Yard al ily tape. Berard
Elanebard of the ‘Sailm-Creceent
©. ches ia seep 4
in 2 feylure YOO-meter vace, Bi
“nojnaciog’ ‘Robineen,. famous’ tap
ateer, sCerred wit a 2ieyard band.
cap ind ran backentdis to wgily des
feat the. name field thet pardeipiated
mie d0O-paed dnc,
“‘Mocnside’ New Play
ME awiteos sores, young sewapat
pep man of New York-2nd. formes
Conumnist of Atre-hmesionn anit the
Los Anfceion Defender, bas written the
piny “Maocsiga,” which ke hopes to
Bave protiveed in New York City
some time in the-early fall. Thie
Play ie. supposed to give an tnvide
Expression gf the lives of memepsper
men ait (Beit work, Mr. Jones is
interesting several downtown’ product
ers in the play: wwe
: We Nergcistas arate Mace
MANSFIELD THEATRE Slt "Tot
L Riana ‘Wetmiptey ont Sxnpitiy. ‘3:38. * if
Be PAO, Aoi eg
GREE: zs aN a ee ee
Sa EA al Rico cn eg acy me
le Wie Sey eee
es Ree 2 a. -- ees
ae i aie
26 Meare bret: atime ee Action '®
and gymndsiom: His @ teatidjous ll
Scorsese
Carlo je never. quite sitieted nies
be Laas sennational 2.0. king bs
can feature week after week unti)
be himself gets knocked out or the
Digger clubs grab him.” Bert Colima,
Baby’ Gans, Young Jack Thompscs,
Peregrine 4nd others ed this po-
sition at thnes and isa rule there
was always & new one, ready when
the old one left. -
‘Recently since bis latest’ one round
COMING UP, THIS
TUESDAY NIGHT
a
Queenshoro Stadium
Kid Chocolate
ae mets
Luigi Quadrini
In featute bout of an |
ALLSTAR CARD
Leo Williams Meets
Billy Franklin: Friday |
At Golden City “Arena
| “So Maxie Rosenbloom t®nks? he
‘bas cleaned’ up the light heavyweight
diviston, does he? "Well, Misto’ Ros-
endloom bas another think’.comin’
boy. Wheah does he suppose Ab've
been all these years?”
It was One Punch Leo Williams,
Harlem knockout King, talking. Leo
tackles Biliy Franklin, clever No-
tional Guard battler, in the foaturk
ten-round bout at the Golden City
Park Arean in Canarsie this Friday
night and Is matched to box K. O.
Phil Kaplan at the Quoensboro July
22, but regards these bouts as merc
stepping stones to a match with Ros-
enbloom.
Williams thinks he can bowl over
the Messrs. Franklin and Kaplan
without too much exertion and then
do the same thing to. Rosenbloom.
Of: course, this may sound # bit ex-
uberant, but there is no getting away
from the fact that Leo packs an aw-
ful wallop. Perhapa the best evidence
of. his hitting prowess is Rix five-
round knockout victory over George
Courtney, the Oklahomit cowboy ‘who
hever had been stopped before.
One Punch nas met Roseiloom
twice and o both ocenctoan she é:-
So close, jnéesd, that Prometer Jee.
SxeMfahou iy willing to put on a ese
onblosm-Williams bout at . Mblets
Pied fe clear up the situntier.
Waetbor or not this nateh yl) bo
consummated depends entirely upon
Rorendloom, who hea been complains
ing, hewan't get any action,
‘A strong supporting card backe up
ine Williams-Frapidin Zerture at Ca
nnzsie Bvidsy night. Lea Dazze, of
she Fast Side, tackles Jory legion,
Browa:vitle Juniér Hentweignt. iz the
elght-round venvtefin), ‘Tho rematnd
er of the card follows: Howard Bach
of Freeport vs, Irie Laws a of Eay
Ridge, and Teny Glota, South Brook.
ye, mects Afzed 33, Smith, of Fnr-
om in Une te, se
The dpening four-spot wilt shuw,
Yom Bianchi, Manuel Pyaining Hick
School sil-nraund ailete ansteat Jim
Ted Blackman Now
Directa at Alhambra
| Tad Blackman, for the ixet” four
youre character artist at the Aiaamb-
‘ra Taeater and a former Howard Un-
ivernity graduate, was appoiuted Inst
week as the director of the shows at
the Alhambra Theater. taking -the
place of Joe Martini, who had been
at-thix place ainee its oponing.
Mr, Biackmao is well iiked by the
Albembra audiences ahd tha Albarc-
gra players, both dramatic and revue
It ta dolieved this Induction into thix
office 6 a the instance of Mr. Gee,
managing director of the Alharabra,
whose interesta had been looked upon
most favorably by Harlomites.
“Win Honors in Music -
OHICAGO, July 9—(ANP)—The
privileges of « epecial-Chicago Mu-
sical College scholarship with Percy
Grainger internationally farpous con-
cert plantst and teacher was the cot
veted distinction won by two young
colored secre tant sgpak when ites
Hesel Harrison of Chicago and: Mrs.
James C. Williseason of Cheyney In-
atitute, Px, won, tn a class of thirty
m_. 7"
} a Sey Cepenere: started #
Pee iene bee ort oo
fevebters re’ Foul’ Sane "He la ei
this’ Raturday demon Mexi-
fam anda damew apanese yest
colored. star ‘and an American fash
fo international war.
Pete Pacheco, Denver Mexican wel-
terweight, will battle Howard Frits
‘and aKno Nakamure, Japsuese.teath-
erweight, will take on Harry Grey in
the double malw event of two six
Found boule at Mata tres} -@aturday
night. Polo Mendosa and ‘Tony Ar-
chey, 118-poundera, will box the four-
rourd special. :
THEATRICALS
ALHAMBRA THEATRE
Week ot July 14—Wells,, Mordecai
and Taylor. {Tue populer trio.) Clara
Smith. jolly record and radio atar in
“Fashion Plate Follie’,.” with a big
cast. .
“Get Rich Quick.”” In thle comedy-
drama good fortune comes but ‘& foo!
arid his ‘monsy~are soon parted,
Tn Claire, the daunguished Broad-
way star in “The Awful Truth.” A
romance of a siren in love. Midnite
show every Wednenday. :
Pretty, little Margte Boupnonville,
thé pepplest_ member of the peppy
choruy, is hting used in the drama.
Though Margie's voice is not’ reson
ant enough to All principal parts. she
fits admirably in the fuvenile roice.
LAFAYETTE THEATRE
| Commencing Saturday. Joly 12-—
[New 1980. edition of 4-ti-44. with
| Eddie Hunter, Victoria Spivey, Alex
Lovéjiy, Andrew Tribble, Alme
er at, ee
Lily Yuen (our favorite).-and Wen
‘Taibo’ +. Syncopators. :
“Also. ‘itaphone acnsation, AT Jolson
in "Mummy." "
- We have been unable to cover. this
Rouse for the last couple of snonths
owing to the lack of cnoperation bp
‘the part of te management. Even
the usual courtesy of iraulng a xens-
en piss"to"the press, Ta ignored. We
will drop thie thentee from our list
‘unless Uke preseyjt condition ix rem-
fediets
|, ROOSEVELT THEATRE:
| miesday and” Wednosday, July 15,
16-"Doitble Crossroads,” with ‘Rob.
ert Ames and Lila Lae.
‘Thursday and Friday, Joly 22, 18—
Joha Gilet sn “Redemption.” with
Renpe Adores, Costad Nagel avd El-
eangr Mowrdman, 7
Prsent Syndicate
28 tearg the bitterness lyin:s Cor
miant ia the Healt: of playern aud
erleltet devoten.: iat: ought to be
tha chogen tusk of the refarmed syne
Gieate, Players, stubs hid eaesuea Se
Row dictating: Ie thepant they were
content with vague promives uml
were never reclined
Xr, Cecil Curter, the antute, ver
teazued diplomat, wiP its fina “andere
toking, bringing the Rermudians here,
enlivened dott lenses to the extent,
Heit they suspended «of thetr fixe
tures during the duration of the virie
tors’ stay. He was moat, micecsntul, A
Phrene. business sisn, That eugionr
hug been in vogue up to. the. prafent:
now the leagues have degided net to
sbandon thely scheiuing fiiares,
The leuaues, wer addle-Beaded to
ove ryptes to dieoutisur their choc
yles Baziand cht sot chicontiaue, 3
thy kbvival of a wisitiny team; county
rantoher ave played throwrhout,
in atinge if they are forced to went,
the benck, sil exiled or to. play iD
the one of two matches they nia he
fortinate enough to play agaioes die
invaders. Th “enwn't" be done,
‘Pho real gportsmeA controlling: wit
lenpues can be forzivven for the state
of chaoe into whieh they have thrown
criéket, In the past. Eack promoter
dinned into their eager ears: “Suspend
voltr matches: {2-19 in the interests of
the advancement of the. game in this.
country.” It was not ta the Intereatn
sath Dohrn ta wien al
thear who’ ywere making the ;'Do Re’
cae ea ;
‘The continuation .of the leagues’
wcheduied fixtures will meat the To%s,
of a few dollars in’ the packetn of the|
Rresent syndicate, but, it will not’
necensartly mean defeat of the ven
Nicos 4 tha nubile. fa romeriy con: |
sidered. - !
‘These ara hard times, Work scarce.
ais love tie game; but, dollars are
soateat.
Are these ragtag skirts an effort to
conettiate beth those wit: want. ‘em
tots OER We
ing "oan short? me
T dida't havea single shifiing
‘Se eS
tanke,of delecting a New-York repre:
sentative eleven. They‘-sre in =D
position to do a.
‘When the honor of New York £3
stake, there shold be-no favorit
displayed; men ‘should not be setect-
ed on their past reputation. Good
cricket fs not played by those ‘passe:
. ‘ran some
We have been burdgied with “dead
men” on our “New York Pick” ever
since the iden has been conceived
‘The public is tired of it. We demand
rand have « right to’ expéct—the
dest eleven avaliable. There. must
‘be no tall-enters. . -
Good. sound cricketers, such _ as:
“laud Thomas and John, DeSilva, of
Primrose C. © Ben Sygheriand, of
St. Vincent C. C.: Verne Greenidge,
of Sussex-C. C.; Renzer Allen, Athel-
atype Gittens, Berry Seeley and D.
L. Lewis, of Carlisle C, C.; Contitte
ot Paragon C. C.. and rome half-
dozen others, = good, are not even
considered, when the Pick is being
melected. Why?
New York's Pick. may play two
more games agalixt the Overieas
eleven; three matches with the Ja-
maica eleven - with its half-dozen
imported stars: one or mhore games
‘with the Trinidad C. C.--now that
that club has been strengthened with
the Mosms. J: Small and: Gedrge
Johns;
"WHI" our unrecogniaed cricketers,
mentioned above—with latent poten-
Uinlitias;’ men who have. proved time
and again, their worth get. thelr Dig
chance-to makg a name for them-
selves?
Not while those who undertake the
romponsibility of shouldering .a task
too heavy for their puny.backs, (se-
lecting real New York. represen:
t@tive cricket team) are aj the throp-
ple of control, will the powerful et
gine (New York) surmount. the sleep
grade that” whadow var ihe aunt
that lies between us and the glortons
sun. (World widg recognition).
“Out trom the valley of shadgare
... proud New York ... Though Wot
of thy seeking . . . Thou art pintoned
.. . Stified Jn s narrow eslinder . . «
With a tight driven cork .'- . Oppor-
tunity Je here. Ht knocks.
Fxpand—Burat. thy bonds... 0 New
York.’
PLEASE OMIT
«The serra, Dash, Karl dpa Cant
(Bick) ‘Ted. Margetaon’ cothd have
been Ieee off TUE Feorerentative elev.
en iu the here Die mated ote
lent July sith and Guy! :
‘Tho vchoge peatlemen end Cae wrt
ter ate jead friends, T auve no ans
mesity towards these angn, JEUsL and
Ted pte penilemen sud scholars, We
deem item bene to eall then friend:
GEG Dash; but We cannot he inte
enon by friendship, mo santien how
strong, when the henor of New York
Mfacoticlset) i at stake.
‘The thres gealemen in question,
when in form, eqanot be ft of of
nny represoniative tenmeoavhen 7
orm. They -are. neg now it form
wag pitidud 40 wateh shetr feoble
aentAe 4h vendiy Alissonipret, 1S
Ue other eight players of egr Pick
“phe Mangetuon brothers are gent
uses in the ue line Ted te % a
imaster et the plana, They ere welt
practiced on the manedrom site
they Gerive ve Hwang. ‘Paey Mave ne=
pivoted Ure pinetien of eriexet, Eran
Me Deck gvan @ surprie, «The ealy
cxeure, wd cun thifik af for hima fe:
(oo, much practices “Rraunte rarely
inition”. day. He ean bg foung wie
mont any nfternoon in Cchtrat Park.
A brifiant fielder, «2 slshlag pate
man, yet when the ay ef days Az
rived he fell, far short af our expec
taalemen.
Although ‘they have not, been ap-
provetieds I should. he Ue @uty
beth Teakiten, woemlsgin-conganction,
ta elect n reprregntative team, «6
Indieiduat” es ieaivi@uats, shout, be
alla to tinurp the pewern of tre
Korerning hodien of eviekct.., Heavy
penaitlen ahould be ineued. Pinyern
nd seit eppelaied arcenerure show
hevreatralned, Fe te abeut tn nome:
thing Arnatie. in dono to: reprene, the
tendencies of those active bt the sport,
no one, driven it seems, by thalr eon-
ceited fancy that they are dominating
cricket im this.country.
Tet is unite and Grive them tke
rats, from their holes, No-one maa,
or group 6f men should have the
right to be n.s postition te umdeeninn
the foundation of the game hore.”
“LORD GEXD US MEN. THE
TIME CALLS FOR MEN... MON-
Eat AND TRUE," We want those
whe ares help... net.o hindrance.
DR. GIES MAY ervee Fi cd
‘Owimg to the’!
gar. wel Saowed! ‘fiend, Dr. W: 0.
Ghihe may return te Barbados ts the
nen? Setwee ‘.
. wing fréin 2
wane ean “Lie SRoNaE
Ee iy. peg af tis Senet!
Perera Se
oy hcl a Nandan
S; pe ahapetade ty a a ® ”
| WELCOME RECEPTION
OWsiting TAMAICAN CRICKHTBAG
. Dt REXAEES ANCE CASTRO
| wntaitie ‘SHUBSDAY EVENING, GULY FTsh, TRS seiesea
[| £ G@PENEING GAME. "7,
VISITING JAMAICANS 4s. ST. KETTS &. 6,
z Sunday, July 20: 1930 .
goth PYGOUN OVAL
eine et Stee wet At et a ain
rene OTEY, 7
283 £ 4) 2oN BLE
= waortAa\ =
eS A"
LUCKY HAND
___ = WETW A:WHITTEN GUARANTEE
RS Ee eat boas ee
‘YOU CAM LOOK THE WORLD DV TEE PACE .
) -, acres. iy
2. Alexander ney ‘D, Aeaaaies
SP eee
ee ee ee “——
Ay. DAR ORD ERE
TET Fi at nes tots EE EEN ©
wes Ye ae a 5 Mee Ak a
a Sr a
ee peta
| Mayers at Peake Gnte 4 w.
Amn * Wer 4 Rung...
“Taniafail Oval, N.-¥)s July 12—We
Deve mat the enemy ,!. and they are
ours. To the victor the .spoils—Coe-
mopolltan League.
~ Playinig before a meagre attend-
ance—800, the Overseas cricket com.
‘vine tasted the" cup a? defeat from
‘the RAnda ‘ef Cosmopolitan League
‘Piek. !
Ideal conditions prevailed. Pick
batted tats A. Mayers and C, tuom-
as faced slants and spins-of ©. Mar-
tindale and E. Achong (visitor's. ace
trundlers).” High scorers: ‘Claud
Thomas 36 (entitled to “blues".) B.
M. Clarke 23. Final total 122, ".
Bowling, Overseas: E. Achong 4.
W for 54 runs; E. Martindale. 2.W
for 29; B. Sealey, 2 W for 22; M. An-
thony, 2 W for 40. ge
_ Overseas batting. B: Sealey L. BW
to b. D. Lashley 41. « Final total 104
runs, i:
Bowling, Cosmopoltan Hck: x
Mayera 4°W for 4 ruta, DI Laphley
2.W for 11: H. Ragehill, 2 W for 28:
BM. Clarke, 1 W for 19. 4
‘Alan Mayers, on, being given the
ball, in the Inte hours of play, ralsed
havoc with the opposition. In his 3
overs hie had 1 maiden and 4 W for 4
rons, Alan ranks with the beet ia
the game. .
Coxmopolitan | fell: 1-1-2-7-3712-4-,
64-5°84-6-89-7-94-8-107-9-122-10-122,
SPhe monteh wag well contested a
d@erved a better attendance:
Overseda: 1-29-2-51-3.67:4-11-5-102-
1-102-T-104-8-104-9-104:10-104,*
- ee aay
Dyckma: Oval, N. ¥.. July 10.-—
JOversase 12™t0r 2 W. Catlifle ©...
re
PD, te Lew ‘of Castine howled @
over 1 maiden, 1 W for 30 euine's
Tacogolrad at INS.
‘Overnens, J. Smith 42 notzot. ta
“Jeffrey 40, Dr. W. 0. Gibe= 31. For.
Carlie, C, Pe Carter, 22:-Athel Othe
bens 17; Martindale, 2 W for 36;
Achong 2 W foraat.
a
St ater Agu Miamited =
Commersint Wield, Brookiyy, ¥.
y, duly 48.--St. Kitts tooke Hts tous
waiter pation. They. are. land
bunch. “Overacts, coming bask alton
atter the previous day's detent, wiped
the eartiiwith SL Kitts, Overaecs
232 for 2 W, St. Kitts on being vent
In compiled! 225 runs. E. -Murgetio’
Gfblie, Mor the pant wert he har boos
ssnctiealy playin: ented in @ sane
De. Gisue ie, beyond. doubt, Ue
mast briiliant haiiaan of the touring
Went Trdians, in tke evant that eire|
cumstanget compet ile to recat Dies
rnnturely, it will be ‘regretted by Bis |
numerous friends, Our aympathy is |
externa towaris our feted and COO!
fade, fire WHO, Gibbs, |
Pes. ss .
To bave met the enemy . . cand
enietpod./ kak witout nOkOn es
‘ Sis sora fon
see, . Francie (Bt. | me
the pen:
Pctiodule—Thureday, July” 11, “6k
Ryckman Oval, Overtens, va, 8
‘Brooklyn sombination, 3
Saturday, July 19, va. All Antigua
at Tantetell Oval ,
Sunday, July 20, ve. United C.
at Commercial Field, Brookiys.
Givo; Him a Fiay 2
* he grocer’ onthe comer of 38st
atreet_ and Brosdway, oppedite Van
Cortlandt Park grounds, He'll meet
your price for anything you can sat
or drink, Give him a play. :
CANADIAN CRICKET
The Montreal West Indians hustled
ariother obstacle in thelr path to-
ward the Ross Robinson:trophy when
the ydefeated Vickera G C. duly 12.
« Vickers compiled 53. The’ fret
three Datemen of W. I swpaseed
the totes
Jommott of W. I, oUtalned 5 W, Sop
14 runs. Kid Lewis and Iid-Helder
took the rest, Soft, Hr yhett
Raven't lost 8 game, oe
Surrey C, ©. 197, Jamaica 2 @
105. Jackson and Mulvaney of Je
maica 40 abd 26, ; For Surrey, Re
Gibbs, 56 run-out,
S F. rr.
hatr ‘beavty’
‘
ne
B ra
Soe
pasate ae]
gti ei toseall estos 2
Follow the lead of Gladys
May, vivacious actress in
Shufflin’ Sam from: Ala- .
bam’ who says she finds
Exelento the. most de
lightful hair dressing she
has ever used. :
QUININE POMADE:
getse oxipienl lerectes
the coote of the fide aad.
Hives naturad basics that
rtaye! Stops itching seat
and stakes hambest be
soft und pliabic,
Write for FREE sampic -
and Luok of Beauty Eieite
Eneebneg saistenon,
an eS PT MB AA OEE Gat RENT CURE LEE remem og ALS Ri aPC HITE SHES TORR aaa Es
Rpt eee RE Pa cee en Cn Me eR an ae a RTE ar 2
Fated ea TS OE eee rr
(RMN SO EE oa eee te a cea . roe ae
SOTeaiaSer NIE TIPO CONTR estar tera enroy OU ULANINT ENO HI O nT ROOTES OE RERUNS ORES IUD aS ENN rt 1s - eR ann ae
Oa ON ee ee ee ee
MER sate 5 Ses 5 ENR IE co cag Salida agence aS aman am TPM ce a re a 2 Rr opel ae ae
wa ao i ae <a ie ae SP oe SRE EN IRE aS i eC Ao c sae ead Pate
VECECRTYV: VFA TIE PS 2 Oe Pe Serth. Gs
Ft SES hee AE gE Lake ot cae eee Rll he ES RRL OE DON Cs em SOE RG SES sc PR
a = t # ’)
<Folks who can’t eat what they want and can’t.
drink what they-want without terrible-stomach
distress. .. and folks who suffer, constantly {rom
SOUR ACID STOMACH ... GASSY ”
| >. BELCHING ... AND BAD BREATH ~~
} _-.~. folks who want.to be free. of nau’ |
ij © Seated, upset sickening stomachs .. . a
~ALL-should-tokecur_aduice_ond_ iy _ aon —H
H- ACIDINE, the marvelous new’ digésiant pea
| geen sea «|
: aE eg cd ‘. Ses
ee Bes g Jac tea Chet +
At AU-BETEEA DAUG STORES PC
ak Fag ies = covey nc Ue ae
ACIDINE.
SelicReliance:
“]Negro’s Need
Reidicicicacin le tied ce nad Pence ines, UE
Negro race is. struggling far exist
fence with its back against the ver
‘walt. The daly reason: you! are no
standing with your back against th
wail is because You are. standing i
frovt of some other of Your Face.”
T don't care what you Yell alow
your schools, or how you faise yout
Chureigs’ to the standard in deauty
anit size. Unless you do somettypg
for, your “business, and that right
away, yoursstandard as @ rage wil
_hot be merited, Business is 10 teed
Your-race. Bupinsup ix to clothe your
tact. Business is| lo employ yout
race. Cooperate ugth your usiness.
multipiy your bustiess, boost your
dusiness, for businesssis life Isself to
this race.
‘You dpn't ‘baye to! take my word
“for dt: Go out into your own ity.
Soe for yourself who employs, fers
and. clothes “ye members of the
Negro race, Tie members of ge
Caucasian. race do, it. They-empi,
‘pay what they want to, ‘They feed.
“Byarge whit they fee! liker They
hte for wat ie pleases thee, Wha
fufiprence there i bel ca his ant
slavery Is hardly dieperetn
“Abrabam Lincoln tid ot free ‘tbe
Nearhes, He merely struck - the
mhacklen off thelr feel. ‘The Nexro is
Sul a stave. Abraham Lincoln, nor
Rayon’ aise can frenatbe«Nozro, No
fone else ig.so, interested in the wel:
fare of the Negro, and if the Negro is
mot that swterested tn himself (try
To fore bimselt. he wil perish -in
Savery. :
Ts this progress? Fetlowyritivem,
Tidectare unto vouvtt is the [ast stind
df a race for decent Hyelihoed. |
We realize’ what? our doctors are |
doing, ‘and we are ‘not ignorant of:
wha, the sministers “are Gneessundly |
SASH tote: the peopie tn dq And
wee hold $2 mind what educators are
up agiinst in trying fo stamp ont |
enorance in the race, It tx necer|
sary. «find we knot” vou “are doing |
2 wepta while work. And Wo pray |
that ‘fox will da more and mong!
nad then some. But while you are!
doing, please don't forget to say a
font nord forthe poor taxiaers re |
Gies Wsiness among your race at
seat, ter husiners ia fife Haoléate this
rive. Tore the toxgoiten farmer |
forts an the fowkdation of Uowiness,
(ho soeting pout ef civilization, Boost
“ogre Nera faod fuses and cloth: |
hs stares. Banat far Nagee fetories, |
Sutra towns, Nexo eitien. Dent ke
armed and eoneeied enough to!
Hing, thal vou nave made enero |
srogtoss. TF once heard 2 poatievin |
meerieeae aif tke Neary Hitet Se had
ain tail of avery tows Hike testo.”
fue Soe fwea io prem
eaty ef Ste being mane ouch day. |!
f yon dan't Rave enaisn to start wes
netlngis of your gu, seek eooperte |!
ion. 2 ai ipterBated im the man!
sho wilh enoperais sn taieiness, “Don’t | §
ie €raid yaw wit! toca vn doniar. |
Chat man han ever suecesded whos!
ud Rot tere tm the eginalsis Thoney | 4
aot sade ta keep. Tie motto on é
MfoiPer tell us that i, ix made to]?
from raagy to one, mui then ga.
ind you sholtid lo vours jo where itt!
if do you and yayr rice tha moti!
oe. So capes’ with me-sne T]
"i eoonesnte with yon, aundawe at le
f you var't Builds grieery vignt on |S
Mada tdet aries
Dalla a dunck® there, buts fet ie pei}
Afid have the fare as cheap ag cua |S
be Tete
c You can't hutid atone, taca get! !
somebody cise, ae dS
‘Ang pot th your'mongy topecner, 1?
Sil wove for your poopie sad nest |
for yoursalt i
‘Ang “We wa always be fae |
weather, “8
‘put np a shop: ° a
Ye you ewa'r build a stor, stare |
agin 4
he largeit-and qrestest are not ate
ways on top. es
But the ‘best as alwaya vase. to] D
wind Hay, Je)
Phat «Waid
: If you don't go to churen you
‘are not 5: ei
eae
You Aiea Well YOU-Ere OYE
to biuft. a
If"you Hon't give td "charity you
are e tigntwad. ce
If you give to charity! you go'tt
for ‘show. fs
It you don't drink you are-no
kind of a regular. guy. jj
If you drink you are not a de-
sirable person to know.
If you wear a-beard, it Is to’hide
& homely. face. sate
- If you are smoogh-straven it is
to try to look your.
If you Jet your wife waste your
imoney you are a fool.
If you fefuse to let her waste ft
you are a brute
If you lose @ lot of money you.
are idiot,
Hf you make a lét “ot! money
You are 9 crook. °
If you' tango You are frivolous.
At you don't you are a back |
umber.
If you Aare poor you are no Rood.
If you: are rich you got it by
robbing others. ae
If you die you dissipated.” ~~]
If You live ‘tora good old age
you attained it through laziness.
"If, when you die, you 5@ to
Gehenna. it “is because. you de-
served It. e
"It, When you die, you go to
heuten, you! go thete by mistake,
So what's the use of worrying
of the world?
Liberty’s Skirts Getting”
Shorter in’ United States
+: A wave of suppression of Commun:
NR activities and leftewing strike
| predipitated more court cages tavolv
Hing freedom of speech and aseambls
fig America in the ‘irgt five month.
(of 120 than in any complete yea
Isinee “the war, the Amierican Civil
| Liberties Uition ehcgedl today tn its
| annual, report,
[The wave Ras begun to. subside
[Howover, aild public opinion has grows
more alert to defend elvil liberties
[and appre repression. the report
side : ¢
| MConditions have. sain, worse. in
| California, Georait end “Wyoming:
Uvetter ts Idaho, Tgdiana, “Towa, Ken-
Uinciyt Masachudtts aad. mew Jer
fey, aad A3ve Not changed elsewhere,
ibe report gaits
Kae Now Docile 7°
| Corresponients in forty: States: ve
poring ‘upon the ‘groups responsible
for (he vicistion of frecdoth of speech
Jand meetings, did not mention the Ki
Rix Kher-the tiret time since 1922
Mint this oxgentsution Nan been do-
sie, Ge Atecrenn Lega ceretoed
the must eomatuate, 22, with petal
oftieint, the B.A, R., inndamental
iste and chontberk of eommeree ciate
Bg te pitner.
WU Apindis the outstanding aecompe
Hehmants of 1929 and the dfrst park
of 250 Inoking towed an end te
aurprevsion the unton eiton the ee:
cision of the United States Chreutt|
Covist'af Anpeais in New York that,
Mary Ware Denneit’s sex puntpbhet
Was sot subversive of publie mors
ant the dismissal of contempt charges
‘gaint wo editers. of the Cleveland
Presa Sermpi-Howard newspaper:
whe erijicised 2 Judke for iertiinge aa
infitietion preventing oficersant ti.
haw ftom hulting racategek amb |
ines Lay ete
Some Sethaets Cited i
O29 the om" hand, the conviction |
Aicvioters at Gastonia and. Marion, |
N. Cut the interference of the milgis
the #ilsabech Tenn. then’ etrite |
sie Casi and Tron police situation tn
Pennauteanin, the Dhrring of Rostke
Scinvimmer from citizenship beeaitce |
av refused to promise to hear arms|
f salted pon in time 08 war, the |
Nines decieton upheleing a State
newepaper Rag’ few and Rumerots
outt decisiony in Communiat enzes!
were cited as set-bacis for clvil Bb |
‘hea os ,
‘They «idn't,call them rackets in the
old dys, but there was «chap arotind
every ofiice who kept radtiig of the
seme waten, :
‘the snndisncement that Gomorrah,
das Yeon found at the hotzon of the
Deen sen, sounds like © pretty: salty
ea tae, i‘
Waxiin tor Nova
rasa pitsgai
: pee: Us ie And: Uaity, Wil
5 aes SORA ceAmee |
How many of us know ourselvss'
How many of ‘us understand our
niveat es ee
“The majority of ua for ges hav
failed to know opteelves, to master
gown destiny, to become the. al
Fectar and creator’ of out own gu-
ture. : : 5
10 id the hope of the Universal Ne-
gro Improvement “Association that
$00,000,090 Negroes of the world wil
realize that we are about to live 8
| new life, a risen life, a life of know-
ling ourselves. Today az wo think
of our risen Savior may-we also think
j of the life He gave us, the-life that
made us His. instruments ‘and his
fehvidren,
For hundrean~of years~we -were
lost sheep<without hope, knowledge
and understabding, but” sinte. this
eee ane, a sees a
as come on the ‘scene, and has
|stffred the entire world, and has
‘brought to theminds of 400,000,000.
ae their duty toward their des-
tiny. : a
| Let ws, who are watchful and’sober
‘therefore, put on the breast-plate of
{faith and love, and an helmet of hope
of salvation. "As Christ labored for:
‘ple the way of salvation, men sought
‘his life. He was thersecuted and at
Tast He was crucified.
eg CTE lumped neatly two thow-
sand years over death and’the grave,
‘20 do T hone that 400,900,000 Negroes
of thday will rise triumphant, over
‘weakness and slavery, that we our:
selves shail-be riven from the shim:
ber’ of ages and risen in a thought |
to the highest Idea of Iife. For Bun |
dredn ‘ot years we have been seine |
our Savior thfougn white spectacien,
but the new Negro of, telay in see: |
ing, la Savion through blark “pee |
tacles, oF according to Sétomen’ 1-5, |
<o"T fim blatt, bit, comely. 0. ya]
dauightern of Jerueairm, As the tents
of, Kedar, as the curtains nf Soto. !
moa, look nol unon. me. because T!
am Black, Bécaiise the wii han took |
upon me. my mother's ehildren were |
angry with me, they made un the!
Keeper of the vineyard.” ot
But our Vineyard we hav’ not kept |
tor muindreda of years, Other races}
nnd nations have heen the Keepers!
of nur vineyard. Today’ it hax con: |
fronted the new Negro of the warid |
fo fall In Vine end come In posses-|
sion of Rs: own vinewar.
Cen we doR? Tar. yer. You aid!
t marching up. the battle: heights |
of Francs. Toit dil it for: great |
Amerirs, you exn do it marching up |
he Dutle heights of Afrien. bet!
he worid kaw thet $09,000,090 Ne- |
sie to cur“iet to work ext aay owt
erg oF ene Zorefathens ani ia6th-
riehow they were ent short oF tie [*
Hellege we are enjosing today. it!
auld rive us, tie 200,900,009 New
Foss of: the World, encouracement |
0 £0 on and ever. stop untit the vie= |
oF Wo, or ley our armor down. |.
ur arduous work will not be udone T
mil we obtain the’ crown, + I
We onge were tort: but now we |
re found? We were blind: iat now
fe axe! Wernever intend (o bo blind |
rei. We mean to-ctoss the deen |;
luejeen. So anny of enn ancestors |
ied “Sathout the sight of aur moth |
iad, but we never Intend to exop.
Nezro Compdsers? Contest
| For Wanamaker Prizes
His peing.. All.must be in tke band
pot" the’ Redert Ogden AtSciation,
{Philadetphia, by Ausust Srl.
[Among the Juancerwho sill zerve fn
jtais hina “Contest in Mies Coon.
ostilon for Coinposers of the Negro
lRnce ate:
| "Biiwin Franko Goldman, Theodore
| Drury, J. Rosamond Jonsson, Gives
jeppi Bohetti, Nat Shiikret, Oriando
[fs ‘Wardwell, \. Franiin Hoxter and
‘Perry radford |
| “Announcement ‘of the prize wins |
| ors will be made at the Convention
afte Netlogal Association of Negro}
|Musicians, nc, to be beld the last,
|. Meanwhile, much sorting and]
fwelahing of merit ot the submitted |
compositions.
“Nameriea is rch io musica) tatent |
Through medhums such oa thie Con
test, great composers and ‘must
of the future should be found,
‘And all (his interest and edfort-Jx
Ppctiliarly good in just thie days of
Upewing St tiechualeal slusies
Hisis yet conuane gece ba
le at com .
man life ake ore
stm wih caren
Fepdeabental forms-or patigras mea
siaty DOL each aga should conteinete |
new themes, new musical motions ;
HER LEC Hi :
“~APTER 16° YEARS |
Sere
Did the: Abihaeuek dent?
Sry Somtet
Revive yong’ ee
Anton a ee oe
| Such # sudden. outburst Sf mob, Vig-
[dee det othe ee teeta
ya Bad sheiy ectzndntedy etage
ng: teria, that T do, uot beettate: t
state that: such "spirit was’ a
reaceioo¢'tin Sitge Parker defeat
Since the fight against the ae.
mation. of the appointee ‘was
sored by the American Federation of
Labor ad the Association for the Ad-
vancement of "Colbred People", the
credit. for ‘ls rejection bas. ‘been
claimed ‘by the NAACP. aa tip
‘greatest. victory of its history". 42)
encedig ih efententin the ght
to have registered. its protest agaibat
the confirmation-—was it expedient
for them to have broadcasted im the
majority of our race newspapers (is
large headlines) the defeat of the
South Carolina Judge? -Sueh four-
nalistic jubilation was rdost unwar-
ranted, and particularly s0 in the face
of such 4 close Senatorial vote—41
to 38. "
When we. view with sorfow asd
ty the predicament of our Southern
race folk, we can well ford to ques.
ton this “great racial wetory's for ie
many gepétitions af such recent [ynch-
ings are perpetrated, we may be com.
pelled totreverse our terms frome
purported “viclory™~ to. an) “actual |
os 3
Such are te inevitable results of
SELFISH LEADDRSHIP. Morals
Any general who would sacrifice a
sitire'arshy for his individual success
a COWARD. Courage phig Wise
Jom makes leaders, but Courage ta. |
Bus wisdons constitutes: folly, i
%& ARTHUR S,cray. |
| Rhyme and Reason
= .
| The Editor's Song - -
IF you have a tale to tell,
Bot down!
Write it out and write it well,
Bring carci how you spols
Send the Kernel, ‘ee the sbi,
‘Baft it down!
Then, Shen ali the Job is gone,
jenBoll edewnE ee eta.
8 you want to sbare our fun,
Kaow just how a paper's run,
Day by day, from sun to sume”
Boil it down! . | a
Wien there's not ward to spare,
"Bolt {t down! : 7
Heave a sigh, aid itt a prayer
Stamp your foot and tear your hair,
Tren erin again with exire, i
‘Boil it dawnt ;
When, all done, you sea fan,
We bolt it dowa! :
Where you and, there we besia
This is our tesetling aim,
With a acowt or with a grin, 6.
Wecuitie daeee |
“iMaehe Hers oi Pudste™
Senne" upset tao iy Bb
‘hous ten to the cdg tho ear
ie cae
Stuopss exe Be masts ts mie
aisieatee, segregates, doitnnte
Scrn"the shace gations tee
hoy waning peters | « count.
Deounied remo Without got hte
Aliohs arg’ they 2. an outgger ence:
Huilied anu tormented from place te
pacts + tin... 2s though
vei wile a, they fa conidue fe
Bik, te bine men's we 8 eu
wing Hes
a sigh,
A heart may Brenl—e'e i bac
woes.
Through eulfering? because’ of treat-
nent soe
re bine mannin & pute she white
man cén't vaderaraga, 4
\ patientie be waite Sa aioe
hand. vs >
a9 ot Fead what ip she Mask
man's eyes? 1
werlamasing! Wa? Me's gasiog
toward the’ skies. -
Teac toNme cowie:
Do You Want. A- Bebv?.
Regula $1.90 Treatment
ent free—one to. each family”
epi RRO at ae 7 ort
W2."C shes. Eaatnas 6 1 sont toe poe
or et easciotin ‘weil
, PS Sie to etotees
i. Se Pe
3 wee
a
faeces os
Shorea FE. 8
aes Hs
Sa? ty
cer. am
ao R~ GSES
ne -* = "
SUN at “5 wane
Savers
Seo ae mkigel
a
ae Fy tt oe ens
—s cae or eed
_
has :
a ae Tali A baal is
PEt ir ag ene oe
2 sO RIA OD, SIRE 29
‘Manas enh Freee Bet ad
‘sait: ie a
3 ern: ein Suet
She Ser tot pres os
ats want: children jp.
rato ai thy: Yotane, Evow WS toe
of prejudices and. complexes,’ bq
truthful, Ronest, kind and industri-
ous, they themselves will have to
eamure up and age be found want
T "know one tether who Js fond of
saying to his friends: “I am not per-
‘fect. ¥ do all sorts of things I
woulgn't want Dick to do. But I'm
no bypocrite—I tell Him everything.
T don't want him to thik Fm an
angel when I couldn't grow a pin-
feather on a wing.”
“He must remember that people
with experience and knowledge
know the world -much Detter than
he does, and that that brings priv-
lege, There are two standards at.
our aye and.no cheating. Dick
understands.” 7
Tate Me ‘Cheating Is Rare: ~
Perhaps there }s some justice in his
reasoning. No cheating between par
ents and. children. 1p: rare. enough.
And if that's the by-word at Bis
mouse, T congratulate nits. Even bie
philonophy ‘of reasobing, his. wey Of
ooking at the privilege of an elder
pergen who. is. experienced, has
jomething about It that we cant
Uypute. Experience brings Judgment.
snd perbaps an older. maa is just:
Ned in his own estimation in doing
things that he, wouldn't permit his
on to. da. |
But thére’s that water! Nature's
awe don't chasse.
And you ten't ‘hoodwink nature:
t strikes me that’ ail the time. thie
oy ia eaylog to himself that “It's
AJ right for Dad to do things I can't |!
one's unconsslously making &
nental reservation like this—"Some |!
Syn ean When Tm let
Bile like Dad. He knows, and he j'
Whine do things that were wrong." |,
ie Chitden Mente’
“For :whatnar-we ike -tt-or sot, our ts
iienoy de tenia ue’ od agate
hehe we he ton ot mae
ney're Going to copy us.-particulasy |
r long. as these things pose unde |.
ne iae of respectability, |
heard the same father fell with {i
seat pride how he had sola. used {
ar tor twice an muck as. ft wes|)
orth fo n young rancher who had,
ft his Rerda and hig pals and start: |
tout lo see the Wild snd woolly |x
When kis wite protested ne defend.
i himseit: "Oh, hell lke it 8a
etter ‘fe paving mores S|
Ont jyaation, Now I
then lenew thst (nis son seoud |
Scene ieee ent
ert the otheg fellow Beentue teed
mer follewy would beat hisn if he!
Parents (60 offen fezeh one act of!
jes and practice enethen, Chile {
on Hetentio thar aice, Soiste tes |
ef aud ever bven walle they ae iS
ink sealed for fiks of thes owe. |
They arew't bind to thele recente’
tle “‘prefudices and soctat menne | {3
nace, either, ane they tske- im alii
riz iaconvietencita aad changer}
Ve Think Ys To Live
Or. Lilien J. Martin, S-year-olt
emerine proferser of piyeholory
Stenford,.says Thal pesple cen:
[youge at $0 Sy xeeping mentsily ac
ltiver Aleo they can Bo old at 20 by
becoming dogmatic, mextatiy brittle
and inhospitable to Rew idens. Sik
isaya that “the-secret of a heppy life
tor oid age is fo keep a keen intetlee:
[tual interest in life,” in ew things
Jand new, laventions, Dr M&ftin
earned to drive an antemobile at the
lage of 75. She is always seeking
“new Snteresps.”
Hf one continues in old age under
‘the “physical and emotional tyrapaten
‘of youth,” the learsed paychologist
Femaks, one cannot feel that new
Bense: Of happlaess which tends. to
prolong life. It was because of their
Hberation from those tyrannies that
Charles W. Eilot and Arthur Twining
Hadley were able to attain ‘old age
with “thelr times,” Eduen Markham,
at 78, 13 beginning to write » lite of
Christ. He is déscrited by the New.
York Times asa man with an in-
tense"interest Ta-modarn affairs.
~Johnsoa,—Franklip,. Cariyia New:
man and. Emerson were lively ‘old
sepluRgeneriacs dnd’ octoxenarisos,
Theis intellect®i interest in the af-
fairs of their conteniporaries was
coout a keen after 70.as before. . Ab
fo they were fully as bent bare}
rice. Gadetont, ws ieved' fo a 86]
was enigrogeed ht 3 end pol
_1. ss ene guiners from the tate
mony of Dr. ‘am tatelooigh
oa mage ri 3
al
od Sr SR re coer
WN hoe teen
Sieh = ety Sel et x. Sai
i tye: Rowan Soon
i Sg aieeee SSE
Hh Be Nh aaa ta
Hp Sirens wad: oor Nix, naire.
ce Ra oma Ook acl of
Ab aaa: elt. be-0m,“groed
the wate, aa
SRW. aalt get:clght hours!
sleep * %
ve ‘halt eat moderately,
‘and'exercisa evety day in. the
open att! :
\ Pi thew shalt love itie mem-
“ory of thy Mother, ani be true to
the friends that fave done so
much "or thee, >=
VI—Thou shalt recognize the
divinity 4a all men. .
Vil.” Thott shall ‘remember the
week-day to Keep it holy.
TX. ‘Thou dhalt remember that
thou can only help thine by nelp-
ing other people, and that to fn-
jure -anotHer Is to injure thyself,
‘and that to live aif! benefit oth-
era ts to live long and-well.
X. Thou shalt love the’ stars,
the ocean, the fordst, and rever-
nce alr liveg things’ recogaiciag
that the source of life is'one.
< | —wAuthion Unksowa.
“Bill of Rights
Against Noise” Tells
How ‘to Seek Relief
|. A Citizens’ Bil of Rights Against
“| Noise,” disclosing just what -reliet
; | from snnoying.and unteasonable noise
5 the residents of the clty are entitled
to under. the law, was made public
sjyesterday by the Noise Ablitement
Coramisston; -Déviaring that Summer
[ime ea brought as much suffering
,| from the unmutfed noises that came
;)through tbe opened ‘windows as {t
{Rae agate ee
JE. Brown, director of the commis-
Vion, explained that the spill be rights
| was the commission's contribution to-
wardAleviating this condition,
[There are eight clauses in the bill.
The frst two deal with radios,. points,
[ing out that toud-speakers in front 3?
jahops-are forbidden, and.thar neigh
bors may be restrained. from exces-
slve noise of thitrecharacier by a com.
pleint to the Health Department. The
jelatter of ash collection should be
‘brought to the attention of the Sans
station Department, if made by city,
jcollectors, or the Health Department, |
[if by private eolleotors. *
| ‘The policeman on the beat, {3 the
proper ‘one to bring relief from un-
|Recessarily noisy miltemen, dcor-
jymen's “whistles, tooting of automo.
jbile horns and tsud convergation At |
‘all-night taxi stands. oy
ns ae
\Americen Woinen Habnob |
| ENGLAND.—A number of Ameri
car noaiety women and debutantes
[Were presented at ike Cure 2 St
Jumeg iavt wodlt> ‘This is considered
‘one of the highest honors attainable
Jang Amicrieans have vied with ons ane
lother zor the privileve, . Rvidentiy
they ‘were astonished to find mings
Hing with the crenn: of socitety tromt
2 ees the wet Zo of verlots Migs
One of the American: with-truc
‘meriegn independence violated: the
fradiions of the emt by writing
& newspaper Account of what hap.
pened. | ‘This youns woman hatilee
ivorn the ‘Nourbon aristocracy of
Kentucky. fm her dereription of the
couttt deers. the men ward she wrote
that “eiGielsls and oftleers wore
rattet costs, Rearty embreidarcd
a gold stripe on euelt sida, Others |
of the Royal muses wore wold hele
mets with high crests of white
plumes, Still others were in biaek |
satin knen -breeches with black en0- |
brokieved coats. |
“Ambassador, Dawei of- America|
and Comrade Sokoinikoy of Russia!
wore plain evening dress. ‘The most
gorgeous anale present, though, was
rhe Abyatinian representative. “He!
strutted in a white and gold embroid-
ered ‘jacket and. trousers. His ex-
ellenéy amounted {his with a votuma~
moulv: Diack ‘cape, worker ail over |
with dazaling gold: The entire pro-|
sonsion” whs preceded by two ‘tn. ]
ans io: scarlet coats and blick ad
old striped turbans,” I
'Langston’ Hughes ‘Depicts
The Negro Maig Street
Langston: Hughes, young Negro
post discovered. by Carl.Van Veth-
ten and Vachel Lindsay, bas. writ.
ten Be Hirst ovel, « story of a Ne.
Fro childhood "in “Kansas. Tt ta
called “Not. Without Laughter” and
win sGortly be published by -Alfred
A. Koopt.. ..: ~
“Te this book Ihave sttemptid to
|Gepict what-I.belleve to be more of
ewe “Suplcal senal-town -Negie lite
‘aay dows outside of ane
Wanghes dectares, “I: am interested
}prtapertty in, Be, ‘nat Joeal color, 20
2 Rewe. chosen “as a setting. for this
SG Oo tact ee
Paeairtedy Oe: Riaee Wher, ask ta.
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ent ned ton escte eseiemagie ts
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per scas og are ner ts
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Frew: Taftarl, Head of “9,
oY eaeeate & ithe: everuntent
side @f tom wotld, a9 related by the
-Peatt: of Zaudite, Queen of Bihio-
‘pid (Abyssinia), leaves the; ‘King of
Weblopia sole ruler of the country.
Ras Tatfari, king of. Ethiopia, was
‘the-grand-nephewof the queen.
‘The Conquering Lion of Judan!
| which-ts the king’s other name, has
actually been acting sovereign of the
independent Africa country since
he wis 24 years off. 3
Taflarl Makonnen, G. C. B., GC
M. G., LLD., a bearded man with s.
grander mustache than Kaiser Wil-
helm ever cultivated, ts now'87. He.
{8 of medum height, bis skin Ee
darker than that of many native%ot
| Spain, and be has the poise of @ gen
[eral A silent man is Ras ‘Taffari. He
rules with the fewest possible: spoten
words. >
Although bis royal robeq for state
eccastons are heavy with glittering
gold Ras ‘Taffari's every-day cor-
tume ig simple and. plain, He wezrs
‘te-costume of his fellow countrym=n,
‘a hite cloth toga, and white trotsccs
that ft almost aa tightly as puttecs -
around bis legs, plus ‘a heavy, dar’,
Yoluminous opera-cape fastened wis
frogs, and 4 derby bat, *
When visiting Europe in 1924, 6-1
the frst tour gny Abyssinian monzren
ever made out of the country! to.
‘viewed tRe marvels of western civil.
zatlon with inscrutable calm. [res
now experience he greeter vith a1
impassive face. Only once, it i: rr
corded, did be break through his m="
bral manner...When he sis cs
swimming tn a French park poo! i>
laugbce. : aad
Ethiopla’s King is married anvitiv=n
in a spacious houre at Addis At”,
the. capital. Two. sone anit “tras
datigbters have, bets BAA TO TT
and his wife am he takes great ‘--
terest is “Bis..chfdren: recent ——
bought one of thm a tricycle, Cros
stonaily the children are pwrmnisi:~ ty
sce motion plenfres Radratos 2
joys motion piefures and cften =>
fans with his private nprojeetne’ f=
Ruests. He Wker to ative Mee
car. -After Menclile If ef-sied res
Italians at Adua, Ras Taffaris f="4-~
who wax a disteict chief, we" sot
on a mission fo Eurone, This orice
eneg ted te Ras Taefari's ween
ey French tutars, His ehili vt
spcak French ae rapidly as fe rr ->"
Amharic, the tive tongue, er |
nim greatly In the diffieult inter
paneuvres that have ncqnas-"-!
Belay tial inEurags and bein:
2 Etviopia, aye tive sitesent ¢
fos of rulewshlp whA the ageitions!
asks of tlshi priest, ehier Juren”
ommander-incchier of the armr, fo~
tum minister.-anté heat of tiie tater
oF departmen', tamention a fax e*
ix obligatiogs, White Ha tee x exh
npameOr HE ie work falls opis #
Wn tholcers, om hir"warehal wosts=s
and onde shout 20 o'etoek at ot
Xo Abjeaininn may He imap wits.
mneai Ro contract, such us the ra.
omL ORE with shmeriean enzinews
we a greet dem at Janke ‘Thass
en oo thrarsh unlers he reser “na”
KE GUG enawtine. papers, ad es
Ten iniiiion subjects in a tahd s
rge as the United States east of ti
Neghenies ewenr fealty toes Tat-
si. Most of them are Christians,
optic Christiane, with an ancient,
ell developed creed asd a church or
inthation that is se Independent of
her sects as the Rumanian’ antion®!
urch, Ono of the kine’s. chegistiet
nbitions is Lo write the history of
ch Abyssinian’ saints as St. Geovre
i St. Siichael, i
Net content ‘with the aumeients
ave responsibility of ruling Bin
nin, the King has dedicated his tice
raforming bis people. He pours
e elixir of western wayn dowa:tiieit
roats ea fast ag he thinks thay can
ke the medicine. Most of Ethiopia :
“Ht tn the fandal age with chints
d fighting men and serfa. Ras Taf.
ri, ike Henry Tt of England, shatses
y noblemen toe the marke.of pro-
oer . »
Gfidually be ts opening up -gne"ot *
» richest regions of Africa. -New +
ids are being made, schools and. >
mpitals bavé been erected. and a
dern telegraph and’ “slephone svs-
n extended. In his own Palace the
hae bUGred a rea,
f han establldied a printing prea
*: Sayet Gett Wamed teed,
te moet a ne
Sakon me itor
a ee eee :
de nuevo el combustible a la llama destructora. La familia rodea esta puerta por un proceso de engenación mental. Tal paraco que el ser humano ha pestido su uno de razón, y nos encontramos en una era de grandes peligros que amelazan destruir todos los esfuerzoa, todos los blechos prácticos realizados durante los últimos quinientos años.
blasco duiso de un garage y una
difírmida de la mano, en la medida de
Enfiel, escado de Alabar.
Las ultimas dos victimas fueron
asaciosado a fíres por un grupo de
blancon armados, quienes desde el
viernes pasado buscaban a los tres
que se escaparon, después destomar
parte en la disputa inicial.
La causa de todo esto estriba en la actitud egoista por poder de ciertas razas, de ciertas naciones. Doquiera fijemos la vista, doquiera dirijamos nuestros pasos, nos ponemos en contacto con la influencia malsana de una raza en contra de otra raza, de una nación en contra de otra nacion; y es mas que aparente que la justicia, la verdad, el amor, la fraternidad y la misericordia han desaparecido para siempre. Todo cuanto notamos no es nada mas que un reino de egoismo y astucia, que indudablemente han de interceptar el paso al progreso contemporaneo.
Una de estas victimas fue una mujer contra quien se hicieron fatales disparos, cuando su marido no detuvo su automovil a las ordenes de un grupo de hombres que iba en otro carro, recorriendo las calles de la ciudad.
La otra victima fue un hombre nuero a tiros en una casa a veinte kilometros, de la ciudad, a cuyo sitio habia sido perseguido por una turba de blancos enfurcidos. La victima habia disparado al grupo, hiriendo a uno de los asaltantes.
En toda esta gran confusión los cuatrocientos millones de nuestro pueblo estan llamados a desempenar su papel. Es mas que natural que nosotros nos hagamos cargo del espíritu de la época presente, y aunque es un pensamiento mas que peligroso, estamos situados de manera tal que nada podemos hacer sino enfrentarios con los otros en el mismo plano, y defender nuestros intereses con las mismas armas y con la misma resolución.
En la cienecia de que habia mas gente en el interior de la casa, los perseguidores le pegaron fuego a la misma. Al no salir nadie de ella se supuso que habian escapado a los pantanos y comenzó la caza.
El gobierno del Estado ha dado ordenes para el impiigo de tropas con destino a esa población. con el objeto de evitar mayor desarriblo en los desordenes ocurridos.
Aposar de la seguridad ofrecida por las autoridades, la situación dicha población y simul alrededoras es una de terror para los habitantes de nuesstra raza, quienes han tenido que retirarse a sus hogares temerosos de peores aconteimientos.
Es de notarse que una parte de la humanidad esta determinada a desaquilibrar y poner fuera de combate a la otra parte; una raza esta determinada a destruir a la otra en pro de su propia existencia. Debido a esta competencia tan rigida para adquirir un sitio adecuado en la vida, nosotros no podemos hacer otra cosa, sino reunir nuestras fuerzas bajo nuestra propia dirección, con el propósito de evadir el desbarajuste y la ruina que constantemente amenazan a nuestro propio pueblo.
Opinión Editorial
Uno de los argumentos que los norteamericanos invitan para justificar su oposición a la independencia de las Filipinas es la probable actitud del japon. Se dice que el retiro de los norteamericanos tendría por resultado immediata la ocasion del archipiélago por los japonés. Pero los filipinos hacen notar que otras potencias se bopodrian a tal ocupación, especialmente la Gran Britania, dada la posición de las islas en la ruta para Australia y otras posiciones britanicas.
Más hay que reconocer que forman la mayoría de su puerta los filipinos que aspiran a la independencia completa del archipiélago. Todos reconocen que son grandes los progresos que el archipiélago realizó desde que está bajo la dominación norteamericanos; pero los filipinos, como todos los pápidos, prencen gobernar a si sin animos cuando el gobierno adelpece de defensa, a verse sometidos a una dominación extranjera, por beneficios que son sus resultados materiales. — La Preva, Buenos Aires.
Nuestra organización en pro del enaltecimiento de nuestro elemento se levanta y se manifiesta en términos ingervocos en defensa de la raza negra, y en lenguaje convencente lógico llama a todos y cada uno de los miembros de nuestra raza, para que unan sus fuerzas y se preparen para la lucha por una mejor existencia. No es de ninguna utilidad el hablir o tratar de solucionar este problema humano con oraciones o prédicas; es una cuestión que solamente puede arredarse por medio del esfuerzo unido. Así lo entiende todo andividuo o pueblo progresista del presente.
Las naciones del viejo continente hablan con la fuerza; los pueblos del nuevo continente se expresan en los mismos rímpinos, siendo este su lenguaje predijecto al presente. Las naciones, los pueblos, las naciones que no pueden presentar al mundo sus fuerzas organizadas, serán paturnímente arrastradas por la corriente que desarrolla este proceso de egoísmo y de expresión. Los pueblos exploradores y explotadores están hoy más que nunca determinados a oprimir con mano, más ferrea sus subbitidos de tez oscura, hacia de ello su mejor profesión y factándose de su gran arrogancija.
Inutil sería en la época presenté el mirar hacia los pederes predominantes en pos de commiseración tul 'parece que osos han perdido su sentimiento cristiano. Tomemos al pueblo inglés y al pueblo francés por ejemplo:-su principio cristiano se ha desvanecido como lo demuestran sus actuaciones con los pueblos débiles, y solo pesa en la balanza como equilibrio social en esos dos poderes, todo aquello que se circunscribe y pueda medirse, sustanciarse y materializarse en el sentido de libras esterilis y de francos.
The original text is not clearly visible.
Quizás la primera indicación de que el proyecto arancelario Hawley-Smoot, puesto en vigor recientemente por esta nación, in de regulari firmabien en hedenicó de las relaciones comerciales de la historia, Unidos, con otras tricolores, púlosse en evidencia cuando el director general de Correos, Walter S. Brown decidir que se capacita un imunidad remunición de los servicios postales ganos-astoundidens a conseucencia de que este proyecto arancelario elimina la prohibición anterior de recibir embarques cibanos aquí de pequeños cantidades de cigarrillos y cigarros.
Nuestro pueblo no debe por mas tiempo recurrir al consejo ni mucho menos al auxilio de ningun otro pueblo en sus futuros designios; debe mirar por y para si mismo en la solución de sus multiples problemas. Hemos llegado a la conclusión de recibir solamente desengaños en todas nuestras esperanza, desengaños en todas nuestras ambiciones, dependiendo siempre como lo hemos hecho de los demás. Hora es ya de darnos cuenta exacta de nuestra lamentable condición como raza universalmente y esforzarnos por adquirir la posición a que somos acreedores, como parte integrante del género humano.
Los productores nacionales de egiarrillos y tigaros, sin embargo, oponeuse a la extensión de facilidades de esta naturaleza, para el envio de pequeñas cantidades de tabacos habanos a los Estados Unidos diciendo que con ello se destruira en realidad la industria nacional, dejando a muchos tabaceros desocupados. Mr. Brown, declarando ante el comité de Medios y Arbitris de la camaara representantes dijo que la imposición de derechos arancelarios, aun en cantidades en que importasen menos de un donar (hasta ahora no es costumbre el cobrar en los Estados Unidos derechos arancelarios, de menos de un dollar) remediaria esta situación, indicando también para ello la posible reducción de los impuestos para los tabacos nacionales.
Formémos un sólo haz con toda la fuerza de nuestra convicción, tal como lo hace, el inglés, el francés, el teutón, el norteamericano, etcé. Que sea esto para nosotros una visión de gran altruismo una visión que encarne nuestras mas legítimas ambiciones y nos inspire el valor mas santificado, par llevar avanre nuestras luchas y salvarnos del caos que nos circunda, sacando incolume nuestra libertad y nuestra dignidad de raza.
IF YOU WANT
TO BE
LUCKY—HAPPY—WELL
AND LOOK THE WORLD IN THE FACE
SOVE ALL PROBLEMS—GET WAY YOU WANT
AND FEAR NO HAY OR GROUNDSTARS
WRITE TODAY
In your life, love or hope, you must have a heart to be kind or to be true to yourself. You must have a heart to be kind or to be true to yourself. You must have a heart to be kind or to be true to yourself.
And so lucky you have made something for yourself. You have made something for yourself.
M. BRIARDS
100 Main Street, N.Y.
FREE
Jersey City
New Jersey
La junta arancelaria estudia la proposición de modificar el acuerdo del nuevo arancel mediante la aplicación de la clavícula flexible, para en los centros oficiales biscate a toda zona el evitario, a fin de reestaurar el servicio postal entre los paises, el que reduja en penguin ganancias para los casos expuestos anteriores.
muestra la misma que la lectura.
libro sagrado los califica do este modo: el humago de adentro y el enegro de aditura.
Los patios enmuevados de habitats aquelos que se amanara bajo el mismo techo, siendo la diferencia ligica de que si el hombre tiene enegros adentro, también tendra enegros afuera que cooperen mutamente, para llevar a cabo sus malvados propositos.
Muchas de las publicaciones de nuestra raza, han estado aconsejando a los miembros de esta organización que suspendan la lucha entre si. La parte sincera de esos consejos es diga de consideración.
Realmente se ha llevado la lucha a un extremo tal, que hemos armado al enegro de afuera con el latigo que ha de castigarlos.
Es muy grande todo cuanto tengemos que realizar, para que continue esa lucha infundida entre nuestro elemento. Los enemigos de afieria son legión y no seria posible su derrota, a menos que no exista paz entre nosotros, y estemos unidos con el objeto de promover y protejer los intereses de nuestra organización y de nuestra raza en general.
Maestros Cubanos
Los doscientos maestros cubanos legados en jira de vista a los Estados Unidos. se encuentran en Atlantic ligerantine estropeados a consejeciente de su largo viaje. jeo sin que dejanar de expresar su entusiasmo por el sistema escolar de Atlanta.
Estos vijeros llegaron procedentes de Miami, doubled fueron agasajados con una fiesta en su honor que se diera en el teatro. Los maestros visitaron las escuelas técnicas y publicicas, y después se les condujo aaja Academia Militar de Georgia. Saldrán para continuar su jira cuyo viapie les llevara a Washington, Nueva York, Ningua Falls, Filadelfia y Atlantic City.
La delegación de profesores cubanos lijegara a Washington y serán recibidos por el doctor Leo S. Rowe, director general de la Panamerican Union y los funcionarios de la ambajada cubana. Los visitantes serán testejados con un largo programa de fiestas, pasos y recepciones que terminarán el viernes, dia de su partida.
Estos profesores cubanos forman la segunda excursion que organizan para ellos los ferrocarriles que hacen conexión en la república isleña con todas de las grandes ciudades norte americana.
La excursion en la Pan American Union, terminará las 10 de la mañana y la de la entidad, de Culaya, más que 18 minutos de los unos cuatro prosectos prosectur viajía rumbo a Nueva York y otras ciudades del Este en los Estados Unidos, permaniguerá a la Universidad el viernes proximo.
black-mustard, brushing man of the Reevesville type, who persuading his conversation by thumping a clenched fat on the table. Nahas Pasha resigned, despite the fact that his party included his person and the many in Parliament—with the King himself in command with the Legislature because, the Nationalists say, there was a movement to prevent their constitutional functioning.
After his resignation late in June and the postponement of Parliament for a month by the King, Nahas Pasha started touring the country to arouse sentiment for defense of the Constitution. The new Premier, Sidky, meanwhile, had suspended, the Constitution.
"Defending Liberty"
"We decided every Egyptian should take an oath to defend the Constitution with all his force," Sajas Pasha said in an interview shortly before he went to Mansurah. "The Parliament members also decided that a system of non-cooperation should be enforced after July 21 if the government did not present itself in Parliament. If they do not appear the World will announce their plan against the government—a plan which is now set but which will be successful because the country is behind us.
"We will win at whatever cost of suffering. This is the fourth time the Constitution has been infringed upon and we have won our fight each time. We are doing just what America did—we are defending our liberty."
"This crise was deliberately provoked," he continued.
Six Killed, Forty six Injured
Six persons were killed and forty-
seven injured, the blottery, in the
influence of K. Manushur, yesterday.
Two of the 645 killed fun. over by
Mahas Pradesh ammunition after they
had been incapable by police.
It was told that six men gathered
a Kill Kill of Mahas Pradesh. Two
men gathered a prosecution Ward
Sheriff in K. Manushur in the day and
received a poisoning injury by fire.
The men聚集在K. Manushur,
K. Manushur, and by fire caused. A
police officer in K. Manushur, K.
Spoonful Blues
by Charley Patton
HERE'S a record that "wont behave"—its another by that famous star Charley Patton who has given us two other sensational sellers, "PONY BLUES" and "DOWN THE DIRT ROAD." His guitar playing is "out of this world" and does he sing—you should hear him on this latest Paramount record at your dealer or mail us the coupon."
1906- Shake It And Break It But [Dont Let It Fall Mama]
Vocal Novelty, and A Spoofish Blues
19072- Bed Springs Blues and To To Blues! Vocal, guitar acc., Blind Lemon Jefferson.
19073- Steven Gates Blues and Florida Bound, Vocal, guitar acc., Tenderfoot Edwards.
19069- Prison Blues and My Man Blues, Vocal, piano-trunk act., Alice Moore.
19046- Tend of Being Mistreated, Part I and Part II, Vocal with guitar, Clifford Gibson.
19055- Pony Blues and Banty Receiver Blues, Vocal, guitar acc., Charley Patton.
19054- Down The Dirt Road Blues and It Won't Be Long, Vocal-guitar acc., Charley Patton.
19052- Bekurahop Blues and Long Distance Blues, Vocal-guitar acc., Blind Lemon Jefferson.
19040- Forty Four Blues and Prison Blues, Vocal, piano acc., James Wiggins.
19005- Down on Beach Alley Blind and Five Jimmy Elijah, Vocal, piano acc., L. Green.
SPIRITUALS
19074- Take Your Burden To The Load, Vocal, jazz acc., and Telephone To Clarly, Blind Artist, Groom and Brother.
19069- The Load Strings and drums in Gorman Studio My Nightstand Blend, Buddah Quartet.
19029- My Blues! If your music is one of the seventy you need, make on the screen below.
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Paramount
adherent, with the attacks coming in no rigid a succession that the patient lives in a continuous state of unrestricted apprehension.
The terrific pain of major trigeminal neuralgia may be started by slight peripheral irritation about the face, such as exposure to a draft of air, to variations of temperature, by talking, eating, drinking, brushing the teeth, bathing the face. Many refuse to speak in answer to questions, refrain from eating and drinking, until they are compelled to satisfy their hunger and thirst. Some delay washing the mouth and face as long as they possibly can; others cannot abave without starting an attack.
- There are localized areas on the face and tongue which cannot be touched even lightly with a wisp of cotton, without starting the attack.
- Irritation of a single tooth may have the same result. These areas have been described as "trigger zones," each of them being comparable to the hair trigger of a sign, the lightest touch being followed by an explosion. The trigger zones most frequently observed are small areas on the upper lip, just at the ala of the nose, and on the lower lip near the border at the angle of the mouth. There exists in the region of the temple another trigger zone which we have noted quite often.
The pain chiched by stimulating one of these areas may not be confined to the division of the nerve which supplies the trigger zone. Irritation of one division may produce pain in the adjacent division; the pain is referred to one side of the face and, in the early stages of the disease, to only one division of the trigeminal nerve. At a later stage, involvement of the adjacent division is of frequent occurrence. Finally the three divisions are affected as the disease progresses.
Major trigeminal neuralgia may appear at any age; its frequency is greatest after thirty-five, usually between fifty and seventy years of age. It occurs in males and females alike, and involves the right side more often than the left.
Session Votes to Fix "White Collar" Hours
GENEVA. The draft of a convention fixing the hours of salaried employees was adopted by 71 to 1 on the first vote tonight by the International Labor Conference.
The draft limits the hours in commerce and in offices to eight a day, and forty-eight a week, thus endeavoring to do the "white collar" workers what has been done previously for industrial workers. It provided that the hours may be worn only at industrial provided that only they not at casual ten hours.
Employers, represented, here voted against, and the workers for the measure, with most of the Government's neither voted for nor abstaining, only the Irish Five State and Japan voting adversely. Recommendations also were adopted concerning hours in the剧院 and other employment places, in hotels and in courthouses and negotiages and agitators.
DBMSSP
PETER H.
dons and even bones. The real cause of the trouble, however, is centered in the nerve which supplies the muscle, or group of muscles, that have lost the power of motion or the act of sensation. The brain is the principal seat of the nervous system. The spinal cord is a specialized portion of the same structure. From both the brain and spinal cord proceed nerve filaments which ramify the whole system. These latter carry the impression of motion or sensation. If the disturbance originates in any of the centers the paralysis extends over a wider area than if it is confined to any of the nerve threads.
Paralysis might exist from birth owing to the inability of the brain cells to function adequately. The coherent working of the human machine is then thrown out of order, resulting in the extreme case of imbecility. Fortunately these cases are in the minority. Infants are sometimes attacked with this malady during the early years of life. The cases are generally acute. The previous health of the children is generally good. A few may have had an affection of the nose and throat. An arm or a leg may be affected. Many children in a certain locality may show the symptoms at the same time. Such a condition goes by the name of infantile paralysis. Other individuals are not wholly exempted from an attack. The sufferers, in the majority of cases, recover.
Creeping paralysis is a very dangerous disorder of the body. It starts from below and proceeds upward. The danger zone is reached when the diaphragm is involved. The morbidity is very high but the disease is rare. If the blood vessels in the brain be diseased from hardened arteries or from such a complaint as apoplex, paralysis or cortin party of the body would occur should those blood vessels drive way within the cranial cavity. These cases need competent and early attention in order to obtain favorable results. The first instance of secret tipping is usually a paraplegic manifestation. In these cases the wrist or the ankle ticks the tube. The patient is unable to use either commonly. A wrist depr
Bald parishes so as to produce parrisis of the mind, which they suggest as necessary for the improvement of the mind, are supplied these nerves during. They become atropiled and paralyzed. The result of paralysis forms a very fruitful source of income for quackery. The poor unfortunate are usually pager to be relieved of their condition, and the staf of the mind is such that they will yield readily to charlatanism whose only source of knowledge consists of beautiful promises backed with flowery language. Patience, courage, confidence, tact, intelligence are needed to overcome the obstacles. These characteristics are measured by your family physician. Whilst he may not be able to perform miracles yet he can impart a measure of comfort and happiness to the suffering. And by the attainment of such results humanity is well served.
New Health Clinic Opened In Harlem
(Continued from Page One)
tion of how to keep the little ones in good health.
Health Commissioner Shirley W. Wynne, at whose direction the new clinic has been opened, said today that "the future health of the child depends on the care it has in the beginning of its life, and on an effective follow-up of that beginning."
The Commissioner pointed out that a mother usually avails herself of medical service during the child's first year of life, but that, once the child has passed that period, she no longer seeks the physician's advice except when the child is suffering from a definite illness.
"That is a grave mistake" cautioned Dr. Wynne. It is much better to keep the child in good health than it is to have to learn how to get back its good health. "I urge every mother in Herlium whose child is between two and his years of age at
"Holly, another takes care of 6:20
and then follows it up with having her
children physical defects corrupted
immediately, she will be quite much
unnecessary qurrow and suffering
bother for herself and her girl."
"The elite will be open on Monday.
Whether they and Katelyn meetings
of each week from time to time
of clock."
some for the welfare of mankind, others for the destruction of mankind. Many day the master mind of mankind creates creations for some devices—a new dream of life, whether of animals or plants—some new process, all of which results from his continuous and skillful researches in God's Creation. There are times when it seems almost inconceivable that finite man, with numerous defects, susceptible to "the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to," is capable of the things he accomplishes. Sometimes the reality of these accomplishments are apparently improbable, but in spite of his deficiency, we find him, excelling in phases of art and science, too numerous to mention.
Citing present day conditions, there is hardly any idle force in nature as the result of man's skill and wisdom. He has harnessed every force-visible and invisible. He has placed every force at his disposal to be his servant in a multiplicity of ways. The sun in its daily round, radiant and glorious, is harnessed, but also, not outplayed; even the moon and stars, as the result of man's sagacity, have been used as means of enlightening the human race upon matters which have hitherto been mysterious and contemporaneously complex. The countless ocean currents, whose paths, unintelligible and intangible though they may seem, are now located and used advantageously. Man has intruded on the path of the peaceful river, and has harnessed her to carryages, to be his servant. Today, man has taken advantage of the divine command to make himself self- and master of the entire earth. It would be fatigues to adduce that he has just awakened to the real responsibility placed upon him, of the authority vested in him, because since its inception since that divine command went, forth he has assumed the future which he alone should accomplish. But it would be and it is easier to say man has taken advantage of real elements of his mind and has not about in an inspired manner to the responsibility which rests upon
Politician's 12 Ways To Gain Negro Vote
(Collected from Tape One)
20. 12 Wages disproportionately
in the State Department. More
colleagues pay, formerly technologists.
12 years were employed than
before or after.
61. I have supported colored men
in public office in place of white,
and among all things being equal will
be go south.
71. White dominance of the Power of
the State is evident in the Court has
been found in the colored people.
71. Six in third place in placing the
first coloured man in a white man's
place in the Court of Common Council.
91. Six monthly paper is available
in position for a coloured man that
is always held by a white man.
91. Because this is the first time
I come before the opened People of
the Fifth Court as is available for
offer.
With or on top white camouflage
on the District. I am the only one
whose hair is really lighten, and
rested by the colored people, and with
my family breathe the same atmosphere.
The days in the point, with
performed people.
(If I am the only candidate to
surprise and sound in the district,
I will not cry, at any one time.)
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Honorable Governor Spain a Columbia University Amherst and Edison. We find that every land has its heroes. As a race of what do we have, and of whom can we have? We have a boat of a Booken, Washington of a Wilson, Washington of a McLennan, Milton, Washington of a BACH-GARVEY, and we hold of the fact that despite the numerous rebuffs and handicaps that repeatedly bdeck our path our existence seems more tangible - tangible from an educational point of view, tangible from an industrial social and even a commercial point of view. We hold of the fact that our age of ignorance is receding and that it stills time disappear beyond the horizon. Remember, no earthly kingdoms can live forever, but with the onward march of civilization kingdoms rise, they rule, and also - they fall, perhaps to be forgotten. The ineradicable fact remains: Let our march be attuned to progress - progress let's eternal anthem.
To our Little Friends of America:
From a Jamaican Reader of the
Kidde's Corner.
I suppose many of you know of Jamaica, the little island of the West
Irries which gave birth to our noble
leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, and
out of which has come not only this
greatest of Social Organizations, the
U.N.L.A., but also one of the greatest
commercial organizations, the United
Fruit Company.
From this little island about 17
degrees North of the Equator, where
we have Sunshine and Shadows birds
and flowers, where the sky is always
blue, and where we can see on the grass in our little
gardens, we send you greetings and
wishes for special occasions in our special
work, and I hope that some day all
of you may come to Jamaica and enjoy
the natural beauties and hospitality
of this far island of Springs.
ELEANOR, AKENS.
And new blinds Station UNIA owned and operated by the Nero World Embassing system is about to sign off, and don't forget the university district in your country the company of the "World Air Thought Company, Inc." So long!
Congo Natives Are Serfs of Belgians
(continued from Page 10)
(2) 2,50 per 1,000 within the last four months after the mpa department from their native country.
How dozens of men driven to work (up) like a many hold of the trap, drop with seven even the tree they have started to open their wings, is commonly described by the Lord these men.
"They may till they work, work, camp
and the latest information is given to
them, these must be told with an
eye to the task to the camp.
"One up on the ground obviously
because they could not stand any
lumber. Land and ground, would
both were sleeping camp I predicted
that not end of 1916 would see
in winter again. In the country native
workers camp and women camp now
other without therese's land and
not properly have to children.
"Hated to quarrel against all
whose from questionable, uneducated,
uncertain nations.
"Congrats!' they now feel to
encourage 'the particular' to come
into the communion supported in 1908.
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More fortunate is respect to physical equipment and supervision are the parochial schools. The Catholics have the finest and best equipped school-buildings. The parochial schools are an ablady adjunct to the national schools system, but they are not ample enough to supplant the national schools. Nor would it be a faltering point of view is that these schools should at some time be made a part of the national school system.
The American schools are of the greatest public interest at this time. They are operated by what is called the Service Technique de l'Agriculture. This department was established by law in 1922. It has been under the direction of Dr. George Freeman, not absent in the states. In the schools which have been established under this department the program has been to give the students in the rural districts training in agriculture, trades, and rudimentary academic subjects in their farm and shop work. The service began with twelve schools, having taken over several high school schools and some of the teachers. Seventy-five schools are now operated with more than 7,000 pupils.
The work of these schools leads up to a central school at Damien, where teachers are supposed to be trained to take up the work in the farm schools. Eligibility for admission to Damien is graduation with a certificate from the Lycee. The best students at Damien are sent to the states to complete their studies. The Service Technique also operates a variety of agricultural experiment stations, a farm extension system with demonstration agents, and internships itself in the development of crops which have an export future. Much attention has been given to the growing of cotton and silk. The Service Technique is maintained on almost a strictly American basis. It has been extended into all parts of the Republic as rapidly as conditions would warrant.
There are two parties to the Eritrean election which one hears in a discussion of educational conditions in the island. The more important and vociferous in constituted of the Haitians who direct their principal duties at the Sarys' Technique. The other party is made up of the man with the Service Technique, who justify their program by pointing out Mattei defenses.
*Militant leaders voice a variety of complaints. Fundamental with them is the fact that the Service Technique is meant with militant troops in in your country and million joehs have been used to expand their province. This is in all these monies they have been used by the Militant powers in the US to introduce several systems. This balance for the Service Technique for 1950 is in 2,700,000 dollars. The 1960s are for the Militant Department of public instruction is 1,842,500 dollars, there thus being a difference of almost one million courses. Both budgets are approved or disapproved by the American government.
The historians believe that not only is much money in spent in taking their money to impress men from a system of education, which American think is best for them, but they think the money is unimaginably and unimaginable.
They complained loud that the building which the American constructs are too costly for a country with a little money on Haiti has. Second, they complain that the salaries of the American teachers, referred to, particularly by all Haitians as "American experts," are too high and an unjust burden upon the Haitian people. Third, they feel that money has been and is being walked in some of the agricultural developments. Thus they agree that the experiments in shell are unwise because that crop is not profitable unless grown on a large scale, the planter owning his factory, and that most Haitians are small farmers and must continue to be. Further, they state that the Serving Technique experiment in animal husbandry have been costly, because high-priced American stock, unsuited to the Haitian climate, has been imme
There is a further complaint in connection with salaries. "Americans are employed to lend up practically every phase of the work of the Service Technique. Haitians are employed-as-assistants. The Americans are called "experta." Their salaries begin to begin at three hundred dollars.
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the analysis of the Haitian charge of incompetence against the American is often in line with job objection, not to know the language, does not know troglodyte agriculture, and is not only ignorant of the tenement of the people he works with, but by holding himself stood and above the Haitian, shows himself to have no apparent desire to become better acquainted with the Haitian people. A number of special examples of incompetence of one sort or another has been cited.
Another cause for ill-feeling against the Service Technique has been what the Haitians regard as a sort of highhandedness in its administration. Haitian teachers, they say were seldom if ever consulted about the work of the department. The Haitians feel that the Americans ran like they wanted it without any regard at all for what the Haitians thought about it. The Haitians, of course, always had in the back of their heads the fact that the Americans were spending Haitian money to do the job.
Collapsed from Page with
group of men after Boyd and
Mars were killed.
The correspondent of the Tuscaloosa News said 200 men still were searching for Ollie and Eau Robertson, brothers of the slain Robertson, and for Tom Robarts, father of all four.
The three escaped after the initial outbreak, which occurred when Jacob Robertson shot Boyd during a quarrel over an automobile battery Boyd had sold the Robertson.
MEMPHIS, Teen. Mobs are running rapages in the South and a repetition of the exodus of the post war period is threatened as the lives of no Negroes in the section appear in safety. There has been one lynching within the past two days and two others may occur at any moment.
The actual lynching occurred in Texas, which makes a total of four for the four final states. One of the mob attacks also was in Texas, while the other was in North Carolina.
Jack Robertson, a colored youth was shot to death on Saturday on the road to Austin, Texas, by a mob of 150 white men. He had been accused of attacking a white farmer and his wife at Round Rock during an argument over wages due him (Robertson).
When located on a farm four and one-half miles southeast of Round Rock, about a hour after the alleged attack occurred, the youth signaled to the band of white to give him a knife. When the knife came out, the band shot him. He made a knife offered to protect himself.
Inquiry for three days
Now arrested for three days
in and around Equipment, Tequila,
but was successfully quoled by courageous
and shrewd officers. Burry ragged
while more than 1,000 whites attempted
to lynch Ramsey Williams, 58 years
old, whom police on seven
cars had shot and dragged.
The sheriff williams started
Thursday at Port Arthur, Texas,
when officers fought off a mob of
200 white, who rattled around the City shell where he was in jail. Chief of Police M. M. Worn succeeded in sliding him down the path of the fire
station in the bushland. He was then
place in the suburban west of Free
Chief Eugene L. Duncan and the
beach.
At the same time out of the station
toward Damascus, Trimark, the crowd
made a rush and partly succeeded in
dragging Williams out when officers
fired two tear gas shots in the crowd
and drove them back. The fire auto
made the mp 15 miler in 15 minutes.
LYNCHING SCORE
Tithegoe Institute reported that there were 9 lynchings in these United States from the first of January to the end of June this year. But we give below a list of thirteen lynchings:
Jan. 11 - J. B. Hoy, Negro, lynched at Rocky Ford, Miss.
Feb. 1 - Laura Wood, 63-year-old Negro woman lynched at Barbars Junction, N.C.
Feb. 3 - Jimmie Levine, Negro, lynched at Charlotte, N.C.
Feb. 6 - Willie W. Nilsson, Negro
As a Gold Star Mother, many people be beaten, many sing in protest against the institution issued in the attitude of the War Department of the United States in segregating coloured Gold Star Mothers who are entitled to go to France to visit the graves, where our loved ones are buried.
"When the call to arms came from our Government in 1917, mothers, sisters and wives, regardless of race, color or creed, were asked to give their loved ones to the end that the world might be saved for democracy. This call we answered freely and sincerely. in the years which have passed, in our country, our loved ones our anguish and sorrow have been assugged by the realization that our loved ones, who rest in the soil of France, gave their lives to the end that the world might be a better place, in which to live for all men, of all races and all of colors.
"Ten years after the Armistice, the high principles of 1918 seem to have been forgotten. We who gave, and who are colored, are insulted by the implication that we are not fit persons to travel with other bereaved ones. Instead of making up parties of Gold Star Mothers on the basis of geographical location, we are wet aside in a separate groun, jim-crowed, segregated and insulted.
"We appeal to you, as Chief Executive of our Nation and as Commander in Chief of the Army and navy, to issue an order abolishing this unjust ruling.
"If you, as President of the United States, refuse to abolish this ruling, we respectfully decline to make the trip to France, preferring instead to remain at home and retain our honor and self-respect."
This text tells the first protest President Hoover has received. He has been appealed to by prominent Negroes all over the country and by interested white people. These letters, all courteously acknowledged, have been passed over to the War Department for "consideration." The original plans have remained unchanged.
The bill to allow war mothers to visit the graves in France at the expense of the Government provided for Government-owned vessels for transportation and for proper military transport. The War Department was ordered to make the actual plans for the taking care of the 6,000 mothers. The department figured $840 for expenses for each woman to make the trip. This was to take care of first-class accommodations all the way. The finest hotels with an allowance of $6,500 a day were included in this reckoning, as well as first-class transportation on boats and trains.
The House Appropriations Committee, in hearing of the appropriations, for the philipimage, thought most of the estimates too high, but the War Department explained that it had made the estimates high enough to allow the war, though the expenditures would run as high as the estimate. They won't in the case of the Mexican mothers.
In arranging for hostage the War Department decided to segregate the Negro mothers from white Officials explained they did no because in many of the public mothers were from Southern States, and they felt it was for the happiness of all congeny. They promised, however, that there would be no discrimination; that the Negro mothers would get the same accommodations and conveniences. "In the official welcome tomorrow, Mayor Walter and other city schedules will greet the Negro mothers, the 300th Inventory with its regimental band. Col. William A. Taylor, Commander two companies of the 10th Infantry, (U.S. A.) and company of marines from the Brooklyn Navy Yard, the Col. Charles Young Post, and Dorothee Brendel Post, Veterans of the Foreign War and the George P. Davis Post, American Legion, will take the part.
The Municipal Band of seventy gibbes will be stalled in the gallery of the Aldermann Chimber, Major Deegan will present Alderman Mosee, who in turn will present the mothers to Meyer Walker. The response on behalf of the guests will be by Mrs. Willie W. Bush of Atlanta.
Conciliate' India
(continued from Page 018)
adopt the spirit of mutual trust.
"Two roads lie open," he concluded,
"one leading to turmoil, disunity,
unappointment and despair.
the other guiding those who follow it to the India of our dreams—a proud partner in a free commonwealth of nations, lending and gaining strength by such honorable associations."
WOMEN DEFY SIMLA'S
POLICE AS IRWIN ENTERS HALL SIMLA. — The visit of Vice President Lord Irwin to the Legislature today to make his pronouncement with regard to the Simon commission report was marked by a demonstration of twenty-five women civil resistance volunteers outside of the chamber. The women, dressed in homepun, took a position near the gate and refused to disperse upon police orders. As Lord Irwin apprehended them, arrested, no punish, and "killed the resistance." As soon as the violence entered the chamber they supported a prosecution and marched away shouting "Defend the burglar and arrest their enemies."
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we explain the Preamble program of the world in a conversation for the purpose of organizing a very important group on the Universal Negro Programmes in a conference and a African Community League of August 1958 of the World, in that conversation. Five authors were appointed and elected. During the discussions in that conversation the delegates from all over the world expressed their views in no small form on the subject of the many difficulties with which we, as a group, have been surrounded for the past 65 years.
Negroes who attended that convention made up their minds from the discussions that no more would they stand for men who would take oath of office in this organization and become traitors to the same. The officers elected and appointed on that memorable night when they were installed in the presidee of thousands of Negroes at Edelwes Par. were agreeable. No one would have thought that in less than one year we would have been confronted with disloyalty, heck of cooperation and deception on the part of either one of those taking the oath of office. How and it is to the millions of Negroes, members and sympathizers of this organization all over the world when they read of the millions of the first office next to the President General. How sadder still are we who served with him from day to day, we, the organization of August, 1929, when we are less than one year old and are being dragged into the courts by one who wrote before God and that he would do all in his power to neglect and preserve this organization even to the end of life.
Mr. E. B. Knox by his own actions has brought upon the organism and himself disgrace that we can securely outlaw. He speaks now to enjoin us who desire to carry on the program as handed down by the convention of August, 1929, of the world by asking the courts to restore him to his position and give him control of the mouthpiece of this organization. The Negro World on the grounds that Mr. Garvey the President General and Administrator has no power to dismiss him as a subordinate. We who know our constitution know that Mr. Garvey does not need to dismiss Mr. Krex, who he dismissed himself by his behavior under the constitution which governs the organization of August, 1929, of the World.
The Divisions are asked through cable coming from the Honorable Marcus Garvey to assist us in raising the funds to fight for the preservation of our cause and to prevent any individual from taking away from Marcus Garvey, the President General and Administrator, the fight to control this conservation which is the child of his dream.
The American Divisions, please take note of the following cable: NA141 11 CABLE KINGSTON JA17, 9, 9220
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