The Negro World
Saturday, August 23, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
We Must Create A Soul-Stirred Race, Perfect in Ideals
Whites Fail in Attempt to Drive Two Negro Doctors From White Plains Practice
Sought to Get Two New Doctors to Compete Under Inducement
White Plains, N. Y.--While there has been an apparent lull in this city arising out of the recent firing of Samuel E. Morsell, Negro executive secretary of the Martine Avenue Branch Y. M. C. A., Drs. Errold D. Collymore, chairman, and Arthur M. Williams, evidence has been brought to light that either the White Plains Y. M. C. A. officials, or some real estate men, have attempted to invoke other means to hurt the two Negro doctors.
From authoritative sources we learn that some white men, said to be real estate men who are connected with the Y. M. C. A., having been folled in their attempts to get Drs. Collymore, chairman, and Arthur M. Williams to give up their homes which they bought in a white section, are now seeking by insidious methods to drive both doctors from White Plains.
Doctors Refused Offer
The attempt, has already been made, but so far has proven unsuccessful. The plan resorted to 'was to solicit two young colored doctors in New York City—one a physician, one a dentist—to come to White Plains to establish offices in opposition to Drs. Williams and Collymore. The doctors, who were to be brought to White Plains were to be set up (Continued on Page Eight)
Howard Prexy Barred From White Beach
Howard Prexy Barred From White Beach
Rents. Cottage at Exclusive
White Beach and Moves
Cut Again!
Washington, D. C.—Wis. President
Morton Johnson, of Howell Uni-
versity, trying to "pass" for white
when he rented a cottage in the ex-
clusive white settlement at Barre-
Beach on the Cheyenne Bay, last
week?
Dr. Johnson rented the cottage for
one month, moved in bag and baggage
and moved right out again.
His family was cooled the use of
the beach and it is rumored when
white residents learned he was a
Negro they protected his presence.
Dr. Johnson is very fair and can
cally "pass" for white, but his wife
is brownskinned and can easily be
identified as a member of the Negro
race. His children can "pass" without too close an inspection.
The whole family is now back on the "hill" where it is not as anywhere else in Washington and plans for another vacation have not been made. Dr. Johnson rented the cottage and the agent never said a word about the clause prohibiting colored persons on the beach. This resort has always been a rendezvous for rich white persons although colored people live nearby, but are denied beach privileges. Most of the colored people are servants. The Johnson family only remained a few days although they were scheduled to stay a month. The World tried to get in communication with the owners of the property this week, but long distance telephone connections were not available.
Information reached the World early in the week that Dr. Johnson was trying to "pass" and had moved into the swanky white resort. investigation revealed the fact that he was at the beach, but was back on the hill. Such a short stay caused further investigation which resulted in disclosing that the beach was an exclusive white resort.
Live Agents
TO SELL
THE NEGRO WORLD
IT MATTERS NOT
Where You are If you want to handle
this department
RACE WEEKLY
You should write to our team
to urge. My friend may be made
from there alone. Every Negro Harvey
will have a copy if requested.
You must have and more than one
passenger to accompany our people, put
all their names on your.
HARVEY HARVEY WORLD
Chicago Police Arrest
Armed Killer-Of Rats
CHICAGO.—In the course of their ceaseless quest, for wicked persons the police came upon Al Ladd, "out riding with his shotgun. To find an ordinary citizen out riding with a shotgun was most offensive to Chicago policemen. They arrested Ah. "Your business?" inquired Judge Lyle. "I am an exterminator." Ladd confessed.
"Gang, or big game?"
"Rats and bugs," the defendant asserted, and, slinging his shotgun over his shoulder. A1 Lidl went out to the slaughter.
Poll Tax May Become Africa's 'Salt Tax' Issue
Our campaign for mass refusal to pay Poll Tax is already meeting with a response in a number of districts, says the Ummeebenbil. Native workers in Natal are taking up the campaign with enthusiasm. Last week at Vrede in the Orange Pine State a big meeting passed a unanimous resolution to refuse to pay Poll Tax. A similar resolution will be moved at Menel on the 13th inst.
A Native comrade writes: "I am going to spread this resolution to refuse to pay Poll Tax, because we want to fight the Government with a united front on the part of the O.P.S. workers.
We have received the following letter from the leader of the Communal Party in Natal."
Dear Committee—I welcome the call to refuse to pay Tell Tax which you have made a special feature of in Unisecend of late. The present Government's repression of the Native people and their organisations demands action even of the passive resistance civil disobedience type that comrade Climers Dutra adores to dey (Lee Labor Monthly, June issue). We must rescue the masses and urge them to follow the lead of Ipha.
I quite agree with you that Africans must not wait until certain teachers have refused to pay their taxes, because that will mean waiting eternally. We must show the so-called (Continued on Page Night)
Old Records Reveal First President
Held Nogroes in Bondage Traged
Like Machines
PRINCETON, N. J. - A roster of the 317 slaves belonging to George Washington, both "in his own right and by marriage," which was written in his own handwriting is one of many interesting documents owned by Judge Edward Ambler Armstrong of Princeton, who possesses one of the most notable private collections pertaining to Washington in existence. More than 130 letters, autographs and sundry items of correspondence of Washington are included in the collection. at Judge Armstrong's estate, the Farm, near Princeton, and many of the letters are of such unusual interest that the Congressional Library in Washington has recently requested permission to publish them in a forthcoming volume on the life and letters of the first President.
Tagged Like Machines
The roster of slaves contains several pages; listing the individual slaves under two columns, one following the initials "G. W." and the other the inscription "Dower." Several slaves were listed as "past labor." The roster was arranged to show at a glance the names, ages, types of work, the different farms on which they worked and the relations of each slave. Highways, roads, railroads, smithing, piercing, milling, silk and bird-diggers are included among the classifications of the slaves.
Washington was very careful about the persuasion of his home servants, as he persuaded by a letter to a friend that he would not sell any servants or live in the same household of his master.
Out of Racial Unity We Must Work Out An Expression Peculiarly Our Own If We Want to Survive
As a Race We Must Learn From the Japanese, Chinese, Indians, and Must Not Allow Grass to Grow Under Our Feet
The Negro Must Now Be Aroused to the Fullness of His Energy, and He Must Act, Feeling that the Very World Depends Upon Him, and Act Boldly, Fearlessly
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting:
Looking at our world of which we form a part, we find that everywhere men are engaged in the titanic struggle for self-existence—a self-existence of the individual, of the race or of the nation. In this the Negro must consciously find his place. In Africa, in America, and in in the West Indies he has started to think in terms of racial unity, but he seems to be far behind the other groups in his determination to work out of this racial unity a national expression peculiarly his own. If he is to survive in the human conflict, he must take a stand, no less positive and determined than that of the other groups now expressing themselves, through their selfish urge toward the things needed for their own existence, nationally and imperially.
Chicago Experiencing Tense Situation Over Bank Failures
In the great fight for the conservation and the acquiring of the things worthwhile, there is no middle ground, but everybody is striking without compromise toward the self-acquirement of all that is possible. The Negro must therefore realize that his course cannot be different to that of others. It is not so much a selection as duty, and so there is now a mighty urge seekings, to bring every unit of the Negro race into the frame of mind and disposition to selfishly grapple with the problems and see them excused.
The Europeans have long established themselves in this line of human action. The Amatics, chiefly the Japanese and the Chinese, and now the Indians, have not allowed the grass to grow under their feet. It is now left to the Negro—the African at home and abroad—to so fouch his mind toward the things that will give him of place, not unworthy among the other groups, in that in the end he will be one with the rest.
The Negro should not be discouraged, because he is the last to make the effort to establish himself in the world as a power and a force not unworthy of man. If he had not decided, he would be still regarded and kept as a slave, but he has formed his lesson well, the lesson that teaches him that by indulgence and indifference, a race will die, but by energy and action a race will live. The Negro must now be around to the fullness of his energy, and he must not, feeling that the very world depends upon him. It is only when most start to think that all things rest upon them that they are able to create us to make all things satisfactory. This is the urge that him made the white man the builder of our present civilization, it is the lack of this understanding that has made the Negro of these modern days the dependent subject of the world, but gradually he is rising out of this state of mental inferiority. He is realizing that everything depends on him and so he is reaching out to the highest in nation buildings and in racial imperialism, feeling that all things that are earthly are to be part of his creation, and should not be ignored. We are rising, and with great satisfaction to ourselves. The great spirit that has been stirred to bring us to this point must, not be sent back to sleep, it is the spirit that takes hold of a race, probably once in a thousand years, and that spirit when prop-
CHICAGO. Aug. 7.—This morning Monday, four days in the wake of the closing of the Binga State Bank, a condition best defined as panicy was observed and felt in the colored district of the city among business men and wage earners.
The mild alarm caused by sudden cessation of business at the Binga Bank was speedily accelerated Saturday morning by the circulation of the report that the Reevesvak State Bank and the Bankers' State Bank, both white institutions in the district, had closed their doors. The Reevesvak, however, had closed to show building materials there and had been married with the Bankers so that Saturday action affected building business of only the two houses, the Bankers' State Bank.
The Bankers' Bank is in the heart of the town building business district of the Binga State Bank and the Bankers' State Bank.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
erly directed, generally leads that the new dog will have to make contact into a new life. This stage is termed Ethiopia one, hoping for this new life, the life! With very best wishes, I have the aid of real freedom, the life that will see you honor to be.
It was billion Key who said: "A more perfect race means a more soulful race, a more soulful race a race having greater capacity for love."
The Negro whose soul has been nurtured must naturally become more perfect, perfect in his human ideas and ideals. He is bound to see things with a greater feeling of love. We look forward to that international spirit of goodwill that will cause the American Negro, the West Indian Negro and the African Negro to realize that they are all one, a part of a great confraternity whose souls must beat in unison, in the hope that
ncing Tense
er Bank Failures
kept a sort of hopeful vigil before
the closed doors and exchanged their
sad stories.
Every bank in the district has
been affected. Mild "ruins" have
been experienced at the Lincoln State
Bank and the Franklin Trust and
Savings Bank. Heavier runs are
reported to have occurred at the
Industrial State Savings Bank, the Citizens Trust and Savings Bank and the Douglas National Bank.
Confidence is expressed that the
condition as affecting all the banks
will soon be evicted. It will be
surrounded, and that its depositors
will be spared. It will be regained bank
MARINO CITYTOWN
President-General 'Universal' Negro
Improvement Association and Afri-
can Communities League of the
World (August 1929).
"Diedlys Park."
S. Sir Andrew Jambrook B.R.W. I. D. I. Again I must appeal to all members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and Garvey Clubs to pay in immediately their annual assessment tax and to see that the Secretaries of each and every Division and Branch forward same to the Parent Body. No member or Division or Branch will be regarded as being financial who has not paid in this amount to the Parent Body. The Divisions should see to it that this tax is paid as it is the revenue by which the Parent Organization is able to successively carry out its program. All Divisions that are unfinancial should send in their reports immediately, for in a very short while a report of the financial divisions will be published in the Negro World. All those Divisions Branches and Chapters that are unfinancial at the time this report is published shall be cut off from the Parent Body in that our new program must have the support of only those divisions that are financial as that they may receive credit for the work that is to be done. M. G.
Fair Play Toward Colored Trade Will Make Better Race Relations, Also More Profits
Smokes 144 Cigarettes In 15 Hours for Record
SOFTA, Bulgaria.—George Tzanoff, sitting at the Phoenix Cafe here, set a world's record for continuous cigarette smoking. The old mark, said to have been 121 cigarettes consumed in twenty-four hours, was raised by Tzanoff to 144 in fifteen hours.
A committee sat at, the champion's table and confirmed the count as the smoke clouds filled the room. A bulletin at the end of the performance said his physical condition was excellent.
Southern White Negrophobia Is Russia's Pest
Southern White Negrophobia Is Russia's Pest
Communitist Leaders In a
Dilemma—To Punish
American Whites or Not
(We print Mr. Walter Duranty's despatch to the N. Y. Times, below)
MOSCOW, Aug. 13. Labor newspapers continue their litigation about the case of the American Negro worker, Robert Robinson, who was thrown out of a mess hall at the Stalingrad tractor plant by a white American named Hexis and other American from Southern Russia.
There have been loud demands for the expulsion of these Americans from Russia or trial of them by a Stalingrad court, but the Workers Gunette state that the Stalingrad District Attorney has "not insisted with the again, which rests at a dendlock." Other papers declare that some American contempt approved the action of Hexis and the gunette when the applicant right of the Stalingrad authorities to take action, may unite that all the cases are not get known here.
During the last nine years your correspondent has met many white and Negro radicals and Communists and non-political workers who voluntarily came here from Antarctica or elsewhere, and are in preparation to go on record that the vast majority of not only sincerely but are able to make politely and intelligently with a "honorable correspondent." These are, however, exception, not confined to any race or color, who seem to think that residence in the "federal Fatherland" entitles them to the arrest and unrest.
Bronze Tables Placed in Library By Members of Twentlefth Century Club
New Bedford, Mass.—Last Sunday, August 3, there was a gathering of prominent Negroes in the lower corridor of the Free Public Library, for the exercises of presentation to the city of New Bedford a bronze tablet in memory of Frederick Douglas to be placed on the west hall of the south landing of the stairway leading to the main floor.
Harry R. Ellis of Boston, a native of New Bedford and a member of the Twentlefth Century Club, which has sponsored the erection of the tablet, wah the speaker of the afternoon.
The presentation was made by C. Dudley Ogley, one of the Douglas Tablet Committees. A charming 4 year old girl, Louise Eutlaw Best, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Judson Bert, affiliated at the unveiling. In the absence of Mayer Ashley, Librarian Geoffe H. Tripp made the speech of acceptance for the city. Cleggyman of the Bethal A. M. E. Church, and the Union Baptist gave respectively the invocation and the浸念。
Denounces Idea, 'Negro is Made to Be Bled and Not Fed'
By WM. M. MARKOE, S. J.
There is one time when a white man seems to forget that a colored person is a Negro and that it when the latter has some perfectly good hard cash of which he can be easily relieved. The white man's pride of race is never so great as to cause him to turn up his nose at a Negro's hard-earned greenbacks, or to fear contamination when he has occasion to cram his palm with Negro quarters, dollars and dimes. But many, of those who are this willing and even eager to take the Negro's money, consider it an outrageous piece of frontiery if a colored man humbly applies for an opportunity to earn a living. The big companies, the landlords, and even many small business concerns, which rake in millions of dollars every year from our people—dollars which represent mental sweat and toll, and which are garnered in spite of fragrant economic handicaps—are scandalized at the presumption of a Negro who, while they exploit him, would so far forget himself as to aspire to drive a milk wagon, sell potatoes over the counter of a grocery store, collect bills, read motors, or (God fethid) fill a prescription in a drug store. Their theory seems to be that the Negro is made to be bled but never fed.
(Continued on Page Eight)
GandhiDemands Govt. Be Ready To Capitulate
GandhiDemands Govt. Be Ready To Capitulate
Complete Independence
Declared First Nationalite
Aim—Bewoll Sprachnie.
BOMBAY, Aug. 13—Cut of a rare
mailable gathering of civilians who
died, hold bold the walls of Narcissus
prison in Poona, may come decision
of the different importance to the picture
of India.
It was a strange meeting, with
McIntyre Gandhi, leader of the civil
disobedience movement, the central
figure. Arubh him were a woman
brutant, Mrs. Surojini Kavni, and
three men who long have been pro-
mena in Nationalite, activist—Far-
dit Moriol Nathu, historian, Jawar-
nahal Nehru and Yudhakshi Patel. All
are serving sentences for acts in con-
NECTION, with the nono-operation
crimination.
Fall of the time their conversation were extended to Siegfried Eichhorn Sapur in Mr. Jayachan, the international "peacemaker" who are in tempting to have the Nationalist movement held up paving the outcome of the round-table Indian conference in London this fall.
The meetings today killed five hours and no hint was given to what happened, but Sapur looked grave when he emerged. Tomorrow morning the five Nationalists will meet again, with the two peace emissaries joining them in the afternoon. Lord Irwin, the viceroy, is backing the peace move, and authorized the transfer of the two Nehrus from Allahabad Jall to facilitate the conversations.
BOMBAY, India; Aug. 14-The prisoners of Poona and the prisoners of Alishabad met again today in Mahatma Gandhi's quarters in the Yeroda Jail, but terminated their conversation abruptly after a session of two hours when Gandhi asked for assurances of the government's intentions toward India before committing himself to abandonment of his campaign for independence. The
one or two to call in use.
There was assembled a large crowd of members, friends and well wishers of the U. N. T. A. at the usual Sunday night meeting held under the auspices of the Garvey Club to celebrate the Birthday Anniversary of the Hon. Mascarus Garvey, now in Jamaica the land of his birth.
Hon. W. F. Rivers occupied the chair, and associated with him on the platform were Rev. C. P. Green, chapman: Simon P. W. Drew, of Wash. D. C.; Mrs. Goodrich of the Garvey Club, Chicago, Ill.; Hon. L. W. McCarney, 1st Vice-President; Miss. M. Collins, 2nd Vice-President and Secretary; Hon. J. N. Robinson of the Trustee Board of the Garvey Club, Inc.
After the opening ode and ritualistic performances were over, the Uptown of this Military department gave a demonstration. The Band then tendered a selection, and the choir followed with an Anthem. Little Miss Thelma Brown recited the poem dedicated to Marcus Garvey, "The Black Woman," and won much applause from the audience. Mrs. M. Sinclair of the choir then gave us a Solo which was very much appreciated. Master F. Thompson read the President-General's message in the style, and the hymn, "God Bless Our President," was sung hastily by all. The Chaplain then read the notices and informs us of the coming United Monster Bride of August the 31st, 1980, at Athens time all branches of the Association in and out of the city will take part and cooperate with the Executive officers now in the country, thus bringing back the spirit of the age. He then proceeded to call on the speakers of the evening as follows:
Mrs. Gooch of Chicago
Mr. Chairman, Officers, Members and Friends. I bring you greetings from the Carvey Club of Chicago. I find that the same conditions that prevail in Chicago prevail in New York. Today, we are forced as a people to come together with one understanding if we are to survive. The G. N. I. A. has been a heaven light to us the Negro Race. This work must be carried on, therefore, I would advise that you give your world and financial support so that our leader will be able to touch to the atoms and desires for the perfection in behalf of a catering people. We are uniting in the very streets and parks in Chicago leaving no alone unturned if we are to survive in this century. Let us keep praying for our master, Marshal Carvey.
Mr. Chowman, Officers, Members and Friends. Today, the Tiger Division and the Gunny Club has brought back to the mind of the people of city City in Grand monument, that Miriam Garvey is yet determined to bless the goal of a free people, and a free African. Thanks to the military department for their cooperation, for we have counsel another milestone in honor of his Birthday Anniversary this August 17th, 1930. While in Athens, he said, "If I die my spirit shall approach the doctrine of the Universal Negro Improvement Association." The time has come for named Action among the race, for "United we stand and divided we fall." The time has come for the Negro battles down in all consciousness, and to sympathetic for himself and solve the problem that confronts him.
Mr. G. Chalamman, Dutifulgien of the Gilbert Officers, Unit of the military Department, Members and Friends. Tonight we are assembled to commemorate the forty-third Birthday Anniversary of the Hon. Marcus Garvey of the twentieth century. Great men and women have lived and died, but their lives have after them. Many of the white race have been mentioned in history until this day, and are giving inspiration to their people. Our history has been very much destroyed, yet we can find some of which we can mention. We shall not forget that the Black race gave a Touis-sent L'Overture, the great Liberator of Haiti; Dumas, the great writer; Hamibal, the Carrington general; Antonio Maco, the Cuban patriot; Prof. Scarborough, who wrote the Greek text-book, Crispus Attacks, and Frederick Doughas. Today we have with us the Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General of the U. N. I. A., Aug. 1829, of the world, trying to encantate the minds of the 400 million Troops of the world, inspiring them to nationhood and a government with the tri-colors of the Red, Black and Green. He sees nothing but an African Redemption for the scattered sons and daughters of Ethiopia. Tonight we honor him for his devotion, his work, his loyalty in the service of his race. We shall him as the greatest idealist and genius of the age, and as a friend to humanity. His work has been the product of his own mind, and he is championing the cause of the Black race the world over. May his years be growned with success.
Owing to illness of the husband of our President, Hon. E. Capers, she is forced to be from us this evening. The Cash teachers her sympathy and hope for a speedy recovery of the Queen.
Born William P. W. Drew'
Officer, Charger, Distinguished Veteran, Legion, Nurses,
Military and Friends. I can offer you that I esteem this a douloureux to speak upon this Birthday anniversary of the International honored officer and gifted leader in the field. Marcus Ger-
pay. For the last two weeks after my Testimonial Birtday Anniversary at which you so kindly represented yourselves on Aug. 4 at the Béthel A. M. E. Church, I have launched a "Get to Work" Campaign, and have already put many of our people to work. You will see them in the Atlantic and James Butler Stores.
There is one woman whom I have greatly respected, and that has been Victoria the Good. At the age of sixteen, she expressed the desire of having all the Negroes freed. The name of Fred Douglas will be long remembered among the annals of history here one of the great leaders of his people. Today I was much elated when I saw Col. St. William Grant, President of the Tiger Division, inspecting his men of the military unit and that of the Garvey Club and Excelsior Division after the demonstration through Harlem in honor of the President-General's Birthday Anniversary, the Hon. Marcus Garvey. We do honor to Booker Washington for his great industrial program that he, brought to his race, but no man had such a vision and dream as Marcus Garvey brought to his people—and that of an African Empire. His idea was to organize the raciality and the inalienable right of the Negro to rule himself in his own country. 'Africa has been, and shall be the Black Man's land. On his dream he saw ships manned by black men carrying his people to and fro, carrying commerce to other lands. Today, other nations have made excuses in the Black Gold Star Mothers of proper transportation given them to France. Those that went had to go on freighter. It is same that the men and women of my race woke up to the true conditions surrounding them, and fall in line with this mighty program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, the only solution for the vexed situation that confronts the Negro the world over. I am appealing to the women tonight to see to it that every child born hereafter, he named after our great leader Marcus Garvey. The Liberian question was thwarted by President King, but truth crushed to earth will rise again in all its might, and today we have a different aspect of the present happenings in Liberia.
The meeting was brought to a close with the Benediction and the playing of the Ethiopian National Anthem at 11:30 P. M.
On 'Sunday July 6th we welcome celebrated Garvey day. The meeting was held to endure 7:30 P.M. with the singing of the prosecutions hymn "Shake On, Eternal Light"; followed by the opening歌 "From Greenland's Ice Mountains" - The 23rd Psalm was reported. Next was the reading of the spiritual part from the ritual. Hymna 7 was sung and prayer offered by Mr. W. McNesan, Chapelin. He then read a passage of scripture and took his text from Jonah, Chapter 5, Verse 40, which ended the spiritual part.
Then the meeting was turned over to Mr. B. S. Roberts our B-Prep-dip, chairman of the "flowers Service." He asked the congregation to sing Hymn 154, "Oh Africa, Awaken," and addressed the crowded hall. The speakers for the night were Mr. B. George and Mr. N. Loe Surgeant of Legion. The choir rendered nice songs and solos. The message of the hospitable leader Moran Cursey was led by Mr. J. A. Titus, Acting President. Little Mina Dorn Virgo and Master Frank Love received and a solo by Mrs. G. Somerhall. The congregation then stood and sang the President's hymn, "Father of all Creation." A liberal praise by the choir, organ solo by Miss K. Bartolomeo and another by Little Miss E. Moraiso, Miss Edda Smith, Mrs. M. Brissett, Miss J. Cameron, 1st Lady Vice President, Mr. P. Ford, Mrs. S. Lee, Miss E. Knight and Mrs. J. A. Brown, Lady President, rendered solos respectively. They were well received. Reading by Mr. W. M. Nalrain, Caplain, also another by Mr. J. A. Titus, Acting President. Rendition by Mr. J. Smith and recitation by Miss A. Gonzalez.
The chairman gave his closing remarks and announced a dramatic concert and dance to take place the following night which was with all success. The Ethiopian National Anthem was sung and the meeting came to a close.
Successful Jamaicans
Two sons of whom Jamaicans may well be proud have recently brought laurels to their Island home. They are Drs. Leonard Edward Arnold and Albert Ernest Forsythe who have won at McGill University, Montreal, Canada with honors, the degrees of Doctor of Medicine and Master of Surgery. Mr. Forsythe had been riding for some time in the U. S. A. and went over to take his course in Canada, but Mr. Arnold went directly from Jamaica to the college to take the course; he will be returning to take up practice in Jamaica, but Mr. Forsythe will be returning to the States to practice.
Here and there a literary critic who must read a few dozen of them a month 'to keep, up with the times; isounding long for the war novel.
Two Lynched in Indiana
Third Negro Encounter
MAKINNY, Ind.—Grant Dutty, all
here was under heavy guard last
week to prevent a possible attempt
by a mob which early Friday morning
lynched two Negro prisoners to
mute out the same fate to a third.
Two units of the National Guard
were also called out.
The Negroes—Tom Shipp, Herbert Cameron and Abraham Smith—were charged with attacking a young white woman after murdering her escort. Ship and Smith were hanged to trespass, but Cameron escaped when another Negro prisoner was mistaken for him.
Sheriff Jacob Campbell pravalled upon the mob to release the man mistakenly seized, and eventually to disperse.
Breaking through a police cordon armed with tear gas bomb and clubs, the enraged mob numbering more than 2,000 persons crashed through the jail wall with a battering ram. They seized a jailer and two deputy ahrerses, obtained the keys to the cells, and carried Shipp and Smith to the street.
One of the Negroes was hanged to a tree in front of the jail. The second was marched to the center of the town and hanged in front of the court house.
New Turk Party Sets Aims
Fidges Itself to Stabilize the Currency if Returned, to Power
ISTANBUL The program of the new Liberal Republican party, issued today, contains eleven articles, one of the most important of which is a pledge to stabilize Turkish currency if the party is returned to power, thus allowing foreign capital to enter the country. The party, according to the program, will be Republican, Nationalists and lay. It promises to suppress the Istanbul port monopoly, reduce railway tariffs and port duties, wage a vigorous campaign against corruption and take steps to speed up the administration of justice.
It will also support an alteration in the law, whereby a direct system of voting will replace the present indirect system under which Deputies are elected to the Grand National Assembly. The extension of women's suffrage will be favored. In foreign affairs the party promises to maintain good relations with Turkey's neighbors and triplans and collaborate more closely with the League of Natios.
Clyde-Mallory Lines Inaugurate Low Rate Excursions South
Commencing, August 16, and continuing to September 49, the Clyde-Mallory Lines will operate excursions with a 14-day return limit to Charleston, S. C., Jacksonville and Miami. The special low price includes meals and birth in third-class quarters. One of the large Clyde-Mallory Lines leaves New York, every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday for Jacksonville and every Saturday for Miami. Further information, tickets and reservations can be had at the Clyde-Mallory offices uptown at 858 Fifth Avenue, and downtown at Pier 50, North River.
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 16.—A 1,000-voice chorus composed of singers from 81 churches, town choruses and individual musicians, on Aug. 4 plays a concert at Hollywood Sound before thousands of listeners. The mammoth chorus, was under the direction of Prof. Elmer C. Dantell, inscribed by Claudio V. Fills of San Francisco, and Gilbert Allen, guest conductors.
Assisting this aggregation of singers, were the following nationally known solisters: Mine. Florence Cole-Talbert, who came from New York to take part in the program; Frosta Shaw, Gneida Floyd, Mine. A. C. Eilbrow, Mrs. Cora Laverda Morrow of Pasadena, Kenneth Spencer, Emmanuel Hall and George Jones. In addition were three groups of singers from the motion picture studios. They were the X. B. Jones Movietone chorus, the Melodian Movietone chorus and the Etude Ethiopian Movietone chorus.
Excelsior Division
On Sunday, August 17th, the membership and friends of the Division assembled at their new Hall, 440 Lenox Avenue, corner 132nd Street. After the usual religious' ceremony, Acting-President J. E. Samuel's, in welcoming the audience, said the time for flowery speeches had past and that the time had come to think in terms of economy and industry, and expressing the hope that the time would come. when the branches of the U. N. I. A. in Harlem would be united in one big Division, with Officers conventant with Political Science, understanding the law of Economy and psychology, otherwise the membership in Harlem must starve.
The other speakers were Meeran J. Govitz, 2nd Vice-President; O. B. Biggin, Mrs. K. Colon, Major Woodley and the Use Rev. Green, Chapin of the Carvery Club, who brought a message of cheer and good will from his Club which was highly appreciated.
L. Submarinizing under polar ice is as interesting that would bring Julie Verne into the twentieth century—R. L. Jahacks Assistant Secretary of the News.
Master of ceremonies Mr. Abbey honored guest, Dr. Dippe, of Sloane and members of the Governing Club, Inc., and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, officers of the Type Division, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, deem it a very great pleasure to be present this evening on the roostrum of the Bethel A. M. E. Church as a representative of the Survey Club Inc., bearing good will and best wishes to Dr. Drew on his sixtieth birthday celebration.
To my mind, the spirit of cooperation that is now evidenced among the black peoples throughout the world, Yufilis the old, prophecy, "Prince shall come out of Egypt, and Ethiopia shall stretch out her hands unto God." Tonight we meet to do Dr. Drew honor. Dr. Drew has one of the most colorful careers of any man in America. He is a man that stands for justice and fair play to all mankind. Those of us who have followed closely the activities of Dr. Drew, know him to be a man of principle, of integrity, and of very great worth. He has championed the cause of the black man of America. He looks towards the Negro movement with nothing but sympathy, and is always ready to cooperate.
His evangelistic and welfare work is the product of his great mind, a great worker, and an outstanding member of the black race. That is why the officers, members and friends of the Garvey Club and the Universal Negro Improvement Association of August 1920, have seen fit to be represented here this evening in behalf of the birthday reception of Dr. Simon Drew.
The Garvey Club Inc. was organized during the incarceration of the Hon. Marcus Garvey by loyal and faithful members, who saw the necessity of banding themselves together to further perpetuate the aims and objects of the movement, with its motto, One God, One Aim, One Destiny, to assist in the development of independent Negro nations and communities, to establish a central nation for the race; to establish communities or agencies in the principal countries and cities of the world for the representation of all Negroes; to promote a conscientious spiritual worship among the native tribes of Africa; to establish universities, colleges and schools for the racial education and culture of the people; to work for better conditions among the Negroes everywhere; and to reach a solution of the problems now confronting the race the world over.
To do this is a task which should not be under-stimulated. All unpitt workers, organized for the progressive onward march of the black people, have met with opposition from within, and from without. This makes the task doubly hard, and twice as difficult; but the history of other advanced and progressive races, coming up out of chaos, was even more dark with misgivings.
These of us who are fond of history will recall that William the Conqueror after the battle of Hastings in 1096 A. D. was faced in England by superstitions, hatred, and malice; but these oppositions strengthened him to lead on to ultimate success. In the early revolutionary days of France, the outlook seemed even worse, but Napoleon was strengthened by opposition, and before his death France became a dominant nation of Europe. These glimpses into past history serve to strengthen us. It is always darkest just before down, and those of us who are shigging the trend of events should not be alarmed at unemployment and hardships now confronting the race, because out of this state of affairs, will come a solution for the Negro problem, because hardships make us think.
Dr. Drew is one of the present scholars within the race. We do him honor because of his devotion, his work, and his loyalty to his race. Dr. Drew is one of the well-wishers of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and its founder, and president-general, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, whose birthday we are also getting ready to celebrate the world over on Sunday, August, 17, 1930, as his forty-third anniversary. Dr. Drew has openly endorsed our great leader and his work. In behalf of the officers and members of the Garvey Club he assembled, we wish Dr. Simon P. W. Drew the greatest success as an evangelistic and welfare worker, and as a friend of black men everywhere, the success that is rightly his.
In Memoriam
In loving memory of the beloved
pusband Erderick G. David, who de-
parted this life on May 18th, 1930.
Just three months ago, sweetheart,
Your precious voice was stilled.
A place is vacant in my heart.
Which never can be filled.
Thou art not lost, but gone before,
And with the ransomed rein
Thou are anchored in that happy
shore
Until we meet again.
ERNESTA DAVID.
IF YOU WANT TO BE
SUCCESSFUL
YOU SHOULD BURN
INCENSE
We call all blacks. Spread $2.50 per hour
every year today, and have a tip of
happiness. No P. O. R. System.
12040
220 West 157th Street New York City
Regents, Black Cross Nurses, Motor Corps, and Juveniles in Greater New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Connecticut. You are called upon to assemble at 135th Street and Madison Avenue, on Sunday, August 31, 1930, at 10.00 A. M. sharp.
Three of the Parent Body Officials will be present on this occasion. So get your uniforms ready and report on time. Let us all combine our fortunes so that this event will go down in history.
M. L. T. DeMENA, HAROLD G. SALTUS International Organiser. Adjutant-General.
Whereas, we have made careful investigation of the evidences and facts concerning newspaper, publication and general rumors affecting the Christian character of Secrets M. Townsend, and having the representative of the firm of McIntyre and Short, public accountants to appear before this Board and state that they failed to find any shortage of funds or evidence of unfairness or deeds of mistrust on the part of Dr. Townsend, or the Publishing Board. Special reference is hereby made to the $62,000 loan, which was paraded in the public press.
Resolved: That this Board composed of a representative from each state affiliating in the National Baptist Convention, U. S. A., Inc. now in session extend to Dr. A. M. Cowan, send a vote of confidence, and commend him to the unlimited confidence of our entire Baptist constituency.
SIGNED: S. A. Moosey; Missouri;
A. T. Stamps; Mississippi; J. H. Evans, Georgia; W. T. Watson, Arkansas; J. R. Evans, Florida; R. N. Hall, Alabama; D. C. Hunter, W. Virginia; W. P. Offutt, Kentucky; H. T. Boaders, New Jersey, Committee.
SAN FRANCISCO. — A hand-grenade similar to that used in the World War and filled with high explosives was found in a telexphone booth of the Oakland-Alameda waiting room at the Ferry building, here today. Attached to it was a note reading:
"Death to all Filipinos." Ordnance experts of the government reservation at the Presidio, who began an investigation to determine the source of the death weapon, if possible, said it contained enough explosives to destroy the entire waiting room, and perhaps the whole building. Authorities said a sharp blow administered by any person handling the grenade would have exploded it.
Mother of Dr. Drew Leaves Total of 294 Descendants
Margarettsville, N. C.—Mrs. Iabella bella, Drew, 104, mother of Dr. P. W. Drew, of Washington and New York, died here recently, and the funeral was held June 9.
Mrs. Drew was the mother of 13 children, nine living. She is the grandmother of 55; great grandmother of 115, and great great grandmother of 85. Funeral service was held from the Mount Zion Baptist Church of which she was a member for over 75 years.
The Sub-Committee on Summer Playgrounds (of the New York Urban League Executive Board) is composed of: Mrs. Arthur C. Holden, Chairman, Mrs. Elsa Butter Grove, Mrs. Anna Jones Robinson, Mrs. Edgar N. Parks, Mrs. Abbey Porter Leidard, Mrs. Frederick B. Stein and Miss Luey Retting of the Child Study Association.
The playschool is under the direction of Mrs. Anna Raphnaport, who is assisted by Miss Dergosette E. Watson and Miss Carolyn J. Dublin, Social Worker.
An Honor Conferred
Dr. John T. Gibson, the race's only millionaire in the State of Pennsylvania and a theatre magnate, has had conferred upon him a certificate of honorary membership to the Citizens Builder of George Washington's boyhood home, Fredericksburg, Virginia, affixed with the seal of the State. The Doctor is the only race member affiliating with the Parent Body.
This is to instruct you to call in all uniformed man in the jurisdiction of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Connecticut for the purpose of taking part in our Anniversary Faree on August 31st at 12 o'clock, noon.
You are further instructed to act on this particular occasion as Minister of Legions.
Kindly do everything in your power to have your men make a good front on this particular day as it is the desire of the Administration to present to the world a good front so that we may make a favorable impression on the public in the City of New York as we have done in the past.
Thanking you for your whole-hearted support and trusting that you will proceed in the premises so that you will have sufficient time to bring about the proper combination on this day. I am.
Respectfully yours,
M. L. T. DEMENA.
Int. Organizer and Officer in Charge of the American Field.
Special
LOW-RATE
EXCURSIONS
including
3rd CLASS meals and berth
Charleston
$22.00 ROUND
TRIP
JACKSONVILLE
$29.70 ROUND
TRIP
MIAMI
$41.25 ROUND
TRIP
Tickets good from Aug. 16 to Sept. 20 inclusive—14 day return limit. Similar rates. Northbound.
Sailings from New York for Jacksonville and Charleston Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, for Miami every Saturday. Return sailings from Jacksonville on Sundays, Tuesdays and Fridays and from Charleston on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, from Miami every Tuesday.
CLYDE-MALLORY
545 Fifth Ave., at 48th St.
Pier 36, North River, New York
"Climb, Climb, Climb," Mme. DeMena's Message to Gary I
All Roads Lead to
NEW YORK CITY
on
SUNDAY, AUGUST 31st, 1930
MONSTER PARADE
and
MASS MEETING
Held by Parent Body Officials
All Nearby Divisions Invited
Watch Next Week's Issue for Further Information.
M. L. T. DeMENA. International Organizer
Tenth Anniversary Celebration a Great Success Midst Pomp, Splendor
The Gary Division of the U.N.I.A.
Aug. 1989 of the world celebrated its Twenty Anniversary in such an elaborate manner that comments from citizens of our local community point out the fact that never in the history of the city has such an elaborate chair graced its portals.
The much heralded demonstration had its being on the 27th of July 1930 promptly at 10:45. Liberty Hall was crowded to its utmost capacity to listen to Rev. Washington of Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church deliver the Tenth Anniversary Sermon. While seated on the rostrum were the visiting Presidents and officers of out of town Divisions.
In the center was the Hon. Charles L. James in his aching Brigadier General Uniform which gave such splendor to the occasion that the spirit of Garveyism ran high. On his left was the magnetic Destiny guest Madam "M. L. T. DeMena whose pleasing countenance thrilled the yast audience.
Rev. Isaiah Samuels called the service to order as the Junior Choir marched to the strain of "He Leadeth Me O Blessed Thought." The thrilling sermon was preached by Rev. Washington and he encouraged his hearers to hew to the line for God, Garvey and the Race. Our hearts burned within us as we opened to the scriptures from a modern viewpoint. Hon. Charles L. James made a few remarks while Madam DeMena in her imitative style made the closing address.
At 12:30 under the rays of a scorching sun Major Recoze called the huge Battalion to attention.
It was a unique spectacle, for fifty 500 uniformed Legions, Black Cross Nurses, Motor Corps and Juveniles and Girl Guides obeyed the whistle and fell in line. The sun with its scorching rays, even though some succumbed to its command did not dampen the courage of the marchers, as two ambulances were provided for the occasion. Behind the Battalion headed by Major Riese, an horseback was over 1,000 men and women which brought up the rear. Behind them were SS5 automobiles and floats. Prominent among them was the officers of the U.A.L. Garvagism ran high as the U.N.I.A. Tempo Star-Band of 55 pieces rendered real patriotic music. The parade ended at Liberty Hall at 2:30.
The Hed Carriers Hall was packed to its utmost capacity to listen to Hon. Madam DeMecnal and after a much needed rest, the Hon. Chas. L. Jarrett called the meeting to order to the grains of "He Leadeth Me O Blessed Thought". The Juveniles Choir marched to the rostrum; behind them the officers of the Division, and the Hon. Madam M. L. T. DeMecnal in her official role of office, heavily guarded by Major Reese and Skid. The opening bell came with a ringing Ritual by the President, followed by a selection from the Band. A trio by Geraldine Riley, Percey, and Mary Barnett entitled "Sing a song of Marcus Carvey" almost bought the house down on their melodies can high through the air. A Trombone Quartette was rendered by members of the Band which was well received.
The president rose amidst roaring applause and in a forceful manner made the opening address which ran the meeting to a high pitch, of enthusiasm. Professor McFarlane, principal of<sup>1</sup> the Roosevelt High School, was then introduced to make the welcome address in an able way. He spoke on the achievements of the U.N.L.A. and Ron. Marcus Garvey, Negro Culture and Literature and welcomed the visitor to the steel city.
God Bless our President was then sing after which the President-General's message was read. The space was set for an address by one of the greatest Orators in the world, and at this time the president rose to introduce the speaker of the event in the audience. The evilugh chosen remarks characterized Madam Delmae as a loyal hero to the cause Afric.
Madam Delmae, International Organizer of the U.M.B.A. and A.C.L. Aug. 1929 of the World, rose amidst deafening applause, and spoke on the subject, "Climb, Climb, Climb".
She, conveyed the greetings of the President General to the Division and told of the wonderful climb of the organization. She also asked the members to pledge to the $600,000,000 fund.
The president introduced the visitors on the roostum and brought the meeting to a close with the Ethiopian National Anthem at 8 P.M. Another glorious meeting was staged at Liberty at which time the President of Indianapolis Division, Hon. Thomas King, spoke. Madam M. L. T. Delmae again made an inspiring address which gave us much food for thought.
On Tuesday evening an extraordinary banquet was staged at Liberty Hall in honor of Madam DeMena. The beautifully arranged Hall and the tables so decorated brought back to life the setting of one of the Court Receptions in New York City in the gone by days of the U.N.I.A. Madam DeMena's table with the colors matching her dress gave splendor to the occasion.
Mr. James, our President, acted as toastmaster and popular numbers were rendered by the following, Mrs. Gertrude Williams, solo; instrumental trio by Mrs. Barrett and children, Mrs. Barrett and Organizer, members by Mr. William Lord, Neloms and others. Eulogizing Madam DeMena after which a sumptuous five course dinner was served. The Ethiopian Anthem brought the banquet to a close.
Too much credit cannot be given to the officers and members of the division whose insuring efforts made the celebration of our Anniversary a monster's success. Thirty-five members were added to the roll. May God assist the Gary Division to so work that in another ten years under the leadership of the Hon. Marcus Garvey and our youthful President, Africa may be redeemed. J. A. WHITMORE, Reporter.
Camden, N. J. Div.
The 28th Division of the U. N. I. A. held its weekly mass meeting on Sunday, July 13, 1920. At 3:30 P.M. Opening Qdee, "From Greenland's Ice Mountains."
Perfecting Monte and Lundy Prayer in concert.
After the ritualistic services were over the reminder of the program was as follows:
The front page of the NEGRO WORLD was read by the Secretary, Mrs. Edna Grear, Singing "God Bless Our President," Responses by the Chairman of the Trustee Board, Mr. M. L. Newman. A few remarks by Mr. D. Donald which we all enjoyed. A very able as well as inspiring address was delivered by the President, Mr. A. H. Harris, subject: "We are at a Test." Few remarks by Prof. J. O. Brown.
Meeting brought to close by singing the National Anthem.
The popular, fascination is to take it very seriously and mediate the suffering of their relicting supremacy and sweet sentimentalities or solenni tragedies assume supremacy.
Stiek to Marcus Garvey
Till Affrdea is Redeemed
Sunday, July 6, 1938—An inter-
seting meeting was held on the ocasion of the weekly mass meeting of the East Brooklyn Division of the U. N. I. A. August 1929 of the World.
We had as our guest of honor and principal speaker, the Hon. Charles L. James, President of Gary, Ind.
Division of the U. N. I. A. August 1929 of the World. The meeting was well attended and the spirit of enthusiasm ran high, as the various speakers defined and expounded the principles of Garveyism.
Mr. James brought us greetings from Gary, Ind. Division. He told us detail about the Knox conference in Chicago, etc. Among other points of vital importance, he stressed, the need for co-operation and honest leadership, and implored us to stick to his Marcus Garvey, for while others sold his ideas us. His address was punctuated with applause, and in conclusion he appealed to us to fight until Africa is redeemed.
The following musical program was rendered: Processional march, "Shine On Eternal Light." Opening Ode "From Greenland's Icy Mountains," ritualistic ceremonies by the chairman, selection by the orchestra, lsadier Mr. C. Green; opening address, Mr. M. E. Kelly; President; selection by the choir, directed by Mrs. W. S. Knights; reading of the preamble, by Mr. E. Hay; reading of the Negro World by Mrs. I. H. Mitchell, piano selection by Mrs. W. S. Knights; selection by the orchestra, C. Green; address by Mr. Johnson, student of Union University; hymn, "God Bless Our President; by the audience; recitation, Miss Agnes Golden; selection by the choir, recitation by Miss Alma Golden, address by Mr. S. H. Roberts, vice-president, voce duet "Miss Agnes Golden"; selection by the orchestra, collection while audience sang, "We Will Not Forget Thee," presentation of the principal speaker Hon. C. L. James, president of Gary, Ind. Division; appeal for members by the president, M. E. Kelly, announcements by the president, closing remarks by the president.
The meeting was brought to a close by the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem and brindlediction.
ALSTON H. ROEBERTS,
Reporter.
Tiger Division
On Sunday, August 17th, 1930, the Tiger Division No. 119, Harlem, heard the roar and saw the Tigers in action as they staged a Military Parade in honor of the Hon. Marcus Garvey's forty - third birthday anniversary through the streets of Harlem, New York City, at 2 p. m. We have burst and sent the hearts of the enemies of this great cause. We have reminded them that Garveyism is an strong as the Rock of Gibraltar. We hereby tender our thanks to the friends and community us, also, for the cooperation of the U. A. Legions and Units of the Garvey Club, Ite., and of the Excelsior Division.
At 8 p.m. m. a great mass meeting was gagged at the Elks Auditorium by The hymn "Shine On Eternal Light," was sung as the prosecution led by Capt. Johnson filed to the restrum. The opening ode was next played by the band, after which the ritualistic pieces were performed by Mrs. Boyce. The audience was then greeted by the President, Col. St. William Grant in the name of Garveyism. The band then rendered another selection after which the speakers followed.
Hon. L. L. Brown of Jersey City made in speech that made all awakened Newcomer start thinking new thoughts. Hon. Nurse Carrie Graham made a speech that she was not afraid to die for the cause Afric, and so the house was left in an uprout. Hon. Hartley of the Browns. N. Y., also spoke. A solo was then rendered by Mrs. Johnson, also one by Prof. Woods. The President General's hymn was then sung by all. Hon. Rey. Duster from the Executor Division reminded the friends that Africa must be free through the consolidation of the 468 million Negroes of the world. The Jersey "Harmony Quartette." A female vocalist, a reclusive solo was reedied by Mrs. Blackston, followed by the Military Review under command of the President Col. Grant. Hon. Brathright, Hon. E. D. Forrest of the Garvey Club Jnc., Hon. M. Callendar Lady President, Hon. Lady Daughtery Air Aviatrix, Hon. Wm. Landmark, 1st vice president; Hon. Rena Powell, vice president and Eva Pearce, 2nd vice president.
The principal speaker of the evening was Hon. Col. Grant, who took the house by storm, and reminded his hearers to be strong, for men are wanted that will not bow and crine, nor sell their race out for a mess of pottage. We must be determined to put this program over for the salvation of the Negro Race. Tonight we honor our leader for the wonderful work he has done in bringing a race of black people together. The band played the Ethiopian Anthem and the benediction was pronounced at 11
We wonder whether the Icelanders realise how fortunate they are to live away from the rocket and rush of the world and be free from erosion, movies and crime.
LEGION NOTES OF INTEREST BY MAJOR H. D. WOODLEY
GARVEYISM IN OUR OWN TIME
The Negroes are gradually piercing through the clouds of distrust, disunity and dis-harmony and are trying to find themselves. It is strange that the countless bumps and buffeting they are getting did not arouse to sense long before.
If the Negroes or their so-called leaders had either courage or vision they would not have so blindly opposed the most constructive, philosophy of Carveyism. But it is well that they are beginning to see the wisdom of that life-giving philosophy, and they may yet join it in hundreds and thousands.
From the reports coming into the Negro World office it is becoming manifestly clear that Garveyism is again taking hold of the heart of every Negro and very strongly. Lost every Division is gaining new members every week. And the divisions wherever there have been more than one, are coming together in a harmonious spirit, and we hope that every city in the United States, Canada, Central, and South America, West Indies and Africa will have a strong united, fighting division, that will be in a position to cherry on and put over the mighty program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association of Aug. 1923 of the World. Let us unite, and we will have Garveyism in our own day, which means the Redemption of Africa and the liberation of the Negro Race.
Winston-Salem. N.C. Division
On Sunday July 20th 4:00 P.M. the regular mass meeting of the 10th division of the U.N.I.A. and A.C.L. of August 1920 of the world was held at their hall, 19th and Liberty St. The President, J.H.R. Glancee, presiding, "Shine on, Eternal Light" was sung by Mrs. Campgell. The 49th Palm was read by Rev. Robertson. "From Greenland's Ice Mountains" by the audience. Prayer by Rev. E.W. Hogstach-Chapman. Miss Emma Womack read Mr. Garvey's message in the Nero World and was enjoyed by all. Remarks by the president who introduced Prof. Williams, who gave a Brief history of Negro music in America.
The visiting guest, Prince Chester M. Wilburn of Gold Coast, West Africa, was supported by Prof. A. A. Mayfield and Rev. Dr. Gholston. Pastor of the First Institutional Baptist Church. After greeting the prince the president arce and presented Prof. Mayfield, who is his masterly form presented the speaker of the evening. Every seat was taken and standing room at a premium. Prince, Wilburn rose among applause and held his audience from daughter to spindleboard for 25 minutes as his subjugant "Gil Glory and Hire" Porty- eight Ypsen. He pictured the juxtaposition of the black man from Boston Columbia to Planden Field in France to demonstrate the charis and strength and yet she failed to protect him. Come into the palace of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, the only organization in the world that can solve the Negro problem.
Speaking about great men, he said, Mr. Garvey was the greatest man he ever saw or read of since Christ. He told his hearers to see God in his own image, and cause to send money and missionaries to Africa. But send your Edison, your J. P. Morgan, your Henry Ford, your steel magnates and what not and the mission money should be put in the coffers of the U.N.L.A., which is doing more for the race in Africa than any other missionary, the prince is giving musical programs to city and is around great interest in L.A. As a pianist he has no peer.
The meeting closed after a few musical numbers by the prince with a new song dedicated to the Hon. Markus Garvey and the U.N.L.A. This brought to a close the most successful meeting for a long time. The benefaction was read by Rev. Edward Cholston.
F. D. FOXWORTH, Reporter
To the various commanding of
fifth-century Universal African Legions
greetings:
It is indeed a pleasure for me as all times to assist in putting forward forcibly the principles of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, August 1919 of the World, as said association is 'the only solution for the Negro people of the world to bring back in this twentieth century the past glorie of Ethiopia under the fearless leadership of the Horn. The experience of the foundation has blessed with all the necessary qualifications of leadership. So let us therefore, as officers commanding various posts in the Universal African Legions take inspiration from eut commanderin-chief.
In these 'days of reconstruction our association requires men and women who will be fearless in carrying out the command of the president-general. All weaklings should step aside and allow those of us who are willing to die at our posts until Africa is redeemed. Put the program over. Once more I am appalled, to all fearless and courageous men.
'Blessed Be the Tie that Binds,' Farewell Greeting
On Sunday night, June 20, the offices and members of the Hutton Dewey N. P. A., August 1899 and World War I memorials responded at Liberty Hall to the general Sunday night mass meeting and to bid farewell to the general secretary of the division, Mr. Charles U. Harrison, who would be leaving for his native land, Jamaica. B. W. I. The meeting was presided over by the president, Mr. V. Lawrence, who also acted as chaplain.
The singing of, the opening ode, prayer from the ritual, and hymn, "God of the Right," saw the closing of the religious service. The president in his opening remarks explained the significance of the meeting and stressed upon the members the necessity of the hour: he then read the preamble to the Constitution for their memorial. The President General message was now read by Mr. W. Hutchins, 1st vice president, after which the congregation rang "Father of All Creation." A duet by the Misses McKenzie and Robbins and a recitation by Master Lenny Misha was well appreciated. Two addresses by the ex-chirmen and secretary of trustees Mereg, C. U. Sinclair and Welsh, told the audience's math note of enthusiasm. Then a duet by the Misses McKenzie and Braithwaite befitting the occasion to the parting secretary was quite appropriate. Also an address by the Lady President, Miss J. McCourtle.
The closing address was given by Mr. Harrison who in a brief summary gave a sketch of his life in Cuba and this connection with the U. M. I. A., both as a worker and a member. His discourse was very encouraging. At the close of his address, through the request of the Lady President the officers and members, and also friends of the secretary, made a circle in the midst of the hall and with Mr. Harrison standing in the center, sang the well known hymn, "Blessed be the Tie that Binds" while everybody chook his hand wishing him bon voyage. At this stage the president proclaimed the bandition and the meeting terminated with thanking of Ethiopia's National Anthem.
Kansas City, Missouri. Division No.
131 met in our new place. The 8. D.
of Ae. Hall at 14th and Michigan
streets.
We beguai our meeting at usual hour by singing opening ode. Prayers repeated by Brother Chase, Mr. Moore of 121 Sun Flower Division of Kansas City, Kansas, repeated for preamble. Miss, Tillman of 171 and Lady President of that Division repeated the 23rd Praim, Minutes read by Secretary of No. 151 Division. Hon. M. Hause, President of Morning Star, Garvey Club of Kansas given front page of Negro World and in his memoirs he says "African Awake" and "Bless Our President" was sung by the body led by Mr. Campbell of Kansas. A reflection by Bex, Chase on piano, Little Garvey Fields, 7 years old, played and raged "Wake up ye son of Harm." Mr. Moore made a few remarks, his subject being "He Wanted His Substance."
Attorney J. E. Wesson, a candidate for the Justice of Peace, spoke and called "Mirza is yet waiting on her son and daughters to come home." Mrs. Pointer of Sun Flower Division and her grandson gave a rental on plane and viola which was beautiful. Rev. Newil of Sun Flower Division made a few remarks and then he installed officers of 151, Kansas City, Missouri, Division. Officers installed as follows:
Honorary: Ben, Stuart, Hon, Chan M. McBride, Hon, Gee, McDey, Trustees, Robert M. Chasan, Chaglain.
After installation "God Eless Our President" was sung and a glorious meeting was brought to a close.
of the Universal African Legions,
August 1929, who are active to
forward all notes of interest to our
column weekly for publication in The
Negro World, so that our race at
large can read some interesting news
and articles. We are staging a monster parade
in New York, Sunday, August 21,
under the auspices of the Parent
Body, to demonstrate to the world all
large, that Garveyism is still alive.
Therefore we request that all offi-
cers, N. C. O.'s and men of the
Universal African Legions, Black
Crises Nurses. Motor Corps and Juveniles in New York and nearby,
vicinity who were inactive for some
time to report to your various post
commanders for service on that day,
as we will like to make said parade
a wonderful success.
I invite you in the name of Gar-
veyism!
The modern bathrooms in the five-
color advertisements, are handmade,
to be sure, but you can't tell anything
about, screwing them a picture.
Minec. Robertson and Chancellor Ford Unite
Columbus Division
Through the good offices of the president of the Garvey Club No. 220, a joint meeting of the four active divisions of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, August 1920 of the World, was held at Liberty Hall, 597 Mt. Vernon avenue, on Sunday, July 19th, at 3 p. m. and 8:30 p. m., and on Monday night July 14. Our visitors for these meetings were Madame S. V. Robertson of Cleveland, Ohio, Parent Body representative and the Hon. G. C. Ford, chancellor of the organization who has recently returned from Jamaica to do the stitches in favor of the headquarters in Kingston, Jamaica. Madame Robertson spoke from the depths of her heart at the 3 p. m. meeting on Sunday. The hall was crowded and everyone was glad to be present to listen to the good things she had to say. Mr. S. D. Hooker, one of our leading business men, presided in an able manner.
Mr. J. D. McKorn made the welcome address which was to the point, Mr. G. R. Christian, president of the Garvey Club, introduced the master of ceremonies.
The Hon. G. C. Ford arrived during the evening and was present at the 6:30 service. He was the chief speaker, Mr. Milton McCee, president of Division 154 introduced the speaker of the evening and in a brilliant speech, Mr. Ford kept his hearers interested to the very end!
On Wednesday night July 14, quite a large crowd turned out to listen to Mr. Ford and Madame Robertson. Mr. Ford was the main speaker. He showed how the organization of the meeting American was giving unnecessary trouble to the Cause and his topic based on three words: "Why persecutest thou, me" was well received.
Madame McGee, the wife of President McGee, gave tape of splendid songs at each meeting. She surely has a strong voice. Now the voice is known to the crowd. Columbus that all unite for a good cause, let us keep it up and do all in our power to foster the cause of Africa's redemption.
P. Richard Division No. 559 of the U.N.A. (August 1920) of the World held on Sunday, June 22nd 1920 at 3 P.M. its regular mass meeting by singing first "From Greenland by Mountains" followed by prayer for honorable President E. D. Reynolds make the opening remarks after which the front page of the Negro World war read by the Executive Secretary Mrs. E. Roberts, Solilo by Mrs. Ronee Williams, Address by Rev. M. M. Maron, Solo by Mrs. B. Rudolph, Address by Mrs. B. Jackson.
The speaker of the evening war Mr. T. Thomas who rose masterly amidst great applause and addressed the audience on his willingness to serve and die for his race and the redemption of Africa.
The meeting closed by singing the Ethiopian Anthem.
Mike B. JACKSON, Reporter.
Contributors to
THE DEFENSE FUND
THE FIGHT IS ON, SMALL THE ENEMY PASS? IT IS THE DETERMINATION OF ALL, RIGHT THINKING NEGROS TO SAVE THE ORGANIZATION AND THE NEGRO WORLD THAT GRASSES THOSE THAT WOULD DECISION. IF YOU ARE WITH THE HON. MARCUS GARVEY, THE ORGANIZATION AND THE PAPER THEN CONTRIBUTE TO THIS WORTHY CAUSE AND HAVE IT RECORDED IN THE DEFENSE FUND HONOR ROLL.
THEREFORE WE TAKE GREAT
PLEASURE IN TRANSITION THE
FOLLOWING DIVISIONS FOR
THEIR VERY TIMELY CONSIDERATION:
NOTICE
American Divisions please take note of
the following cable:
NATION OF CARL HINSTONIA
JUL 9 1930
LCO DEMENA
$55 LENOX AVENUE
NEW YORK
RAISE NECESSARY FUNDS
FIGHT KNOX
GARVEY
742P
SEND ALL DONATIONS TO THE
NEGEO WORLD, $55 LENOX AVEN.
NEW YORK CITY.
DONATIONS RECEIVED
Arthur Smith, La Suzer de Tur-
Iralba, Costa Rica, C. A. $ . 56
Indiana Harbor Div. 75. Ind. 2.50
GARVEY CLUB, Chicago, Ill.
Betty Lambert 1.00
Alberta Robinson 1.00
Elmor White 1.00
Clara Whitfield 1.00
Adalpbus Williams 1.00
J. M. Johnson 1.00
Please permit me space in your valuable paper to make notes of the Monaster Mea Meeting staged in Liberty Hall, 308 Steven St. on August 13th. On this grand occasion we were graced with the presence of the Hon. Hennetta Vinton Davis, Secretary General; the Hon. International Organizer, Mme. M. L. F. Deng; Hon. J. S. Croon, Pres. of Garvey Club 910, Philadelphia; Mr. Scott of Washington, D. C.; M. Haines, president of Philadelphia Div.; Col. Broxon, Commander of A.C.L. and quite a number of Lahomans from various Divisions far and near, each anxious to hear the message of the peerless, leader, Mme. DeMena, Liberty Hall was filled to overflowing and still they came.
Hon. A. H. Harris, president, presided. The meeting was opened in the usual form. With the chaplain Rev. R. H. Jackson at his post, after the Religious Services were concluded the president welcomed the large audience and introduced the Secretary General, Lady Davis.
The Hon. Lady Davis rose amidst cheers, she said: "Hon. Mme. Demena. Hon. President, visitors and co-workers: I greet you. I am indeed glad to stand here this evening, having been absent about four years. I am indeed pleased to visit you again, although I didn't come here to speak this evening, but more to lend my presence on this wonderful occasion.
I bring you greetings from the Hon. Marcus Garvey who bids you fight on and friends, if there ever was a time when Negroes should organize that time is now. The Negroes this century civilization must line up with this wonderful organization and through unity put this elaborate program over.
Mr. Grant of Washington, D.C., made a short but inspiring address. He said:
"Mr. President, Lady Davis, Hon. International Organizer and Friends. I have only a few minutes to speak to you, as I know everybody is anxious to hear the principal speaker pleasing with you to support this initiative. General may say so the President-General may say so the President to put over this gigantic program. Enthusiasm has high as speaker after speaker told of their determination to stand over ready to comply with any command handed down to us by the Hon. President Garvey. The Hon. Lady President of Garvey Club, 910, Phila. made our hearts burn when she told us we are the only one we are trained and dedicated the rights to have an interested should. She bid in tight on us as we already climbing upwards and towards us to our "African."
Hon. J. S. Cromie invoked tremendous assistance as he took of his determination to carry the fight on, given to the very gates of Hell if he need be and redeem our Motherland, "Afraid" or report to God why. We of the "Sith Division are always pleased to have M. Gloemn visit us and then he comes again soon. The president here introduced the Hon. International Organizer Mine, M. L. T. DeMena who rose candidly in applause and said Honi Lady DeMena, Lady DeMena, Lady DeMena and Friends, I greet you. I am indeed pleased to speak to you this evening. Having been away for some considerable time, I bring you greetings from our courageous leader. He bade me go to his friends in America. The time won't be long before we will see you again face to face in America. (applaise.)
I also bring you greetings from the various divisions I have been visiting in the U.S.A. since I returned. I visited Chicago, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and several others, carrying the message of Good Fellowship, Love and Unity, and I am ready to help you. I am the U.S.A. to obey instructions from the President-General and be ever ready to comply and execute them. If Negroes would stop fighting among themselves and adopt the policy and principles of this wondful program we laid down by the Hoh, Martin Gurvey, there is nothing that could stop our economic stride in the great march to human progress, and the complete emancipation of this down-tradition trace of Ethiopia. Negroes, turn on the searchlight, turn the night within so you may see your destiny:
So in conclusion I am begging you to practice love and unity in your various divisions, and stand ready to support the organization. Financially, so the President-General may be able to carry this elaborate program to success, and that can only be accomplished, through the loyal support of each and every division and unit.
The International Organizer called for new members and four joined Meeting closed in the usual way by singing the National Anthem.
A. H. HARRIS, Prom.
M. H. FAINS, Reporte
LINCOLN
RECEIVED ADEMES FROM
POLICE BUREAU
EXTRATERNAL - COMMUNICATION
Secretary - Hathawaying in
Broad Circles
Congress All Women's
Students May Begin Activities
USC, International
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"|" The'Nogro World does not knowingly accept questionshle |
or frandulent advertising. Readers of ‘The Negro World are
earnestly requested to invite dur attention to any failure on
the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation
contained in any Negro World advertisement. i
Nea 2
VOL. XXVIII. NEW YORK, AUGUST 23,1930 _No. 4
Garveyisim in Africa-.:—-
ABica too has felt ihe magic touch.of the, new. decade, and the
» *™ longing for freedom is bubbling up in the North7in the South, ir
_ the Bast and in the West. None could have foreseen such a ‘sudeler
transiormation in the life history of that historic Continent? © © ~
“Here in America we are iamiliar with the slogan, “From a farm
box 10 the. Presidency.” And similarly mankind will wake ‘sometime
dies the-end of this decade to learn of ‘another, shocking go’ the unac-
“eustomed ear perhaps, slogan, “Africa has jumped from lethargy to
iiberty in one magnificent bowie.” ——— a
+ Xnd what has brought: ibis metamorphé®is in that Sumbering: Cont:
jnent almost over. night. so ter say’? AWho prepated the soil wherein the
seed of freedom could he sown? Anil who, pray, planted that seed of
. freedom?” a : & 3
_. Ladk at Africa and speak to Africans, and you will get the answer.
The Africans are no longer afraid, nor are they ashamted Tike. sone
‘ef our American Negro'leaders. to come ont openly and confess that
their consciousness was aroused hy the soul-stirring philosophy of. Mar-
ous Garvey and his great. all embracing organization, The Universai
Negro Improvement Association. aoe Se x
_ Yes. Africa is stirred to its depths. and every African wants “free
dom. Egypt. Tunis. Algeria-and Morocco have: felt the impact from
the awakening of iskunic Nationdlism and have created an irrepressible
hationatism of their own, And the Kagt and South A frien five been
inspired by the Jndian movement and Mahara Gandhi's. ideals, And:
West frien has heeti the gave through which Garyeyisnt entered Africa.
___indlecit, irrepressible has hecome’ the forée of Garveyism in Africa:
in praportion to the sncers of the Negro ineligenaa ir stort
World the simple, locing and common-sense Airigan Negra has espoused
the cause of Garveyism with an undying zeal.
Mareus Garvey is wanted tow in Africa on the Scene, and the, vations
‘Mfrican leadess are preparing to invite Iii, Native piigees ait chivts
jy West Afvica are clamourinyy ior Mr. Garvey to come and tead then. |
Whe WU. No EA in South Africa waging a heroie Inaie for the Bis |
cration of eae race fram the cluteies of the fuer British iinpe ‘ston
And Mas ‘Tafari af Abyssinia is sounding tu seo ft Marcus Gacvey
awoukd honor the heart and crown of Ethiopia with a visits —
We have reason ts helieve that Abyssinia and its rulers have been |
canverted to Gavveyiem: whoie-hearedly. Recently k Howard medical |
graduate wes myied te thay Rinsdomcte join ite medienl stalfe And!
in the new? furave ney and more techpieaily tramed Amevicnn Newrets |
will be invited there. And so also will de the other Afsient territories |
as they libevuie themveiges Frown Enrupean iaiperiatisns |
“Here Madens Garvey will have 8 wonderiel deke on the Negro
intellectuals of Awerica and the West Indies.” “fhey will no lunger say,
"Weil, we don't want to go to Aftien! We are Amertean citizens!” |
+ Reg, bevetthey Will la: cumitngéta get the best fobs in Abyssinia and
eisewhere in Afvien and-kiss most reverently thelsscred sed of nc
Hvrefathers . |
Garvey is again vindicated? i
Negrephobia in Europe
ean Souther white man is fike 2 diseases
ies wherever he goes the germs of Negrop
be contagious.
rid is well aware of hew the Southern
name of the Negro during the, war in Fra
Phroughoit the last decade they avg: persi
nehmen to fall, prey'te Negrophobia. “They fi
me success.'the Frengh Hotel Keepers jaid
TSVHE Anierican Southern white man fs ike g disease-riddon stinequtite,
“Fis eneries wherever he goes the germs of Negrophgbia ald tries
his worst to be contagious.
The world is’well aware of hew the Souther Whites, tried to
vsally the fair name of. the Negro during’ the, war in France. And that
is net all Thvoughoitt the Inst decade they ieag persistently tried to
force.te Frenchmen to fall, prey'ta Negrophobia. ‘They have thrdateried.
even with some Success.'the Frongh Hotel Keepers anid restaurantenrs
with drawing away their patrosiage if the Negroes were tot exelided.
This the same’story with England. Recently Paul Robeson, our
outstanding actor and singer, was harred from seme English hotels.
The Southern “gentlemen” are breeding fast their obnoxious germs.”
+) Anel it was these, same vicions souls that tried to poison ihe Ger-
nians with the idea that Senegale. the French Colonial ‘Soliiiers, were
“muddying” the’ honor of German women. Thank goodness that the
German people had a sense of humor to sec through such ‘Jabrireated
stories. ‘
Now Négyopltbia has pouetrated further North in, Europe, About
a month or so ago a Negro, who was adventurous eifongh to go and see
the 1.000tH anniversary: of the Parliament-of tecland: was heing éjecied
from a hotel where he stayed. Who was‘dyhind it? Thanks tov the
fairmindedness of a great majority of waite guests: in chat ite: chia
they voted that the Negro gentleman‘ was a welcome, guest. :
Can it beany more shocking than that these:Southerh whites should |
invade with their hate-breeding germs eveng Soviet Russia where the
phifgsophy of no caste, creed or race differentiation is most vigorously
ine a? *
“iva mess room at Stalingrad-where a Negra was dining @ South;
era Cracker got infuriated-at the sight of the Negio and threw him ouly
fodily. And that Cracker is being supported by his American white col-’
lends. 2 <=, eR o
And what are the Communists going to do about it? They preach,
-gotial equality; no doubt. But according tg’ latest reports the Bolshe:
‘wile officials are -hesitating to punish these. crackers. . Why? Because]
pest Americans, that are in Russia ‘are technical advisers, sent-by Aimeri-
tenCasitelists. “Apd ityis plain. from the: way things are. now going
Pipetite Russinas ‘ced these. American Axperie more than the América
gene a ‘And that is the dilemma’ Mospdgr faces. z
SS Dope thy Cormimist aisthotities Wwill-stand Eat ‘tor-ideats, ‘not}
eK eenteriel ieteresis. ‘They may whitewash, the incident, but, if they
ier asie. propegsinia among the Negroes the ‘world over, especially inf
be: We ediet gore orge cot Commnmist Comrades‘in Moscow to show |
hy: ompabiiiied gemich the erackers Sttmety, | t44)' al
BEE LCCC Ny omer ERY yp ata ge tek ee onde et a
EF, Sane ee hg ae ARNEL nce whic est tea
Soe ene
he very sot Indie Repelsioes SN
PSHE We were’ tb look “for sixH’a common, ait absoiping, rallying ‘syiit-
bol-of revolution in. Africa: whiatwill that, be?.:\We can't: help com
flimenting: the little ppper, “Umnseberizi’’. published’ by. the. Communists
‘in English and Bantu at \Capetows, whieh has hit upon the POLL TAX
as the: thing to be: universally “deed: by’ alf:Afrircans, in which we un
equivocally agree. « oo ams
Poll Tax is a very insidious tax,- Its underlying motivesis-to force
the “lazy” native to” work in order to meet. this actual HEAD TAX.
The poor ‘African is' numbered and tagged and has to tarry.a pass for
identification wherever he goes. If he fails to show the pass he is sub-
mitted to endtess humitiations: aii 2
wnd this tax is prevalent not milyfin South Africa, but in sRenya.
‘Tanganjka. Uganda and ottier British “possessions” in Africa, in Porte,
giiese, Belgian and Eyench Africa. Jt is a universal tax and universally
‘suffered. “ . ee gets
". What other’ great factor for arousing Africans, men and women,
young’ and old, rich and posr to political consciousness. du we neef?
All the Africans need js a courageous and shrewd leadership. And we
helieve South Africa is, capable of producing such. leadership.
The basis for our belief is that the South” African” Negroes caiite
in personalzcontact. with Mahatma Gandhi white he was in their country
fort twenty-one years, carrying on Stazagraha..* In’ recent. vears the
South ‘Africans have actually made experiments in civil disobedience
with some success’on a small scale. in which experiment, men, women
aiid even, children took part. And the South American National Con-
ress is modelled on the Indian National Congress. .
Even Commnuttis. - have become converts to this jaissive defiance of
the White tyranny atd are urging to refuse to pay this odious Pad!
Tax. And she Verde district. where the U. N..1. A. has a great strength
fias expoused this cause with great chthusiasm. Let them all converge
their Forces and we are ‘sure Poli Tax will create a Pan-Africa, irce
and based on a federal principle. *
‘The ‘Negro World will be prond to cspéuse and give a lead ti
this civil disobedience movement, not ofly in South Airica. bur wherever |
in Africa this inhuman Peil Tax is current. * we |
SALE OF WISDOM FROM AFRICA
Editorial Opinions of ihe Regia Press
© Wisdom maker no distinction ¢
» — Hindu “Poet. “
What, the child says be has heard
aAi-home.
Jt the dog is not at home he
barks nol.
~The house-ro0f fights with the
rain, hut he who is sheltered ig-
nores it. :
—Forow— thyself —better—tran—he
who speaks of thee . +
Not to’know ingbtd, but not to
wish fo know is worse.
Mont eats not meat.
But fro the “wide trousers
prayer would be a scandal...
We who has no mother siicks
kis grandmother.
If you know the-deginaing well
the end wil'not trouble you.
To love the King is not bad, but
a king who loves you is better.
Man should take as companion
one older than inimself. ;
‘A mond action Is better than 2.
dnd nelion,
What the convaleseont rerices
weoufet give pleasure fo tae anne
ASpemerican Society
| Nagro society gets a left-handed
| pat on the back. in the current Seri
[ncrs’ Magazine. Mr. iugene Gordon
jor Roster, whose opinions on th
jAframexican press andeon “interest:
Taome people, at lerst, amile, is again
pn the war path, And the black
fbrother's sociai life iz tne object of
[iis attagk this lime. .
| Nest of what Mr. Gordon says i
[eve Zn fact, there ts hardly any
charge of the young*journatist which
can. be “disputed, 1 Js doubtless 20
that “there being few who can adorn
family trees with pretty tates, the
colored folis have had to chrploy the
white man's secondary measurement
of socia? eminenée, decupation.” And
96 it-ix the Lrath that “class distine-
tions within the race are multiplying
[are ‘are being. recognized by those
aliemets Not only, that, but class ais-
tinctions within .the .race .are, being
taken as a matter of course." -
What probably inspired “Mr. Gor-
don’s azticie is the conglomerate na-
ture of Negro society, He explains
[the social intermingling. of xo-calted
high-braws and low-brows rather
Gasiiy. ““The’ most exalted mon and
women in, these United States.” says
the weiter, "represent individual
achie¢vement--save in a few instances.
}A black banker’ {s not such “through
inheritance, hut trouga persona
achievement. His father was-imot a
banker but a butler, while his mother
scrubbed to’ help out a.
Choosing-Wasbington as the social
capital of Aframerica the critic no-
tices growing class somengune and
class, differentiations, pulibaszed he
says, ‘on the. least -desirable_at _all
possibile criteria—color. Nothing iv
so calculated to, rip to abreds the
pattern of race solidaiity as distinc-
tons fourded ori color. IX the attempt
to establlah an “upper crust” within
the Negro race .reports to: such_a
standard, theri tt ought to’ be staiped
out in Hs teciptency, anf the con-
glenorate: Megro . elite,” “reaching,
froma ”the. sewer to. the cathadral
spice,” left to, stroteh jp rents,
See mates
Negro lite. be a.far bée}
hr then a cant aystem|
coeruaam ate ar et
ce iby Beene Hagry' thee
men te of, Atremmerion, end, te,
praegrecy Chit they bane mate -
| the color of skin.-~A modern,
Aman wie touches what you
have ehut up sould not dweil with
you
1 believe tae death because of
the bones. * . :
“he born. merchant goes not to
the other world. *
._If the door had daggers no one
“would leave the Yoom,———"——
Refore one replies one must be
present. .,
Without fingers the hand wouid
bea spoon. | 3
Running about gives no scbolars.
He. who always turns when
Meeping does it no more in the
other world.
Though the woif be lexan he can
he content with a goat.
£m man makes soup of his
tears do not ask him for broth,
She whom the” partridge: loves:
as she whom he hates, would
starve i€ they forgot to serateh
the pround for fond,
‘whe freve sajoys iseté in water
Sut notin hot water,
gon at leat paraliols their progreny
nlong other hncs. Left alone, # real
society, will evolve ax succersive-rex-
erations of cultured Negroes come
nad Ro.’ We' need. not stimulate its
evonition by focising attention of
false standards Of differentiation.
What we need is adt a society, but
the real foutdation for a sogiety.—
Norfolk Journal and ‘Guide.
Neero Here of the Faisfax
j- Th an cidtorial inst week headed
Phe ead Speaks." we conchaded by
Vsaying “The well now tradition of
| Bravery and heroigm .of Negro sex-
;men in times of dixaster has always
| been maintained. We believe. this. will
("he found true of the Negro crow of
jthe il-fited Fairfax after nll returin
jare ia.” : 5
|" Already Julian Mearés, 19, of 301
Reach-strest, Greensboro, N. C., one
lot the surviving Negro waiters has
‘been praised for his-heroism in pre-
venting ‘Mrs. Lillian Batson, 237white,
of Brown street, Sajem, from leaping
overboard into’ the. raging inferno
that surrounded the Fairfax. Similsr-
ly a Mrs. Berkewick with baby in hee
‘arms was saved by Meares. The baby,
the, nicther, Mrs. Batson and Meares
were all'confined in the Carney Hos-
pitan. mel
Many witnésges have tealified at
the Federal inguicy this week. Nowe
DAS SUOSCANCIXteG exriy CitMrges Limi
Negro members of the crew were
panic stricken and acted cowardly.
We further venture. to say that more
heroic deeds of Negro seamen tn the.
Fairfax disaster.will be uncovered be-,
fore the inveatigstiongends.—Boston
Chronicle. .
Bedouins Act to'Cut Wars
WH Submit Inter-Tribal Disputes te
i Ordtaary Law Courts. _
Jerusalem—aAp indication that the
hereditary tribal laws that have gov-
Bedéuin trives. for- centuries will be
abolished is. seen in an sgrecment
reached tiday by & sutmber of promt-
pachre. they. baby hgreod that beste
eter Lincines od eter ty Ore
mpdie tz¥een chal! be athuated tn tes
ordieary aoe fmiteed of, «:
te the pet, by sivwae, 9 mngaeely
SM og aca Pa at ast hae
‘Ene & eomre § FoOruin
ck Shoe Pe ei
Rees Ete Se.
3 Me And sibea 2
}The world bas even seen.) +
Tye: woadardul wealth of ‘adr! om het
i betes SEE aE
‘Beaina, te. merit 9.gioriots: crawn—_"
A, crews: of Contentment to Victory
‘That might win for her Fame: and
Renown. :
‘She stepa with thé air, of a statély
a, queen, 1
Whom her subjects love so well.
As she fondlés the tri-locofa RED,
BLACK and GREEN,
‘Their‘joyal hearts to swell.
Fair Lady, we follow thy footsteps
Wherever thou dost: go. =e
And. rély.on thy strength for succéur
yehen our own grow weary and slow.
For the path thou dost ‘mark meane
honor bright,
Ard of it we have always dreamed —
Let’ us fervently hope naught may.
darkén the light”
Till our Africa ts redeemed! + _
Well may'st thou be called “Ethiopia's
Pride,” _ fo
As under the setting sun. | _
She welcomes her. loved ones to“her
aide, .
And- bestows upon thee the “WELL
DONE!"
= ” . JRIS £. PATTERSON. |
The Negro World in Fiji
| Editor. .
The Negro’ World: “2k
+ We are reading The Negro World
with grest interest, an many young
Sndiaris (in Fiji) admire the boldness
of the paper. I would ask you to send
your paper .in exchange for Indian
papers (published in Affica) ‘and re-
produce the news ‘tkerein in your
valuable -paper. I'am enclosing-« list
of addresses. al
With kind regards to: you and the
great man, Mr. Garvey.
- Yours sincerely,
BR SINGH,
* “Manager:
SFiji Sampohar.” . :
SS a cess
God and Prayer ~
T crave a iftte space in your val-
uable paper fo make a few com.
ments oa un article ‘which appeared
in your issue of August 2nd...under
the caption, “Beware of God and
White Man." The opening words- of
thig article are: “If there is a God.
H& is white, so don't depend on
Him.” Purther oi I read: “Prayer
will do you no good. depend on your-
selves."
Mr. Editor, it is becoming a mat
ter oft commion knowdedge ‘that the
secre: thoughis of an individual in-
fiuence ig Ife and the minds of
| aunera Tor read oF evil sit the Care:
lgoing iz accepted ah a scientiticgor
ijisychologicat feet, no argument ie
[needed to. prove the more apparent
effects. resulting from the expréssion
of thoughts" by word:
T have “bers prompted to write the
foregoing kecause I am in persona?
contact with some of the readers, of
your valuable paper, and am there-
fore ia a position to note their re-
[sotion to the statements made above,
JX will endeavor: to diitine briesty my
‘observations in this direction. The
[assertion by" Mr. Darrow, “IC {here
is a God. He is white, ete.’ wat the
your rehders. “AIthowgh hone had
the courage point biapk to rigeiare
fhat there fs né God, ‘célr renetion |
fo the susestion wat obvicus, as’ the |
majority’ asserted’ thelr agrecment|
MAUI it, They also asserted that God |
was not at all concérned with our
material welfare or interest. i sup-
port of this, Mr. Darrow's reference
to God standing aside in lynching and
other forms of oppression, and doing
nothing, was cited. One poor old
lady io seemed perpiexed over the
matter said, “{ don't want to ‘sin
againS: God, but how TF sée the write
man oppress us and Il treat us and
still Rave everything for hiraself, it
makes me sometimes'tiink that hé is
only fer the white’ man,
The summary of the above odser-
vations fs in effect, irreverence nnd }
ungritefuiness te.God as-well-as the
appalling “possibility of the lows 2t|
all faith in God. Secondly the state-
mont, "Prayer will do you no good,
etc.” has had tte efféct on the minds
bf your readers comparable to the
effects of poison gas on the physical
body, The prominence and import-
ance: given. purely material consid-
erations in our modega world at the
present ‘time has so aimed er at-
vention, that many taft-discarded- the}
helpful .practice af prayer. Any
statement touching sq iniportant &
factor in, our. lives, should be- cate-|
hully considersd,, by those having the
mecred privilege of iafluencing mib-}
iopd ot minds, before it is brosdéast. |,
per you ave tn this position of sscreg]
espeustbaity.. a ae yon that}
wapirede. wise Rive int: reed: tate):
Whier’ ‘Sov. mecuths. or. a
eed the Negro World. and
het whatever is tapes ,
roms Me. Cae terete
ject tn tity a tof
Wing: 06 Fear etien the far matt}
r ie: tga 3
or cure’ wots an
Ne ee Se ae
9 ey aM aaa ale acs
It ite oe acs
conan may. sare 8M pore
ie she Sanction 0
| meny ‘of millions of egynest thinking
‘byman balugs veho have proved th
eepattanom, oS a
=. Mr. Raaitor, T- betters stich wtate
jsmments and. suggestions as already
quoted from above mentionbi’ artici
are lasidjous and poisonous to th
minds of our people bs they Rnd tc
‘crystallize the materjalistic ideas be-
ing bromdcast, I.admit and realize
the necessity for relf-deperidence and
confidence in our desire for progreat,
but don't sce why the possession. of
Wiese qualities should prociude rev-
erence to, and dependence on God, the
Father of All, < :
‘What our people need is.a better
underctandlag of the inseparable con-
nection between Spirit and go called
maetter. The most successful men in
every sphere of life dre those who
have become in some way conscious
et this, relationship, and have thus
received-inspiration fo achieve, Con-
‘scious contact with this inexhaustible
Spiritual Resource is the truest-form
of prayer. In the present awakened
consciousness of the Negro which
embraces atesire to reach the sun-
mit of ‘human achievement, I would
Hot under estimate the value of edi-
cation, organization, or any other in-
telligent means contiibutive to pro-
gress, hut I am submitting tha), if
we give these things first ‘placy 42,
ouir hearts-ed place ail dependencé
on them, neglecting to resort Jo our
Spiritual Resource, Piration,
our foundation “be of sand.
Ta our upfard march, we as Ne-
gr express our indlvidnal-
ims the pursuit of our ideals. That
intangible difference which exists be-
tween every human being for.ns the
basis for individual expression, ‘We
must not be mere copyists or imita-
tors. Are we going to follow the MD
ample o? other nations saying. “Look
tue ai nation, she has been Wanton
and cruel, ye: Soday she is wealthy
and great?” Are not the signs of
decay arpsrent in’ at! these nations
iaday? Are,nct the pillars of their
struéture tottering? They have been
dopending oh-their powerful. aunias
and navies oftheir great wealth, to
dominate the world; but the signs
of panic are evident. |
What do we find today? ‘The Brit-
sh navy has lost its power to inti-
midate ihe Indians who are striking.
put for liverty. Can the military
might or wealth: “cf any nation awa
the Negro any more, or stem his de-
mand for racial recognition? No, be=
sause these are dependable only up
9 acertain point. The only reliable
ind dependable thing is, tiie uacon-
suerable spigil within man recognized
1s God in us. If we fail to recognize
hig spirit. within ux or ke sore
though we may progress apparent-
yi, we Wil imply be faBnk into the
‘at of materialism whigh rises but te
Ta conctasion Mr. Editor F will re-
nind you of the: invajuable oppor-
unity at yéur Fomaantt through }
he medium ef your’ paper to in
iuence miltons “of muindgs for good,
believe you can materially eon.
ribute to. this exd oy excluding from |
he columns of your valuable journal
ssérlions oF statements dertruetive
o the ideas and practice af prayer
nd falth in God, the omy principles |:
ving the power to Influence .the
Carts of men for ood, Constitu- |
ions, Ins, aries and navies have |
siled to do that, . A}
i Yours truiy:
HERBERT PALMER.
Centre? Santa Maris, —
Comagyey, Cbs. . Fi
Adiires Darow’s >
- Counsel
Editor, The Negro, World:
To me, the,two best white friends
of the Negro jn “America, and I must
say of the world, are-Mr. Clarence
Darrow, America's famous criminal
lawyer, and Hon.” Judge Xichols
Kicin,. These two men are. ever mak-
ing it their-iuty to tet the Negro
the truth, and their mantiness in so
doing soundsa thousand times bet?
ter'ta us, the hypocritical missiouar-
ies. bishops,-sponsors of” revised. ver-
sions, notwithsi@nding.
‘The’ word inventton is: thus ex-
plained by Webster: The act. of in-
venting, the thing invented, discov-
fy, creative faculty, concoction, fab-
Fication. All the evils from which the
Negro suffers today must be laid
at the feet of the white man irre-
spective of what may be said other-
wise; for he is. the inventor of the
whole-scheme Tem the moment he
plared the chain ‘upen the hands ot
the first African and put him or her
im {ho “alaye ship“ yntil now. The:
name uf © “slave ship’ dose not, take
much effect upon us because ‘it ta
susceptible to any race that has been
weik and msy become. weak, but
what I' refuse to inculcate is after
Waing' us as slaves, ond. giving us the
.
quaiation thomgh = stuistad echeme,
thas ohome of vo
So amend
OR xvt 0 cyeegeis of what 1 mean,
a ‘Stes ‘the whine
wh whe -caporpoasker the,
tMagew Sitscatiod Mok
Een nee ee
Ra eres coe
ts Vas Dates 3 Cirtt:
comment
> se Get Re omar
{Spec eee Sunil, to 2
pretation cages testi
Depart nema ‘a Wai
Ington, ‘D.C. reacted’ in. 102 agpti-
ante subraltting thelr quaftioatins
"ot hee esc soliteaee te stalites
[and hres: df-thata, ‘two .coloned: and
one. white, wore Ceftitted .t¢ the Of
1&% of Education from the Ctvif Ser-
vico Commission some weeks. ago, -
Of the sixteen others who qualified
eleven "were colored men, one colored
woman; -thiree white men and one
white woman. \
‘The Commission of Education gtat-
ed on June 27 that the position which.
carries an entrance salary. of $3,800
had not been filled. There is much
speculation as to what Is delaying the
selection and the. appointment of
Educationiat.
To Ask Garnegie Medal
For Negro Lad’s Heroism.
COLUMBUS, Ga,—Agitation for a
[Carnegie medal for John. Wesley
‘Boynton, T4 year old Negro boy, was
renewed here today whey’ it” was
tearned that. on Thursday “afternoon
he rescued from drowning three white
girls about his own age and thelr
adult companion. a
‘Three little girls were wading 4n
Bull Creek, in Muscogee County,
}tome distance from Columbus, when
Saran Slaughter, 12, Rome, Ga.
fAepped in Beyond her depth.
‘Jane Power. 13, whom We was vis-
iting in Columbus, went to her aid,
amt’ was “pulled in‘o the deep’ water.
Edna Pear) - Rusgell, 13, and Mrs.
Nina Crutchfield, 52, followed sull.
\s they floundcred”in the water
the Boynton hoy. crosging: a bridge
below, heard their cries for help.-He
plunged in and dragged the four té
safety. e :
~A year ago he leaped into = pond
near Columbigg and rescued Billie
Crouch, 12, a white boy. Grownups
had failed in an'attempt to save him.
Three weeks ago he pulled a little
Negro boy from water.
Last. year follovYug the. Crouch
rescued, Cohimbus citizens made a
purse for John Wesley Boynton, and
Suggested a medal for him, but the
‘movement. died. “Citizens said it will
8 revived.
Japan Warns Auto Tourists.
“I guess I'll have to invent a horn
taat tuiks Japanese,” was the com-
ment of “Captain William Sparks,
president of the Sparks-Withington
Co., makers of Sparton horns and
Sparton Equasonns receiving sets.
‘The following articie, which ap-
peared in the Wall Street Journal,
occasioned the above comment.
‘In Japan, the following printed
tard ig-iseued to English speaking
tourists, full of as mugh - flowery
language as even “ie resident of the
Oriental. country, come desire.
“AL the rice of the hand of police-
gaan top rapidly, Do not past oF
otherwise disrespect hin:., When pas-
senger of the foot hove in sigbt,
toatie the horn, ‘Trumphet melodiously
At first. Then tactile with vigor aad
express by word of mouth the wam-
ung ‘Tie Fis
“Bawnre of tee wandering horse
that he shall, not take fright.” Gy
soothingly by. :
“Give space to the'Testive dog that
males werry sport in .the ‘roadway.’
Avoid entanjdement of the dog with
your wheel -spokes. vs
“Go soothingly on the greaco-mud
ag there Juri: the skid demon. Press
the brake of the fog? as you ro!l
argund the corners te save the col
lapse and the tie-up.'t :
Anetent Race Traced
| TBXICO CEpY,—Eduardo Nogu-
era, aroeologist: arriving here from
Northern’ Vera Gruz, said traces of
seversi.nncient. civikzations bad beer
found in a newly discovered archeo-
Jowical zone About twenty-seven miles
south of ‘Tampics:. °
‘The zone, he said, ts rich in pyra-
miésentirely overgrown with vegetts
tion the structures showing definite
signs.of Toletcan and, Mayan civill-
zations.
He "suggested. possibility of disco’.
ery that even more ancient races ha¢
existed in. the same spot, which ap-
[narently was fevived as @ center of
population : successively by. various
tribes and raccs. we
No Tension, Turks Insist
ANGORA. Turkey.—The Anatolie
Agency .today says reports of ten-
sion between the Turkish and” Per-
sian Governments are without foun-
dation. The agency declares the re-
ations between the two governments
‘are’ fsiendly.:>
telling us iwo.decades ago, 1 predict
much could have been done by ‘the
Negro himself to’ escape the propent
dilemma, “We can be greatly beue
fited by the following from our
worthy Mr. Darrow: -“Prayer woe't
do you any good. What your rats
needs is education, as good "pay as
you cab get, courage, perseverinct,,
and as many of the material. needs
anil comforts as ft is paasttie to ob-.
sdould' not give ‘to charges. @ Jou
ie ble Sean tae ea ae
= epgplner efi dan-o a, be
things very cayefaily. . pore
tines If he ix fo continwn to, peagrysh”
Se, ea om nae
ems, Segui tips S35
igiiaii ne eto iA rai Sasi ocr ramos ay ee a Sarnia y:: epemeR wn ane 85095 2 on 523) ote carrer ances mene arose em
Teen Sascha OAT IIT = : cine aid Se oa
ore gem coe RO neotenic thin ties aman nines are Setiee ee ae aT nian iiaiaieitii
,*, TT MIE Re 6 52S. MOM og erase ee ee ON ay yO SE se eae NR tn TaN ot ot eee Tee Cee tte ne
Se ae eae Bw Be Bee ee ae Bk eg eo gg es lige elle ee io erm
(Boxing Shad PWS": I NeatTricais—( irr WMCE
pe es & SF ae: (SSO a ve sf is 2 4 3 ee a ). Le - ae L =
MUON sei cnc rN gy Mt, Se SRS Re Bea ER dk Oe RAE PTGS Bethe oe EN ae gf ANE AR a ae ee
EES og ig OE aide Pipe aS Tage et HAROLD G.SALTUS-.-, “ ‘ Peis a pe ae
Ba a elie en oS i go a
4 RASA NER Camm s ORIPOETT Cera qpacemmenetiod Omen EPO OHH TD AED EDO
Ta elena Tee ae ere res ee Oe eae esate» : pa aicaeert Sea tore ee tee 2 fj 0 Lhe ace ee
FEE PO. emma P09 Lek Johndon’ -; | Jackie rs Will cp) “JNegroee Are Greatest Scores The Overson Eleven: :
: Sent. 3 pa up, a9 aby Joo Gane | : Wil : Se ‘Actors: Saye eee 2 And Yaoi :
‘other two .reuisd knock-out ‘victory On Baby Cans 7 pe ages ore Dramatic Actors, : . Two Victories * |' Am tatting Jamaican
Fuweey Seer evens se | Iw Feature Bout! © «| Go East in September} ©. Crane Gilbert, Actor Over Simpson |. Tm Tussle Ags
Ap Bao lath hens, bette s 188 | Serene Aug. 16—<Sahe “Jobe f0 2° ge SS If plainn How belng formulited by] *°* Be ee Pes Bas |
Theses Govubt about tt aon, former hemgweight champice of food Figkiet to Appear has acguired 9, atlonat reputatiga, Free Cttact, popular Broadway! py RUSSELL J. (COWANS aah ime conn ae oe
is gong to be gato touble tote Sow at ioe Huniamey eae}. in Bouts in Detroit '— “ t00.000 Negros, is clamoring. to yee Sere Haivoese spore o ialehiganscofotes ewolsttaa | orney Io Week ago faced each’
vabouts, That is oe ; jnim in action. : “| turn re {Michigan's colored “Wolverine Ex-/¢: Jast Saturday and Sunday to
en ens. ‘Telde that ho fo SUT. the cosa ke See maw Buys Home for Parents ‘Slackle will return to the\city this | peared in, pictures with John Barry-| preas.” proved his: supecmrliy wa’ ane Whigh ofthe two ia aupreme, hs
Mose Locke aut Al Steger ue prageen dicen Ja the| Jackie’ Rodgers, thal Spnting ite Week to go.into training for hie AEM | ete ang!ciner beats ore aaeltastul: daanes when ipeacored a double-bar- Bers aout elght ndred tamu
a 3 r jack , a el Victory over five of the "
anes an orgeti of Coes Colo walt:.| main “bout, wili-arrive in town, the/ atom from the Hill: district, who has Seg kee 21. No opponeat hee oop | Harlem will have another tittle thea- Gaaniee Tpcintets at: tne, slate: tae aes ne termed astern at i
ing to cocl you off th-the-event YOU) 1157 of the week to" resume training. | Uterally tought his way from obscur- + named yet, ‘but efforts are being | tre movement this fal. Mr. Gilbert | yrounds Saturday befors 35.000 of his | for perfection oe bowtag batting a
get too hot, and 1 mean, it will be 8! “Gans, who meets Joe Rugguzzonl, {ity to the pionacte SF Pee Bloey aide ta pet bie tne bak fighter of /'8 conyinced that, the Negro’has | Some town followers ia the running !fetding. The boys on both fom,
Ree ears ae td Cheeolare |® THEGOd Italian, “in tey, rounds or| Meresbouts, js on his way. to ‘New bis weight available, Breaking oe nce e NES Oster AM] ce the fourth -anaual’’ juilcemen's inter Rite than they were in th
Bee eee tee Mt, Te eanaet [eH went into training in New York | York. i ven out’ ON the following Friday, Aug. 29, |8Peaking on this subloct be old: [HCH and file champinnshipn | first game which was a dram
because, he was. too light, “I cannot] scons following his triumph over| This was the information se onony Jackie witt go to Jolmstown, where| “There is no doubt y mind | The men tralling-in Tolan's dust! The score Saturday was Overse
see how you will be able to get YY! Reid Murdock, hard-hitting. Olle- ey Goureay moornag by Jonuny ‘ne bas. been sigued to Nght. that with the proper training the| were George Sidney ‘Simpson Obio|74 against Jathaica 65. ° The le
Koll Kélo, The Spanish speaking | noms weiterweight,'on the Chocolate. | Deutsch, Deere of the mesieg De {s; Ga the néxt ‘Thursday, ‘Septi'4, bel Negro will exces the waite mao In state's “Flying Bullet:” Cy Leleod,4 cricket wartaten tus ane hee
race men as well as Harlem's OWD! Berg card.. Prior to the Murdock] ‘22 salog the’ atten f the’hard. (wwiN Agbt In Detrolt. Fils, Sea) ap-|histrionic ability. ‘The Negro has| texas’ Chrstion luniversity:; Claude | before. the finishing time. There te
re ag Fy on of ong Ba. er wae in Se fe pote eee lage acy Cae e t | ve Slane Cee uaa ma
are willing to pay their sheckeles t0/ cessive enock-outs: . | Rittine We One 08 te inet ackuis.; Yorke wit be at dhevers Mock ox Man 1 ire-cdecaues 66 tue cies, Cee eee
see him shape up at any time. ‘Yun wWatehime fuewuwannt exis’ a | OO
TP aceite hike of watousy for
. ‘about all kinds of matohes for
September, but up to the ‘present. do
nol stem to be able to land the, right
‘one. Singer vs. Berg, “Phew that
stinks,” Singer va, Jimmie McLaria,
‘nothing to {t, Who wants to see
Singer mufdered. No heavyweights.
Well: Mr. McArdle, bere is one for
you ‘hat will stack them’ in_Wasry-
Smith 2. Mickey Walker for the
middleweight -championship of thé
_world. } am quite sure that Smith
will accept 12%: ber cent, although he
in the boxing world today and has
a big following among the white and
colored fight fans. Try and induce
Mickey t accept thin bout. as this
tn. the, only outstanding sttraction |
lotetotane open-air seasons
go ae BATTALINO, fcather-|
weight ‘chaiapion has issued »/
siatement that ho is ready and will- |
ing to defend his title agaiust Kid |
Chocolate., My That sounds too |
rood for words. Wonder if there arc”
any eatebes or strings attached to it. |
Anyway jf tHis match cam be closed /
T predict it will be the hottest for!
September. They have been angling |
to Jand,this one for a long. time but |
it seemed that Bap's-tianager wanted {|
lo pil a fast one on the Kid's pilot, |
WHGK 1S -Guitetnposstbte—as—every—
thing ‘haseto be .on the up ané Up)
with thle Cuban outtt which is als
yyoed dose of ‘sure cure for Boxing.|
~ Max Sehmeling has made a, back:
hand slap at the voxing commission
and the Madison Square. Garden pro-
méters. Say, It's a shame‘ the way
these foreign fighters come hére and
ouiemart the ‘New York officinis
This is the second time that Max
has pulled a fast one on our Iathers
of swat, He was ailowed to box Umsy
Paulino Jast-vear, and promised to
Ro through with his bout with Phil
Reaut, before he'iect fo2 hgme. Did he
Go %7 No. ‘Then he wis Bowed to
come back to our shores for a cham-
‘pionship bout with Jack Sharkey and
‘he promised if he won from Sharkey
tn Gefend the thie within the year.
Vie is now in Germany and has Te,
cently istucd a statement that he
oul net fight is Amerion again.
Ha! ia! Hal Il is te iaugh. Bat Caos
jr the laugh-on? |
7 |
Harry Sa ih Stops |
Pingloy i Seventir,
Harlem Bees” stains Negra Afid-
7 gta ctictt Title. © I
ROUGH SID. N, ¥.. Alig. 13
~ Barry ©. e¢ New York, Negro
middiews..°" cpampion, retaited his
title bess aght hy" Knecieing wit
Jee Trvv “+ Peekskill in the sev-
enth ro" of a scheduled fifteen:
roan? vir mpionship mateh, A crowd
of 3090 saw the bout, which was
staged at Woodviift Park.
Smith had Tinsley on the floor
three times before “he battered him
to the cuavas for the full count.
Smith weighed 1581}, Tinsley 160.
Al Settle stopptd Al Roseriteld in
the third rotnd of the ‘seri-Anal,
which was scheduléd fof ten rounds.
Buffalo Kayoes - -
. Tony ‘Tedesco |
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Aug, 16.-
Gene Bufinlo, 149, boxer of Philadel:
phia, scoréd s knockout over ‘Ton}
‘Todeara, 152 aleo of the Quaker City,
in the sixth round of their scheduled
eight-round windup bout at theNorth
Side Boxing Club here, Buffalo had
been leading all during the battle.
‘He put Tony. to sleep with a hard
right hook to the jaw.
Morris Gross, 127, of Philadelphia
outslugged Tony Morgana, 122, Phila-
delphia, in eight rounds.”
Tiger ‘Taylor, 130, knocked git Clift
Boykin, 13% in the third round. of
thelr six-round bout. e
Deuay Victor, 117, “Philadelphia,
won over Petro Loreneo, 119/-Phila-
delphia, ‘in six rounds. .
Kid Bates, 116, Atiantie City, scored
he Paiiedelpite, oe tagted
caine fo ine tpater of the ting. Batee
landed.» tight te the jaw.c&s Moots
‘Went Gebie," His secomis: worked on
hire Se tim melemtel, °°
* It © anid Ghat tack Uf reel cakes
- On Baby Joo Gans © -
* In Feature’ Bout
SEIROTT, Aug: 16.<datk -jobn
son, former heavyweight champion 0
the world, who will pramnte the fat
‘show at ‘the Hamtramck ‘stadiuns
@uring the coming Mike ‘conventiot
‘here, announced Monday that Baby
Joe Garis, one of the principals in the
main ‘bout, will arrive in town, the
last of the week to resume training.
Gans, who meets Joe Rugguzzoni,
& rugged Italian, -in ten, rounds of
less, went into training in New York
‘Monday following hin triumph over
Reid Murdock, hard-hitting _ Okle-
homa welterweight,’on the Chocolate-
Berg card., Prior ta the Murdock
battle Gans had scored nine auc-
cessive knock-outs, : -
In watching Rugguzzoni work’ at
the Grand River gymnasium Monday,
Johnson said he was satisfied with
the Italian's condition. Rugguaron!
43 a fighter of the Berg type, contin-
ually on the aggressive, swinging
blows from .all angles gga alwKys
ready to atand toe to toe and alug.
Gince his arrival in Detroit last
winter from Italy, where he had won
the Furépean welterweight title,-Rug-
fuzzoni has won 13 of his 14 starts.
Supporting the main bout Johnson
as John Buchanan and: Joe Men-
losa in the-semifnal, 2
Buchanan has been witining con-
istently in the middleweight division
ind expects to continue. at the: ex-
ese of Mendosn.,
‘Mendosa ina new race fighter from
chicago, where he established him-
elf as a formidable foe among the
niddies. The Chicagoan is known as f
foe. worthy of any middleweight's|
rettle. The remaining bouts on the |.
Black, Joe Walcott
io Loses to Lawrence
OXFORD, Miss, Aug. 16.--Young.
Tiger Lawrence, welterweight cham-
pion of Mississippi, Won a smashing
10-round decision over’ Black Joe
Walcott of Memphis_hereLasrence.
won every round, having his man al-
most out on" several occasions.
An Entertaining Card
For Boxing Fans for |
«This Thursday Night!
of Promoter Jess McBfahon has com.
Ipleted his program: of bouts for acx!
| Thursday night at the Olympia Chut
jin Harlem. He has billed as his fen-
ture ten rounder, Ray Rivera, light-
: Weight champion of Porto Rico and
/Sid Rabin, of the East Side,
| Medahon wilt offer besides the stat
jten rounder, eight four-rounders i
[tween foroxgn and American boxers
jWRo come inlo Same-terough fehl
jing in the ving. * _
| An ambitions nevyweight product
lknown as a second Paulino, hailing
|from. the some part of the Basque
leountry in Spain, wil appear in the
semi-final number, he is Raoul Red-
| rigiez, and he has beck matehed with
j Jack Thornford, the Yorkers Yonk.
| The, rest of the card is’ paired «ex
follows: Jesse Pimental, Porto Rico,
va, Benny Mana, ‘Bronx; Clyde Ed-|
rundson, Bross, $s. Tzay Lieot, East
Side; Peter Rivero, Temps. vs, Jack |
Golifaro, Bast Sidks Alfonso Chicom,
|Haviera, ¥s, Kid Fernandaz, Brook
lyn: George’ Kanizes, Bronx, ve, Jobe.
hy Ratti, Harlem: Baby Chocoi@ie
vs. Manny Florres, Porto Rico; Be)
ter Campbell, Harlem, vs, diromy Lo-
reno, Bronx. ca “|
Colored Children |
In Comedy Roll
| Actwo-reel comedy featuring race
‘| children recruited from the colored
-| population of Ls Angeles, has just
| been completed by the H. and H. Pro:
|| duetion Co, of Hollywood, -and short.
'|ly wil be previewed st-an East Side
‘Phentre. «|
Lyeun Kosht of Glendale, nationally
"known ax “The Bird Lady.” Mrs,
"Kost plays ‘the lead, supported bp
Arthur Morton. afd the Dixie Gang.
| Mrs. Elenora Harrell of 1427 B.
{3rd St., does good work ax "Maramy"
lot the Dixie Gang. +
| The children have-been sigriedon
{for year and the company’ cxpects
to make the Litie Gang weil muvwu
{toudin: fans hey range Ie ace
from 45 months to eight years, tne
youngest being Frank Braxton, small
ton of Mr. and’Mrs, Frank ©. Brax-_
| ton of 8926 Dorsey Ave.
| Other players in the Disle- Geng
Lare- Batty Lou. Ross,. Tina, Stagieton. |
Dorothy Revier Johnston, —siby! |
Spight, Allen Evans, Marlon Lacey,
‘Sylvia Catherine Lindsay, Arthur
George Walker,( James Jackson, Jr.,
Birechall Shroudér,. Rugine. Braxton,
LeRoy Spight, Ray Spight, Lukey
Colt, rater Cooper, ad th Moody
(oam.-Frank, Flossie, Mey aad Anzie
Moody, |.” ae
Godfrey to Box Li’. |
«sO deh Bae Aue. 3A/'
Endlanspelia fight fens wil be
Greated. toe reel, singtent Woimes-
dey, Aug: “20, wile Tar Lifsh Los,
George Govticey. ia © 10-remd Settle
at tie gribery Calais wy eared
Jackie Rodgers Will =.)
<. |, Go East in September
S ag owowv—_— * ——oOoeee
tot Fighter to Appear ‘has acquired,p. athnat reputation,
in uts'in Detroit — .%24 Destro “Wherein reside ove
* Buys Home fon Pareass iM in” rae ”
e; Jackie Rodgers, that Sighting. little
e| atom from the Hill district, who ha
.| Uterally fougnt his way from obscur-
i, | ity to the pinnacle of pugtlistic glory
r|heresbouts, is on his way.to New
«| York, 3
r| This was the information given out
.| early Saturday morning by Johany
.| Deutsch, one-half’ of the mariagiiz
(4 team of Deutsch and Mason, who
are handling the affairx of the hard-
"| hitting local lad. Deutsch, be it, un-
deratood, is one of the most astute
| of local ‘managers, and with Johnny
Mason *offeting the kind of sage
'|counset and advice which made the
late Harry Greb @ champion, Rodg-
| ers interests ‘both In‘and:out of the
|ring have been well taken care of
In fact, Deutech’ art, and -then
Deutsch and Mason, have kept such
a tightened checkrein on little Jackie
that Saturdsy evening Rodgers, ac-
companted by Deutsch, motored over.
to Sanduaky,-., to ehyinten the home
which Jackie recently bought for his‘
adoring mother and bis proud father.
Going: to Detroit.
‘The atop in Sandusky was made!
while the pair were on thele way to!
Detroit, -where Rodgers will be sighed |
for a main. bout altraction in the}
Motor City. Purel¥ through his local
record ‘ax a knockout artist Jackie |
Bojangles, Adelaide;
At thePalaceTheatre!
| By CHAPPY GARDNER,
|, NEW YORK, Aug. 16.—The world's
Rreateat dancer and the girl whore
Hfirst engagement, ql the Pelace tens
ja huge sutcess are baci at. the nape
lar Broadway house for a week.”
| 2d was BIN Robinson whé worked
jRard to get Adelaide Hail in-o the
| Patace. ‘There she ix again being
eppinuided—by-nppreciative-audionaes,
Bill and Adelaide arc making this
stand just before going into “Brown
Buddies,” Sept. 15, at Atjantic City.
‘Eddie Marshall's
! Band Going Big
| LEXINGTON, Ky., Aug. 16.--Ed-
die Marshall and his original Pitu-
burgh Cotton Pickers are creating’
Jquite anit in Lexingion, Ky... where
they are one Of the features of the |
big annual Lexington Fair. :
The Pittsburgh orchestra now has’
one of the finest traveling bands in!
Werterh Pennaylvaiia, and wherever!
they appear, their ferviecs are prov |
ity? highiy" satisfactory, * ;
7 nn eee = |
Seeks Roheson to Siar © |
In New Americas Play!
| EXorts are being made to secure
[Peal Robeson for the leacing rale_in
{the coming production, “Sweet Char-
ios.” whieh was written by Robert
[Wilder. a watte playwright. Cable
[between the noted actor xd concert
| siager ond backers of the drama.
If Mr. Robeson is unwitling to ree
fea to the United Slates 32 15 likely
inst the drama will be presented in
| London with the ‘ster of “OULclio,”
Anothes performer wonld be engaged
fox. the pjay here and the production
would-be staged: concurrently ia “the
two'theatrieal centers of the world,
The drama will require the services
of our actors, Most of the cast hex
‘been engaged, according to Michael
Mindlin, white producer, ..who wil!
stage the play. Choral rohearsals are.
delng held, "with ‘Sept. 22 xet for the
opening. : |
If You Have Not -
-, Seen Green Pastures
Now’s Your Chance}
|, In order to satisfy an ever increas-
ng mail order demand for neata tri
out of town patrons, -who want to
see “The Green Pastures,” Rowland
Stpbbina, the producer, and tie Chan=
fax, who direct the Mansfeld .Thea-
tre where the Pulltzer Prize Play
is attratting record audiences, decid-
ed yesterday, to place-upon sale at
once et the box office the ‘tickets for
all performances up to and including
New Year's Eve performance,-which
falls on Wednesday, Decomber 31.
_ ‘The seats for the, remainder of this
year. witt-be-on-sais at the-box office:
today,,and orders-tor future perform-
ances will be accepted by mail, and
through the thousands of Western
Union. arid Postel Telegraph Offices
roughest the eoutry.
be pug bl tans ‘sovantagy of 1 |
se bale of the
portunity to buy thelr tiekete tar
nog im ddeanee, it wi: make 1
possible to guartiates to the patrons
ie ~~ ‘Thuntre. the. selec-
ow sit the ehelce ‘losationn' for say
stovimenet; sed At afrjetly, box ‘of-
*The ‘Groen’ Pastures” wil reset
iat has pm ae tae}
ore then 0 qtr of Sse per.
o bevy. alreoty poig! ‘tor wee the
r. z
Wir Ohyelaw Bivcucdereaa taf .
Lun Uwsley Producer of ‘
Wow Teer. Wiarctecel Sheecu
me Bie Time Musical. Show
; ~ TS 7 =
GREEN PASTURES” ;
aro fe
has acquired, siational reputation,
Sand” Detrosty Tinerein reside over
100,000 Negroes, is clamoring: to pee
ihtin in action. ie
‘Jackie will return to the) city this
week to go.into training for his fight
at Hickey Park on. Thursday eve-
, ning, Aug. 21. No opponent has been
“mamed yet, ‘but efforts are being
made to get him (he beat fighter of
‘bis weight available,
‘On the following Friday, Aug. 29.
Jackie witt go to Jolmstown, where
he bas been signed to fight.
.. On the néxt Thursday, Sept. 4, he
will fight in Detroit. His fina) ap-
pearance here hefore Meing to'New
York will be at Meyers Bow! on Mop-
day, Sept. 15. Johnny Datto will be
his opponent on thi§ night, and Jackie
will-uncorke everything. he hag in an
effort to win’ hig last local ght be-
fore invading the big metropolis, _
That Jackie ‘is the most popular
fighter in the city is atteated to by
af unofficial return of the ballota be-
ing sent im ta the Pittsburgh’ Press
in their conteat.
" qhe Press in endeyoring. to’ assist
the Meyers brothers in determining.
just who-is the fighter they ‘wouls |
ike most to see in action at the out. |
{oor bowl -before it closes, and nc-
cording: to Lester Belderman. con-
nected with ‘the ‘sporte .department,
fackie is far in the lead. * .. I.
According to his managers, Jacki¢c
vould have been in New York beforé'}|
his had it not been for his age.
| Stage and Screen
| Triumph this Week
| At The Lafayette
. galls
| Akother progmm of unusuai ex-
‘cellence is scheduled for présentation
nt the Lafayette Theatre this’ weeks
‘The stage portion of the’ program
consists of a fast and funny musical
coniedy. revue entitled “Brown Pep:
per.” Advance information ef this
Rood one and entirely different ‘trom
the type of entertainment which Har-
lem has ren lately,
The cast of “Brown Pepper” is,
made up of forty-five well known
Players ‘including’ ‘Tim Moore. the
Four Pepper Shskers, ‘Two Shorties,
Jeanette White, Atline “Broole and
Paul Sullivan's Dancing Damseis, .
‘The feature picture to be preseifted
with “Brown Pepper’ is “The Love
Racket,” starring Dorothy Mackall,
Ibis iy the Neart-tonching. story of
, beautiful girl who, gave her alt-to
ihe man she faved only to be.desected
ye abn. in. Wer hour ot need. Pate
made: her x juror ip 2 tris of os
oman who had murdered this maul
hat happened after that males
The ave Racket tne af the meat
veintenay, tgiking pictures ever}!
roduced. ,
“Silas Green frum New
Grlesns” Ea, Presents
"- ©Bouny Money’?
Good news comes to us fram down
an Keystone, W. Va., to the effect
jtaat the original SQas Green from
New Orlesax company will. ke back
in the Meld of musie&l comedy this
season. é
| And Bétter news than that iz coa-
inined In the anmonnetment that
none other thas’ Tiss Owsley, veteran
sixge and theutrizal producer, will
produce the show. He it understood
that Owsley is one of the fines: col-
Grad producers of small shows in the
eduntry and the very announcement
that he's with the new show guar-
antees itzsexcelience, «*
‘The show, offered for the first time
lent Monday night, is called “Funny
Money.” -Cextumen, electrical eXfects).
cte., aramew and of Todern detail.
The progrim follows: ‘
Charles Collier's Silax Green show,
1930 musica! comedy, offering @ scin-
Uilating musical comedy, with met~
curial situations, funny‘ and’ iaugh-
able speeches and, actions, tuneful
music jn tWo acts anu seven: acenss, :
written and ‘staged by Tim Pi
Dwaley. at; - at ly
Special music by F. B. Woods’ and
seorge Gilling, lyrics by Tim E. Ows-
ey. Special choruses by
sobby ailins, Heatle Bryant. and
Woaabell,— -Bpecial—scenery,- Schell:s.
calc tudio;. costumes, Guttenberg.
ipecial designs by.Jéhnscn Rooks, |
Negroes Are Greatest
Dramatic Actors, Says.
. Crane Gilbert, Actor
‘If plans how belng tormulated bj
‘Crane Gilbert, popular ‘Broadwe;
ramatic actor, who recently re
turned'from Hollywood where ho ap.
‘peared in, pictures with John Barry-
more and other Mars, ‘are successful,
Harlem will haye another little thea-
tre movement this fajl, Mr. Gilbert
is conyinced that, the Negro’has a
great future as a dramatic actor. In
speaking on thia subject. he gid:
“There is no doubt. ys mind
that with the proper training the
Negro will excel the white’ man In
histrionic ability. The Negro has
never had a fair chance_in the thea-
tre gBecause of the success “he hes
attafhed asa comedian and singer, he
je lifted In hin acope to much’ parts.
_."Getting the laughs ix alrights-but
When an actor can make people cry.
18 I know the Negro can it given #
hance, why ‘shouldn't he he given:
iramatic rolex? +
“The drama is ndt dead. With the |
ovelty of the talkies worn off, .the
uublic {8 more than anxious to give
ts suppc mn art (that has lived
rough Wi ages... |
“f ant aaTous to” aid Te bringing,
bout thin renaissance among the!
‘egro dramatic actors In Harlem, |
nd. am sceking the cooperation of!
il who are interested. !
Mr. Gilbert may, be found at the|
rondcanting, studios" of Station |
-BNY. j
“Hallelujah” oe
5 Star Marries
LOS ANGELES, August 16.
(ANP)--According to x alory. ap
pearing In the California News, Nina
Mae McKinncy, star of the motion
picture “Hallelujah! was married on
the night of July:22: 9 Willie “Gor-
Wa” Jones, outstanding welterweight
Prizefighter. The marriage- ceremony
ix reported to have been performed
aboard the ship, off, from San Frin-
claco, 4
“E lave mas HURbaHaS Misi Me
Kinney is reported to have, told &
reporter. “He is the tines? man, 1
ever met, We arecreatiy-in-tove.
Will not xive Un.my. movie “curcer, at’
this time, but my husband arid 2 wit
sail for Hurope the latter part of the
fall.”
Miss McKinney's ages was given
as elghteen and Mr. Jones’? as
twentyenix. TETis her first mate
moninl ventury.
TAS & wedding” present’ from her
husband rhe received a pair of dia- |
mand studdend earrings, and a binck |
and silver Lincoln rondater, + |
Jones is a native of Aktuny 0.
where he if ewner of a hotel and
nighL club, He ix a contender £0:
he wellerweicht champiepehips and
ae AOL Tonk a fine dm rH mMONthn. |
Some fruneiers warie wondery anc
ees nein aut de- cance ene,
| Characters ~2 Mr, “Meddier, Kite
Gresham; Liles Been, Manzie Comp-
‘Rell; Naney Green, Marion Greshant:
Silas Green, Pord Wiggins: a strect
angel, Princess White Burak; hus-
band, \Frahke Weith: wife; - Mildred
“Scott; man, Mose Penny, woman,
Evelyn White; lawyer, Stim Johnron?
‘oMees, Freddie Durrah: Ungle Rece,
Frank Smedolay: Mics Watsny, Katte
Bryant; Miss Ritseu, Hertie Davin
townspeople, Bobby: Gillina, Bernice
Carter, Henristin’ Pinkneg, Ethel
Monroe, Hazel Walker, Katie, Buck-
hatter, ‘Cleo Wong. Rosbeli Hunter.
Special added attractions - - lini
Green & Reberta, comedy and song;
Allie Johneon, wire artist.
y Act 1--Scene 3, front yard of the
Green home; ncenc 2; nearby street;
scene 3, public. graveyard; .acenc 4,
same'as scene 2; scene 5, city park;
scene 6, wame a eceue 2,
Act Z—Scene 7, living room of the
Green hong,
Musical ciumbers-e"The Same Old
Silss," “AM the Tirse in Dixie,” “A
Little Kiss," “Whoopee,” “In “Love
With You,"" “Absence,” “Dance of the
shost,""' Steppin’, “For Sale,” “My,
soul,” “t's AM Over Now.” Special,
Blue” . Princess White -Durrah;
Cant neip.s,” aveiya Witte,
Sta? of the Silas Green show
charles Collier, owner. and general |
nanager;, Johnson . Rooks, ‘business
nanager; Tim E.. Owsley, producer
nd ‘stage manager; F, B. Woods, |
nusical “difector and band: leader: |
kr. Moor, billing agent; E. Mason, |:
lectriclan; publicity annotincer, Kite |
reshars. ee es a
| _ THERE IS ENJOYMENT FOR'YOU AT TRE ~
ORGANDY. DRESS -BAEL'
2 fit 8 Thad Was Be Geen By Pe
‘At Keller ll a; Me eae
~ GOOB MUSIC. orc. SUBIC
Tolan Scores
. Two Victories‘
:.. Over, Simpson
” By RUSSELL 3. COWANS 7
DETROIT, Aug. 16.+-Eddie Tolan
Michigan's colored “Wolverine Ex
Press,” proved his superiority In’ the
dashes when tp-scored a double-bar-
Tel Victory over five of the. gation’s
classiest sprinters at the, state fair
srounds Saturday beforo 35.000 of ‘his
home town followers in the running
of the fourth vannual” policemen’s
track and ‘feld- championships,
The men tralling-in Tolan’s dust
Were George Sidney “Sempson, Ohio
State's “Flying Bullet;" Cy Lelond,
Texas Christian,” university: Claude
Bracy.~-Rice--ingtitute:- Jack- Filer,
Notre Damé university. and Don
Bennet. Ohio State university, Every
tan in the race hed.ctons the cope
tury in better theh 9.7 seconds,
Tolan’ raced to victory in the 100,
meters ani then nosed out Simpson
in--the "220.- It was the first time
Simpson hat heen defeated: in the |
furlong in two years and tho defeat |
caused tegrs to Well in the Buckeye's |
eyes. Baldre negotiated the 100 meters |
(109.3 yards) in 40.5, second and cov |
ered the 220 in 20.97 .
~After a .few preliminaries hy ihe’
ix “sprintern-at. the starting. point
hat was fenught’ with espace. |
he starter got the runners away io!
\.Perfect break to the rear ‘of the!
nrge gallery in the 196 meters,” |
Simpson was the frst to break in?
rent, closely pursued by: Bracy and
clang. ‘Tolan overhauled: the leau-
rs at the SO-yerd mark and tan én
qual terms with Letena sand Posey
ounding a fow inches in tue rear. |.
AL 90 "yards Tolan poesia ta pull,
way from Simpson ard breiseted the |
Ape two yards in the van-of his
reh-rival,” Leland finished third,
racy fourth, Elder Afst: ant feanet, |
ho had pulled a tendon, sixtt, {
Reggie Weir |
Wins N.Y, Net .
Singles Title
By CLEVELAND «. “turex
yj Mire Ora Washington of Chicage
| int Reginald Weir af New Sore whe
Vike Midis’ sad men's singles in the
New York open state tenis tourna,
mept fn the finals play.on the 1. an
S. Cennis tourt, 141 St. and Fisth
PAve., Inst Saturday afternoon,
i One of the largest and. most pie-
jttirenque galleries to attend the lita
Hof Uke state championship tour
jMent was presémt and witnessed a
fine brand of tennis.» .
| dick Washington #éfented Blanche
Whiston of Washington in tea theill,
inn sete hy the score of G2 nnd
64 :
Bath women showed excelent eure
trot on the courts, but auperion fens
syaieip on the part of Miss Woks
ington Kept her in be lead.
Wor astentea ne iery TR eds
aon of Dew Rochetle in three wetn
Unt were full of trill: ond. ure
BIG muh settlement ig the wie”
lofated gallery,
Conckivenbh intorey! was menifeste |
ed in the maint beektse ofthe ate
tention thet Reginald Weir, exptain
of the Ciiy Collexr tenuin teat hie,
aiteagted this cexwn and whe Toapet.
NP ae-2 ponuible nations) champion.
Weir defeated Rickaztron, ‘uy the |
tore of G--3, 6° 4 and 6 -%. :
Welr and Norman wok over rien |
iron ard Danetin in tht amen's doit |
sles by the Score of 6-3, 7b. fame!
or aad Wasiilugton won wver Riek. |
rason and Gant fp the mixed Gon!
Nes. . i
The New York open stxte is next !
@ the national touraement in inter=|
it and draws a iatge gathering: of
paltors. Many of the wanking tonne |
vers were nuiened strom the New
Such well-known ‘players ay Flgnt |
rown, ed" Thompson, Mother ||
cames and other favorites wha vsti ||
iy play in the New York tourna.
tent were absent thin year. Ta
Dick Campbell Heads
For’ Hot Chocolates
Dick. Campbell, Popular young
tenor with Chicago night cluh and
theatre crowds, .after whirlwind
engagement at the Cotton Chih, Val
ver City, Cali., popped back“in)o the
Windy City this week, headed tor
Chocolates. Dick will pause here for
several “days with relatives before
traveling East. 7
He. atatés that. Walter’ Brooks,
white producer of “Shuffle Along.” is
now, producing floor shows ‘at Frank
Sebastian's Cotton club on’ the ‘Pa-
cifle const. Aurora Greely and Leroy
Broomfield, he states, have been re-
tained as principa's. Dick: was mas-
ter of ceremonies xt the club.
The Oversens Ebiven, (°°
"And Vising Joceleee
_.. Team: Tussle Again
‘> mHan0lhClt rt
oe tte Cricket teams that. gave
New York fans a thrill. for thetr
Money two weeks ago faced each oth
+ last Saturday and Sunday to prove
which ofthe two’ is supreme, Thare
were aBoyt eight hundred fame at
Saturdays game to witness, what
should he fermed masterful cricket,
for perfection of bowling, batting and
ficiding. The boys on both teams
‘Were better than they were in thelr.
first game which was a draw.
The score Saturday was Overseas
T4 against Jashaica 65. <The last
cricket wastaken just two minutes
before. the Anisbing’ time, There is =
Puree’'of a thousand dollars to be
given the winning team at the close
gf the setics, which’ 'winds up with
the three day match Saturday, sun.
day-and Labor day.
These two texms have Feally pat
cricket on the pinnafle. It ahould be
in there are ‘thousands of cricket
enthusiasts in greater. New York that
would be always willing to pay ade
mission to see, real cricket played,
Therefore let us hope that next, wea
ton New York will’ be greeted ‘with
‘8 Rood, or even better ball games.
[have becn made: to uriderstand that
Rermuda will have a representative
even’ in the Aeld aio. So with the
ick’ of the West Indien and ‘e solid
cam from Jamaica along with the
Sermudinns. My! My!’ My! what
nicketsthere will be among this tre
DRIE OntMt. The promoters need not
verry about the gate on the occasion
f RAY two Of these teame getting
ether. Ax the old gang willbe
RAE onehand-with their bucks: so
« fo it boxs, and place cricket where.
belongs'in the Big City,
British’ Cricket’ Results
|_ LONDON, Aug.7.~ (Canadian Press
Cabte)—In cricket matches finished
42. raRiand torlay. “Gloucestershire
oat Giamorganshire, Clifton, by
an innings and 39 runs, and North
Amptonshire defented Hampshire, at
‘Northampton, by two wickets, Glone
cester's victory wis due largiy tag
fine bowing performance today by
Wali Hammond, the international
player, He took eight Glamorgan
frat inningn wickets for 2h rans and
four second innings wickets for 49,
ssGloucester, 220 «Sinfield, 98): Ghz
morgan. 62 ‘nnd 128.” Norsn Hants
Sepred 120 and 9%, for eight wirknts’
and’ Hants 60 and 13." Among tha
best DAtting featn of the day wax
Sack Hobh's 196 for Surrey against
Suntex.:
Closing sores today were:
-Worceatershire vs, Derbyshire, at
Kuiderminister: Derby, 85 and 115
fer five wickets: Woreeater, 309 (Gthe”
pane, 8; Rant, £0)
Puerey vs. Sustex, al Mnstingn: Sure
Hs. B60 VTage, ewan wiekels tar £4}
wat; Baie, 125 far Sve wickets 12,
Ba phy Tdok pines inthe follow=
Leivestamuve and Middlesex, Some
niet vn, Essex and Australia vaW are!
vickahire. xen! vs. Nottinghanse
hire, at Cantevininy: Kent, 279! Natty
UP for ax wickets. A¥Vhysall, 18).
Fushegee Athlete
Z Joins , Hole-in-Oro
| TURKEGER .INSTYTUTHE, Ain,
At. 38. Rue Adda, well knows
vous Tiger :thlete, iu-the drat Tus-
jHexee student zaifer to be listed “ns
| 8 wiember of. the kole-in-one club. ,
"While playing on the “fom .Thusabs
|yOM course the fret day the ust:
were opened tothe public Alga mad
ahgie in one. 7 ‘
Bre midget coursé, has been ‘iaid
of under the supervision of Coach,
Cleve Le-Abbott on the plot of ground
near the old CL. Byington graane,
house and apposite the residence ore
cupled hy John L. Anderson, ‘intl
tute electrician.
Deivoit Wins Over '
_ Nashville. 12 to
} RAAROIS, AYE. 16.--Aided de
home runt at, opportune simes, the
‘Detroit Starz accounted for thelr 16th
victory 10 a row this Aftertcon when
they. Gewned the Nashville Elite
Giants by a score of 12 to 5. Thene
48 victories of the Stars hava been
made in barnstorming games with.
various teams.
‘Turkey’ turns aui Dauivie
punched gut the circuit blows that,
combined-with the effective twirling.
of Shaw,. brought about the one-
nided’ victory. .
Daniels got a three-base Rit forthe
Stars, while Ridley poled-out one of
the three-ply swate for the Nashe
ville club, ee
Nashville ....006 002'S00— 5 10 @
Detroit ......205 122 00°—-12 10 %
OG er en unit ge 5 Ae IRON WORE, CATS, COURT am Goa SS BOS TET SAC TARR a ee anarmny
"iy pp coerce ot tae ES i EPS eS SRST A ROPER IES
OE re ce vee etc. ee SR eee Te eee eT ee ee
_~Weekiyv Miasgazine And -Heature Section —
A‘Tunisian ©: (Sa tre "(Secret Persian Art: .|Bith of Niipualide i» }England Seared of | 7,, Demeiamows . |De eptionds -
Rad Aueti Tt aansiser'ssaaep ine, | On. View in Londoli| .-Xtell f Imperialiom) " HaltCaste Menace!’ suuynucacoweee. af AGI Lege
» RAUB AUCHON | sions te 6 wi tan wie ware ‘py angie ony < [ee een otal ee emeaeens te 1s A Great Art
oa Be Ca'arus Mee”: |[ineie nc rng | Ee SPs aes eee Hae Sansa aes arte || tat ete al tees [Na ites an ichcecn
Ab! It’s.a Sight that One |}-/2 ben's £0. : 5 | frond current reports, thase ‘to whom x 5 iS ; enember- |] 1 to. Charad
See anSen Eloewtione: || Acuarae menmanta yoda. > Map. emia. 1 tea sacemoed tte bare fate to| $< —- Rien ad etme YIM IV atte Nema Terelare
ee. eee
+ 7° > Workman.)
+ Dust swirled in the sacred city of
- Kairouan. The sun beat down through
the parrowest of the alley's, Flies set?
tet on: the dirty cups of the cute.
From nearby came the throb of a
tom- iam as insistent .as the heat
_ waves, In disgiish T gave up my sticky
coffee to the flies and. opened my
fiilde book. 'T had come to Kairotian
to see ite mosques., According to the
guide there were cighty-nire, and in
fli Tunisia the aly mocqués open to
“tnfidels like myseif, But as the bot
wind blew dust into “my sefes and
mouth, T wished very muca that they
teo were opeit only to the devout foi-
lowers of Mohammed. Had" these sa
cred places been forbidden to’ me, T
sdould, stil be in pleasant Sousse
watohing the freighters load sweet
amaliing 2i€% and the fish boats,com-
ing in at sunset with the sailors
crawling up abd down ther sloping
masts, Reluctantly I had to admit
that Twas'sorry Thad cogs to Kairo-
tian and had eet mye tte, tank of
seeing eighty-nine mosqucs <tparated
from each otaer by tong kilometers
fof narrow. smelly streo:s.
Bekin¢ a skinny Jhue hoyse T
started, off to the, jaa! Kebi.
the Great Moague ais known as the
Morgue af Sidi O's, Sidi Oka. was,
that warrior diseipin of Mghammed
who. spréad Islam throug? Tubtsia
shd Algeria ant as far as the At
antic coast “of Mozocca. Seven pile
grimages to the holy city of Kutrouan
which, be’ founded are cautivatent, to
one to distant Mecca. 1 thought that
If 1 ever Became « devéiut Mosiem,
T saouid prefer the long sch journey
sto Macca rather than come tomthis
dusty aty:seven times, “The Mosque
of Siii-Gicba is three Bundred and
‘soFeaty-five ineters: jong and two hun.
fared and Ukenty-iive meters side.”
so cave the Guide Bleu. Size is im:
prascive but mot enchantingsand the.
quyivapd aa erecterias was 2)
enipiy an a parade ground: the “hall
of prayer ay lovatile Fa Gersan
forest where the trevs Hund in rawaz
an whateverthdre was of beauty
and-Tam nofdenying Its presence in
The marie coltmns stolen from the
Ohick of old Rome. that vere 82 red
porphyre. 38 the carved endaz of cocks
ry ane minhar. and tn the Inrtre of
Hig Uttes T away em mo mood tA enjoy
i Opsient to tke Guide Blew. 1
Cinted wo the tap of tie minaret and
Treted owen at eke white city “be |
prvih with iby amstanshaned dpmex
ef fe monques and begond ite wots
Pt the emote, brawn eouney with
sex, Then T sitmbed back intw my
cab and refused te he diver ta the
Marque nf othe Dasher ne ty fhe,
Sipque of we Pheen Tors ov 19 ant
of the other eimmrenmne sequen and
haly places ef Karun, 1 alsa Pes
fused ta che ddrvet tn the hovel of
the driver to ss ‘is, onite wens rai:
or tog bones ef 9. friend of othe
Epver's wha would charm some bexue|
Tul enakes for my. benefit, oF to ade,
for me, arto any of the other, cate:
tniaments that hie i:aaginstion evely=
on, and we parted company :
Ror a ngyle T wondered about hat-
wali seatig jintie, Reeaure of- (2:
gare of the can. thinking Tad ine
Geet grown travel Weary and had
Ist all my Joy of roving the world. |
Suddanty tre ally down whieh T wes
continued in 2 eaeit time) whee? 2
Little light shone, Giudly T passed out
of the fieree sim inte. thir welcome |
sade, Uttie caring where tt would |
lend. From that street T passed {nto |
ahother where shafts af Tight eame
throurlt Uke roof shove and fell on
the bright feather of the Sober
canary yellow and pomenranate red:
Sand I stopped and watched -Usem
pound and-hamimer and cut and sew.
then turned a corner in the direction
of strange voices. Hers I found my-
self in the way of many Ten who!
valked back and forth with rags axes |
thelr alms calling pumberses they
wove in and oul among each other.
And.in the iittte dens along the street
sit the tux merchants crossiegged,
ee
10,000 People
Weeted ty Mite
J. Wanted to Ty
HILL'S &
New GiRe
Discovery / 7
|The Wondprtul Pain, oars
‘Exterminator eo
FS he tay Stine ay ae et
Ue eek Pc toad att
SB acer eee ae pale
HBae uate BeeiTaad aa old
BESS Pt, ana ots fiom te Soft.
See rat nae dee eee
teen ara eers sot Bae take
Saath Tees Sak See
es
Fan Sore,
are Pa.
Seas oe rt
- as ‘LENEMENT CO.
‘, eran ;
]. Phone, Tittichaet 200s poet as
o%. BENNETT |.
© ators sn Caps, Bovbe ead Riva, Crest Seven
Sit ema aeihent sine: ==>
487 LENOX°AVENUE- ° = “NEW. YORK CITY
os, ” Pe lied & 1Sied Ores, ‘
eo ee Tr .
A drummer ts a, know, -
A ren to san gp tae
‘But Ive néver meta plumber,
Who, ba@-to do with piums.
‘A cheerful man:who'delis you hats.
Would te w “cheerful batter,
But {s 9 serious man who sella you
Mats a“werlous matter?” _
_A man who brews as everybody
knows
| 15 called a. brewer:
|| But if your landlord sues you, :
Would you say he was a “sewer?”
| Would ‘a plous-man who fries a |
Kipper bea “holy friar?” "|
| And a timid man who lies tx bed
Isvhe a “fearful lar?" ..
es 2 OM
appraishig the: rugs ‘and raising the
price of the last bidder. In this dim
light, it fook a keen eye to estimate
color, design, and wool at Ite proper
Value, bus these mes and their father's
fathers had sat here Jn the ‘late
afternoon throughout the’ many cen-
furles that had clapsed since. Sidi
‘Ouba had founded thrir city. Neither
ume nor French: ruje had. changed
this age-old ‘institution. Merchants
like these needed ns chemical test”to
{eit (hem whether the color that went
into these rugs exme from the berrits
of buckthorn, sthe leaves, of henha.
the rinds of pomesranated. the, roots
of saffron and madter, or from’ the
aniline dyes. :
+ (Ta Be Contiouad Next Weel,
Life and Life Ptineiple
By J. MILTON BATSON,
(Coatiness trom Snat: Week)
We know that the Danes, the Span-
tarda, the Germaneibe Fiaweh, the
Sortighese and the Aaslo Saxon’ or
English anvaded the shorem of the
Ethiopians’ Paradise --Africa— on or
Abose the yeor 1102.” We know that
tne Pyranatae ood the Phoeaie, tht
Ne tue Ultewot aaeleat and msdere
arta pia tative afeicoa odor amd
re ta Africas, rom what lille is
{ord tao IeaiGd cu arom tna cae
causlan chambers of Fumepian met
ferlen nisl te very rosent lscavers
ini Gein, Beare ot be arta
Ganly folded and. scientitleally _pre-
tags tr Thafoenen Haried In coke
baa wast ar cad Boule (emlp tans
faratg, Afvlean ‘paid, we how Wal
Sie Black mat Ae Exiinouan asl beee
FaInine Feud aol, aroma
"Gains: tetany and rier
and? inveribthg with" hamser and
thieel Hart prnalta: wionent wring
brooks and rivers and building homes
ina caitlog of untehdess evenieeiare
evidence of which seven the cruel aad
evectaulgg criminals af tape ad tee
Panel Wife Ine oneeeens acer
present peau. "ceunies An Carat”
vel da. Ges Mental ANBhes al
Beene Gate Get ratiiel tae ona
Aaah uid Pee callanterrach orrtt
ia crate, tis ate ‘une ateee
Sihisheing, havechatn Eispien Walk.
fey cies TOGA of Mba Nios ar
acl «Corin ae, the fumes Baty:
sian Feige ab ose anor” enire
tatliged an. the “pes af sera
it dhere tobe. tags We: 499
sinow, sapthing rehout ant ae
the origination Gf the hte pent
leis nian ssriwal as Bly preseal
dectination. vin the erestien, Record:
tne te peneae of Holy SRG
Waeee ie arriet via Mite” the
ane He. Abriha tae calmnpames Soe
Babses the Taeahes oueortine th
thas the ariainaionsanetne fe gains
tiple aa, the Maca, probable ote
a ten billion Suarstage: fe te Soe.
teri the elontide tina af teoey
ha it tas to she mata o Saon Son ae
the theories, dogmas and. opinions at
religious apiete ‘ar acleatine savants
to the contrity actwithstanding.
We ttiow or thould kriow that the
raystory of the ongination of the life
priaelpic 1a savwide, wo softy, se nese
found as’to be entirely ‘without the
range of the imagidaive potentaie
ties of the human, mind, it kelgz God
iSinhselt the cveatée of life that is ae
Incking of niystery as date. The
most vicious, contemptibie, nefarious,
poteistent: and: pevniclous asomy eb
fannie prim sgaoracce
If gnen ‘ofthe mind of thé *Atace
zahotn and noch charactors ar are te:
Rronnie. for our present, giory
through Holy Writ and even of the
superhumanemind of the Grand Gali-
ecu naa Dotniag to say in'ae far an
the origination éf the ‘life principle
is concerned, it is ssfe to assume
that God” At Ayill not revea!
Himself to The soadand duuphtors
ot Tatoo god tint aa
‘hme atyatery” will reveal Itself to
mamaniiy” but “Etblopia muy hese
stretch out*her hand not to the vis-
ible god of mamman but to the "Myx.
tery of the" Life Principle,” that's
with '-us, ‘Tempus Fugit, Africa,
yeaah a a
Secret: Persian ‘Art’
On View in‘ Londo
gins ine ane Se Bows
- * Ship to Exhibit, .
| LONDON.—Details of the forth.
coming. Royal: Academy's , intérna.
tlonal: exhibition of Persian art have
béen announced by Professcy_sfthut
Uphans Pope, who has just returned
{here from Persia, where he went at
{the invitation of the Persian Govera-
jmeht to select materia) from tMe'im
| perial treasury, rouse, royal
[brary, national museum and snost im.
portant mosques. r
| Mr. Pope, who, is the direvior’ o!
;the exnibltica apd also adviser ip art
|t0. Persia, said“the material aiready
“promited makes possible a demon
[sation of the eVolution of Persian
|ae® with a systematic completencss
foever before attempted. very
'known type from before 3.000 B. C.
|to the present will be represerted by
‘the exhibits, arranged to sbow orig-
ins, developments and influenzc.
Guy. those equated wit Per
[olan histoly and traditions wiil ua-
derstand the significadte of this
[apse he aid. "For centurps ac
\vériturous, Europeans have tried .to
| penetrate Pérsinn mosques intu which
‘entry is absolutely forbidden on pain
lof death to'auy con-Mosiem intruder.
[Even some of the dess, orthodox Mos-
Jém sets sometimes foumtt entry dif-
Nimalt. Too or three times 1 Ure last
jeentury several mosques were" ¢n-
ered by Buropeans in disguise, but
a Rout a chance of careful gbaerva-
“By Jcomamand:6f ine Shah, ar-
rangerients were nisde “for us, to
make a.syateniatic photographic sur!
vey of the.great “mosques. Some 1,500
photographs already have been taker
and roucht important, new and beau-
‘ful material discovered, The loag-
closed mosques proved faz more heat
thfut nd smportant in the history of
architecture than any one * ever
degemed. The treasures: of” the
masques freqiently turned cist, to be
of astonishing richnese--treusures ac-
cumulating sinee"the time’ of Haroun
nt Aavchhi carpets —manuecriptsy
jewels, gold and sliver brocades. en-
ameled jewels, carved wood—targni-
ficant theasures of every description,
the, finest” of which, alrendy are as:
Sembled for shipment to, London.”
Many.other countries also are.send-
ing thelr choicest Persian works of
art,from hoth public afid private col-
lections, . including a number of
American muscims, sucit es the Mel-
ropolitan in Now York, the Chicazé
Art Jastitute and the, museums of
fine nets in Boston, Detroit, Cleve:
and, Washington, St. Louis and
Phitadeiphia.
Keep Up the Fight
By EVA SUUSTEVENSON
| Great and fgocd hooks end ‘presi
and gend mon are slike, Our greater!
‘troutte, perhaps, is fallure to appre
ciate ahd cherish’ the gable” texchings
bf eur lender, tho Hon, Marcus Gare
vey
|The see question is t VERY SERT.
OUS send aggravating’ ome, which
Hime Will rurcly satve, When. the rel
[ion of derur Christ, i plansed ¢nte
the heats of every races and indivi
dust, then man will look upon man
[as his Wother “and hig brotacr's
[eeper: (Tt untortiiately Fo hapvens
Hat Both the lencuers ant the
lynched if these ‘Unites Stator accept
equality to Jesus. Perhane i isan
nation, boycotting, moh violence, 4
burning at he stake wel inevitably
cease. 7 .
there may He iPtnes of ousy which
‘are unnoticed now: we may be cated
‘every name in tae world exept the
fiat name. ts efig tNat we ute ine
J moat sind end saoct stothful ix the
[great race of life. now—we may. be
Secused of every crime that fs com-
milied upot tis ‘pate-ta02, nowt
walt until. tuth shall reseive ith
hearing, and justice sity in every
jecurt; Walt until the footfalls of four
hundred millions ef bias: mon and
‘womten ‘shall be heard exming from
every nook: and corset of the stole:
wall until the bugle sound cf out
Progress shalishe heard around the
universe—then the usiverzal verdict
[wil be. that my iace bas. improved
[wondertully and made splendid: prog-
ress, commensurate with tts, advan
tages and opportunities.
| Fellowmén, let ut not be discour
"Aged: let us keep up the good fight.
jearing not what others may do or
| say, for we are coming four hundred
million strong, and with GARVEY ns
our leader, we fill forge through’ hell
for victory: for we are the GREAT
IUNBRA 3: -
In 1950: “Dear me? Now I've got
to turn back,” said the absent-minded
Pilot. “I left my. parachute in that
barber shop.”"
4 < o he.
Folks who can't eat what they want and can’t
_ dtink what.they want without terrible stomach
distress .. .and folks who suffer constantly from .
SOUR ACID STOMACH...GASSY.
BELCHING . .. AND BAD BREATH
< cfolkt who want to be tree of nau. 2
» Mi ould: teke our aaivics ond. iry |
ACIDINE, the: marvelous new digestant
band anti-acid. It’s really pleasant to
{aks nd gistious ree? comes vlmowt
-sinstantly! Bug U here . .. TODAY!
‘Sold Caly Under Aa trea-Cied - R
AT.ALL BETTER DRUG stomEs of <J ee
Birth Jel {t tnperals
: -Kuell -< ' Imperialiom
ig Oe era oi!
+ Yes, the SpHinx Bas spoken? But
from current reports, thise to whom
TE nem addzessed itselt have fatled ‘te
correctife interpret. the declaration. *
| From. the: New York Wond We
read: “The root'of the trouble, how-
ever, Hes outside of Egypt itself. Jt
Nea in the, problem of defining a sat~
|ietactory relationsa:p between Egypt
land the British Eompire. Disdolation
}of the Egyptian Parliament, followed
/by Nationalist demonstrations ard
‘riots, are imerely the latest incidents
in x long. series .of troublesome
events afisingg from a-conflict be-
‘tween nationaljera Yad imperialism at
the gateway to thé Orient.
| “The Byitish government ts Inevit-
‘abiy an aptive agent th Egyptian
politics, despite its avowals of neu-
‘trality, for'the reason’ that Egyptien
| politics ‘tuya exclusively on the ques;
ion of alk Anglo-Exyptian treaty.
| Behind .the “present controversy and
ite attendant. riots stilt looms abe
[problem of finding a compromise be-
tween nationalism and imperialism
tisfactory to both Egypt and the
pire.” cs
Wily old. England! Always seeking
‘some method .of ‘evasion to retain
her- power and dongrance of her
erstwhile subject peoples.. (But, con-
fidentially, Jonn, oid dears the: fig is
up, and you may as well pack up and
go home---for the hoys are in ernest
[and really mean business. Don't kid
yourself!)
" Madeimperiatism beon satirfactory
or acceptable, no necessity for nation~
lism would have arisen. An exeava-
tion is in process, and, al! evidences
of overiordship mist be removed in
Grder to properly@ptablish a lasting
and enduring foundation for SELF
RULE. oo
Rhime and Reason
Grabbing for “His Good”
*: by: BERTRAND SHADWELL .
(We Feprint this poem from Indian
opinion, Phoenix, Natst, South “AE
Fie you sce an island shore
[Which has not been grabbed, hetore
| Lying in the track of trade, as island
should, 2
Unpropared to nile ght * +
Oh, you Just drép in, and take it for
his goods
Pe geen of ‘money ape. is undes-
stood.
Hat ye row yourself ta the tard
With a Bible im your sands
And you pra for hits, and rob, Bim
for his Rood
ic he hollers, then you ckont hima for
his.pa‘id
gr iim toten fem hope 7
ro campiigitng at the (Gabe
where the Boor ix hang bined for
ne goed ila
[He would weleame British rate
Hig fe weren't & blnoming for4
Tus you see it's en for fas good
Ro they are burning Neuses for 3
Making helpless women Aomeies? £07
Bei" Ron
Leaving tts ehiléren for their goed:
Yn india therm afe bloaey sights”
Battin out the Hindeo's riskiz
[Where ve have singahtered meay
| millions for theif good
[and with bullet and with vrand
Decciated sil the land ;
“But you Haw we did it aly for their
goods
[yes and sill more far away
Down i Ching ist de coy
Whee the Git otis Soba te penta!
for his: geod
you may Summ and you may shoot
[You may ill your sacks with 190t-
Butbe sire you.do i esly for his
goed.
:MORAL *
Tf you Gare commit x wroay
On the week because you are strong
Nourmiy do it, i yoo do it for his
Sear vote
Ret wy: gaa vibies GRE hana iehes ss Oe
'Xou gay rob him, if you do it for
ee
eur Tet his, # you de ft fo
ae
| Wie are told "by: the dieticians-that
Sialeneeions contain wteccos At
SUSIE Nod to tha someting tha
Jeontains D, Wand F and goons
eentates Di ond Fahd £0. 0023
Ee Coe Meee
a Sane ec
_We are inidebtea to Mr. W. ©. De
Uberry of Oakland, Cal,, for the fol
lowing clipping. trom the Literary Di
‘west: 4
To atop the intermarriage of whit
women with men of other race
“something must be done," urges th
“Liverpool Asrociation for the Welfan
[of Half-Caste Children.
| wAnd, the British press finds simi
[tar trouble at other harsor porte, tn
creasing the menace— :
For example, at ‘Cardift, a mixe
tolored population of 1300 is pad
up of West. Afticany, Somalia Arabs
and Inditna; Manchester “has 20
[colored South Snicids has an Ara
}probiem, and London a Chinese prob
‘tem, :
| But’ Liverpool's 400 Anglo-nesote
families spd 1.350 colered ciildzen
‘whose mothers are-white, and father’
‘chiefly West “AYrican seamen, raise
chict “discussion: and demand for
‘compzthensive Governmen: Inqury.
Investigators find that “mentally
‘the Anglo-Chincse child ix éaid to be
equal if not Superior to tue white.
Schoo! authorities s:af@ thet the
‘Negro palf-caste child shaws_earty
rightness, but retrograiies [Str
probably rating ‘slightly infefior tc
the whites, “As the Mancliester
Guardian observes:
‘vhere are, however, other factor:
which make him inferior. .
‘His home fife iz deplorabie, for
Since a Negro staman’s earnings are
not sufficient to keep his family above
the poverty-tine, f° often happens
that while be is away on a voyage his
wife is forced to become’ a prosti-
tute.” And it is virtually impossible
for a half-caste to finé employment.
"So the girls of the family. tax¢
io the. strects ard the boys to-petty
vice of mere idieness”
Mort of the West African seamed
com> from Liberia, Nigeria, and the
Gold, Coast on ships in the, trade.
with paisports and money to: spend
Gress Well...and so attract youns
white. Women, say correspondénts of
the London ‘Times and ‘other Britich
papers. These wives, however, hive
iag-once muied with colored. men,
nahelesciy unable so heeak away on
acecunt, of community. ostraciam,
with Uidir Ratf-eante children, turden
charity and government relief,
Besides goverment. inuuiiv, the
press cali fOr special seein! workers
at the ports, and Zavor at least fore-
ing eolered: eeamen to “sizn an” in
Africa. so that they shall not “have
money to spend until they get dhack
Neisner Negro Clerks
Barred from Park
Chieagovm For the first time Cols
ored citinins were dedied the rignt
Co Gratty Gyan eppivee whe
ciatmed he had orders@rom tis cu.
enjeyag the rights accomed every
ene ee. 4
© Nebsner rom Host +
‘tie’ pienie wag given yp tie mam
ager Ne ‘TannYbaum of Neonat
Bros, “The fammts Gveeconteand Got
lar store at 41 Bayt din Sterct, who
smploys 60 colored clerits srt Hoor-
Fieh and is the first lore of its hind
wth ite Branch on tho south pice to
Ue ssh, Woohvorth's ave a 30
conmenin) manager gavé, hail of his
Emplovece an outing tast Sanday un
der is manazement they proceeded
to Mapio Parks a part of the Jprest
Preserves controlied by the Cousty
Board or which Anton J. Cermale is
president, a
Lucky Liodestone
‘Carre, a_aate, ot Genatte
izeateattliatle Greate
Bete aed one Hinde
Lucky Numbér Book Fras
ii niin Fay 0d SLE a
T THE MODEL COMPANY -
seo ee Tram
rer PPMONEY, id
= TeasyoE/ean =
=~ A *S
ES ate Sean
2c Sere
“BREE 2 Rae
Ten Demandmients
|; -Thedt Ten” Denyandgnents. ac-
cording’ to. Tha! Literary. Digest
bang tn.a Landon factory. They
are worth Heading and remember-
Mee. is tay
1. “Don't'te.. It waités my time
and yours, I'am sure to catch you
in the end,-and-thaf is the. wrong
end,
|. Watch your Work, not the
clock: & long day's‘ work makes
long doy short; and a’short day's
‘wibric mes my face long. -
‘3. Give me mpre than I’ ex.
pect. and X will give you more
than you expect. I caa afford to
increase your pay if you increase
my profite.
4, Your owe s9 much to yourself
“that you cannot afford to owe any’
ody else. Keep out’ of det, oF
Tkeep out of my shop.
Sf Dishonesty’ ia never an ne:
Yeiddat\Gcod mea, ike good. wo-
men, never see temptation whed
taey meet ft,
6. Mind You! own businese, and
in time, youl nave a Business of
your own to taind.
7. Don’? do anything here which
hurts your .setf reapect. An em-
Ployee who !s willing to steal for
me g willeg to steal from me.
ar is one of my” business
what you do at night. But if dis-
_sipation affects what you do the
next day, and you do half ‘2s much
as I demnd, you'll last half as
long as you hoped,
9. Don't tei! me what I'd like to
herr ut what, Tought to hear,
J don't want a “valet for my van-
fy but cae for my money.
30, Don't hick “if X Kick. I¢
Jowre worth” while correcting
you're worth while keestaz. 7
gu't. waste time cutting specks
out of rotten apples.—The Broad-
easter, 7
What the Attitude of
Divisions Should .Be
& Bw. Pranenix’s
| att, takes more than’ mere apece?
‘to operate x division successfully. 1
[takes men and women of rare tae
Jazd diplomacy. They ntuct be. above
PS ART ETS ear ate tome
foree_Jopedlence, and to know ‘what
is good for thelr reepective divisions
‘sven a men or woman functioning
Jas a leader of aa orghnizetion, J
fsaabie to determine what. is Bazin
fut to thelr veils, then he or sb
rghould ‘be removed, for the good of
Unit, This f& an otgonizaCon young i
[point of years, and needs t0 create
ag many friends in all walks of fe
fz possible, Frientis are an asset in
whotever capacity they my be.
Leaders should count the corto!
every movement andssee if there Jz
gain of lors jo ony undertaking.
Werreatize that thers mut be a ee"
iain lement of ignorance: in avery
organization. so the wise leader will
of necesity terp these irzerpencibies
Gander earh, Worst -reatize thal
sown divition {2 28" a unit ef the et-
ravization and therefore ix tabor-
finate to the parent” body" of the er.
pusization, 7
Ganidering the fact that each eee
Hoh of any part of tha onranization
affects the whole, iL is well for al
Brita to Rovern themselves ap az t9
Tefiect enix. peo an the ormaniantion
ne 2 whats, Clearihinking meabers
epiore tae rufiah tactics of same of
the members of the orsaaisation here
in New York.
Ht up t9 the torders who claim
fo deeive tne advance of the Univer-
sat Neato’ Improvement Ascociation
ganigniton, an? weap the nari: of
Seaeeel benurleeR”: foam. Ie
EX-BISHOP T, BE. GUENN
325 Indiana Ave, Indianapatis, ind.
_ Booit dealer, sever In one, ealied the
EUvopian Blac Man. the oxy one is
the: world thet tells (he thuth ef what
God has ald-about the Nexré, No. 1,
This tg whst st containe: ‘The History
or the American Newo; “Tid, H¥e-Binckc
san's Burden fa South’Afrles: 3rd, The
Judgment of God at the Last Day:.4th,
The Laxs aud Customs of South Africa:
Sth, The Wey to Always Have Luck and
Success; 6th, The Key to Business Life:
th, The Way to be Sour Owa Doctor:
Un, Way, to Keen a Feteng: ath, How to
‘Miter Nour Snemies: With, The Way to
Heal Goncumption, Dropay ‘and Hcoao3
ism. You will receive all mentioned irom
RW, Fame -cown to No. 0 for the stun
Of $1.36. These Dooks contain the many
things you want to know.
": A/Great Art!
Roheson’s; Statue’,
. Rejected
1 eae ae eee eee
jof, the Paul Robescn model from the
Rittenbouse, Square exbfbit, by the
Art Alliance, is still the subject of
jmueh discussion. Mr. 8. P. Chamber:
Jain, writing. to.a daily paper of the
|etty says: pads .
| "I really fee} that something ahould
he said in Wefense of the action of the
‘Philadelphia Art Alliance in refusing
;to accept the statue of Paul Robeson
:for-display in the Rittenhouse Square
{ exits. ot
| ‘I am sure that the desire:and the
‘determination to preserve art was th
‘real motivating influence behind this
jaction,
| nerT® Prove, my contention it will be
[necessary to give a brief summary of
| Paul Robeson's achievements:
| "Robeson won a Rutgers’ séholare
; ship and entered that coRege in 1918.
| Many of hin claasmates’ resented bis
[presence (there is no evidence that
| any member of the Art Alliance wag
iamong them).
ee won hig “Rin football, track,
beebsil and basketball. He had been
named All-American ‘football, end by
‘the late Wolter Camp. He had been
[an outstanding member of he Musi-
‘cal club for four yeara He was the
best debater in ‘college. :
_civith an averaxe of about 99, per
coat ducing bis collene years, he was
jelected. Phi Beta Kappa, He war
LeineTed “a> member’ of ‘the’sCap and
Skull Senior Honorary. Society, to
‘which only, four men belonged. | He
delivered the ‘commencement address.
| “After graduating from Rutgers he
entered Columbia Law School. recelv
ing his LLB. two years later. *,
"Possessing great histrionie abiity,
jhe turned 10 the stage and soon be-
came recognized as a fine. actor.
“At prosent, he is in London -star-
‘Fing in the Shakespearean. tragedy,
“Othello, and being acclaimed by Eng.
eh erities and audiences az one of
“Now the Alliance, no doubt: von=
chided that to exhibit the statue of ®
Negro whdse temarkabie abifity and
splendid achievements have made him
internationally ¢xmous, would shatter
the miyth Unnt Amos ‘2! Aney portray
the nome of Negro aspivation-and ca-
pabikty. |
whe Alliance was “far-sighted
enough to sce that happenings of
this Tid swovld eventually rerult im
Uke loss of ne of our mort cherished
arisu-the art of deception mest
sublly expressed when characterizing
the Negro.
“t hold thal the’ preservation “af ast
iy a function of an.Art Avinges, snd
that aur village chapter shovid bs
commended for thelr ‘seen juczment
and vigilance in thie eave,
"Ie Mr. Silomime fee that It iz
gealiy important to hiré Rohgeon, or
Thimiels, that the, Are Alliance rescind
their decision “ind give, the wilagers
a chance te reo this Wosk of art, T
would sugkest that he send it back
next yeur wh the earved inseristion,
“Anurew Brown, President of Freek
aap, etka eho seecar
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Ang, delitnted. Adcrans, Dr. DePew, Bult TO,
Bad Gelignted. Adatons De. Dare
Jtra vos la Turba Homie
cida
En el estudio de los multiples problemas que afectan directamente a nuestro elemento, hemos notado cierta clasificación en lo que al sentimiento de nuestra todo racial respecta: la parte industrial y progresista y la parte indiferente y depediente. El grupo productor de nuestra raza esta compensado de que puede llevar a la realización, todo aquello que los demás hayan podido hacer en beneficio propio. El elemento que constituye nuestra organización pertenencia a ese grupo progresista, y por ello le yemos laborando hacia la meta de una nacionalidad independiente.
Una turba enfurecida de mil blancos asaló en Marion, Indiana, la carcel del condado, rompió las puertas y ventanas y se apoderó de dos negros acusados de haber asinado a un hombre y asaló una mujer blanca, y los colgó de un árbol cercano.
El repugnante expectáculo de los cadáveres, mostrando en las caras huellas de la "terrible agonia que precedió a la muerte y colgados a 25 pies del suelo en las ramas del árbol, sirve hoy de muño testigo a la barbarea que los prejuicios raciales son capaces de despertar en los habitantes del sur.
El universalmente anhelado continente africano es legítimamente el hogar del hombre negro. Hora es ya para que congregado en su propia campina disfrute de la vendimia, considerando nuestro deber el desperar en el sentimiento sano de su propia conciencia. La gran familia humana aprenderá a considerarse y respetarse mutuamente, cuando cese la competencia activa, en el mismo país por aquello que concierna a lo económico, social y político. Cada grupo debe proporcionarse su patria donde pueda aspirar y progresar sin resentimientos.
Cincuenta agentes de policía patrullan las calles de ciudad, armados de rifles y la Guardia Nacional se encuentra lista para entrar en seccion al menor sintona de desorden.
Las victimas de la furia homicida popular fueron Thomas Shipp, de 18 años y Abe Smith, de 19. Se le acusaba de haber detenido en desoblado, un auto en el cual viajaban Claude Deeter, blanco, de 23 años y una joven blanca. Los negros, según la policía, assassinaron a Deeter a balazos y atacaron a su compañera.
El elemento progresista de nuestra raza anhela avulcionar en su propio medio ambiente; aspira a gobernarse a si mismo sin tener que sentir el menor atomo de restricción; siente actualmente el mismo malestar que sentiría el hombre blanco si éste fuera gobernado por el japones. Si vivimos en nuestro propio distrito, debemos ser nosotros la voz cantante en ese radio de acción; si somos nosotros la mayoría en nuestras comunidades, debemos también ser nosotros los directores en las mismas. La raza negra constituye la mayoría de la población en el continente africano, y por tal razón debiera ser ese elemento el director de los destinos de ese vasto y rico continente.
La primera tentativa de la turba de linchar a los dos supuestos culpables fracasó cuando la policía empleó gases lacerimosos y agua para dispersarlos. Posecida de rabia homicida la turba no se descorazon y armandó de hachas Jogro derribar las puertas de la carcel y apoderarse de Shipp y Smith, quienes se encontraban en sus celdas.
La turba enloquecida arrancó las ropas de Shipp y cubriéndolo con un manto lo condujo a las cercanías. En el trayecto se le maitrúte brújamente, siendo finalmente coigado de un árbol. Smith fu primero privado del conocimiento con golpes de martillo y preintazos y en ese estado se le hizo pasar por los rigores de la lea. La Lynch. Su cuerpo mutila helicas de puntazos arañazos que le fueron producidos por un grupo de mujeres.
El hombre negro no intenta disputar la posición de Europa o America; no pide al asiatico que evacue las regiones de oriente para establecerse en ellas; simplemente apela a la justicia y al derecho para que le entregue aquello que por ley natural le pertenece. El hombre negro del presente, como cualquier otro ser progresista, cree en la práctica de la verdadera justicia y anhela la confraternidad universal. Si nuestro derechos han de ser respectados, debemos por consiguiente respetar los derechos de los demás. Nuestro elemento ha estado siempre dispuesto a ceder al somewhat aquello que sea legitimante suyo, en la esperanza de obtener del mismo identica recompensa.
La venganza popular quedó apaciguada con la muerte de los dos nugros, pero un pequeño grupo de insaciables maltrató también a Herbert Cameron, otro prismero que no tiene nada que ver con el crimen por el cual pagaron con su vida Smith v Shipp.
Mas que placentero nos setia el observar en Europa y en America una raza blanca pacifica, prospera y progresista; en el continente asiático una saza amarilla disfrutando de los mismos privilegios; de igual manera anhelamos una raza nogra en Africa dueña; de la situación. La humanidad, sin ninguna esperanza racial immediata, esta actualmente dividida en distintos grupos, cada sección con sus propios ideales y aspiraciones. No podemos esperar por lo tanto de cualquier raza el que ella controle el monopolio de una creación y le sea posible el satisfacer a las demás. El elemento de nuestra raza tiene irremisiblemente que convertirse en un gran poder y cual fuerte inespugnable, defender el derecho que le corresponde como pueblo progresista.
Cameron fue salvado de una suerte semejante por los ruesgos de un hombre que dijo ser tio, de la muchacha asaltada en el cañino solitarios.
Una tentativa de que quenía el cuadiver de Shipp francas por no alcanzar las llimas de la pina a la flor durante de balancina el cuerpo. Deuter fue asentado el miercoles en la noche. El único testigo del crimen, la señora Marie Bell, declaró que cuatro negros detenieron el automóvil donde vijaban, en el Dector y la asaltaron n ella. Shipp y Smith fueron detenidos en policía aseguna que el primer contó ser uno de los autores del atrac.
Ya es hora, una y otra vez hernos de repetir, para que el alimento negro se consolide universally. Nuestra organización inició ese movimiento, poco mas de una década ha, con solamente trece hombres y mujeres quienes formaron la primera división en esta ciudad. Hoy dia cuenta con mas de mil ramales organizados en este país, en Canada, Centro y Sud America, en las Ansilla, Asia, Europa y Africa, los cuales representan seis millones de miembros activos, todos con un mismo sentimiento, con un mismo propósito, con un mismo destino.
La policía informa en la tarde que un grupo numeroso se congregaba en Fairmount, guscio de donde eran natural Dreeter, y discutía la manera de volgar la muerte de ese. El cuartel fue referido con una guardia adicional. En las primeras horas de la noche un grupo de 600 blancos rodeó la carretera, siendo repellidos con gases lacrimosos y aguas. Pero nuevo refuerzos se unieron en la turba que obtuvo exito en su segunda tentativa.
En mas de una ocasión nuestra organización ha sido sometida a ruda prueba, apurando el acibar en la copa amarga de la intrigge y de la decepcion; pero ya cual hermosa barca timoneada por expertos marinos, su cuerpo directivo, navega viento en popa por el amplio mar de las esperanzas, determinada a arribar en no lejano dia al puerto de salvación. El lema de la actual dirección de nuestro movimiento emancipador es eficiencia, eficiencia y mayor eficiencia. La aspiración de sus miembros en general es la práctica del reconocimiento al derecho inalienable en todo ser humano.
Eosos linchamientos son los primeros, que ocurren en ese pueblo. Hace 45 años fracaso una tentativa para linchar a un blanco, cuando la turba habia ya entrado en el cuartel. Incluyendo los del jueves en la nocie, 62 linchamientos han ocurrido en el Estado de Indiana desde 1889. Diez de los victimas eran blancos y diceiseles ngros. Marley Hardin, fiscal del condado, anunció que no profería cargos contra los lideres de la turba que linchado a los negros Abe Smith y i nomas Shipp.
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Aftaidio que los cadáveres de los linchados permanecen aun colgados para satisfacer al pueblo que desea prevenir a los negros contra futuros ataques a los blancos. Se cree que una tentativa de rescatar los cadáveres produciria nuevo desordenes. Mil negros se reunieron después de los linchamientos y pronunciaron disueres acusando a las autoridades de la proteger a los prisoneros. No se registraron desordenes y la reunión se dissolvió pacificamente.
La tribu se compone de cinco mil jóvenes agresivos. Tienen buenos consultores en los sacerdotes y estan tratando de allegar proselitos en su marcha.
Las autoridades de Bombay dieron sentencia contra los jefes nacionalistas arrestados después de la demostración civil de desobediencia ilel sabado. Vallahbai Patel, presidege del congreso de la India unida, fue sentenciado a tres-meses de prisión. Pandit Malaviya fue multado en cien rupes o la alternativa de quince días en prisión.
Cuatro mujeres se negaron a pagar multas y prefierejon la cañcel. Varios otros prisioneros fueron sentenciados a tres meses.
El nuevo presidente interino del congreso nombrado por Petel, es un musulmán: Abdul Kalam Azad.
Informes de Sukkar, donde ocurrió la revuccia el martes ultimo, indican que en cualquier momento puítera presentarse una nueva conflagración.
La policía anunció que en las afueras del población habían varios grupos que se prepararan a reamendar los desordenes. Todos los establecimientos permanecen cerrados. Unicamente los más atrevidos habitantes se aventuran hoy a sair de sus hogares.
La policía y las tropas hacen servicio de patrilla en las calles y se han pedido anarquiladas.
El despacio afañed que habían cerrado varias calles y saquecen en algunos establecimientos. El desorden es de carácter local.
Inglaterre se encuentra frente a dos problemas de gravedad que tendrá que resolver percentorialmente las incursiones de trulhas salvajes en las provincias nordeste y la creciente hostilidad entre los hinduces y los musmites que han tenido varios encuentros con gran minero de muertos.
Aunque la censura de las provincias frontieras es estrictas, los informes recibidos indican que dizuil afridís se han declarado en franjas recolida y anudizan a Perhawar. Esta ciudad es de arcecanental importante estratégica y todes los conquistadores de la India himnado por ella. Varios destacimientos de tropas inglesas han sido cindadas y reforzar la guarnición, y las puertas de la ciudad permanecen cerradas.
Los agijas perchecen a las tristías pathas y han perdido va el temor a los acetoplanes, cuyo bombardero esquivan arrojando sus mantos y cecidiondiece en las cercanitas. Los avidores bombarden los visos los mantos creyendo que se traga la guerreros.
Simulhanamente los hindues y los muslimes han visto a regurgitar su ancestral hostilidad y anidanar tular la tranquilidad en la provincia de Sind. Según informes recibidos en Sukuk perdicerion 12 y resultaron 150 heridos como resultado de un encuentro.
Greed Declared Menace To National Existence
Declaring that civilization is not, in itself, a guarantee of stability, Dr. Carl Knopf, a member, of the faculty of the University of Southern California, in a sermon at the Mississippi Congregational Church yesterday told his congregation that unless the law of love shall be allowed to rule the lives of the citizens of this republic, the United States will go the way of other nations that permitted themselves to be governed by the god of greed and the will of power. Pressing on "Civilization Last Choice," Dr. Knopf spoke in part as follows:
"There are various types of civilization. Soviet Russia has chosen one. The experiment has been far from successful. European imperialism is a definite type of culture, but its finality is challenged by nations seeking self-determination and expression. India and China are symptoms of a deep-lying aliment. If we were to choose the things we could least dispense with in our modern civilization, we probably would murder automobiles, radios, telephones, movies—everything but the science of modern medicine and surgery, and the Father-Brother concept of God and man so beautifully portrayed by the Companer of Nazareth. Civilization has and will choose many things, material goods, and theories, but to be sure it must make its final choice the highest possible. Starting forth, amalgamation, alienation, defiance must give way to love, self-referencing and fellowship, or just impulse. Need in the trail has been the need in the war we were fighting.
Civil Service News
Parole officer about September 30—Official recommends appointment to be ready for promotion past year. No new jobs at this application will be issued next week. Candidate will write to the Department Division, State Department of Civil Service, Albany, M. Y.
Court attendant—This is opened to both men and women of 21 years of age or over. The salary is from $3,600 to $4,700 a year. It is planned to include Government and Arithmetic in a General Paper to serve as an eliminating subject. Watch this column for further details on this examination.
Prohibition Agent examination on way.
All indications are that an examination for Prohibition Agent will be held before the end of the year. Col. Woodcock, the director of the forces, has asked for 500 more men and Dr. Doran has asked for 130 more men. Requirements will appear in this column next week.
About 100 written and unwritten examinations are scheduled to be held by the State Department of Civil Service on September 20 or later. Among these tests will be Parole Officer and Factory Inspector.
Female telephone test soon. No eliminating experience, candidates must be at least 18 years of age. Duties—to operate telephone switchboard, to keep records of telephone calls and to perform other incidental clerical work. Salary $960 to $1,560 a year.
Assistant Truant Officer examination Oct. 17-Applications for non-civil service partition issued by the Board of Education—Park, Ave. & 98th St.-Salary $1,560 to $1,820 a year. Age 21 to 25 years of age. Requirements—graduation from a high school or its equivalent. Send for your application now.
Clerk Carrier tests---The next examination for Post Office Clerk and Carrier will be held soon. Age 18 to 45 years. Salary $1,700 to $2,100 a year. Open to male citizens only. Competitors will be examined in the following subjects---general tests, sorting and following instructions.
Other Federal examinations are
Laborer (Postal Service). Applications
must be on file not later than
Aug. 29, examinations Sept. 13, Junior
Laborer, applications must be on
file by August 29, salary $1,150 a
year. Unqualified Laborer, applications
must be on file not later than
August 23, salary $1,14 a year.
Teacher of Secondary English for
Philippine Service. Applications are
being issued now. Designating Machine
Transcriber, August 26, the last
day for filing applications.
Clerk, Grade 2.—The physical exam-
mation will be conducted first. All
who pass the physical test, which will
consist of lifting a dumbbell, eyesight and general physical condition
will be called for the written tests,
and only those who attain 70 per cent
in the General Paper will be eligible
to give their other examinations.
Bookkeeper, Grade 2 (Mak. This is scheduled to be a wonderful chance for our young bookkeepers to get into the service. The entrance salary is $1,000 a year. The commission will be held this Fall. Watch for further information.
Again nearly $300 charge was apportioned from the various items. Among them were 25 Clerks, Gr. 2 (with knowledge of Addendum's at $1,200 a year, 10 Title Engineers, Grade 2 at $2,100 a year, 6 Dentists at $1,220 a year, period time). 5 Probation Officer at $2,010 a year (female); 8 Auto-engineers at $8,000 a day; 4 Post Office Clerk, 70 certified for City Job positions, and many stenographers, typists, clerks, bookkeepers and accountants.
"I still love Kip," she reiterated in
in tears here, and "I'll never have
inappropriate hair." East India Hair Grower
MAY 1928
That there is a time for everything under the sun is a well known assertion the veracity of which has found an example in the subject under our
immediate consideration. This reflection has its localization in the upper air passages and is produced by the action of the pollen of certain grasses and plants upon the mucous membrane of those possessing a high degree of sensitiveness. It was early in the nineteenth century that special study was given to this malady. The knowledge gleaned at that time was rather scanty but from then on new facts have been gathered which ultimately makes it very interesting. Generally speaking this condition attacks an individual at a definite season of the year hence it is possible to be prepared in advance of the coming onslaught. Spring, summer and autumn are the seasons in which the intensity is full. There are a few individuals who are unfortunate to have a visitation all the year round. It is regarded with a great deal of certainty that those who have comp
Alice Not Colored, Still Loves Kip
With six years of sensational litigation between herself and her rica husband, Leonard Kip Rhinklander, settled by a property agreement, $24,600 in cash, $8,800 almost a year, and the prospect of receiving between $200,000 and $500,000 in the future. Alice Jones Rhinklander spent the time on the eve of her reserved debarkation for Europe in denying a give for anyone but her divorced husband and in infighting that being represented as a colored woman "must hurt me most."
She said reports that she was "going out" with a harlem colored man, "I couldn't afford to do anything like that," she said. "I am white. My mother is pure English. My father is of Indian extraction, and his mother was an Englishwoman. Of all my troubles during my years of litigation, that of being represented to the public as a colored woman has hurt me most."
Some of the reports that she made with a man later on were posted on the Internet. Why, there isn't much to tell.
1024 Mt. Avenue, corner 56th St., New York
City. Hours 9 am to 9 pm. Sundays by
appointment. Telephone 321-622-6222.
BOPICE
The office of
DR. R. WILLIAMS
Physician and Surgeon
Bronx, New York at
1024 Mt. Avenue, corner 56th St., New York
City. Hours 9 am to 9 pm. Sundays by
appointment. Telephone 321-622-6222.
locus in the spring, dries through the pollen of certain trees when the symptoms occur in the summer the causative factor is due to the pollen of grasses. The autumnal form is seen in those who have symptoms during the months of August and September and the pollen of weed is the agent at work. Among the grass family rye is considered to be a very active contributor whilst the product from corn, oats and barley must not be forgotten. The symptoms have a very light pollen and these are capable of borne over long distances by the wind thus producing the ill effects on susceptible contacts. Spear grass, brown grass, blue grass and alfalfa cause it great deal of disturbances during the summer.
Women suffer more than men whilst the young and middle-aged bear the greatest burden. It is a penalty to be paid for dwelling in large cities. I highly nervous individual is generally attacked. The odor of a horse or even that of a cat is sufficient to stir up trouble for some. The watering and itching eyes and nose, aching, itching of the throat make a picture dreaded of death. Poisoning the attic believes death would be a welcome guest. These symptoms appear abruptly and depart in the same manner. The method of attack is similar to asthma. Both diseases may be regarded as first-cousin. A mouche, will aid to allay the symptoms. Permanent cure can only be effected by special vaccine. This treatment should be early. A sea voyage or the dry mountain air is beneficial to those who can afford the change.
Woman, 51, Sees Father For First Time in Life
Portland, Ore. - For the first time in her life, Mrs. Ila Fulton, fifty-one, of this city, has seen her father, John Turnage, seventy-eight, of Carbonade, Ill. Turnage and his wife separated just before the daughter was born.
About six years ago Mrs. Fulton located her father by writing to friends in Willimington county, Illinois, and they exchanged photographs. Recently they met to face for the first time.
POLICE SERVICE AVE. 200
100 W. 10TH ST. NW
100 W. 10TH ST. NW
100 W. 10TH ST. NW
100 W. 10TH ST. NW
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Rabie SE a Eee
eS Wh fa White Fates (Famous Potato Kiage' Farm: > (Bak taba
ENA
By BRENTAA. Da.)
“OUR awogearak “
A Sides, Bare we Are AES 7S
“ena mala atetion “pf Station UNEA,
‘owned ‘and operated by the Negro
‘World Broadcasting System, and
apis you will hear © program of
“Table, “And dok't forget ;tuat
te cpmaing: te you
a the courtesy of the Food for
‘Mhought Company, Inc. Here we are:
Liberia
—--THE COUNTRY. ‘Liberia_Is_ an
“Indepedent Negro republic with an
ierea_of 40,000 aquare miles. It ‘oo
Copied, 350 miles of the Weat. Afri.
can coast and extends ipland. 200
miles at Its widegt part. Many rivers
carg navigable in stretches. The in-
tenor rites into mountains: of from
2.000. to 6,000 fee€ Ja height:
GOVERNMENT. . The ‘constitution
of the republle {4 modelled oa that
of the United States. The execttive
Power is vested in a president and a
Council of 6 mizisters and the legisla-
Live power in a parliament of two
houses called the Senate and House
‘of Representatives. Z
COMMERCE . AND INDUSTRY.
‘The exports’ include*yibber, palm ;
oll, pelm kernels, plessava fre from
‘the rafia palm, coffee, cocoa, ginger. |
chilies, Svory, annntto seed, dye and
canwood—a-bard dyewood. The chief’
moporte are rice, textiles, tobacco
pullding timber,. galvanized roofing”
fran, ready-made -elotbing and dried
and preserved fis.
COMMUNICATION. There are no
railways or vebleular means of traps-
port ia the country except ox-caet
Tha new motor Foads, of about 500
miles. *
PRINCIPAL “TOWNS, Monrovia.
Gandhi Wants Definite .
‘Assurances from’ Govt.
‘sCqntinerd from: Foes: One!
sconversations wil] be resumed to
morows sett
‘The: request ioigated that the
opoly one” was not reads to surran.
dee all bix, policies for the sake 0!
promoting Wiscizsions, since” te ye
Pent "Simon “report on Indi Rad
froved unentinguctory te the Wark
fre Congress members.
that gestentay's penieipants, in
ludiag ine Nabatina himself, Be
two Nebeus and Mes. Surojici Naidu,
wera present, ax were SirsPej Baha-
dar Sapre and Mr. Jayakar of the
Workers’ Congres, who promoted
<the conferences ioaking toward 2
pencelul ena of the civit disnbetierice
Tetarvnees, +
‘Sn far ab the War Council of.tne
temigy Provincial Conpeess Core
riitice wis ennrerned'! did not seat
Ter whether the dinobitions were pros
Coding ell oe HE, This body ealay
Pesred a resolution “viewing the
present apgace patiers with rave
Fancarn,” ectarings that qumptete s-
Teencence would Ee the eounells
irae tndwation that there fee s¢oth ms
ot the Nationairin ate art prepared
fetnrow orn nnamd candi and
de their aun : 4
Fhe sittin an the northwest
fronuer inday showed HUle change.
Lim the,smmedinte geihintioods of
JPoshawhr ronitions bvietiely were
“pench improved, but HeporG ONL
ed Ta ausive here af esteiiinn af the
avert tp eertions of eraer tribes he-
Hides the Atridir, Officuts expressed
the view tonight that it probabiy
wilt 1ake severnd days to elanity the
Hivation on the nershiwest. fraatise
SMe lat few dayy Inve acon de-
‘armaned etioriz on the part of Uke
Baurh armed frees, incase Ute
Payal Air Pores, to ataeay wnt i8e
sggremion nosing! Renawar, Sac
penentay's repose hidicetd Gh he
inecat agumst the eltyy wale fs Gio
feat Af tha Nortawes Provinee, had
deen’ broken.
‘Thirteen worten volunteers betong |
fos to higher clase Finén faratties and
Eeiy-nine men belonging tthe |
pedFep claases worn arrected today’ ti |
New Bethl for pleketiog sigue shops.
“Pwo thounand “textile -worters-he-|
earme. idle today through closing of
the Simplex Mill, the arst 10 be af
fected 6f A group of twenty-four Ta
vopenn-manngad cation raills on the
War Coizact noycott Niste- “twelve
jaills have now clash, rankiig idle
23,000 workers. ;
Pectin $4 tha Bement Geeta tact
LO.G6.¥ Htation to the President within the!"
~ ASTROLOGY | next two weeks. He dectined te dis: fie
3, PORTE AE ORE con [eons omen |S
" verona centres? Ase you Napoy {a pour mar: |] Ons he will make to the Péggivent, | be
war spe ee in seer Suvnree dete? al ga, fa reah mess |] Ropes Wa make fo, tne Degen |e
$BE ii Raeayetee m mat ntfn oee est BR bat ala tba nnd come Yo the 2
ert gee, ok Uae hea, cub of rater, dn eur Kies Avast | Se Sreed an tar as posale romeo
eee ae tury GF PATE tint may thee eu vt at our awtcnéings te || crament 3 iz
ies Tampere anne eatin bt" Me alcaon In tat ane pres |
ese” onthe Wodation, tet when they are untaversie vei" El ont tlme, “aaldabr, Moto, te tones {7
~ ey, piolniest Passions |. enerwner igs aicg ye Ga gine f DEER oF the-fenpoation of taxes. on |
Say dnd divest nhea tne plancta"ave vo a fasseabie or aepeet for || rum and tobacco by the recent gov-'R
SIA aie fei BB ciah aa hd Meta, cet nae: “|| erhuent of President Borsa, Same-|
Ecurishiys marrage, tevaell ay ecling “wien eniths secieeate: || thing should be done immediately to
7 Reg PRE e reineay the sltvation, Dr. Maton
aba, eres coos theo: soni havea wotne aig TREE? We ettnation, De. Maton
TERS am server cat reas tare a une vite TH at *
Corre nacre Sh toh oh lo ently acto Be-anes |
Bm foram sale Reig coring abe 09 game e tape, te may enante } ep yice sr cag Coline Go
BBs wbele couse of yon iife. Kaclow a 65.0" bill wide Sour mame’ and aggtess and ‘Being “st the bottom t#n‘t. so bad if | fir
Dirthgete. “You will br more than pleased. Wi + + you use It for a foothold. iat
14 wen 11 ei ee TORO oe aes eae Nee, SSS
es ||| WHEN IN NEED OF
2 LO WELL © |: if vesen ees ore os same
‘ FUNERAL CHURCH, DC. “ It Will Pay You |
eS SEVENTE AvENOR Sas AvDebee eae Hl H “"L STEINE
cg Mit Chen berjton ot ators Tastes of Chen tree WE’
.-. MAROLD BU TEDGENAN, Themed Memgw —° < . ill] 226 WEST J4STH STREE
KABRRS- ARE REAUES TE DT Mees pee
be.capved and chief port; Reberte
poe and) Marwbald, 5 0
< Ftelte kiddies": Haw 4d”you do.
Hello Kiddlea! “Spealeing to you.
Introditcing no one else but me—in
peer .
Mf I could compose Mke Dunbar," —
‘What's great composer I would te!
[But as Tcap’t compose ite Trunber
I'm doing my best—you see.
Tm doing. my best—you pee
Uf Thad money like Rockefeller,
Waat a-rich gitl Y would'be".*
Td buy me some ships, some oceans
‘And-then a great Dig gem +
It I could fight like’ Napoleon.
What a great warrior I would be!
Ta grit my, teeth and grip my sword
And eet my people free. *
If I could fly Ike Lindbergh. -
What a great flyer T would be!
I'd leave for heaven at one: o'clock,
And be back.to earth at three.
Now, that Lhave been ail these things,
What better off amt? «
T am fust,ie a lower~-a-rose
That is born in this world to die’
* BOBBIE NEELY,
‘Chicago, Dh
For the past hour you have been
husteniag tova. program that came to
vou through the courtesy of the Food
ior Thought Company, inc, brosdeus
over Station UNIA, owned and uper-
ted by the, Negro, World Broxdcnat-
IngSyatent’ We hope you bave en.
foyed-the programa a2 3puth as we en
Javed delivering I (o your ‘Unt rext
week, them, 0 long! De Sena ane
octclng: :
Negroes’ of Mase. :
Honde F. Dousiaz
{Continued trom Pare One)
spoke as follows! “Owing-to te ab:
fence of the Mayor from the city. he
tras asked me £9 accept the tabiet
for the city of New Bedford which
the Twentieth Century Club. has had
place?! upon the wails of the Library.
Egladly accept this duty. tecting very
‘Mrongiy that it is: emmently Atting
that this recogsition should be made
of thé hfe services to Bis race. ard
Horttye-spirit-of Usczalicns which wore
promoted by the aclivitien of Fred-
erick Douglass, the “Bran whom yor
honor today. Bork in slavery, at the
age of twenty-onhe wax able to es
cape through Ballimore, BhilaZolphde
and New York, \where he’ was i-
formed by {lends thnt New Bedford
might offer hit « sare refuge. With
his newly married wife, Unis 1ad took
the fteamer.yor Newport, where he
changed to g'staze conch Zrom that
aly i New Bedford. The refugee
from injustive (wet Tordiatiy received
in Now Bedford, " Almow the siest
monéy he wast able to make as the
fruits of thin labor war obiained by
getting ena! inter the house of BPR
ter Hin sdetight at recent 2 ait
See Ralf dollars ax a royeard of bis
oun {roe Inne was unburned.”
£ see
* se
Pell Tax to Became |
Afvien’s Salt Tax
Simtuter of Machine Guas and Tere
Romie, Piraiw, that ive are not Ra-
ing tn be cxplaited any longer under
the prevent dictatarsiep, ARG if we
tale dhit step of Fefusing ia pay
this tox there will be no Roe Pirow
fa South Atrios, He wil baws%e find
skome-tie ifs, :
Vherstore Africans we apneat to
you to prepire to refuse i euiver
Pha tasation, And We rudy alsa to
ick the sdocetied Drover, the dirty
Sapte tiowhien wecnyeeniiielied tS
carte wosite in ont pockets EO Ue
vay praken ge RoeeAaTy for every
uunian being, ler us see Piraw, Herte-
og, Smuts and company carrying
thins na we black rom dot if roi tok
us burn them: they are useless to us.
| Copirades, i sonelysion, if you
viant' (6 he free, sick “Plrew out af
hiseeataa Msister_of Justice and
repiace fim by meb ckoken by yOu,
ihe "workers, See to it that jour
leaders are prepared to Ro with you
through thiek and thin.” Comrades
be ready now, for brave action-
Yours fratérsby, 3, W, Nkoste,
Durban, Natal.” .
WHEN IN NEED OF __- .:: "
-BEDS, SPRINGS; MATTRESSES, PILLOWS
"Wil Poy You to Call’ In ot
. » L STEINBERGS > ©
OER PS ner —perneadhaenry sn ai
eee ed ti, BE wes
evan eepartet ik ap. attenst ends
‘be. maszig. to- make physicisn a
metaber of. the Waite Pieins Host
Sat <2, es Sia 9 carte ress,
‘Once the doctors were ‘the
ote ‘would attempt o-tntihanes
the Negroes to stog te
Coltymiors sad wilds, Ghd to. go
jo the olker two doctors: ~~~ —-—
1" However, this latest move has bee
blocked thus far by the refusal of the
two, New York: Gity. doctorb. to gp
to White Plains afthr’ being apprised
of the tru -teete-underlying-the case.
The doctors, whose names have been
withheld®when informed gf the plot
refused ‘to become partis’ to any
much treachery to their race.
People Stand. Together
Inquiry discloses that the’ small
Negto commumity in White Plains
and vicinity Is standing with sur-
prising solidarity for what is right
fn, this situation, and ts in no mood
to give welcome oF patronage to
any otw-comers under these condi-
tions. ‘They gasert that these two
young men bave done all they could
fo promote the welfare of the race.
They hold them in high esteem.
‘Any Negro practitioner coming ‘to
heir community at fhe present time |
Be akea "eps eth suspicion,
is alleged. The report is that other
{octors soon will be approached with |
he hope that they will cme to White
pining, ighoraat of The parts ‘they
will be playing in the aitempt to!
sive Drs. Coliymore and Williams |
ut of White Plains. .-«" 4
on a spas.
| Smith's Building ~
"To Rise 1,248.Feet
pie State Building, now being arcet-
Jed on" the aite of tbe old Waldorf.
Astoria-Hotel at Fifth Avenue nad
Sein Street, will extend its height
with the Zeppelin mooring mast top
the bullding to the equivaient of 102
stories, 1,248 feet. above. the street
level, making it one-dtth bener than
anything ever built by man, according
{to former Gov. Smith, President’ of
Eropire State, Inc. = |
TA anyouncing the change ia ibe
plans, Mn Smith sid that originally
the bullae corporation lance os
the root of the cighty-fourth floor of
ine boiling syonld be 1,043 fect above
the street Jevel and that this. should
be stirmounted hy 4 Klass inclosed 0b.
servation roof. He snid:
“The new plans call fer a large ob-
servation gallery on. the eighty-sisth |
floor, raises above the roof level apd |
rheathed with nickel and steel aid
since." :
Has No Use For- : |
“Shine? Newspapers|
go rts AMR... Auagaane: 30.— Cy.
IN. B)—"C don't want t0 have ‘noth:
ing te da with no ‘shine’ newspapers,
ang I don’t care whether they pub:
not.” was the varenstic feply ot Joba
Rocnink, present owner of the Dé:
treit Stas punekall teatg, in answer
fo the question punt to mim by Ruscetl
J. Gowns, sports writer, as to why
ire" coniiounusly refused to advertise
in colored newapapers,
Sinee it hax been Ieprned hat Roc.
hink'awnr hoth the all elub naw the
Fiarie’ now -inawn’ ag Roesink’s: Sta-
“aunt. Negroes here are planing a
Hhoeott for the remainder af the seg
pon. Recnink owned the pid “Maa
Park,” whieh, Jong condemned, wat
Gestroy by tie gad a host of people
injured whily 20 were killed, last stm
Negtdes have bstigved for a tong
time thet the Stam were owned by
Moze 1, Walker, colored man, but
St invettigation-into the M-irentinent
Dr, Moton Callsven 7”.
< Presiden: Hoover
Washington, D. C., Juiy S1.-~De
Roburt Re dtoion,privipal of fuake
see. tustitnie and’ chairman of “th
SGeinlsae whieh, ease e stkey te
Gently of the Hollian education peo
fom for Prosideat: Hoover oabed al
the, White House last Thuredey ts
rake an Toforsne) Sports Be was
accorapanied by other members of
cae cocnteaion
Dz. Moton said he hoped @ have
ho wiltten vopert Dear tor tine
tation to the President withia. tre
mond to wane: Hig declines Ube
cuss the nature of the recommenda:
tious ne will make to the Prggident
but sald that he chad. come Go the
concluslon’ that ‘edueation, anoutd ‘oe
ajvoreed aa tar as poss rom neer
coment.
‘Phe situation in Haiti at the pres:
ent time, saldabr, Motor, is. tense
because ot ther imposiion of taxes on
riga and tobsoco by the recent gov-
crdment of President Boros, Saine-
(hing. sbould be done immediately to
remedy the situation, Dr.. Moton
ihabe, ‘Tho: pesasat "population
qreally affecteg, Hecoatas
“Being “st the bottom isn’t. so bad if
— nara ot ‘$61,900
as 2 SE tereniomet inet 8 oY 5
ANAM OFT, Hines hn fon as Seagate seh
ee an ee Se Hip ng ton cote as tntefet tak ban
san Mow ‘Velay:. County’ tats || eos taro pai and tena are dpe
sae: Kaneax, wad ood af. ane: ingeect far two year" | c<
‘tion on the Wyandotte County’ Court] In a:etatement. made three inogths
‘House atepe here -Tussday morning] ago, members of the Groves family
0d, was, Rought by-the Kaights of] timed weather eontitices and. the
Pythias of Missouri for the sum of) ‘Of the potato market for their
pect sudlagrer partion mined wPr| beep tte caré—for the loag,. The
mortgage sod various ald | term ie being opseated’ by seven. sank
by the Pythians. ‘Ther were no. other |.and © daughter of the late Junius G.
bidders, B Groves, wig died in 1926, . The ‘elder
—Lindet the Kansas law, the Pythi-| Groves camo to Kansas beforé the
ny cannot take possession for eight: [beginning of the century and Toute
en mapths and Gurtag that time the| his potato emplre of more than 400
Groves fainly has the right to buy'|acres by working’ for forty “cents a
back the property if it éém secure| day. ‘The 22-room brick mansion op
the necessary funds. -| the farm is famous for its hogpital-
‘The Pythlans were forced to take | ity, Booker 7. Washington once hav.
the atep. they said, pecause nothing! ing been a guegt there.
¥ les, os te
Fair Play to Negro ss | Vice-President, |
Trade fs Demande ‘| ‘Hits Disregard |
ins oe NaS pbc eee eh
att aeRO maak atcne
Fneath thePavhite man's dignity. tc
‘bleed the Negro is evidenced by: the
existence of $18, grocery sores, 3
drug stores and 45:haberdasheries it
St. Louis which cater to an almost
exclusively colored trade, Landlords
‘offices absorb thousands of dollars in
‘exhorbitant rentals collected by whité
agents from colored tenants each
month. Some 17,000 Negro homes
ise gas and electricity every unit of
‘which, is measured oh A meter care-
fully Fead by a white man,in a*none
too white collar which it” would be
uppish for’ a ‘Negro togplace around
his peck, eapecially during working
hours.when be is merely’ supped
to be earning enough money 10 pay
his monthly’ bills.
In Chicago, by systeratic memods
of organization and publicity, our
group, has been ‘rather successful Ja
bettering these unequal epportunities,
To achieve this praiseworthy result
it is not necessary to’ start a war.
By establishing proper contacts and
cmmploying right methods of appronch
our group can frequently with suc-
cess appeal to the classy which
may contro} situations, and s£-thete
powers that be have no high ideals
of fair play they may be moved to
sive better employment opportunities
to Negroes by the bait even of great-
er friendliness to iis colored. cltentele
and afford west opportunities if cam
to Negroes to earn a Gecent liveli-
hood, its cash régisters will click
more often and better race relations
will prevail Which in itself will make
for ‘mutual prosperity. In brief, we
muni appeal to,the white man’s bu-
mranitarianism! if he 4s so lacking i
pumanity as i be unwillisg to re
copine x feliow, human being “we
mint appeal to his cupidity and urge
yim to fatten his hog before he Siayy
ae
Geo. Washington Kept
A List of 327 Slaves
Eeaifca Snuwcrad) avout ine Goa
ter, where wan er husband? “What
fanally nad she? What age ‘eas ate?
Of whas temper? What she active or
npitited ‘ir ceceuting her’ business?
Wheiber ober nd" honest? sow
Mrueh knowledge aid she’ paecena i
cookery ang Dew, well id he tnde=
of a table? Of What uppearaace
was she? #
“A paragraph added im the tetter
Stated: “She will ave 2 warm, de
cent dad enmefortable reser to ledge
fm and wil eat of the victuals of ont
table, bul. wil mot fit at He At. ny
ted a ling Satacaciory to-elther par
ty perhaps would se erawn Rere-
Stimson Plea for Aged
Negro Rétains Him Job
| WASHINGTION,—Through the in-
ltercession of Secretary Stimson with
| he Civil Service Commission, am ex
Henaion of one year in active ‘service
|bas been" granted to Edward Augiis-
tine Savoy, Nogro messenger who has
“served Secretaries of State for itty’
nine years.
OVRL 35 vents of age “Bedie" is tong
past the retirement age, but ae! has
| repeatediy been continued in thé serv-
ice. The Civit Service Commission felt
Ghat a limit to. thege extensions bad
[been reached. The lea of Me. Stim:
son waa granted only. after he had
cial quallfcationn” of the messenger
ard—the.commiission had’ stipulated
that the "exeeption: should not be
regarded as « precedent: © oe
Roland Hayes Back in
U.S.A. on Business Trip
Roland Hayes interngtionally famed
tenor, js back in America. The metro-
potttan star returned recently ax &
first-class passenger aboard the’ pe-
latial limer Paris.
feiss mae et
ty tf tas, Goda, so tntarent halk bees
Reet so Gaye
Ja e-atatement. made three inoatht
ago, mambers of the Groves family
Digmed weether eonditions a ths
‘Of tha potato market for thal
ftire to cure forthe: tat Ta
term le being opieated’ by seven sons
‘and © daughter of the late Junius G.
‘Groves; wish dled in 1025, . The elder
Groves came to Kansas’ beford the
begioning of the century sid rounded
hn potato empire of store than 400
‘acres by ‘working’ for forty "cents a
day. ‘The 22-room brick mansion on
the farm Ss famous for its hospital-
ity, Booker 7. Washiogten once hav.
Ing been a guiegt where.
Vice-President.
‘Hits Disregard
For Constitution
|, OCEAN CITY. N. J.—Spesking be.
{fore a gathering of members of th
|Methodiat Episcopal Church. Vie
President Curtis made.a strong ap
[peal for “reverence” and obedience
‘to.the Constitution’and “all ite art!
‘cles and amendments,” in an address
here. 2
|The Constitution ‘of the United
States,""he asserted, “is the keystone
to, our’ national strength, our pride
in Uie hour of prosperity. our coriso-
ation and rallying point under every
pressure Bf adversity, and whoever
eriously wishes to preserve our Con-
stitution in ite fullspurity and vigor
must of necessity wish to bave all its
articles asd amendments nonest!y
obeyed and faithfully enforcer.”
“What we need now more than
ever.” the Vice President ald, “is
Teverence for the Constitution” azd
respect for the courts of our country.
"To determine the extent to, which
legisiation is, beneficial and ‘beyond
which it is hurtful is the province
ot :statesmanship, White-people may
Gittet as to the windom of .enact-
ment of & particiller plecé of lezis-
latios or as to the amending of the
Constitution in regard thereto, st ts
impossible to ignora the Constitution
and unthinkable. to evade it by. ad-
ministrative policy, either national oF
State. \
Poro Moves to’ Chicago.
To Escape'So. Cramping
|. CHICAGO, Tl.—(By The Associa
[ted Negro Press). -Pove college he
moved i: headquarters to Chicazo
|Srs, Annie 2. Maione,, founder and
omer of the famous institution
made the announcement this week
in a lelter which was rent to morc
than 10,000 agents afiiated with thie
organization ‘and who are scattered
[throughout every neck and corner of
the emuntey.
Hohev Geen Rnown for samatim
in business eireler here that Men, Ma.
Hone was quiet: aeqsiting ext enzive
jtea! estate heldinzs-in Crieaze, Sie
Rows-owns ‘the entire lve on South
Pariwey.dormeriy Grand Boulevard,
between “4th and 45th streets, ‘This
bleak iu former yours wai neoupted
hy a gronpeof mnuitimili‘onairas, John
|B. Thompson, the restaurant men:
Thomas Carey, the brick magnate.
jand other wiz, wealthy men bail
‘Uie magnificent houses surrounded dy
expensive igwns which nit the blork
These buildings have heen remodeici
and for the present will house the
[Various departments of the business.
[One situcture for sometime thas been
‘oceupied by the College of Eeauty
Culture,
s Pore Block will he the designation
of this new Pore home. Mrs, Ma-
Yine i Bald To have plana Yor a” See
Tentious iyaiiding wegram, byt no
anzouscement of her intentions in
ThisHegard has deen made public,
Mrs." Malone did, however, issue
statement in which she cxpisined the
wsausfer of business from St. Louis
to Chicago.
“Weave felt for sorsetimes” she
onid, “that Chicago was ‘the logical
place’ fofPour*maiy plant.
“In the rst piace our: votume -of
business among. the 200,000 colored
residents of Chicago is larger than
at spy other: single point. Again,
We are. closer to the sources of sup-
ply with. consequent savings from a
manufacturing and shipping stand-
point, Too, Chicago, in my opinion
ig the capital of Negro America. The
people here are accomplishing things.
Tae atmosphere is one of commercial
striving, endeavor and proznise.
“St. Loula is a Wonderful city. I
ove mY OWN Peopre Ih Si, LaUiD, J
hive tried to serve them, But St.
Louls in, most, of its-attitudes ts a
jouthern city. My experience would
lead me to doubt that, Negro busi-
ness can grow to large magnitude in
the South’ witout feeling. somethlig
af restraint; as well ag a arial
yense of insecurity. a
“We are hopefat that Chicago will’
ster us an opportunity for continued |
yrowth and developement so that we
may have the privilege of rendéring
patter, service to our fellow women
ae ioe . ae
_Usder Ground
TREASURES
OU we: San oie
Bank Faibures: Git *.
hank Eahares. open te
Chinage, Voty. Heavily
2 eGaiatigd tomate aay 82°
‘Swit, pele to aad
Met Peete oscuteg
that’ pani il mths oma
bank's <dieuition.
secrts that =e sana
[the Bing Beale.on so-called colard
[property end- sought to bave-one of
‘the large banks in the loop which bad
jat other times'hglped the Binga Bank
- ty they. “The Joop bank,
f. destingd with regrets and
muda, the claim thit they were un~
able to ‘yet rid of mortgages-on Ne-
‘sro property among white purchas-
tra: Thesh mortgages were oo choice
-parcela_of real ieatate_on Michigan
‘boulevard and South Parkway.
Joe Binge’ Bank 2) reported “to
have close to $800,000 in mortgages
‘on colored propertae ne :
Southern Whites Beconie
Crackers In Russia Too
<Continurd irom Fase One)
that textle "Workerer wil hold a
“demonstration trie’ next Friday.
of a worker, who returned to.Russia
a fow years ago after many years’
residence in America, on a charge
of approving the action’ against Rob-
ipton, ‘The newspaper says the
metal workers’ union proposes (0
take similar steps in segard to Hewis
mad bis eeccclales $e. Stabagved,
3 eee
FOR SALE
Names and
Addresses |
p: stekanper |
200 Weat-335th Street |
SNew York City? NFL +
~ LUGK FOR ALL
Money, Magpiriess, wealth,
BRE se Ee Picante ans
GSS contac in tee
Siete eStart
Eee eontsinn ie Sees
Co ticte Oe ee a LS eesrenaar
1nd es Nat nsnanae Fea
Nomi" ope Rich Sad gle Wea
Sam | eb keel tek as, BSee
asnundee aor SEE, Che ae
ae “he tle EE eee
We SUTIN. Pennington, Noid
WIVSARVTInELS
SALW GTS HAVE LOCELG
eosiiRicjg, 4 Uatetiyiaeney Siac
Ue, AE ES
SS gh De
ES ee AO Miche Senta
foie PORE Bion stones terrae
EPL Sheers Conptce ince
eee Nae eae
SERINE? Saaoreet emia |
igi OS Coe eee ett E
GAR conta recent ad bet tact Muon
SAE STUNG Seteaaiaa tae dices
Eee Ce aint |
Hg Sew ntaetc AEE, Par gntave chee
Sele. nonace codslieny Setitaetiner esses cee |
Eakins nese ce ce
Tak ERS GUREAD, Goat On|
Pers ec 35 GROOT RE !
vegncat We Haein CUSINTRE tee eet |
iste teoteneain He Shea!
BET SECA |
You ie
crowning ~
f charm
ie
ar ge
“+ Belishes May, Lesding.Iady
Be thet can be Gremed °
ih say style vail, soft, ;
can have it by using’ *
EXELENTO
QUININE POMADE
- Bayins Slt sate ;
ol Exeuito. Its medica,
See
scel Festep ced soltoom.
Pee
wit fae he .
ht
Se
SR ey Caesar capanramad = ee
eos casio as a
eececree eens
Roce Ta ae =
eer S
SON Foitiae, sanene :
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Fumisies. som 0,60 aeons
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NEATLY furnizhed rooms snd kitchen:
TEATS plied ros ee ees
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Help Wanted—Male and Female
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“SHAVE WITHOUT A RAZOR”
SHAVE SUTHOUT A RAZORT
Seite ae UNE Ee Sane:
ORTER, Lis Went Tu. Streets New Fark -
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WANTED, Colored Men, 18 to 45, qualify
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sncipatate “rovoiene Countsizs trees at raat
DURANT ERS So Ws Walerton Str Boom
Breast Cleats,
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saefites monn Su io ecember, with
Rn petoueessteh W’fou ins Soe plank mow:
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Songwriters Service Co.
Ste, Neligwand Be, Tal wend Calerats
Soin onde eet aects ousmlted Uy Pleiurs
ESewie eda fee alien by Sot We
Benard ie Aiteasiae ete ing
N. SU GusARG HOUSE
INFORMATION
AND, jee. sreit Moters ane the meme
Bi 398, ie inarriied 00h Soe See Seon
TEDW. FERRELL :
seg dfethematlea! Servier
to We. UNTER WelFrszone! sen.
46 i
666". |
; .$
| Relieves u teaUache or-Noureigin §
[in S0- minutes, cheeke 2 Cold the |
frst day, and cheetes Matarie dat
three days. : eRe
| “606 alse in TPabiew. %
| FOR PERFECT EYEGLASSES —
conde
Se We)
. Os g We YY
a =e 7
Dr. D. KAPLAN
Optometrist *
RELIABLE snd REASONABLE
| For 20 Xenrs at
| 331 Lenox Avenue |
/ “ NEW YORK CITY
a OE Sue
Office Tel. Cathedral 3014°
Motto: Courtesy Ted Satletuctca
Henry A. Toppin
LicensedUndertaker and
——Funeral-Director—-
< 106 West 129th Street
- New York City
dase 186 Went a birt
MMOS ee en 3
| Strong’s Express
' Moving and General |
|. Trucking =< |
- DELIVERIES MADE 2
| PRICES: REASONABLE.
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Wight Phew Brae dete”
|
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