The Negro World
Saturday, September 20, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Daily Independent Weekly
No. 174, no. 175, no. 176, no. 177
Negro World
'A Newspaper Devoted Safety to the Interests of the Negro Raza
VOL. XXVIII.—No. 8
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 20, 1910
The Negro Must Learn to Pool All His Resources-Garvey
South African Nat'l Congress To Lead Fight Against Poll Tax for Africa's Liberation
Worcester Prisoners Released on Bail, Urge India's Non-Cooperation Program
CAPE TOWN, South Africa. A reception was given to the Worcester prisoners by the Cape Town branch of the African National Congress in the Banqueting Hall, on July 3. The prisoners were released from Worcester gaol the previous week on bail of £25 each. Elliot Tonjeni, who had just returned from a tour of the country districts, was also present. Many people were unable to attend the reception on account of the ridiculously high price of admission (2s. 6d.), but quite a good crowd turned up, and gave the fighters a rousing welcome.
"Swart Man Gaan Afrika Regeer"
The chairman of the Worcester meeting, J. Oosthuisen, received a tremendous ovation when he rose to speak. Speaking in Afrikaans, he described the frightful conditions prevailing in the countryside, where agricultural laborers often have to work from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. on the farms of the white land owners. The speaker said that those who remained outside the organization helped to perpetuate these conditions. Their salvation lay in their own hands. "Die smart man gaan Afrika regeer op dieinde," he said. "Ek gie nie in die predikant nie. Hye se om moeie steeic nie maar builhe het ons land gesteel." (Contributed by Rachel Right.)
Blease Defeated By S.C.Voters Now a Derelict
Blease Defeated By S.C.Voters Now a Derelict
"To. Hell with Please"
Answers "To Hell with the Constitution"
COLUMBIA. S. C., Sept. 11.
Senator Cole L. Blease, the champion of lynching and arch enemy of Negro and foreign peoples, went down to defeat Tuesday when the real people of South Carolina defended him at the polls. Official returned evidence that Palmetto Democrats were fed up on his tyrannical siege which has characterized his long term in the United States Senate. His retirements to private life may be attributed to a campaign speech in which he said, "To hell with the constitution, if it comes between me and the virtue of white women."
Pleaser's successor in former Congressman James F. Byrne of Spartanburg, who led the vitriolic Blease his 10,000 votes.
The news of Elisean's defeat will be celebrated by 12,000,000 Negro citizens who have written under his crushing denunciations on the Senate floor and in the public press. An editorial from the Pittsburgh Courier denouncing him as a lynch advocate and menace to American life and liberty so riled the Palmetto tyrant that he insisted the article be spread upon the Congressional Record.
His most dastardly practice was fanning the race prejudice spirit in the minds of the ignorant white factory workers and poor farmers upon whom he depended to reslect him each term, returning him to the Senate floor, where he would repeat his vicious and unwarranted attacks.
His recent campaign, however, met the disapproval of the white press. Leading South Carolina and southeastern dalles declared that Blease was going too far in his encouragement of lynching.
It seems that Blease's statement, "To hell with the constitution," was interpreted by the South Carolina voter to mean "To hell with Blease."
Live Agents
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THE NEGRO WORLD
IT MATTERS NOT
Where You are if you want to handle this argument
RACE WEEKLY
You should write an offer for your quota at quae. Big Profit can be made. Some shops within Deputy Home Power will buy a copy if approached.
We could make it more money and reason to advertise your paper. Let me know from you soon.
White—Chatham Dept.
THE NEGRO WORLD
THE LONDON AUTOMOBILE
Lieutenant Governor Punches Man in Cafe
NEW ORLEANS—Lieut. Gov. Paul N. Cyr engaged in a fast fight with R. Theriot, New Orleans, business man, in a coffee shop today after Theriot had tainted the Lieutenant Governor over betting on the outcome 'of the senatorial campaign between Gov. Huey P. Long and Senator Joseph K. Ransdell.
Bystandees separated them, but not until Theriot had a gash on his cheek and Cyr had cut his fast on his antagonist's teeth.
Negro Serfdom Must Be Wiped. Out from Earth
The Message of the African Princes on Visit to Hon. Garvey
In accordance with the principle adopted throughout their travels, the Royal ambassadors from the Congo who visited Jamaica recently-on an important confidential mission, refused to give any interview to reporters who discovered their presence here. Instead, on the morning when they departed in the same quiet manner as they had come, they left in the hands of a "Blackman" reporter the following message to the thousands of readers of this paper:
"We are imploring, the sympathy of the outside world for the native sons and daughters of Africa whom white intruders in our country have subjected to the greatest injustice while they extract super-profits from our raw material sources. Only those who have traveled in Africa and come in close, personal contact with the African Nations can fully appreciate the conditions under which they suffer at the present time. Greece brutality, suffering and death stalks around at every mining centre in the continent. From Sierra Leone, down the West Coast to within the Congo belt extends a system of serfdom and forced labor that is einfach the manhood and womanhood of the black toiling masses.
"Tribal Chiefs, Kings and Princes throughout Africa are now propagating against this oppression and forcible projectorization" of the native musics, who have been forced by poll tax and bus tax to abandon their pastoral life and become wage slaves for French, Belgian and British Landlords. On the whole, the problem of colored labor contributor in its many
President With His Control Over Civil Service Ought to Remedy Negro's Plight
WASHINGTON.—The recent statement made by the director of the census, showing that 47,000,000 people are gainfully employed in the local population of 122,000,000 in the contiguous United States, carries some figures respecting the employment in different branches of industry that show just whose the economic backwardness of the Negro may be improved.
When President Hoover said through Judge William C. Hueston, speaking to the National Negro business League, Aug. 20, that "he realized that the Negro citizens are greatly in need of more and permanent and profitable employment," and that he intends to assist in bringing about better conditions, he laid a basis for his plans through the facts secured by the census.
In the first instance, fully one-third of the population is under 16 years of age and hence in school. Yet 1,000,000 of them are at work where there are no child labor laws, and that condition obtains in the South.
Fire and a half million people are 60 years of age and 3,000,000 are over 70, yet at least two million of them are working. Here again the Negro is unprotected and has a large population above the age limit.
In the totals, the director finds that "about one-quarter of the total population, men and women, is engaged in some form of agriculture." Among the Negroes in the last century 58.9 per cent were engaged in work, or almost in payment of income to the community.
We Can Succeed Only to the Extent That We Can Rely on Ourselves to Support Our Institution
Most of Our Businessmen in America Misunderstand the Attitude of the White Man; He Means No Good to the Negro
He Would Help Us Build a Church, a Y. W. C. A. and Other Harmless Social Institutions But Never to Further Our Economic Independence—Let the Race Cooperate All Over the World
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE. Greeting:
It was with deep regret we read a few weeks ago of the sad happening of the closing of the Binga State Bank of Chicago. We hope by now Mr. Binga has been able to re-open his banking institution. (It is stated that Binga Bank may soon reopen.—Editor.) As related, the Binga Bank is one of the oldest Banks among the colored people in America. Mr. Binga, up to recently, was rafted as a rich man. The collapse comes as a startling surprise to those who have watched with admiration the growth of the American Negro in big business.
Mencken Says His Wife, a Native of Alabama, Still Believes in Slavery
Our Study of Things
Those of us who have studiously and keenly studied the attitude of the white man toward the Negro have always been afraid that most of our business men misunderstood the attitude of the white man in America toward the Negro. We have always stated and have always explained that the white man in America means no good to the Negro commercially, industrially and politically except to use the Negro to suit his own selfishness. We have often stated that the white man will assist the Negro to build a church, a Y. W. C. A., and harmless special institutions, but he will not assist the Negro to start and further big business which will naturally lead to commercial independence.
Assistance Needed
Assistance Needed
From the report of the failure of the Binga Bank, it is evident that at the time when the bank could have been saved, white bankers refused to negotiate business with the Binga interest, thereby leaving the institution to fall. That is just what we always predicted. The Negro in business in America will only succeed to the extent that he can rely upon himself to support his own institutions which seems to be very hard and difficult, because he has not yet laid the proper foundation. Any big business that the Negro starts in American dependence upon the white man, for it is common to reverse according to the disposition of the white man. The white man knows this, and that is why he laughs up his sleeve when the Negro attempts anything big without first laying the background to support such an effort on his own account.
Hope to Receive
As stated before, we hope the Benga Bank will recover itself and thereby disprohibit the dangerous reactions that would naturally follow if the bank wish to remain permanently closed. We are suggesting, however, that the only way the American Negro business man can stabilize his business is to link up his economic interest, with that of other Negro people of the world. As a race we must pool our resources and thereby be ready at any time to come to the assistance of each other so as to make it impossible for other people to destroy us so easily.
The Cooperation Spirit
Among white institutions, whenever there is a failure, generally there is a willingness of other business men to rescue the unfortunate institution so as not to create a condition of distrust among the people. We have not reached that point as
BALTIMORE. Md.-Henry L. Mencken, widely known critic and editor of the American Mercury magazine, says his new wife believes in chattel slavery.
Mencken, a confirmed bachelor for fifty years, was married August 27 to Miss Sarah Powell Haardt, of Montgomery, Ala.
A correspondent for a press association asked Mencken to answer a number of written questions on marriage which the editor did and at the end Mencken voluntarily added the following paragraph:
"The bride-elect and I differ somewhat on politics. As my unreconciliable competence, she believes in chattel slavery. Many of her relatives in Alabama in fact still hold slaves."
C. L. M. P. R. L. Y. E. L. W.
yet, but it is this that we are suggesting, and this can be brought about only by universal cooperation. The Negroes of the world represent wealth, if sufficiently organized and properly directed, to not only build and support their own financial and commercial institutions but, would make it possible for us to realize every bit of our political aspirations.
Building and Safeguarding
It is on these methods that the Universal Negro Improvement Association has been working and especially with the new programme launched at the last convention in 1829. These who have given careful attention to the programme will see in it the great possibility of building and safeguarding our institutions and supporting them so that there will be no cause for discouragement such as is produced periodically by failures of Negro institutions.
Stabilize the Race
Stabilize the pace
Let us look forward to a grand and glorious future through universal cooperation. Let the big business men
Mississippi. More than 100,000 Negroes are still held in slavery in Alabama. As a Liberal I naturally deplore this, but I certainly am not a reformer, and hence plan to do nothing about it."
Mencken has always been known to Negro readers as one of the fairest editors in America on the Negro question. Frequently he has written some biting criticisms of the Negro, but just as frequently he has written in defense of the race. His magazine The Mercury, has printed more articles written by Negros and by white people about Negroes than any other magazine of its time in the country. In 1857 Mencken wrote a letter entitled newspaper articles for a string of Sunday newspapers in which he declared, his belief that the Negro was not an inferior race. A column of criticism arises in mighty places, especially in the South and a number of programs immediately threatened for dismissal of criticism.
of our past in America unite with
the agrigustinii Negro of the West
Indies and Africa. Let us pull to-
gether and work cooperatively to not
only stabilize our financial and poli-
tical institutions, but to stabilize the
race.
With very best wishes,
I have the honor to be
Your Obaghici Servant,
MARCUS GARVEY.
Editor-in-Chief,
"Edelwein Park,"
67 Slipe Road,
Croton Roads P. O.,
St. Andrew, Jamaica, B. W. I.
August 18, 1920.
P. S.—I have to remind the members, Branches, Divisions and Garvey Clubs that it is imperative for each and every one to do his part in supporting the Parent Body. We are now lining up for active work between now and our Convention of next year. We want every member, division and branch to line up so that success will crown our efforts as we go along. I am also reminding all divisions, branches and clubs to send in their Annual Assessment Tax which is overdue. Reports should be sent regularly and it is only by so doing that the Division will be rated to take their stand in the next Convention. Let everybody cooperate in this direction. Friends and members are also reminded to make remittances on the Six Hundred Million Dollar Fund as pleaded. All communications should be forwarded or directed to the Secretary-General, Universal Negro Improvement Association, Edelewis Park, 67 Slipe Road, Cross Roads P. O., St. Andrew, Jamaica, B. W. L.
M. G.
Graft Chargen
Rock Jamaica
KINGSTON, Jamaica.—Charges of graft bribery applied to Mr. Tremendous,
a controller, by Mr. Simpson, a broker, associate, therefore to divert
the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation from being a political
affiliate in the city. Positions will be rented by the government putting him to
mature personal expenses and damaging the premises.
U.N.I.A. Wins Two Points in Marks' Case; May Soon Take Possession of Liberty Hall
God Kept Waiting While Worshippers Slew Whales
THORSHAVN, Faroe Islands.—For the first time in thirty years Faroe Islanders have had a wholesale killing of whales from a school of 100 discovered close to shore by a Danish flashing inspection ship. Attention of the islanders was attracted by the sounding of sirens. The fishermen took the small boats and drove the whales into shallow water and slaughtered them. When the school was sighted even divine service was auspended and every male, including the minister, joined in the hunt.
Cuban Officials Slight, Harass Race Notables
Cuban Officials Slight, Harass Race Notables
Took Hint from U.S. Government to Discourage Negroes' Entry
HAVANA, Cuba.—Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune, famous woman leader of the United States, and President R. P. Sims of Bluedefield Institute, with members of their families, were held back and annoyed when they were to embark at Havann.
The Cuban officials later claimed that they acted under suggesting wishes of the United States government officials in harassing and discouraging Negroes from coming into Cuba. Strangely enough, this annoyance and harassing does not discriminate between those who go seeking work, as some from Jamaica, and those traveling as tourists and educators, like Dr. Sims and his daughter and Mrs. Bethune and her grandson, who came to a party from Florida.
"It In Americas"
President Sims and his daughter, being lighter of skin, were about to be passed by the official, while Kira Bethune, being plainly Negro, was being held up. But they made it known that they were all of the same party and refused to be separated. The firm stand of Mrs. Bethune and the intervention of a colored family in Cuba saved the day. But the officer, to save his face, hold back their return ticket, for which they had to call later. The Cubans say it is the Americans; the Americans, when you tackle them about it, out of the hearing of Cubans, say it is the Cuban government. The Negroes believe the, inspired, by Americans. They had even refused to sell the Customs.
Youth's Invention To Curl, Accidents
Race Bay Invents Railroad Gate to Eliminate Crossings Mishaps—Kall Mugnates Interested
An invention that will revolutionize railroad travel and prevent train accidents at crossings has been perfected by an Ohio youth and railroads all over the country are seeking to acquire information about the new discovery.
Eugene Arlhur, Barnes, of Liffini, Ohio, recently left Washington after spending a week here having his invention patented. Young Barnes has perfected a railroad gate that positively prevents accidents at road crossings. An automobile may amass itself up of crash into the gate, but it never reaches the train. The heaviest impact will not damage the gate.
Prevents Being Struck
In explaining his "gate" to a World reporter this week, Barnes said the gate remains closed and opens only at the approach of a car when a train is not coming. If a train is within a certain number of yards of the crossing the gate stays closed until the train passes.
The new gate will release the railroad of all responsibility of accidents and save companies thousands of dollars in accident costs as a driver will find it impossible to be struck by a train even if he disregards the gate or he will mansh his own car and end hurt the gate or match the fall.
Control "Fall Trains"
The practice of "falling" a train to a crumbling will slow, lime piles where one of these piles are unstable and prying down. At night it appears light will be hurried down the gap of all these. A control mechanism
Former Judgements by Chief Justice in Sensational Litigation Modified
KINGSTON, Jamaica, B. W. L. Another episode in the long and complicated series of litigations involving principally the unincorporated and incorporated bodies, called the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and arising from the action of G. O. Marks substituted by Maa Craig, was enacted in the Full Court yesterday with Their Honors Justice H. I. C. Browne, president; Justice Adrian J. Clark and Justice Commander Bodily, (acting for Mr. C. E. Law).
The substance of the judgments delivered yesterday on issues previously ventilated, is that the St. Andrew and Kingston Divisions of the U. N. I. A. have, in effect, got everything that they contended for.
That is to say, the Appeal Court has now allowed the application for an inquiry in respect to the order made by the chief justice for the levy and sale of the goods of the St. Andrew Division as also an inquiry into the sale of Liberty Hall, to establish whether it belongs to the defendant corporation.
The chief justice was refused to grant both these inquiries. Judgments were delivered in the following appeals:
(1) Appeal in the matter of (Continued on Page Eight)
Abyssinia Ends Slave Traffic And Banditry
Report to League Indicates
Rus Tafari Worked
WASHINGTON, D. G.—Accord to the advice to the League of Nations made public by the State Department this week, the government of Abbyssinia has practically eliminated she, slave, trafic which have been carried on by bandits in the country. Dating back to ancient times, slave traffic has been carried on in the country by bandits, but now their activities have been eradicated by patrols, and the practice exists only in remote and inaccessible parts of the large country.
First Slaves Were Captives
Are a report explaining slavery in the country the text discloses the following facts:
The first slaves were prisoners who were unable to pay the ransom and remained as a consequence in the service of the conquerors. These prisoners married, children were born and their descendants continued in the natural order of things to be slaves. The Abyssinians, who were constantly at war, increased the number of their prisoners and consequently the number of their slaves. Accordingly, there gradually grew up a caste of slaves which became very numerous. Such slavery, moreover, was in conformity with the precepts of Hebrew law, with which the Abyssinians were imbued and which formed the basis of their religion.
Temptations $ ^{c} $
Later, certain persons who owned large numbers of slaves were solicited by slave traders—mainly Arabs, who supplied the foreign markets—to part with some of their slaves in exchange for money or merchandise, and many allowed themselves to be tempted by the magnificent offers they received. Gradually, this became lucrative trade and finally, when the demand for slaves exceeded the supply, the
APPEARING!
Weekly Feature Articles by
HON. MARCUS GARVEN.
All Negroes should make sure
their DUTY to read each issue
every one of them. Full and
factors and important facts of
INTERNATIONAL IMPORTANCE.
Keep yourself WELL IN
FORMED.
If you have any difference in
greeting our pages you should
cry it to be kept there in your
letter.
SUBSCRIPTION: KARL
Dumblie.
$2.50 One Week
1.25 Six Months
The NEGRO
WEEKLY
WEEKLY
aN i a ar NR ee als Sele a:
Samay Wicut AY ieery Bit!
Ce Gee ee ina Fee ee re: F
ne iim.
Be age Soy tena a aoe a a
ion, Ford Flays Factionalism,,
Fee pee 2 Rg OT ig ee Seige a
"".\ Superstition and-Ignorance
3 Pee geet REC:
Jealousy, Selfishness Must.) Mercus Garvey, founder ep4 Presi-
“Be Eliminated, Chancel. [foi tem er nacwecta ane coeur
Toro (Curcey’s Day. lacoeper benersa2 pus an'us prt
“Liberty Hall, 2667 Eighth avenue,
New York City, Sept. 7.—After the
ritualistic sérvices a very lively mu:
sical program was, rendered by the
choir and band. A aoprano solo en-
titled “The Lost, Chord.” was render-
ed by our treasurer, Mrs, W. Paul
‘Alsogone by Nurse Howard which won
applauses from the ‘audience.
‘The President-General’s_ message
was read, and the hymn, “God Bléss
‘Our Presidgat” was nex: sung very
Justily and cheerfully. Hon. Ethe) af.
Collins, secénd vice-president - and
resident secretary, ‘then introduced
Mr. Herbin Hart, who had come from
the Port Limon Division, Costa Rica.
to’de ome with us in the great work
we are engaged in for racial uplift.
Mr.Hart Drought greetings from co-
workers, and stated that he way giad
to be in our midst for upity and co-
operation, in the carrying on: of
Uberty and justice -for all mazicind.
Hon. Lady Daughtery spoke of her
at Detroit, and of the doublecrossing
she hed received from her race with
that of the white race:.Up to the
-present time the had pot received" one
penny for her services, although over
$10,000 was taken in as gate receipts.
and, she had spect over. $700.in the
undertaking, es
‘Mr. and Sirs. H: McWillle, spoke. &
few encouraging words on ‘the eve
‘of their departure to (heir homeland
ait, bade FGand Bye" to. their col-
Jeagues with whom they had worked
together for’ many years. Rev. C., P.
Green then called on the speakers of
the eveningvafter he had made a few
remarks ux to the trend of affairs
affecting the Negro race in general.
Hon. L. W. MeCurtney expresaed
her. grate(uingss of Nelng prevent at
the mecuung to do her bil in further
promulgating the cause of an Affti-
can redemption through the inspira
tien of the teachings of the Hon. |
.
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SRE WELY TS / 28S
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See Results in 9 Deys Gr
Bioney Back
ei would'you ke to mzke your sn
pice umes Isher in nine dave aad fe
(Ge come eime mexe fp 28 sate and sincoth
Br velver?
How vould you Mike to, Jone'an nate
tractive dark complesion “that von don't
feed and dont want. and at ie came
Seeke better than you ever Have in your
wee
“How would you lke to rentove al dark.
spots, pimples and fecekies and” at the
game’ tine make your skins clear and
Gieeh that iu will Gompet adauration?
+ Took in your mirror today and soe how
Gare your sin is now—ten mall the
coupon below and get tag compicte garo=
Gene Beaty and ‘Bienehing set. Te $s
aay to use, First, make your skin abso
fitely clean ith the cleansing crexm—
ext whooth on a smail bit of the Beauty
Bleach with the"iinger dinsnieave on al
RIgRE and. wach of next morning with
sneMivin Reach Soap. All three prep
aration come with the set). After you
Rave dene. this for nine: nights, see how
Many times whiter your skin ina become.
Make-This Uoney-Back”
Toe
s rena you. like to make your skin nine
Wwofter in nine “nights? Will you
this ayasing new treatment, wi:tout
& eee cent? . Then send for the
Mite waitag In nine tights Hf 50
radthe: treatment set back.
i re
“or-write today— yay Pemgpes $1.8
pres errr ‘Mail coupon, today.
4 Send No Money:
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REGS. GOSCOY, TANGO: GPL, LIES:
é of tas WILL kA
#3 (elec pein prt
3 : y atkeX Xa" the:
Sand note fo get discouraged.
“Bear in tnind that the work-we are
engaged {ols Got a selfish task, and
should net be viewed" from & eign
angle, If we are to accomplish’ any’
success. It is an uphill task, and ko
we need to concentrate our minds
and'thoughts on the objective, Our
leader has given“bis very, life’ and
dealth in this work, it, therefore,
needs ‘cooperation onthe “part of all
members to work together. Do what
you can 90 that ‘dur -thildren’s chil-
dren’ may not be hewera of wood and
drawers of water, but be dependent
on themselves by shaping. thelr own
dentiny.” *
“THe Hon. Grover C. Ford, highs
chancellor of the U.N. I. A. August
1929 of the World, expressed the fécl-
ing ‘of delight in beinge present to
speak to the -many members and
friends of the “Garvey. Club {rom &
practical viewpoint, and as he saw
necessary. He sald he did not come
into the U, N. I. A. simply to be.
financial gain, but he was here, to-
pight to ask the membéra and friends
to come together for their own good
and welfare. :
“Let. factionalism be eliminated
from the Negro race, both tn the or-
ganization, lodges and churches, for
only thea will we beable to work
cowards one objective, andwin @ short
while the Negro wilt be respected
acnong menWe must stop fighting
pach other, leaders cauat atop cheriah-
ing jealéusy and work one with the
ntlier for the ultimate aucckss of true |
‘iperty and. happiness, It $s under-
stood that to be a leader, sacrifices |
must be made, and.even with all the
smbarrassment’ and impediments
placed In the way we must, ¢prry oD.
realizing that the.time will:come when |
wich barriers will fade away
He made references to Lazarus be- |
ng dend for four days, and yet ae!
as ‘restored to life, hig grave viother |
emoved ia which he was’ bound, aiid
ne walked forth to his people. He|
nletured the Negro sace as ping yer
n-their grave clothes, bound hand
nad font pyrite, hace and ser |
fshness to each other. Superstition
yas also bounc: us ih mind and
hougbt, thus hampering our own
DrORTRS. =
“Je we Sill but Jiston to" the My dt!
Africa for the ‘Africans, those at]
feme and those abroad” then we can |
naké off jhe grave clothes thet’ have
ound us ‘vo lightly” these hundreds
st years, an{ become free men and|
vomen.. ‘The march of progress may
jot be stayed, Is momentum has a
world-wide sweep. People, once down-
roilden, “arc hoidin up ihetr hends
ind demanding tacit rights. Through
he instrumiataity ef our louler, the
Jon. Morcis Garvey, we have been |
avekened from the RraNg, oF despa. |
Some of au hive shaken off the stave }
jothes, bu many are yet bennd Iying |
elplers, Dickering ‘among. ourselves, |
nlacing further impeciments in the |
vay of these that are‘ working: for |
omplete eniineipation. Way not xet|
onethar with one accafd for-factetl
iplif? We cannot be cuccossfel whea |
ve afe full of projiutics. An Inactive |
nun oF woman ts Be good to the on-|
vardtinareh of people. The race;
seeds cooperation, unity and Jove. We i
an only demonstrate our manhood
nd womenhood not Ds talkinge but
yy.dolns thé right thing fer the gea-
wal upaét of humanity.”
The -meeting wan brought ta & close
with the benediction by Rev. CP.
ren, and the slaying of the Ethto- |
oa Neh Antti: i
: “EM. Gomans, |
‘ . Sanapens: 1
We are having-a plenty of beat
ignton, bULIL is often broken by the
refreshing show8rs; so ft ts stil 3
haney Lime iy sunshing Tierida, |”
Special Sunday
| Eve Program |
| ~ at the. :
| GARVEY CLUB, Inc.
| 2667.8th Avenue .
jThis Sunday Sepis 220i
At 8.30’P. Me.
. '
Principal Speaker
HON. GROVER €. FORD |
High Chancellor of .the.U: N..
4, AL, August 1929-of the
: World :
Added Fosture Guest A
Reaownsd tence, member
isk Jubiien Singers. Juyt re-
urned frem an expended com
this promising ‘Roland Hayes’
madition there. has bom
eerenees & wonertnl nites
£ Cromaghsn Naat: das eels 28
Rion Macks cc
le
a fetus Dlvoginss: Tien oe
SAL ode ite tin Woo cn eee
ade aoe tere Oa
OF ee ee
Sai seacasteh ©, Hasek ha: poowt.
dene in apeeontate weet me
plained its object and aanouneny that
it will’ meet every: firet aod third
Ayadaye of imach month 2p Ie ot
speakers inciodes: Mr. arengy: tae
fiat Enkys, “alter 3 £ thd
Negro World and “mete
ers of the Women's Pace Sacibty,
iabor ‘uslone, sclentfie. associations,
ete. Bi *
‘A. thought = provoking addreda,.
“American Democracy. and the Ne-
xro,”” was ably delivered by Sr.
Rothschild Francis, former editor of
The Exancipator, St. Thomas, ‘Vir-
gin Islands of the United States.
Questions and discussion followed. .
Literature was distributed, Pro=
fessor Oakly Johnson will.” speak
on “Labor and Unempléymeit” Sun-
tay, September 21. to
Perkins:Speaks j
What is. claimed to be ® grow-
ing wrinkle in Harlem Politica, was
freely gossiped around at the meet-
ing of the Tiger Division U.N, L A
last Sunday night.,
Perkins and Billups were picked to
win in the Primaries today: among
other reasons because it is alleged
wHIgR Yellow" Republicans delites
ately refused to examine the. “Black
Candidates” superior clatms to the
Romination, ‘This aituation te rexent
ed by the mars of Harem voters {r-
sespectivecol car ¢r coins
Leading speakérs et Sunday night's
Rally ciaimed that theyphad exam-
ined and carefully acrutinized ‘the
records of both Perkins and Billups
over a long period of time and that,
these’ records proved themeeives en-
viable records of Public Service with-
cut tear fuer OF prayuaien
Ie waa further polnteg out, that
these men were no upstart politicians
and that the ew Negro Judges should
he iniarendegt men if Satie tn the
New Municipal faurt is to be fair.
Garvey Club J. C. Corps
‘The chitdren, of the Garvey Club,
Lis, assembled at Liberty Hall, 2667-
Sth Ave. N.Y. City, on Suhday at-
iernoon,s September 7th, at 3 P. M.,
on Garvey’s Dayf at which time the
children gave a very interesting pro:
fram in Songs, recitations, addreaser
end pieno and violin selections. The
opening ode, “From Greenlaney Icy
Diountains” was sung, followed by
the President-Genere!'s hyme. Then
cume a “Welcome Address” by Maa-
ter Mreddie Thompson, a “Piano Solo”
by award Willisms, and a “Read-
ing“by Evalyn Bretco and others.
‘A very spirited address wan de-
Livered by Mr. Moody of Africa, Mra.
Thompoon, the directress of the Ju-
veniles, in hes remarks sald, “If
Garvey is with us, who cag be ngatnst
us?" . Capt Harris of the J.C, C.
Glen .addrossed the mecting,- and
ntsted thet ur Ex-Seeretary, ise
Gertrude Jathes, had feft us for her
Motherland a Yew days ago. The
Unit swift miss her for the wage that,
she had dene ameng them, We wish
lier mssnfe vayAre nerore the sens
and others that had gone, We hone
to carry an and on the work of
Garveviom, untti we roach victory.
Miss Vienna Pludd is now our sec:
retry in the place of Minn G. Janes.
G. BCVWARRIS, Cant, J.C. Cc.
Vu FLUDD, Seety., 3...
Wilson Re-cleeted -~
The Head ef Anders
J. Finley Wisp seas ‘recteeted
Grant Exalted Red on Wednesday
for the ninth tme. in the middie
‘et 'his annul addréss he wre’ inter-
tuptdd byea ation from the ear
that Ae be resiccted by accinmation.
‘The rule wore atepended and Mz.
Won: was elected wasnimously.
August, the last month for texck-
or idlenese aud chit, frotie-just 3
Little availa before {C2 att over.
SRUGUEROSEEUSERAUED DCSE UGCLEEUUGLECUSSEOOREEIE:
: a 5
= SLUGGISH :
E "| mave taken BlackDraught 3
E ‘helped me wonderfully,” writes 3
= Miss Theo 5. Whitfield, of =
=. 1450 Center St, Birmingham, =
: whose picture appears above.
fred sing, en oat het oral
amy work. I would heve a
j bad taste in my mouth.
“Someone ‘told mecto try
Biack-Dreaght, which Idid. I:
Black Depught.” a
‘Thedfor??s Block Drenght 4
enay to take. emote.
cftepcieate. . Get 2 poaaga,
ian.
7 fee ce 4
Far Crs =|
Alen Ss o Ai. ae
ee ee eee pe spaniel ea ce
Even Sheet ei a rop.of ead
pe ak Seated i pe ht rae i
2 NBR "Sapies Eibeniien | ea tee 3
Hraotte aah eed oe eee
‘| ou: Meptbettegy: Bir Siietaa “tah cane to
“Dime, . Hadfens, interwaijonal or-
gcaisen Hon, Grover: C Ford, nigh
chancellor, president of the Garvey
]@tub;. superintendent end manager,
low. members and “friends gf the
legro race, I-bying.to you this after-
noon the heartfelt greetings af gur
great. leader, ‘the Hon. Marcis.Gar-
vey. I have but recently left, ‘the
‘shores “Ot “the “beautiful Isle of Je-
maica. Mr. Garvey 1s loaking’ fine,
in splehdid health and ag enthusiastic
over the great work be 1s doing today
as he was on the first day he atarted.
He istas dynamic’ as. ever. We have a
great leader in Marcus Garvey...
+ Congratulates: Mme. DeMens
“I wish to congratulate. Mme: De-
Mena on the great paprade you have
bad today. Under her splendid man-
Agement abe has brought out this
wonderful assembly before the great
concourse of people, regardicas of
ace, color or previous conditions of
They Bung from the win-
dows, they applauded as they. saw
the portrait -of -Matcus -Gervey. On
the sidewalks. and in.the windows
they -applauded -'vogterously... There,
Ties Deon Do“ipuder ot motiern times
equal to- Marcus Garvey. 3
Going Strong as
‘Iam more than delighted—I am
overjoyed when I can witness-for my-
aclf this great rénaissance of our
race; this great cutpourigg from the
hearts of our people, Marcus Garvey
has so imbedded himeelf in the hearts
ot..the Negro people of the world
that at’ the very name of fhe UNT-
/NERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT
ASSOCIATION you can get a crowd
ANYWHERE, ANY TIME of the day
for night within the United States of
America, the British Went Indies or
our motherland Africa, His name is
known througtiout the world. His,
namie represents “the shopes and as-
pirations of the -modern Negro. His
hand. stands for. advancement.of the
race, for mankcod—for the Negroes
‘of the werld, We, Bin followers and |
co-workers, are proud of this. Though
absent in body he fe present tn spirit
at every gathering, every meeting of
the “UNIVERSAL NEGRO IM- |
PROVEMENT ASSOCIATION — we |
feel the very presence of Marcus Gar- |
vey. So, my friends you must feet
Ty ea Wa bet ag ot augue |
this anniversary of eur-canvention.
You must feel like Jinmy.Walker—
that we are ‘GOING’ STRONG!’
"You have shown it to the people
of New York today. You ave shows |
it to the enemy. They are from 2fis-
sour!; you keow, and you have GCT|
to show them and today. you Bave|
chown thém that the Spirft-of Marcus |
Garvey has nubvived ali of the gb-
staclun hindrances,-prizons aad everys/
thing and that thie cplrit ike that of |
Jena “Brow “GSES: - MARCHING |
Metre of the Ago |
| Sect heppy, my friends, for we are
Indeed the heirs of the ages. When T!
thisk of the hletory of our race I
am proud to have cescended from‘
Ethiopia. Waen I think of aricient !
Btatop{a with all of her story; whea
1 think of her shasters of arte and of
solenecs; when I thinks Of her. peopic’™
whe were tbe"readgniizdd Inghest cist
Hnation when the white man was!
inlaing in caver. Ab, ray frlends, T 2m |
proud! You he proud. Remember the
Ines “of Dunbar,. ‘BE PROUD!.3E)
PROUD! i
“And, we have only crown proud
when Méreus Carvey came, on ‘the!
fone aad said, “Negroee-fook up: |
ward; “Inok onward’ and not unit
thon id we bogie fo study our Ais-/
tory. Before then we bad besa study. |
ins about the Duke of Wellington and
Napoleoa and all kinds of bistozy of |
the white race, but the UNIVERSAL |
NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIA~}
TION bas turned the eyes of the Ne- |
groes on their own history. We find |
that we have achistory to be proud |
of, A history, my friends fo be, proud |
of, Wel are the heirs of the ages."The |
heirs of ancient Ethiopia who handed |
down” learning Yo ‘the’ white ‘mem.{
ETHIOPIA—with . all of her gold, |
diamonds, beautiful scanery'—we the ;
Negro people, thé Negro population ;
with its, motto ‘Africa at Home and)
Abroad'—-are heirs to that vast coun: |
try—we are the heirs of the ages. |
March Toward Africa i
‘We heve been fobbed of our inher. |
tance. taken from our hotne, enslaved |
in the’ most cruel slavery of the!
world, but in this 1930 we are proud-
ly parading the atreeta of New York,
oe E Pee Eos SS
f Cf ak daw BOE DN Ye
FO THE READERS OF THE NEGRQ WORLD
. {Who are numerous) - * a:
Ic is 2 pleasure forthe MANAGEMENT of this, YOUR mouth-
piece, to greee you and thank you for your continuation as one of
our readers. We have at ait times been greatly pleased’ with YOUR
PATRONAGE; ‘that is why we try, incur humble way, to CHAM-
_ PION, so fearlessly yours as well 2s our cause, .
Wre feel thet out of ali the Race papers published in America,
outs should be given first call as a: HOUSEHOLD mediuén of in-
formation, Our paper CAN be read. by.tie ENTIRE family. We
publish only news-thet is FIL to read.: Fos.the growing child it is
an INSPIRATION and for the eldérs FOCD FOR THOUGHT!
We want to get closer ro you.and know you:better: Therefore
our seaders are-asked to write us and tell us how they like’ our
general make-up, and also-to‘give us any good suggestions they may
have that’ would be of benefit. . A =. a
... Now,.seaders, we want to take you into-our confidence.* We
feel sure that if in any way you could help ‘us from a financial stand-
point you would do so, There are times when ali business institu-
tions, become’ strained." It“is only those institutions that are actually
doing ‘service to a’ cause, racially: or otherwise, whose profits aré so
narrowed that it prevents them from expanding. ‘We want to: ex-
pand! “AWé want to stretch out as it were. In all of this expansion
YOU, our’ readers, will be ‘the. ones to: benefit, as we are doipg it
for YOUR sakes. “But we are FINANCIALLY handicapped and if
there is any possible: way you can give us.’ helping hand to carry?
- We want to: taise $2,000. (TWO -THOUSAND DOLLARS),
‘between now atid November the ‘first..: CAN YOU HELP? WILL
YOU HELP? . Let us feet yous hands extend it-to us and we'll be’
plewed aoe ges! M
* _Send-whateyer you can direct. co the: NECESSITY. FUND of”
. THE NEGRO“WORLD, 355 Lenox Avenué, New York City:
|... “Alloa the 10 thank, you a choutand ‘inies: in ‘advance for what,
i ETT Re am ah of arepeeatel, :
ee y dense de ee ~ MAROLD.G.. SALTUS,- s
OG GS Spe Eg heb abi -) hue, Beepimess Manager, 0.
[your Sesetiitd a: ‘canoes be
Faignitied: but” cast “out “fear:
‘fear a nian because of hta complestion.
‘Who. cares: about his completion any-
way? We have ‘the aicst. beautiful
race in thé world, The moot beautiful
‘of ail the races. We have then: frem
snowy white with blonde locks -and
blue eyes to the darkest brunette ith
curly haje and that neatehiese-emile.
Africa for the Africans . -
‘Whep I see the work that Marous
Garvey has done I'am reminded of
Gc {008 snd the time when. Marcus
larvey stood on & soapbox—not
ladder but a soapbox—on Lenox ave-
nue speaking. Many passed by as he
stood an his soapbox. They continued
to pass and said: ‘What's thet crazy
West Indian talking about?’ But he
was talking about @ free and redeem-
od Africa; talking about ‘Africa for
the Africans at. bome and: abroad.’
Presently crowd gathered: .about
him. and they listened intently. Mr.
Garvey 1s an “excellant spaakeri-he
speake fluently ‘and swiftly an the
words fall from bis mouth like pearls
from the string around your: neck.
And be fired their aspirations; they
greeped forthe higher. education.
Many :of’ our -mothers—and-‘fathers
were denied the right ‘to go to school.
Some of the sons and daughters of
those mothers and fathers are here
today. And thoue sons and danghters
can remember how ther mothers stood
over the ‘washtubs and their fathers
stayed in the fleld that they migtt
have the advantage of higher educa-
tion and become maaters in the arts
and sciences. All honor to those
mothers and fathers, all honor to
them: .
‘Lest. we forget :
Leat we forget.’
Negroes, pe
“But my guessage to you la Yo-never |
forget that upon all. our members:
rests the duty—the sdlema duty—te
xo out and compel others to corne :n. |
Everybody here is not a member of
le orgableation, but tsey are’ tal |
ing by. thelr presence that they are |
interested and we: want them with
us to close around this’ grest cause
for the time 1s fast approaching when
Africa will be redeemed—it i almost
nere: It is very nice to -have ‘their
sympathy and good wishes but what
we waft them to do is to come. in|
with us—with a perseverance, with
heir hearts and souls—céme. in an
well the number #0 that we wilt join
ands and belt the world. i
30, Negroes, of the 20th century
=this is your day and my day of|
portunity, Cénditions in the coun-}
ry are fast driving the Negro to, seek |
onséwhere elee in the sun-driving ||
; ,COMING - COMING --—, COMING .
| See the Annual Convention Parade
Of Sunday, August 31a, ts:
____IN MOVING PICTURES ON THE SCREEN
ON TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 15th at 8.30 P.-M.
At the Vanceroy Hall, 2267 8th Avei, New York City
Under the Auspices of the Garvey Cluly Ine. :
Mr. Phillip Reid, Manager Subscription 23¢
Come Early and Secure Your Seatx ee
ee eee
ate nes EE ee
te ugarineks.
Seat sectaartoiee oe ae cms
ee eee. here Seer
i sy fd a Ear)
Pager Rear aan gy ages
Karen nese oat ae tes
Vescteneal: toa eoittee: the atin
Renineged yi ees <n
‘fo and to Bare. ‘The man aitting dawn
waiting: for son sony ae
Boeri Sh ml ow
oe Open hk Bosal LS
A eNegroes a9 now zenging ote
Bortaly of Africa cryin, the
do0r—we MUST come io.’ “We. fad
ourasives’ allens-in the western world,
Wo are dehied the éducution that we
should give our childrtn. OPEN THE
DOOR—we are four hondred tiillion
strong. 5 —
“In the beginning of the UNIVER-
SAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT AB-
SOCIATION and our: work forthe
redemption of Africs, Bint our
People said they had lost nothiig in
Africa—yes, but what have you found
in America? The dominant race’ pers
mitted ‘you a few, leaders that they
might hold them up to you for ex-
szpples—such leaders as they would
Ifké-for examples. But we have great,
leaders. While we have but one Con-.
greesman, Mr. DePriest, he fears
nothing, he is strong: nd of ‘good
courage and he speaks loud and strong
about his people and my people and
your people. God,has sent him that
he might plead_oyn-cause—defore—tht
bar of public opinion. ht
* Have Wonderful Leader
“Wdarcus Garvey is in Janiuica ang
all Jamaica knows he is ‘there. He
was recently elected to the corpora
tion couricil. We: have a wonderful
leader, end while I do not wish to. be
sncriligeous I can but compare him
with “Christ when he sdid:
ET be lifted up I will |
Draw all men Unto nic.’ |
“When you lift up Marcus Garvey, |
you litt up all Negroes tn the.world. |
And we are lifting iim up—we are
ifting ourselves up and-we are going
10 Aftica for its,redemption. :
“We don't want the Jasy, g004-for-
nothing Negro. No,; indeed, you’ stay |
nere. We have no use for you. But|
by the, help of untiring workers we |
jo want to strengthen the nation and |
‘xplolt ite good. The natives there
‘now where the treasures are -but
hey won't tell the white-man ¥ho |
as deccived them. There -are: four
wundred million Negroes in Africa |
Jone—at least. Nobody in the. world,|
1as ever been able to get a trmplete’
Pca Wickes. 20 Secnke Fa
Pres eetenpsntieypocisc shar te
Aaa ee ane ST
apa ape iia kita
gira ng Oia eg ee
Sip ger ed a ae :
eed wenn eed ao
io mates en C
Pak sna ane er ei
dulface.: They: never detved down .as
they bave elsewhere. God fs keening
‘thet for the Ne p Esiae
wearld fe a feat and
Berner up the Tiehen Of Oe
wet: hoaad. it up bub gamed Ht ap.
“The Negro is the most, dérptving
person ‘in the’ weorld.| Ho: hea: witted
G2 God-Swho/hesie-our prayers.-Tt
as Dbeemweaid we cannot get. into
‘Africa without--slaying -bul Afri
shall be redeemed without the ‘sued
ding of one drop of blood: The Jews
‘obtained Palestine without shy siay-
ing. We will'ot need-to slay. We wilt
not need'the legions to go over there
for -we-will have the shores guarted
when you get there. And so we shall
work ON ‘ané UPWARD &nd ‘thus
shall we come into. our ‘kingdom’
when’ we get to our. -motherland
AERICA, ‘AFRICA forthe AFRI-
CANS at HOME and ABROAD!'”
Life grows somewhat empty when
nothing can decslve you.
BrX3 In 3 DAYS
in. Y™. YOU can’ now have
Tastroue, straight “hee
without bothering “with metayh
Geary: pomeare.§ Slmoply ‘brant
doer uvrough your Bains ant
quickly becomes “straight ag m string.” Mary
Mattia prices: “aly busband eed year inc
Sttaighibner three days, night and moreing,
ped le, helt a pectecty pean 8:
Gmitn ayn grou canta Chee worid, toe the
best ever uid Tee dried thear ale” Sous
sands of satloRed men and women pralae thie
. New Liquid Discovery . -
Won't Harm wot asciy, not grofer.. ns
The Hair! « otaed wor'-tur ine hale
No dangeraat not iroce,"asy to ve as
sidinucy char fone itt don ahs "ott
pairvatfaigbt and -benutlful ia) three’ dee,
Rcoatn you nothing. A
Send No’ Money
Introductory Jest séa€ your mame and
address tor teraiar #2 site
Special-Offer peitie for eniy 81, ot three
$2 bOltles for onty $8, plas a few, coals posh-
nie: We per pottace on “all extn orders,
tae according io simple airections, SF eel,
pritectiy’ neslitea. eur money" reitnded,
Money most accompany orders trom outside
het
NATIONAL DISTRIBUTING CO.
bapa. BOD 11005. SG BL. Keneds City, Me,
WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 5.—Washington's torrid weather had no effect whatever on keeping back the crowd Thursday night which gathered in large numbers at 1421 "St. N. W., the Washington Liberty Hall of the local division of the U. N. I. A., to welcome and pay their respects to their distinguished guest, Lady Henrietta Vinton Davis, whom they had no reason to forget or move into the reception which was held in her honor after the close of the meeting, gave her large number of friends an opportunity to shake her hand and bid her words of welcome.
The very forceful and logical address she delivered will ever, live in the minds and hearts of those who were fortunate to be present and to hear her, long after she shall have left these shores. Washington citizens were very glad to see her looking so well and also to see that she had not lost any of her speaking ability, for she held her audience spellbound during her lengthy address and rounds after rounds of applause could be heard throughout the matchless address.
The meeting was called to order by Rev. Protho who opened the meeting with prayer, invoking the Divine blessings on the meeting and the organization in general, after which the audience repeated the 23rd Psalm, followed by scripture reading. The opening hymn, "From Greenland's Icy Mountains", was also sung by the congregation. Professor Farrar, the secretary, of the local division, read "The President-General's'latest message as contained in The Negro World of September 6. The message was received with' enthusiasm and loud applause. The' audience, then stood and joined in the singing of "God Bless Our President." A section of the Northeast Male.Chorus, a wonderful musical organization, who have sung many times over the radio; were' presented and delighted the audience with four or five of their selections, receiving many hand claps.
After a few brief remarks by Mr. Jennings, the local president, Mr. Colker, a native of West Africa, was introduced, the gist and force of whose thought was that of "organization." He reviewed the history of his native people and country and recited verses from some of the world's best poets. His watch-word was to "Forge ahead and help to redeem Africa." His speech was well taken and enjoyed. R. R. Collins voiced the desire of the U. N. to be said. "That it it was well worth the toll and energy of this organization to help develop such a promising race in this young man represented."
Mr. Richardson, a well-wisher of the organization, who offered his services to sing at one of the meetings, was presented and sang a baritone solo, receiving applause also. At this juncture, Mr. James Nettles, one of the pillars of the local U. N. I. A. and chairman of the trustees board of the local division, was called upon to make the welcome address. He impressed his delight in seeing so many turn out, welcomed everybody who wished to become members to join immediately, and to everything the U. N. I. A. has in common:
In introducing Lady Davis to the audience, President Jenkinson paid a glowing tribute to her for her loyal devotion to the President-General and the U. N. I. A., and for her outstanding and splendid work which she has continued to perform, notwithstanding the fact that so many who started out with the movement have faltered and fell by the wayside. He spoke of her elocutionary ability and who could draw a crowd wherever she went; of the many sacrifices she has made for the purpose of laboring and assisting this great and gigantic organization which is known throughout the entire world. In brief, he summed the whole situa-
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tion up to producing his by making "Supreme" speech. Now I know he pan." Lady Mills then snorted in self as follows:
"Mr. President," offence and members of the National Negro Improvement Associations, and friends. I am very pleased, indeed, to be with you tonight, after an absence of about four years from this country, touring Cuba and Jamaica.
"I want to Jamaica before Mr. Garvey finished his term in Atlanta prison. He begged me to remain there and carry on the work of the U. N. I. A. I did so. When he was incarcerated in a Spanish town, Jamaica, British West Indies for three months, I still carried the work of the U. N. I. A. on, and when I came here this time on a vacation—my first in twelve years—he asked me "if I could leave him alone?" I told him he left me alone three and one-half years at one time; also left me alone for three months. I felt to be alone in Jamaica, and I was alone, while, would be a very good experience for him, so he is alone and is 'carrying on spendibility'—When I left Jamaica he was looking fine. I have never seen the man 'looking better in all his life' (Applause). He has lost some of his avidrupids, but that makes him look better. He is enthusiastic and energetic as ever, devoting his whole time to the work of the U. N. I. A.
"I, very recently heard that he
h gained the appeal in the case of our
Liberty Hall being taken away and
sold at public auction, but the chief
justice had decided, that the MARK
case has no place in the British West
Indies. Therefore, the hope of the
organization is to get back their Lib-
erty Hall, a very valuable piece of
property* on King street, Jamaica. I am very pleased and encouraged with this case in Jamaica.
"I arrived in New York about four weeks ago on August 1. Mr. Garvey, as you know, was born in the island of Jamaica, British West Indies. There they celebrate their emancipation on August 1. We celebrated in New York City on August 31, the anniversary of our convention. We had a very splendid parade there and showing. I was happy to see Mine. L. T. Dekena managing the affairs which she did so splendidly. We had Mr. Garvey's life-sized portrait leading the parade (he was not there in person) but his spirit was marching onward. (Loud applause). They had many delegates to come—even Washington was represented, which I was very happy to see—so we are going on.
"You are asking what the U. N. I. A. has done? Possibly, you expected that it would have created magnificent buildings at this time; you thought of the continuation of off-shipping business; you thought of schools; and colleges in the West Indies and also in Africa. I am very pleased, indeed, to see this young man (feferring to Mr. Coiler), a native African here and so hear him speak, while not so distinctly, so you can see what ambition he has in native Africa; you can now see that the U. N. I. A. has not worked in vain for these two years, but has brought race-consciousness to the Negro, being scattered among an alien people and in bondage for over three hundred years; every aspiration and ambition that he had crushed out of him.
"The Negro has done remarkably well in the past twelve years and the U. N. I. A. has wright great wonders in that time to awaken this 'sleeping giant'. Africa, from Cape Colony to Egypt, from the Atlantic, to the Indian Ocean, is awakened. (Cincinnati and applause).
"I am receiving daily letters from all parts of Africa showing that they have awakened to the situation that now confronts them. Three hundred delegates, from all parts of the world, came to sit in Congress and to legislate for the future development of the dark continent. The Negro is not only thinking, but he is ACTING, and I verily believe that the freedom of Africa will come from within—the natives, themselves, will free Africa. Marcus. Garvey—If he did no other thing; than to awaken the Negro to race-consciousness and to put desire in for nationhood—would have then done one of the greatest things any Negro could do. (Applause).
"So you ask what the U. N. I. A. has done? It took the Irishman seven hundred and fifty years to get partial freedom, but my race is too quick you know we want things done quickly; we have lost the patience our forefathers had, and if Africa is not redeemed over night by the U. N. I. A. we, begin to grow lukewarm and to stop work, saying: What is the use of trying to do anything? When the Negro begins to get in-rail earnest and united as a race, then will Africa be redeemed. (Ghears.)
"You say it cannot be done—organization—it has been done by churches, for now after the emancipation of the Negro he insight the church and has built different denominations, he has built significant buildings and church offices. In New York City alone, they have church property worth over a million dollars—and Negro churches, too. I do not know how many churches you have here in Washington, new but, they were about 1799 which I but here from years ago, and I expect you have doubled this number by new—shooting that the Negro and he organized my friend.
"Since the ledges have a great bed more the Negro, he not only join
On Saturday, August 19, the Gate-
Division II 109, Gate City, Hebrew
Republic of Phanase, celebrated the
birthday of the Honorable Maraul
Galvey in royal style. Bethlehem and
inspiration persevered the atmosphere
of the meeting place as the cen-
sity of the speakers was expressed
through the medium of oratory, po-
etry and song.
Mr. Samuel Panton, president of
the division, in his opening address,
fold his listeners that they are about
to celebrate, the birthday of a man
who has accomplished more for the
Negroes of the Western Hemilphare
than Queen-Victoria, King Edward
and King George of England, and
George Washington and Abraham
Lincoln of America put together.
Continuing, Mr. Panton said, "In less than two decades, Marcus Garvey, has given us a vision of millions of Negroes, towards Africa; has given us a vision of the homeland, that increases in brilliance as the years roll on; and that is why we should celebrate today, with as much fervency as we did in the past when the birthday of Queen Victoria, or King Edward, or George Washington, came around."
Teacher Brown of the Gatun Colored Schools was introduced as the first speaker; he spoke strongly on the insularity of the West Indian Negroes in this country. Miss S. A. Anthurium, the Division No. 127; Mr. C. V. Thomas, president of the same Division; Miss Scott, Mr. C. Butcher, Miss Wailen, said the Division's Chaplain contributed to a program that will be long remembered, new members were made and the meeting brought to an end after the house was treated to ice cream and cakes at 8 o'clock.
On Sunday, August 4, Division 539 held its usual meeting in its meeting place on Garvey Day with 'greeting from members and visitors. Opening ode, "From Greenland's Ice Mountains," was sung, following by prayer, reading of the Freamble and Scripture lessons from the twenty-second chapter, verse 21, of Matthew, by our chaplain, Mr. Cells. "God Bless Our President," was sung by the audience. Financial Secretary Lukes read the front page of The Negro World, the message from our President General. The opening address was made by Mr. G. E. Ford. The principal speaker was Mr. T. T. West, chaplain of Division 159 Mobile, Ala., on the subject, "Why Linger so Long."
First Vice President Mr. C. Carthorn spoke on "Be Ye, Steadfast." Mr. Gill from Whistler gave us thoughts for food. A recitation followed from our lady president, Mrs. Clark; "Pitch Your Battle." A friend, Mr. Morsett, gave us a new light in what and how to put together and be steadfast. After a brief talk from three little brothers the meeting was turned over into the hands of the president, Mr. John Williams, and he made a soul-stirring call for membership and one enrolled to the fold.
The meeting closed with benediction and prayer by the president, and we all went home roaring.
one jodge but, twenty and thirty, lodges, and so I have hope in these organizations becoming a great and wonderful factor and force in the future of the Negroes' intelligence, because we just like to join. We like to find fault also because things do not run as we think they should run, and sometimes think we can do the job much better than the Marcus Garvey has done. But, my friends, I wish you could try it just for one week—you would quit the job in great disgust, then, you would be able to fully appreciate Marcus Garvey. Patience and long suffering—that is the test of a man or woman—patience. He knows that the time will come and is near at hand, when the Negro shall be free and free, indeed." (Load applause.)
Lady Davis, referred to the Jews, the Zionists, who have for so, many years labored for a homeland and a nation. Why? Because that home was given to the Jews and they did not have to fire a gun or shed one drop of Jewish blood to reclean it—it was given back to them. Of course, they had a hard time, she said, but it is their home now and they are going to keep it. So let us be patient and wait awhile, too.
After speaking of how the map of the whole world has been changed since the World War, she told how that Mr. Garvey's own idea is that of organising the Negroes the world over through the influence of the U. N. I. A.; how he has labored so ardently for the past fifteen or sixteen years to this one end; when she first met him he had this one idea in mind and believed that God had ordained him for this great work as he is physically and mentally built for this great task. After expressing many other beautiful thoughts, she concluded by imploring the Negroes not to be discouraged, but, continue to press on and at last, victory will be won.
After the singing of the Universal Ethiopian Anthem and Bodimentation by the Swar: Blythe, the chaplets, the melting was melodic, the ice cream, candy and other implements were served and Lady Dwarf many friends came forward and shook her hand, wishing her mouth squeeze.
She will return to the Washington division on October 1. We are at that time, going to have a huge occasion.
LEGION NOTES OF INTEREST BY MAJOR H. D. WOODLEY
Madre air Diop, L. R.
Saturday July 10 was a day of great excitement in the second week of the University's new Negro Improvement Association, and African Cohabitant League (August 1989) of the Negro.
Although the gathering was not as large as was expected, yet the meeting was made bright by the milky strange faces from our sister divisions.
At 12:15 p. m., President Charles Becker called the meeting to order and Mr. A. L. Stewart, ex-president of Sigurors and delegate to the convention, was introduced as master of caremonies. The chairman handled the program so well that at its end Mr. A. S. Cunnings, representative and First vice president of Limon, called for three cheers for the chairman. This was heartily responded to. The Charter's number is 174. It was written by Mr. A. Riley and C. Rayo, and Miss Pavil of Cimmarones, Pocorn and Sigurors respectively, assisted by Miss Hilda Reynolds and Eulid Becker.
We take pleasure in thanking our
sister divisions which helped us make
this meeting a success.
S. MONTAGUE, Reporter.
To the various post commanders, Universal African Legion, August, 1929, of the world.
Greetings:
Notwithstanding all that has been said to the contrary, and all the alluresments which are being held to some of the leaders of the people of the Negroes at this time, the events now transmitting, render it impossible that the NEGRO establish for himself a government that will protect him in the times of stress and trials, and word off the acts of infinity and aggression, which mark his path through life, because of the lack of a power behind him, which he can call his own.
Every student of political economy knows, yes, and every man on the street also knows, that those people who are strong enough to protect themselves, are respected. Are not lynched as soon as any mob gets its passion up. Are not, not relegated to Jim Crow cars or what nots, are not the first to be offended, no matter how course or vulgar they may happen to be.
Netroyes have no government that can step up and say to the lynching fonds, "Thou shalt not," or to demand repress when any such wrong is done to a national. But, we Post Commanderes of the UNIVERSAL AFRICAN LEGIONS, have come to a realization of the state of certain minds, are stealing our hearts against that day when Africa will unfurl the banner of freedom, to an astonished world, and though it seems a dream today, it will and MUST come true. We are prepared, some of us, to go, to the very gates of death, if need be, to make this desire real. We are prepared to cross into unknown worlds, that our race might earn the right to live its life, in its own appointed way, and no Nation, no combination of Nations, can prevent this realization from materializing. Africa is awakening, some day, not so far distant, we shall throw our battle flag to the breeder of freedom. The gates of hell cannot stay the dawning of that morning, and when that morning dawns, we shall present to alien thieves and exploiters. Twenty Million African Souls ready and willing to die to the last man, unarmed is free. I minute you in the hands of GARVEYISM. I take pleasure in presenting the following from New Orleans, Louis-
As loyal officers and men of the Univeral African Legions for the past ten years, we have been among those who have made up their minds to give the very best that is within us for the preservation of the UNIVERSAL AFRICAN LEGIONS. God and Nature make us what we are and then of our own creative genius, we make ourselves what we want to be. Many and varied have been stories they have drawn to the paper world of Lusitania's emperors and to the Africans in the English Church, of Louisiana's men in African University of Louisiana, the most beautiful philanthropists, grew up to this milieu. The most beautiful treatises of native wisdom, if they extended to the title of the Great African Church.
N. Y. Tiger Division
Unrolls New Charter
On Tuesday, Sept. 7, our regular
made meetings was opened with the
professional hymn, "Shine On; Eternal
Light," followed with the ritual-
al worships by the president, Col.
Queen. The musical program was as
follows: Piano solo, by Miss Hulda
Johns, and songs.
The principal speakers were Hon.
Capt. Charles Joseph, Lieut. Jones,
and Mrs. R. Kent. The President-
General's hymn was then sung, after
which other speakers followed.
Hon. Eva Peace, second lady vice
president, spoke, as did Corporal
Robinson, Hon. Mrs. Mary Daugherty,
parachute jumper and Hon. Walter
Scantelberry, second vice president.
They hymn "O Africa Awaken" was sung by the audience after which the following addressed the audience: Miss Garett, Hon. Alonzo Hon. Rena Powell, first lady vice president; Hon. Mme. Callendar, lady president; Hon. St. Eastmond, followed by Hon. St. Willish W. Grant with a very stirring and forceful address urging the members to be firm in the carrying out of the aims and objects of the U. N. J. A. of Aug. 1829 of the World, and Garveyism. The unveiling of the charter was performed by Hon. Mme. DeMena international organization in inform department to order and the singing of the hymn "Blessed Be the Tie That Binds" followed by prayer and the Ethiopian Anthem.
An address was made by the president, Hon. St. Wm. Grant'. The U. A. Legions then gave a demonstration, which was very impressive and brought applause from the audience. At this time the international organizer made a speech that never will be forgotten by those who were present. In her address she mentioned that "We will wait right here until Shiloah comes in the person of the only one Hon. Marcus Garvey". The meeting was brought to a close with the benediction and the Ethiopian Anthem.
* MRS. FLORENCE CAMPBELL
Reporter
Stories, that were substantiated in various ways.
Ivory was the chief product of the Belgian Congo, and the Belgian King needed ivory to maintain his great army at home. He drove the natives of Africa, men, women and children to the Ivory Hunt. Atrocities, that followed in the wake of these hunts, were horrible to relate. There were such punishments as cutting off the ears, the arms, or one leg, for those who "failed to gather the required amount of ivory. Women suffered having their breasts cut off, little children were blinded with heated frogs, and men were tied to stems and left to the mercy of the wild beasts. And the horrible of these punishments was that diabolical system of turning native women over to the Apes for breeding purposes. All of the facts were revealed by the late Dr. Sheppard William of坐落 in Haddocky. The world today is in hysteria with the benefits of civilization. They our arts and sciences from Africa. Why should we be enshamed of ourselves. They have sprung from the same family tree of obscurity, as we have. Their history is an amuse in printiveness at ours. Their ancestors can wild and naked, lived in caves and in branches off trees like monkeys. They made human sacrifices, are the flesh of their own dead, and raw meat of the wild beast for centuries, even as they usen us of doing. Their cannibalism was more prolonged than ours when we were embracing the arts and sciences on the banks of the Nile, their ancestors were still drinking human blood and eating out of the skulls of their conquered dead. When our civilization reached the moon day of progress, they were still naked and sleeping in holes and claves with rats, bats and other insects and animals.
East St. Louis Div.
East St. Louis division held its regular mass meeting Sept. 7.
The meeting opened with the singing of the Ode, "Greenland's Icy Mountain."
Prayer and scripture lesson by the chaplain. The front page of Negro World was read by Mr. Bell. Remarks were made by the president, Frank Martin, Rev. Prince. Master of Ceremonies; Rev. Beauford, who spoke on Unity, End and Bell, who lectured on Regeneration, Rev. Walker then spoke on Race Pride, and Major Grant on Love and Brotherhood.
The meeting was adjourned after singing the National Anthem.
Their Great Success Breaking Down All Opposition-Revival Seen
The San German Division No. 725 held a dramatic concert on the night of August 1, entitled, "Lord Marcus on Calvary," which was conducted along the channels of ability for securing funds for the division. As the need of any organization is money, that night was found to be a red letter day in the hearts of the population.
The audience behaved in a way befitting the new Negroes, and the drama was unfolded in a fast picturequeque manner from start to finish without the slightest hitch. Every performer of whatever ability came forward and took their respective places in the drama amid cheers of applause, which lasted until the solemn hour of one in the morning. The drama was organized by Mrs. Rebecca Irons, lady president of the division, members and non-members who assisted to swell the pacific virtues of the U. N. I. A., despite the various upheavals from time to time which the organization is suffering under, the performers presented an unbroken front for five hours, with marked success.
Much was done to break the spirit of the organizer of the drama, but her uniting and unbroken spirit, attentive and ambitious effort, lay to the dusty mallearent who stood out as a basis in her way to progress. Such a worker needs praise, as she is not for self aggrandement, but pure affections for race pride and racial uplift, created thru our noble and indomitable Marcus Carvey.
The program was as follows: Opening of concert, "Good Night," by Meissers, J. A. Clarke, L. Bailey, Miss Iain Woodcock, Miss Josephine Constantine, Miss Beyrl Creighton and Miss Agatha Roachs. (2) A dialogue entitled "A West Indian Man and an American Woman." (3) Sping, "In the Right Church," by J. A. Clarke (4) "Chicken Licking," by Mrs. Iain Woodcock, Miss Josephine Constantine, Miss Colcatine Lawrence, C. E. A. Shepherd, J. H. Archer, Mrs. L. Mighty and, Mrs. R. Irons. (5) "Dice," by Miss Doris Thomas, Miss Hynchin Grant, Miss Agatha
Phila, Pa. Div.
On Sunday, August 31, Division 102 held an enthusiastic mass meeting at Liberty Hall, 920 No. 13th St.
The meeting was opened by President Paul Collins, who in his own way made an impression upon his audience that will be long remembered.
The Negro World was read by Mrs Maitte Brown, after which "God Bless Our President" was sung by the audience, and a very lively program followed culminating in our lady president, Mrs. Union Barnet. The program consisted of a number of recitations, sales, duets and interesting talks by various speakers, all touching on the wisdom of the philosophy of Gervayeign.
I hoped that Carveygym was reborn in all of its glory. The President was rejoiced by the lady president, and we the members of Dividecid affirmed that we are going to stand by her. If I was the President, the wonderful meeting was closed with the singing of our National Anthem.
"From Greenland," key Mountain" was sung by the members and prayer followed by Vice President, S. M. Grady. "God of the Right" was sung and The Negro World was read by President Moore. "God Bless the President" was sung by the members and our first speaker was Mr. Hobart R. Hayers, Mr. M. C. Harris and Home J. A. Bothrum also spoke.
We want to get our paper on every newsstand in your community. It any newsdealers that you know of do not sell this paper, send their names to us, be they white or colored.
We want our paper in every face man's home. Do this for us and we will thank you.
HAROLD G. SALTUS,
Business Manager
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Roach and Mr. Bailey. (6) Resignation. "Jamison Deserters," by M. Surface Calvin. (7) "That A Dear Girl" song, by Mr. Bailey. (8) Gestation. "A Village Blacksmith," by J. A. Clarke. (9) Song. (9) "O Let R. Be Soon." by Rev. R. A. Duggan. (10) "Lord Marus on Calvary," part (1) by Messes. J. A. Clarke. J. H. Archer, R. Irons, C. E. A. Shepherd, R. Golding, L. Bailey. (11) Dialogue. "Mind Your Own Business," by Messes. Doris Thomas, Hyacinth H. Grant, Agatha Roach and Beyri Creighton. (12) Profundo Basso by Messes. E. Evans, C. E. A. Shepherd, L. Mighty and J. Woodcook. (13) "Lord Marcus," dialogue, by Mrs. L. Mighty and R. Golding. (14) Soló by Miss. I. Woodcook. (15) Stump by Mr. Bailey. (16) "Lord Marcus on Calvary," part 2, by Messes. J. A. Clarke. J. H. Archer, Josephine Constantine, F. Harrison, C. E. A. Shepherd, L. Mighty, Celestine Lawrence R. Golding, J. Woodcook. (17) "A West Indian Man and an American Woman," part 2). by Bailey and Argha Roach. (18) Song. "Fitz." (19) Dialogue, "Hullo Johnnie," by Mr. Bailey and Miss Zoe Campbell. (20) "Lovable and Lweet," by Mr. Bailey. (21) "Lord Marcus on Calvary" (part 3). "Marriage Feaset," by Messes. Frank Harrison, as King of the Metabelle Tribe, Josephine Constantine, his only daughter, who was given in marriage to Load Marcin on Calvary represented by J. A. Clarke. C. E. A. Shepherd performed the marriagerites. Mrs. R. Irons, Mrs. L. Mighty, Miss Ina, Woodcock, Celestine Lawrence and Rr. Golding, guests of honor.
This dramatic concert made a splendid show in the sight of all present, and if seemed us if the spirit of the former age is awakening rapidly in all its mirth, in the hearts of those who embrace the teachings and opinions of Marcus Garvey wending their way to nationhood.
At this juncture, the Lady-President, Mrs. R. Irons, and J. H. Archer, President, each thanked the audience and expressed their gratitude for the excellent manner in which the entire program was displayed and asked their cooperation. Onwards the cause of nudal uplift! The closing play, "Until Tomorrow" by Messrs. L. Bailey, J. Woodcock, J. Constantine, J. Clarke, brought the meeting to a close at 1:45 a.m.
J. H. C. Clapham, Executive Secretary, San Germain Div. No. 723.
Attention!
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"The Begro’ Warld does not knowingly accept questionable
or fraudulent advertising. Readers of The-Negro World are |
earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on |
the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation‘ .|
~ contained -in—any~ Negro~World—advertisement.—-'
' VOL. XXVIII. - NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 20, 1930. | No. 8 :
aa is reported in the Press that there have been quite a few candidates: for
the Nobel Peace Prize this yeat) Among them Mr. Frank P. Kellogg.
the forme?" United *StateS, Sccrctary OF State and Miss Jane, Addams, .the
sfounder of the famous Hull House ia Chiegao are prominently, merftigned.
yedson that no solid effort was made.to establish peace’ ‘The last award
was made tothe late .Dr. Gusta: Scresemann, the thea Foreign minister
of Germany and to M. Aristide Bridnd, the prestne Forcign Minister of
France jointly for the. Locarno. ‘Ereaties, 2 patth, work toward a political
peace. ‘ sarray sa
“Political Peace” sums wip all the awards spade hitherto by the Nobel
Peace. Foundation. at Oslo, In the integnational whirlpool only the strongest.
power can bring pressure to bear.” An whoevér brings that pressure
effectively sis in & p&dition to effect a teuce in any" conflict” And such a
truce-maker has been hailed up till now: ay a great worker for workd
peace. . ae ae ae af te ,
4. Theodore Roosevele’ was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for effect:
ing peace between. Japan and’ Russia. And Woodrow Wilyon received,
that award for the: Versailles Treary, chat veritable travesty on justice and
prace. Fo’ fact, the Nobel Peace Prize Commitrce has ‘made a bad mess
out of that award: It “has .always sought a melodramuic political. figure
for-its Jaurels, without taking’ a long range view Of the woth of those,
men in. establishing tue peace, «
Humanitarians ‘had pec forward che candidacy of -Mahsuna Gandhi
nf Inilia: we ‘helleve'ie was-in 1923, as the, greatest worker for true pote.
Fron) the reports enercot then the committee of. award -scems to have
refused the award on the narrowest murgin, ‘The’ slight” majority believed
that ig was not wise to affront the greates: of soil powers, Great, Britain.
setinst whom Gandhi has Iyeen “waging relentless war. al
=e seem to us that ail cffors that do not dim ar erie peice will
jail co being about an enduring world peace. Whac do we meay by TRUE
PEACE? )X'¢ mefin thereby that alll the causes that give ris 10 oe
greed and jealousy mus, be chigunated -before a sworthwhile peace can be
establiched, And Mahara Gandhi bas been advocating such a peace. |
And We might as well come neater homie! Marius Garvey has toid |
the Seerld in-and out of sqasen that there will never be peace en this,
gata until and uoless we Negroes are given our full rights ‘all oversthe
world together with other oppressed peoples.” Ir seems to the Negra Worhd |
thir Me: Garvey‘is one of che Rrestest champions of Peace. far above the |
“raniss “of -HeHegane Mibenesantiel Rewsevelss, Bur Garvey will never Tee
warded a Peace Prize Weeause he is fighting che oppressors tooth and
hath and. becuesbadsHake ,
Buc we hoses we supper des candhicgy af Nis Jane Addams, thar
gentle spirit that has put chet and hope. tate hearts that felt ctemaliy.
forktien and damaed, “To'the Hfieng, work, “SUTRA USAT Tee the Weieiewte. 4
forlorn ane orpianed ac Peace Peige whould Se a feong memorial, Migs |
Sddars ‘s among the foremost who ace wofking. ioran enduring, and!
true peace. ; : ae “
Revolutionary. Peter io South america
Po GOst Be ie etios Buttes te Sou Ame ie Row Ih the
A° a throes of P revelutionary fever’ ‘Fhings yor started ever since Uaiti
aad Sante Domingro “sitie’ on shelr litle fevolacions suctesstutiy.
The first among the Latin Americap coitidios re blow off che td
was Pens, wheres miliary révole ousted! the dicnmor prevident Legals
Argentina followed suit ade nunbled’ inother setter, Frigoven, without any
edfor at alle There who's milicary junio cook over the administration.”
“ "Now there is 5 rovelurion brooding in Rraxi, ‘The Hele Republic
of Panarta tnt an upset in the Cabiner.to gvett a revolwtion. Things’ sec
inoking equally ed in Cabal * aH
. What is the exphieatian of this concerted sctidin on dhe part of the
revolugionaries is severat countries a abouc the same cime? ‘The expladitinn,
seems t0, 1% inthe face thie rie revolution iwarted in these Countries about:
a century age in the interest. of the people B35 nor yer heen tenplee,
For che fiand-hoising classes have usurped all the power ands are:
strangling all tie Jife our o£ the peasent “and working classes, As long |
as these Satter have not an equal shure in the political power and” naiural |
resources there will be akernately ‘revoliitiests and councerrevolucions in}
Souch.and Centeal América. eo : |
Mexico's history throws a flood. of lighe on the sitzation. ‘The
course: of sevolution-there has foliowed the line we have indicated. The
emancipation of the peon has been tie ideal of thet Mexican .cqvolution
Now Mexico hai arrived at the snige where it can ‘peacefully put isto |
working effectively its revohitionary tdeotogy. AC. seems that the other j
Latin Aimerican’ countries have t0 eb a long way befere they ‘arrive at the!
stage where now Mexico is. 7 wo - |
. Eatin “America ig headed for a protonged périod of unrest ‘and in- |
sapiity, ror there is & sinister force working deitind the’ scenes, and |
that is the, Ametican-British” commercial rivalry. In Argentina the fallen’
government thwarced » American commerce and capital while it wel-
comed and encouraged the British. Consequently the Amefican press and’
tary dictator, Uribura, is said tobe pro-American, If that is the case
we have “another anxious dark cloud to watch on the horizon of interna-
tidhal - politics. ‘ ~ @ ° > a
(GRO elements philosophy which enjoins that one should
P patronize his immediate neighbor's industry, business and service. If
tne doer nor do this-'as a dimy he’ i¢ carving his neighbor while he
is feeding » serangtr in-a far off place. 23 ae
a Ler. os “comi cit-pellpophy by. substiruting Race for /Pface.
Te. noe the duty af ‘every Negso: to support. the business; inghastsy’.o¢
ity ‘otbeceeorerprise searréd byrour own people befoce we rash t6 sipport,
patroning ‘or encourage activities. sared by ochers? If we only stop’ co
geuekder the immense’ sdvancsges sccouing by” following. such a phil-
the. economic ‘eenanclpation. of the Negro will noc Be long. in
osdaing. ; ne” ete
ref we sand by our besines: men, out indumriflises,-our bankey and
potensial emmpjoyers we create countless opporvanicies for ourselves.
hn neal
The Nobel Peace Prizes
“Swadeshi” and. the Negro.
PE a PRINS, OR PE pa eh SES cares a4 Reece anes RR ote Sd tetanic ROS a Pe NS SRS A SAC he Re eRe:
sehen Oem oe eS ee ee aes Ree ee eee a es ee Oe SAI EN EMER OE CNC
eas isle nem gehen aaioas Sarena aoe gee Soe aaer ee ees Ree 2
ae [etre SOAP EE ORES, UR SEAS Ce PRN: Fe, Sa nee a rs ee eee RN EE OE ERENT OEE SD NO
The-msesy— speak: sineek- tie pace pence. Ge “seas cin tink bade oF th
gal tlle ae Gigaiee’ sees we) chee eGo Ga we
Nia timed lashes wa chanbe dctand orice acan ne sccecr cc aon
predieetis te Seeding i bd: -Raaliey “of nach) 9: pmeedre 1k Ketan
HO OR REE ROURGE bcsh et ek 8 ROR ET RS oh NOS Se
FS Pe Wine debiaee. pehap Sind i ealiaehg Gta aaa
pei of ee Blowin i scp ic hee swathete gi *s
imiake Toate for" the’ setiving -svhises, .° Bae imayite We hada Sumber of
ienpopadt. Negra: industrial envérprises. whtre thete were employed. ali
somewhitet,.. Wat sould happen. in: tirnes. like thesé2 ."'36 che. whice
sje ee Nogha wothess ie; Negro spleyeet would ale
De firing thie whip Workers.“ Tiefor: tat, hey!” “But. na. “There: would ave
been an -equilibrrum, and ‘no such crisis as the. péetent one would: have
ever “arisen.s eens ‘ .
. The, Negra. could, go ‘still’ further. Mf he. keeps_op messing “dis.
crimhinations on: the part of the whites he’ could establish. relarions! with
his brother Negroes in the West Indies,-Africa: and-Genrral-and “Souttr
America.” Consider the vast’ aututal ‘resources’ and tabor power at the’
commpand of the Negro race if it ever‘makes up its mind so exploit. its
own inhegent, possibilities. It would be a wonder, race! ~. +
Bot hitherto the “shortsigtited men were blocking the working_of
his “Philosophy, which is “noihing bur the” phitesophy of ug Universat
Negro Improvement Association.” Now things ‘have changed. The tet
rific economic -pressure that the Negroes in ‘the United States, arc’ at
present’ suffering under will “force chem to reconsider’ the teachiays. ot
Marcus, Garvey, and we have no doubt thac they are now secretly rei
ing their folly in foiling the enterprises of the USN, TA.
Bur success can only be built i= upon failure. And whar is fathor
Init another step toward success? IA this assdrance et us go formar
ind remake our fortunes. : |
SALT OF WISDOM FROM AERICA
Editorial Opinions of. the Negro Press.
“aaa Rese: i
Hold a true friend with both
thy hantis, ” .
. Tf thou givest thy heart to a
woman, she will Kilt thee.
tis the héart that carries one
to hell oF jo heaven.
Whaiever be the zoodners of a,
slave we dova nul come up to a
had son :
if one doce good Allan “will in:
terpret it to him ‘for Rood.
A pringess never makes A slave,
het friend, le :
If there Js nothing in your hand
do notéshut it,and lel the children
picks putside. 7.
Ti in fine, but “excites no desire
Poverty makes 2 free, man he-
came 2 slave.
There goes witch! There Roe:
awitens” “if fou gre no Wites rs
{ill not turn round. z
Fire and susl-powder do not he
-coRettier
Te yotr master Hates you, ne
cally you # free man.
Give the Negro Relief, Too
eee eee en ak” eink
Ladisi of another ef his great reef
Griwsions, THIS Um@it ig. tits rchef
os the Iaenvers, “Various metkous
[relict are to be ined. Tn many cures,
the Péderal goverment ik going to
relware imoner for road and public
Ene Tempingien ; :
NTs, Gens, vations acetions vay okt
Sage ake iany TSG TEST Tee
af pack perfacmtance. of tiieate relict
sggneice, 52 it Recesnarg te cath thelr
Mlentinn to these Neate outferers
pasted arcing, the Xero ip shways
Paewd up or gets « fart far beneath
ine wetual amvort needed or attotied
tp athers. | Mz., Heaver'a record in
the Minisippt ead fretieg where a
qajerity of the peaple were Nexrec
iy mat ane to Hast of.
We hope te Presideat with see to
He that his cosorkers wit rise abere
the coler of (ne, sufferse” skit and
poner ccliod ns fer tne nbeds av Ce
adiniiial The Wasklagtes World
ORNECTING PAVING HEROS
In these dayy ane fone Nees Cat
srevimats, Oneat DePriest of Chiets
fo, in burned ia-aiigy so often thst
he fs getting ted? to itr which may
explatr why newspapers -no jokger
xIvé-the ceremomies much notice. |
“South of tne Mayon and Dixon Nne |
aig Christian Sowite, brethren rextrers |
ly tet a wesk-end pars without soak: |
ing Oscar's symbole exreass, with
Kerosene, and tossing i onto a og !
wile, toweh A mateh. ‘This grand |
hohday: ix" provided Phe crackers,
white the HEC OF 10 percentinm are
kept lazing. @ . i
The fashion, it lappeara; Ras spread |
nonihwar? Just recently a” Klan!
md at Willow Springs, o& the ycot
edge of Chicago, expresiter its" disap-|
proval of colored ‘mea wae go tol
Congress "by giving “Dace” n Kood |
esrehing, as tho shrouds patriots, |
witts fier? croasex, marched joyfully |
around .the pyre. : |
refraina froma comment on the orgies |
in which he {6 the central figure. |
Rvidently, he is not alurmed,-and ne |
doubtless fecls that if he contributes |
lo giving the whiten a gocd pious}
Sunday sfternoon he's mighty glad/
0 doit.’ * 5 = ms |
‘However, 'one inclined to pry into
natitutions “niquely American sees
n these holy tites.of burning some-
hing significaét, and that 1s, an oft,
emindér fo the Creator of his mis-|
ake when be made persons of any |
olor other than white, or. Having |:
reateg Negroes, commits the unpar |
joaabie sth of allowing them to hold |
esice. sme ne ere seriousty ‘con.
ends that a 2 DePriest: is
wsponaibie ‘for his pareits’ having
nfricam, blood, about alt left of the
etic, of flame anti smoke is the)
tion thet He wiio created wad rime |
he ustveree, larend ot batay the AX r
vie. = ee rerere te d pour et.
0 constant wand.o¢ Kien:
udesios: we teh
se eaten ait seat ee toe
are & cs
(oe color of skilte-& mMedern = *
+s . ‘
T, who lie on my hack, do nov
See the Pky, ant vou.ars lying on
‘your belly. ole
Nobody jumps for joy on seeing:
a strong’ slave cf arother.
Nobody will buy the foct prints
Of. bulloge. ei
If you wantyo {elt anytfing to
Ren ven, tell i to the wind
If one tongue meets’ « thousund
tongues it taints,
One tree recetving all the wind
Breaks, “ 5 .
When you go to fetch water and
do.not return, the do nog inquire”
about the pot. sie
“Two small antelope: beat.a big
one, . ‘
A: grandie or older practices, “7
Ahave nop heard! T have not hens!"
Tf yeu ext, eat a portion, hat do
no} eat al.
The chamelesn sazal "Syed is
soni nit ctemtete be eth
When a man becomes ork tne
town goes ba uth. 7
The urys, im their outstanding ignor-
Anne, Are perhaps tha most ridice:
Jour. They usually open their cay.
cusrs wilh prayer te the. very” Gow
who went out of His way to bless
the irint of the Geld and the vin
[they so muck execrate and, worse
jSttit weno sent aw far as too mate
levery orfrinism reduelnie, in part, to
[ntesho!. "Hyer man himself. “Me
Hoel tis, tet require a aiity oie. a
fonds ‘which, in the proces’ of at
ec Almethty may have time snd
yyationce to bulen ie atl the paste
foit there he a few who prerunie
daub, i. Fadetation News,
ESCARE FOR AGLANY ATES
Where wit he Rule! sympathy ey 5
the contention of the Shvannal Ga.
Tribung that Refad Hayes rhowk
remain a citizen ot this countrs std
help improve canditions between
Negroes and whites in Amerea.
Mr. Hayes hey chosen to become
A Baturalized citizen of France
Where he wii have net only. the
name of cilizes, but all the Heht
cant peicebaren ssi wath oe
An fis native dend, thy vent tener
earnat enjoy the ardinery haman
comforts of & deeent hotel, passage
in sleeping ‘cxrs ‘and service on dine
tes, cafes and gril rooms. In the
eity of Phoadelphiy Fctq thycever-
lnsling shame of the biask popula-
tion of that sfelropolizY not three
years ago Mr. Hayer was refused 4
sent’ on the mrain feor of a motion
picture’ thextre where he wont for
an afternoon of reiaxztion duflng his
concert tour, AlMoUEH he is accord-
ed many courtesies privately he-exn-
not xecure’ the nrdiniry pubile ac.
csmmedations suppéaed te ba oben |
to all citizens.
Roland Hayes isn, the peak of- nis
powers, vf hia own -country was
watting for, niin, to attain, cletine.
lion hetgre Itself acknowleaning shim, |
then “the time has arrived “aad
pansed.e Tt has shown that Roland |
Hayes, the internationally ‘acciaimed
artist: i no more than a shiftless
fleld.band--1f both “be binck. “In the
tate Sf this conditicn: what person,
and in heaven's name, what black
person....blames Haves . for goiny
where The will be -accepted for what
ne ix and not fdf the color’ of his
face? Negroes, who know so well,
the trials of “each minute -of each
day of living as bisck people in
America, should be the. last. to ob-
ject when one -of thelr.number es-
sapes to where he can breathe and
ive instead of remataing. where be
nas to ‘and dodge — City
ei). en peas
“LONDON. —-Prolinnary reters ob
show «fair of $10Rs0h600, or 0s
pet ‘cent, 1d imports, oempared with
SS cea ns etic mente
ced «fa of ihseae of OF be
cost.; jn re-exporta. - Part te
Guction a ecptuated for by tucteary
devitne in ptices jn-the pest twelve
a RS 1. lia ENON Tie She ai Ne Nik STE meant 8 STL ge LR
“Fie Peaole’s Porin
See FeO § fOr.
Le ACRE ORR iene ete ce oer aes
Spt Res Lear arte att ra AG
Be vwentap Ne es Aimenae eos
Poiutaa“watoea ab 2" Vabsoad ioe Deckwarl Africa
‘Stagnated, dark.and stilj— brighteat. polltical:
i ny “ < political star among
aad amet thet A conatallations, of “world. govermne
ce Wyn santa reat “N= bm wey “apinion; ‘the: best'and.
pon “BSEie ixoumtnie dopo FORE Place: for: the -eplightened: Ne
‘Upon ‘some. mountain“ top of toany igArica ey
‘Woild-I in peace opuid dwell, j°F t°cey 18; Roc dasa
But were Tmay net stop "| pecwivs , vy, THORPE
‘The evening shadows tell. | ip Pgs ‘
‘Gk, love which’ once’ was-mine’ “| Share in Nation Buildiz
__13 gone like # pase'ng cloud; _ a a Aaa .
‘What I thought,was divine ditor, The Negro. World: | «
‘A ‘spirtt haughty, proud. =~ The present economic depress
. *|reminds us of the Biblical warn!
Let buried be the past, .. ¢- “He that hath enrs to hear let }
My Joye mingled with groans: |hear.” I know of five cases, all h
Peace moy-I find at Tast [Pening 4n a period of three wee
POW ifetens ie ny” bones: - ~~} where bigck~ men~ who Chact tH
s [Meir positions satisfactorily
Thus through a* weary world years, were .politely removed +
Ewalk with sorrowed head; thelr places given. to whites.
Tame love, and live, and taugh .Thore. are many" puch .ca
To me .... the world is dead! throughout the whole country. Th
+ HENRY B. WILKINSON’ |are-only the shadows of fwhat +
a egete eecnse heppen ih a real crisis
bakin Mareus Garvey has been pers
Fight‘for Freedom: J... cu ee
AOE, RUE ANE RTO NE OEIE,
Laws bave been enacted by tha
Tuniries who come under Tpe HOTT
9 be Mnclyded in the meped “White
“fan's Civilization;* for Uhe .protec-
ion of the lives of birds, fishes and
other eatable small animals: which
men generrlly take as-a luxury. The
whe ne food and the other as a game,
fo that there may be seasons wherein
these helpless creatures may be given
+ chance to.reai their young to ma-
turity, before they might be destwoyes
when ‘the.next, hunting season comes
around. And T believe that, there is
uch a Jaw im the country. Rnown as
the, United States of America.
| “Rut as. far as. we. ean evitidhee.
(salie that codhtry enacts laws £97
the protection of the things mentioned
biove, they, .as far as we can dike
Jrern, frilesl to emel law to protget
'pertion of people residiniy in their
country called Nexroes. In that’ coun-
try, we learn, Negrses have.g 10
bo on the, alert minutely, for at
nights he maf: hapnen Cote .chased
cut of his Rouse. In some pinces he
ig heing-told that the sun must not
nd him here, and sometimes in the
Deight sunshine ke is caught riddled
zad_no redress is "forthcoming.
So we may ax well ray that the
dire, firh ander Rave got a Better
guaryntee, under the Inws of that
Aauntay, aan the Negro because he
has no season to-be killed. Under
this and many other ruthiess atroci-|
ties meted out to the Nerrees in|
America and. simitar sinister selemes
practiced by other gowutries where
he may he ound, lant advocating |
that the Negro shduld get 2 countey
of his own if it is possibfe right now. |
Foi £ predict that, within the next |
Gfty years, with the present, oxetem |
employes hytshe white moa te de-
peive him Of life, he wi meet the
Pawo fale mt ine North America |
Liisually Rear GaP! the ob Negroes |
ismp io the vongiunion Pins tie nerip.
tui is feltag, that There must be |
wats ani runes: nh ware bafare the
en, Lat this F predict, “Phere are |
no sues feurht a yet, i eomparicon |
te whet is ir come,” and thee Unele |
nan Nexrive, " Cosyel Grinder’ who |
wre sented bE revelation Uien Gar the |
ett stay the Weekes will melt “nad the |
wil "run awry, tetter tg andy
rel dead right ned before & comes. |
Ser the New Negra i: prepdred to)
wie! up fighting for bie rights even}
Beer there anyiting reoke and run’
say seas URUT Afsica is redeamed. |
+ Then, me tains, the saying win!
fe completely fulaied {uxt qnan's Jn |
wianaliy to men cakes countiens |
housvnds pneurn. “ft
CHARIOT worse. |
Hatney Carsagney, data. |
On feland Heves
diatar, The Negro World: vii
Your eiftenis!, “A Fitting Rebuke."
“f September 6, on Mérors. Hayes
uid -Rokeron, was timeh! sue inter:
yitiag.
“i heavtity commend thelr wilting:
none lo get, oul and, live ike ‘men
and set Secordingiy: however, 1 ait:
fer Gonsiderably with their choice.
‘The present proseription from whick
they have led wilt loom up even:
fisky Hke Zanguo's ghost to haunt
their path of least resitance, "Phe
aUiitude of thene artists apd other
Western inteticctuais in based on the
Nicezachenm philosopiny’ of mriatoerat-
eindividudiiam, which ts selfish and
Fepugnant. ‘Their actions seem to in-
dicate “his thought: “I have eorned
Tt’ would have heen n better display
of common jensé, {n this age of na-
tionaltar,. for these two artiste to
display the much needed race pride
by getting back to the \origin of
things ~and-dedicate- thelr tives to
things Afric. In so doing they
would have gained undying fame by
maintaining the status of their race.
After ail is said and done, Fraqeh-
men, Germans, Englishmen and
white men in gengrel dq not! want
Negroes_to cultivate ‘enlighten
hem - Gar euinting intertonty eoce-
plex is the only bete noire ° te
causing us to stay pong them gpa
naz “under their questipnadta Het.
‘hod bow, ‘Mr. Hats .
Snow, Mr. “Tec rut regret
nh Asi’ ck Be a
pape. . Wor i te the duty of prveegt
day. artists and-tateltecteais —
eined, to "Xtries whet at
make -
paght to be, Dow forget, thet tt
was the Frenchien fee Rave
jomasy period - who we made
Prasice s dessccracy, for the Pronch-
mgm of today. Thd Bagtion pad the
Germans did the emme te comstrect
Rn Piquer ve. their NADtht fore -
a ‘s iy a s
abroed to.imake’ beckwan ‘Africa ‘the
brightest. political: star among the
constellations af ‘world. gevernmenta.
~, dn say “opinion, the: best und. sat:
sé Pace: for: the eplightened: Negro
of today iavAbricas [0
.. we * 'B. THORPE.
' Brooklyn, N. ¥. . —#
Share in Nation Building
itor, The Negro. World: = «
‘The present economic depression
reminds us of the Bibiiéal warning.
“He that Hath ears to heat let him
hear.” I know of five cases, all hap-
pening 4n & period of thrce weeks,
where” bigek~ men~ who Chad fited
thelr Positions satisfactorily - for
years, were .politely removed and
their places given.to whites.
.There. are many auch .cases
‘throughout the whole coutitry. These
are only the shadows of what wi
heppen ih a real crisis.
Mareus Garvey has been persiat-
cntly waining about this, consition
Jor twelve years. Some “fat heads.”
‘who are too thick’ to'think indgpend-.
It is not too late to heed the cail
of ils inspirod man ‘and sive -our-
selves, Coming tvents cant thejr sha:
dows directly on’ this formildable ob-
ject the Universal Négrs Umprove-
ment Asgociation, which js spscdng
headiong Yo the lngitimate gonl, Af-
rica.
Mr, Blackniar, do. not he a pari-
site to stand*idiy by until we. have
reached our destination’ and then
walk into, the fullness thereot. Sbare
ye now in the hardships, of nation
building. Be one of, the milertoncs
in froedomn's path. + Remeniper that
“There in neither hfe, nor work, nor
Piay in the grav whither thoy
cost.” ‘
* The consummation of “Mt. Garvey's
ideal can he’an absolute reality in-
side decade’ if only’ 10,000,000 out
409,090,060 Nezrogs were ty be con-
sistent, with oneness of purpose. for
the common hod.
It is "well worth the ‘effort,
As.a cry from Poston, 1 ask all
Negroes ts join the brigade of Af
rien's, salvation and let WORK he
Lipa Meek a
ORMTE A. JORDAN,
Tikal, Sine
Christianity and Lynching
; Filer, The Negra World:
j Luot night.l went to bed with a
jeruched soul, a depressed spirit, and
| weeping ueurt, when J considered
over the brutal and murderous treat-
| ment of my brothers in your orainits
I meted out Lo (hem fron: the hands.af
| barbarous white Americans,
1 therefore decided to send you x
[ester with the following susgcetjon:
Write’ to" the President, General hd
ack him to he permitted t6 have sev
[Fal cirewlers printed for cirtritu-
Borulation wot fren, with the zat
Gewing inuimation! “Brothers, it is
seeder ier ta he Bere: Int ss, baste
three Pabienacing, ee wr one 1h,
ene for'enr aim, mind one for oup des
tiny, DO NOT LISTEN VO UTES
DOCTRINES of uke Amencin gesped
miirriosarien, for they cle not proaeh
to yor the true teugh!tys af Ohrie.
They “are deceleing” you. Foy are
hypoarien: they jyach, murder snd
burn yopeaeothdh: at the nae ot
mine rey dime” Uaen Gey ee
peat « Barharsus people ta tench ye
Chritianity, whee they) théms aves
are got Christians at aeart? a
Wilts to_endey, pocioe, ,peeridese|
and king, and alte to ihe pape of
Stems, bitheps, clerayaen of al ole
er mitsionnty seeietien, Explain to
them the aniieringe of our brothers
A Sour sauutey, and that you have:
had mews fee “your Atvieans brithe.
Gis 19 denounce the teaching 6
Chisheniiy from while Americans. |
Gev the women of your ceountry |
and the West Indies, ote. to write
to the vamen of Europe, esting
them to pat own Ameres's savag>|
ary. ang hirk daylight murder come’
mitted, daily on qu hivet_brotnere |
They must also yrite to Alisstonery |
women oY every ‘nation, auking that |
they pray Ged to defend sur case, |
AN your circulars tar Ageia ney
be sent to me, and ¥ will Wisteibute
them from. the Congo to Bisaw, my
on tril 2
df yout Ge not take’up this matter
qwiekly.end serionsty. yazre wilt hape |
pen. aad if the principles of tke UL}
N. 1. A. sind out t0 defend car rage’ |
you should leave no stone unturned |
fo do x0't9 the }etter. |
‘Fours for Une! upiit: of our Race,
*A..G. WILLIAMS, |
_ Remus Wee” Autica,
Aug. 9/1930. 000 oe I
¢ Fearless Loader
Editor The ‘Negro World: 7
— ¥~ congratulate’ tae” Her 7 Maraua
Garvey for the way tn which he de-
livered the goods at Por! Antonio,
Mmaica, BW. 1. . ae
He really did not hesitate to tan
them the truth. .
His epeech. was very. appro-
priate “at that time and I admired
cortala remarks he made during the
tigre, It was vety effective upon
some of our people, and. Ihave it
wou be long. whan Negroes tne
world over will, get’ to realise that
the. doctring df the U.. LA. te ae
strong as the Rock of Gibraltar end
there is no other to compare with ft
at this present:time,
"Therefore, we should all work in
harmony with the dictates of our
Radetatigatis leader 20 94 te, exabie
aime to’ put this tremendous programs
over, big and rte. . F
- ” . CHAS." A. ROBINSON,
Punte Sen Jaa
Tne Resirer
Le NR a ge 8
1 Pines Se
a ae ak pea © oo
Henty fy Mencken, ine, wise. man.
fragh” Baltimore, thade a game. for
imeele: by“ not-anty. a
erittciam “Wut alep. by in
bachelorhodd. He fought bravely. or
rather frantically marriayé, church
men and.God, But now tnat Mobtlesa
isno more. .° 7
Ales, Mencken “gol earriee Tat
suonth, even before 'the sctieduled
time-—so"impatient was*he to know
what wedded bliss was like. And he.
xolually got married with the benefit
of an orthodox clergyman.
---Of course, girls will laugh and ex-
cikim with G. B, S,,-that, “The Life
2rinciple” has won: And the pro:
consul of God?’ They will chuckle
sutiL they no. longer ‘contain them-
selves and will no doubt whisper
among themselves: “Lord, will even-
vually conguer these silly agnostica!”
{But my*concern is not with’ girls
sr with the ministers of the church.
iam ‘gravely concerned with bach:
ciphoed itself. When an acknowi- .
to \the enemy's camp the followers
poidht asewel! feo! disconcertea. Who
ill blame them if they yell in agony,~
“Alas, we're sold!” a He .
It seems to -mé ‘that a hardened
bachelor who relents b&comes the
frost insidious menace to the august
state of hachelorhood. Suppose T were
to go to Mr. Mencken about cohtinu-.
ing my" vow, of ‘bachelorhood. What
vould he say?
“I_was once a bachelor” °-
I can wall imagine his reply. ¥
do not know {f the other side of
rachstorhood haz any” ehduring
charmk-to keep a rebel like Mr.
Mencken shackled perpetually. But
n the beginning’he may be well cap=
‘vated by it. And if such-avere
really the case his answer, wii,be,
"I was a fool, my’lad, to ‘have re-
mainéd a, bachelor until I was fifty.”
Married life is altogether delicious. . .
Get murtied -while you sre young.
Fake the advice of a once foolish old
nacheler, my ‘led :
‘Pie would, of courses be whe ‘king.
ogee met a clergyman who wanted
a eanieines nan that (eed ectuslise axe,
sted! But he failed to do 90, try
is’ hurd ax he coudid. Then’ he re-.
orted to a subterfuge.
“I too, was an agnortic, young man,
vhen Twas yout age. Now Iknow”
uRerent.”"" Thié is Ue meanest argu-
nent io pul fdrward. It has neither
ntelcctuel honesty nor morai grit,
Lis as nolid as a jolly asa, :
Lam afraid Mencken was ekhaust-
a, because he was Laliang tee much.
pgal his -bachelortiegg, and a sly
memy Mpg pRked DIL ups Any-
ay, Tohepe the one-time ebsmplon
ackelor mag a rollicking time of 1%,
cmean marriage.
:Tyavlietor anda Cettbinte oe
Once undn a time a backélor’meaat 7
fibate, just at a spinster, meni
ame thing Ae of yore. baekeler er
coe ik 10 more involved therein ham
incarity is im the fourtecntit and te
genth amendment”. Celthucy and
y the enlightened as proaiestion ic.’
have ueerd in act of on arti. wba,
fen waincene neeuagd ior es Benes
virgin, Gwcutened fo ete fer Weel!
Ston the recegd miliioninds’ wit b=
cre, Yue the would wilh not coms, ts
n ene :
he-tteamufen nf Peinechood
oe prinen,, Not if f folio’ the tom
prince iy net bora to enjoy: ikke.
[Seincs Carol of Roiwania, "w tis
Hsing. doves tn hive with a dowirh
hoauis, bac he wes penslined tor fol
flowing: he dictates of hi¢-henet.
he ere x commoner the court would
have forced hin to pay alimony, put
there’ would Rave bets a chance to
cull’ the things quits aftef that, Nat
so with a prince, Pqor Carol gave
up Uie lam of hls Nia, and bid rove!
prinues-tuthed, her—noue-awey. ior
him when he knelt before her for for
rivendss, an
Bui we. might consider the tite of
Another prince. Front a distence the
Hfe of Eddig the Prince’ of Wales,
seems.to be captivating, I reed oniy
the'osher day that he Hed care big
promotions, ail in ont day.” Imagine
hig became Vice Ad:nizal of the Rect,
Licutenant Generel Ja‘the army, and
Air’ Marshal if the’ airforce, and in
one day! ; 5
Tdo Rot know if Eddie deserves all
thee ranks or not, but he is-a lucky
Prince. He ought to be hapny, though.
if he. takes any pride at all in his!
tities. I don't sef why be ‘shouldn't.
-Covisider my casa I had to put
ncurly twenty yeaa in schooling.
Then T bad to be & newsié, a cub, &
wih.and many-other rough and tolgh..
ihings before I became a columnist.
And if I want to be something else’
T mustwork hang fer it, too.’
Do I" envy ‘tht Prince of Wales?
Oh, héavana! I hope not. I'd hate to
go hunting and become & traveling |
salsaman against my will as the poor
prince ts, Sect gt ct
(Copyright. 1990, ry “ikeew tae
Modern World” Features). +
AND JANE ADDAMS
“NOBLE Peace Patek mamas
COPENHAGEN, Upt.11-—hac
overelary of trate Retugg tod so
Addatns, tounder waa owner é¢ ell
Pi ea ry seeking lp aenoe
Prisee have beeu,’ Gietrivated. since
1087,’ and Utrefere two! Deiate seg
@ fwirded me
er * i PE ee RE Oe ek. Chr SOAR PE SSRN ae aerate eh a eR ATS eh ER ER ete SS Ba ices rakes
ENE PRL YH A OT OE GIR eR DN ES SOE aR GOS OR ee CSAS RNS ces CEE ARS a ee SE IG aT Oe ener a NAL 2 a
ee ce ee tee ee. es PCa tee ee Bo eo By EE aE ee SR Cn A rege eae
Sa ae COUR WE Sa ae a a ao oe Le ACE tie Ch ttt ee Se Re SOS: |
encase enna oe lenin Oni IIDIC 0: > Pah antantnlpusmnetlnnin a nui sl nO UND IUNID ETc Tn rs foots trre=eeuNRg DE about IE SDe EIN USTunrUnSES PENN SOPPoSLESIERSIONSSSE DUET
‘es go a a Ct RSE ERDAS 5170 PS NR DOE I Ga ed OER PE TSN So
Fr ME GS ee aR MR Ne
pee Ore Sa ee fs 3 ane) ea hs eee : peo tig eee PM e ie ba EN ssccemsatios a & ase
teres, 6S Be a Se eee ty Ves ce ree Et Re cee CORPO PE Lo 2
RCs I ade ae be eed ie i 2 ae Ga aes ee q ik " OR ek BSS 3G Be. see
PRR a SI Ree Ge Rr ae amen SEU IRESR Se Ser ee er heme aes OMe ye eg hea
ees SEE NESS Te AB OSES SB at aie Se ape Werte crs By TNO gee ali ecard eee peumtatage: 28 oR Dd ne eS e gas Sat Ho Rees So Ca
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With a year’s subscription ‘tor our paper we will give you 4 topy:
of the book on the life of the world's only Negro Heavyweight.
haniple tans cin: cate cE peal $
JACK JOHNSON |
‘This book. js really. inceresting anid chrilling gait deals with we
life in :and ‘out of the ring. ~Tt relates how he mé& Kings, Queems, g
Sie at ret gt gr cei =
ear! . won ipres a q is first
Sa caly RET He charnproni thle, pee
“Mn, alt efi Esk sronld he Yead by all negroes, ‘as Johnson af- q
feed the anention of the encire, word,” 7 ve.
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“apn oR Cinna ter, + .
peli ANHE-MEGRO WORLD.
Tr jong, ana ter 'o dowry the lane
ik \.of dtutjana for, oar. black boys
“sensee ta") wong Raed, Saunt |
See
ie FE La woi@hns and .e4-our,
‘agement ‘ox clouds 3 Alscoméort and
despair. 7 Eo Leese
it would seem Thay some people
would tire of attempting and actually.
<perfortaing such deeds that would
‘nemd—to—destroy ~the~real “spirit —of
-sportamanship that Ilex predomin-
antly in the hearts of these race boys.
. This opposition is shown more jso
{h American’ than elsewhere. The Eg
question is -why should. Americt
the “land ‘of the free and the home
of the brave" be 90 spineless ii the
treatment of a few who happen to
be_mrembors of the -Afri¢an: race.
. Were not #11 mza born equal? God
fm the crestion of things did not'in-
tend for any one tribe of men to at-
tempt control over the other. .
But it seems that men (white) 10
their attempt to be ® "Boss" in ai
walks of life stop a® nothing and
thereby create an unjust atmosphere
for those that are trylaz to live in
"perfect harmony with tre VorT.—
Even a dog chanzés his spirit of
behavior and friendship 7% bie Bu.
man comrade after a cestain amount
‘ot ale: :
‘Take the black ‘boys that were, rep
resenting Anicrica at” the Oiympia
games. Trese boys had nothing else
jn mind but to achieve vic ory for
thetr country, or the cawtiry that
gave them birth. 'c 4°
‘And what confronted them 2 5.gre-
gation and discrimination. «iva you,
they ‘were to compete in atnietc
events with white, bos#: run fe by
fide with thom. Yetochey were net
pefmitted to cat or seep in the
same rooms ‘with them.
‘Does this not interest’ America? 1
should, Why does not someone in air
thority speak up and save this con-
tinuea bundling of shame which 7s
wing heaped. upon ‘them. Sureiy
your heads -taust- Ming dow im dis-
race, amd dishonour. .
Thé black man docs not want 20°
cist afiigtion with Hny race xToup.
"racy have never cfied for i. But
‘they do want equal consideration and
Senortunily. eg er
WPHEY, CLAIN tag. the Ney Yorke
T Boxing cémmivsien has ruled that
Fiagry Smith and | “aka Jones must
Laght agsin, and.:. aothing, Mean-
ing they wil not de paid This te
what L term i ruling of the worst
Hind. {have never yet een any one
moze or lesa twa men, performs sans
task with interest unless they ware
te be compensated for their werk.” f
ruppose if in their return, Rout they
“cio. pot pgstotza ax thir biood Unrate
fates destre they will make 2 second
P-nedeeision aull, and vend them back
o-tae-Commirsion for.said body to
premunee the sate ruling, beam
Suc @aite some Lime, ‘The throw of
thine fate the nay hy epertatene
fo ep around; Gyo rolurding the
bpyreyiveness war ag saw, of ther,
(he fighters). And it ix daw right
piapidity (0 wlame shen for auy.cat
Qinesz caused hy others, .
wg WOULD supncet ypat che Garden
B pponte right abut face” ind
change the card im their comming ote
door show the ntter parti ef thir
faonth. Campola ands Sharkey wit
not drew, You Nad hetter qu Suay-
key and put Jos deapretty the gad
in there with {ne big Argentihe ade
gmake inoney. © There i ino calor te
straight tafds any amore: The baste
gauat ve mixed, White mea are tired
bf leoving aren white men beating
She axothery eopecisily when the bat
coh bo heating oh Home other race
yap, ¥ am not asking for amfair
missed bouts out evenly maivhed once
that will sstisiy, TRA nerds godd for
the Gurden alro, When “you ave
iene your ont-door affairs éoncen-
trate om this’ hovgit and you can’t
go wrong. The Chocolate Le Barba
Show will deava Harré Smith with
Rood oppesition wil draw.” So: tl
Baby Joe Gang. Larry dohnadn, Jace
Jones, of. Phitadel-
puis Soe: deaaad ia on
Seta. ° 1 a eaa_ tee
karoge of Eoee- leee® egw” aie
right up’ Be Sates for
TD sedent eapp SEREREREIOS CSS OY
‘ardent supposters of Al. Singer
‘have been set back somewhat in cash,
“Que TO ths Knock-Out of aaid ido by
Jimihie McLarnin last Thursday eve:
ning at.the Yankee Stadium, So sure
were the harrings that Singer would
wi, that they laid all on the line.
There is no'question that Al bas been
greatly. “over-rated, - His one round
K..0. victory bver Sammy Mandeli
a few weeks ago, was no’ mountain
pork, ce Sdmmy C#ne into the ring
<half man. Mating the weight really
tha on bine seriously and effectively.
Singor wanted to fight McLarnin,
but refused to ‘meet. Kid Chocolate.
What does this mean? He claimed
that the Kld wis too light-in’ welgat.
Was he not lighter than Jimmie last
Thureday , eveaing? Suppose the
Irish boy fad’saéd no, T will not meet
what would be Al's outcry? | Nothing
more or leas wan. that the Irishmco
was afrald of him. I'say, and with
piénty to spare: that. Al was afraid
of the kid when he made that state-
ment. ‘Who, -will the Lightweight
Champ Sight Hext, is the big quest.on
ASTON CHARLES, the French
Glrennarwcight, who thoognt Be
could make ™ strong comeback in
New York "waa, knocied as cold as
a French trapps by Koli Kolo last
Friday evening et the Olympia A. C.
1 only took Kolo totty-nine sgconds
to settle’ the. little argument.” This
Porto Rican’ surely can bitSsand
brothers—-when ne conngets, “they
rtay placed.; Kid Kolo has his big
chanea, this Tuccday eveding whos
he presets his stock in trad at the
Queensboro steslium in the Semi-final,
fen round bout.
Augtictine Percey cf Porto Rice,
reored .n one round Knock-out vie-
tory over Jackie Gitdfarb of the
Bronk. Here is ancther ood foreign
colored boy, that _hax 2 future, pro-
“Wing Re cantinues to hue the iinc.
It haz been’ said thad ihe lives a lite
ile Toons, ut if ne wants to aeguict
fame and daryine be had ibetter live
clean. ee is 7
So = Sie
FYCHE Jamaican Crické: team was
fant Wednesday ovaning. by Mr. end
Mrs. Gayartn” at their home, 2468
Seversh avenue. I: was indred a
well apant evening for sll wha nie
rendu!
‘The Jamaica team whith som-
prises MX tar cricketers imparted
from Jamaica to. play a aerios Ot
gumes in New York have bung “up
hn undefeated Het of Siam
hein superb playing fas of tines
tagh. mame cwon played Sanday cht
to makewthe prea
However, (Maen the team a pleas
nat bon vigage back te thes Bente
Ind, an@.hepe ve ree tate: aan
Te twas guch Tnmities ae ths Gaus
one tha@randed their stay 2 5.20ns
fot ane, Angad want te thank 3 a2
Dhemnar extending the Wend of Rese
ged srickelerst :
_o Moe TSR Asters Hin
PEPTAMURT EH. Avs. 20 — Lopes
ai hiss tndinn Nerebearrt | Wlisoa
Charla, Stegmuxeied Cnelda from
Pigakel) Institute, won the nations.
Sroatntox championship Loday by Tun-
tng Big dim Siewart of the Lon An:
amee Ae C. fafa tke ground in the
Gaal event, the pruciiigg 1500-mete:
Fu, : é
f Ckerhack Props Girt.
Ruvers: Utterbrek, former Univer.
He of Pittcsargh athlete, ‘Topped
AE ck esi
Snegsmrpecrm OH olsbgac??? af EEE
CE POSE, ERQSNPOT She "elim ¢
Baby Joe Gane ”
In Pittsburg
~~ Determined ——to-—give—iocat—tans
gomething to remamber in the waning
days df the outdoor seuson, Match-
makér Jules’ Béck of Moyers Bowl
has stepped ont and grabbed“ him-
self a double windup for the Bowl
next Monday night that would be a
eredit’ to amy matchmaker in the
game * 2
Baby Joe Gann, who ranks aldag
with Kid’Chocolate and Jack Thomp-
son as the greatest in th: game
among the Negro fighters, and Black
Bill, that @azzing' Cuban | agent .
whose sensational bouts w! Willie
Davits at the Bow) earller in the
season, are still fresh in the memory
of local fans, will be seen in a double
windup. 7 «
* Gans will face Harry. K. Brown of
Philadelphia in the top number snd
Black BiNwill tackle Marty Gold, the
spewist ind eter paces oar ncitle
Rodgers w mighty, tussle. at Moose
‘Temple last winter.
Gans and Brown fought a sensa-
tonal bout #$ Philadelphia leat
Christmas ‘ana Gans was the winner,
put he was forced -to pick “himself
up of ihe canvas on two decasons.
‘and fight an up3ill battie to wis,
‘The rest of the 10-roundera, in which
Rin will moet Gold, should prove
equally interesting. Both, fighters
have appeared here sevecal tires and
are favorites with the fans.
High-siass* preliminaries will sup-
sort. the dowdl> windup.
Billy Jones to
Meet Gourtney
PHILADELPHIA, ~. Matchmaser
Pete Tyrell Of the Arena has an-
nounced that the headlime bout on
next Monisy night will Be between
Pittsargh Bitly Jones, colored. and
George Courtney of Oicahome, This
Wise tor ten rounds cor fens ath
Ave six-cound- bouts as an appetizer.
Jones and Courtney mat down nt
the Stadium, dust summer ard ine
western lad was given the. nad by
the judges aad referee. Many of ur
fain aa sports. wittesa present.
however, felt that Willyum had been
vobbed, amd awit Row! of divaps
proval grested. the ,oMclat verdict
Bince thes sory, to bring the gir
oretier haye Mere taortve,
However, Pete Tyrell and the
Arena prmoters, Fried and Fishman,
have accomplished what, wag thought
ta,ba impacsible, and ily gets hte
geanie at vindication next week.
+ Jonds isa. yah —improucd_ochtss
ince (hat maith ef tart sulnaicn and
Henele i hound te hee that 2 en
preie Foren, Wie hufsre the odes
en Courntey were preninities, ff
Ghee weak IH Lime the tnrmes cow
hom, who dy Bie pride af Heder 2tul-
hits stable, will hd mm hs chore end.
vit when In angen plage RL tte gad
of the heal twa events ahd Dyebet
was forced to aive up after ke Bad
Andwhed minz oo theses, Mir event
paint total yqwe Dyyckman 2 pists ta
ike finnt standing. howeers.
Aine Couvieed
CLEVELAND, CG. Fi
Vaumredack Thompson is ae Pyner
welierwaight shampion of the werd.
cforee from Now Nork, gotties wet
Rewaired Tommy Prepaion's Rand as
the ficlor, over ‘Fhonipaon,, im 8
grueling” battic ste "the American
League Park here Wriday night. ‘The
‘oeision, nx big a piece Of rpbbery as
suas ever Suligd of in a championship
fig, stunned a crowd of close t9
1a0eo fans, who wire convinced that
alaough Tommy Freeman ts as gant
as they corag, way oh “he stort end
in at least ten of the fifteen rounds.
Wnth two evert aad tare in Biz favor.
Bnompson fought x championship
tight all the ways and aithough at
Limes appeared a dit. curcless, be was
In anger viny ous, tues Using a
the fourteenth round, when Freemsn
landed with a right and left to the
chin (itt made the champion hold on
raomentarily. He quickly recuperated,
and when the bell racg was again in
‘soMuprate, commasng7be the rituattos:
‘Tiere was litt -any fireworks
im the first rolind, but Thompson, by
clever boxing, wali the winner. In the
second rougd-the-first thrill, of. the
eventos Came when in-sy exetuings of
‘Plows, near the center of ihe .ring,
a crashing left hook spilled Freeman
for-a count of atx, Me arves badly
shaken, but by some Gespertte noid-
fog managed to weather the sterm.
3 were adoui.cren ia ihe ino
following, byt im tpe fourth
“again opened up with:'s
soaking coege Hoot ‘Uke tiene; and
dying litte protect kimepif, It
whe @ ted round for Preemes, Ne
sa ares oat whe
Fe = chamapion &
4 the
an aunte Gabser. Where Yitus
eemehd with Repes of
H p
H H
i A
i
Hi i
Be 3
Ber: |
7 t
bP |
Mr. Merrftt Hedgeman, former-
ly a ntudent “of Fisk Cniveraity,
has been soloist of the Fisk Glee
has"also. sung with the Famous
Fisk Jubilee Singers. Mr. Hedge-
man plans to study in New York
thin fall after which fe contem-
plates going, ‘abroad fo continuc
Dis ‘musleal careey. He ts now en
gaged In concert work in New York.
| Kr
There’ Be No
No. 2 Company of
“Green Pastures”
“TeerelN de no second company of
Green Pastures” 4
‘This was the information given oul
by officials af the sensational show
Row playing at- the Mansfeld -The-
hop, wage Saiurday, to Chappy Gard:
ner, Coutier reporter. .
“Our shaw should stay here two
yeare” GARD one offelat. “thén run
inree years on’ the road. We are
warkinegnow at A London’ engane-
rent” + ¢ - *
Irvin ©. Miller's, Latest”
Show to. Have Many
Renowned Beauties
frvin CG. Miler, aha pat the
prownriin tienuticg on the rap and
glorified the Ameriess Negra’ gil
ii: many. pleating Ways, pute BIH ew
edition. a “Brawankine” of RY into
rehearsal Ie week.
While there will bea few of the
oid favotit@e present, for Uae most
part the now nntsit wiih resemble MF
rew flower paren of auarled Deut
Ucn’ It is heing’Reised around tat
theciefiy—tayie CL. wil atfut ext
HOLLYWOOD, Cel. Duke Hubna-
len wid fis ondygsty are het at
work en) Git. muabat nears. othr
ther furthooning REG rcturs with
fagek nt amt 7
The chuge ret lobe’ aren sh one
nisturs age new neaciy eempteted,
hein mark sceanty, tin in Gach
would estzt bia attack to & seme Of
MPping veppereuts that made pame
nid Tommy. sag ot Use iimecs. 1 woe
Madi “this styTe of Cighiiag that Ure
cuempion eared the fight une the
Rinth, when Freegan, in 2 dd-oredic
wffort, carried the Math by 8 narrow
margin, :
. ‘Pkomgnos showed his only signs of
distress © in ihe: fouricenth reuadl,
| Freeman landed a one-tvg punch teat
panied dhcit 49 bald montentarlly far
the fest tae during the fight, det
guickiy recovered: z
Ail Uhings ‘considered it was a goo
land’ at fitges; spectacutar fight, with
come fifrce exchanges of blows, wilt
'fhompson always making Freeman
‘preak-ground, Thompson Wan beauti-
| fisi to behol aa be set a dazzling: Paeq
Wacuugiuus die su-rouad otawie, urate
lea to the proverbial pink, and'a sharp-
|shooter, he looked every bit of the:
‘great fighter that he is, and even’ if
be was robbed of bis crown, he con-
yinced 16,000 fans that he is a far
pettertighter than the new cham-
plo, and It wes ofly the “breaks”
‘of the game,’ from whicb all Negro
|figtiers must suffer, that be todsy is
‘not the rightful holder of the welter-
weight title.
+, All Dectutang Bad
Pat Haley's dacision was no} the
‘onty one on the card, In, fact, every
winper on a véry godd. card’ was
‘gybred, with the exception of ‘Tory
‘Hortere, ibe Mealcaa, and Tony. did
net or ee * auance to deprive
phen, 08 , Se be came ‘back
trou. two tripe to the cemene'to sore
Sree truey sie ughtwolgate, an
walterrfeight of Mris,. afi over the
'siog, Wut “sea declared the I over.
Other decisions, that Jecked to be, off
cater Wore ‘Mickey: Cobesr, over Louis
Bare ag tas
: O° ae 2 eo. Weg
A Life Story of Maurice Hunter,
“Negro Model and-Creative Artist
Seige oa
Hunter Is-One-of the Beat letsractors of widely - varied. types
“Models ta Aniericg, Who 3" Hehe gti
Is Now in Silent Draraa [for twittng Rie features. into. gre
e |tesque appearances and whicit he has
By BERTHA GILBERT ‘developed into an art now stands him
He spent his jast penny for a cos-
pee ia which tp pote a8. model
id then nearly tstarved until he re-
‘ceived. his. monthly. psy. He nearly
lost hia life in a traffie: Jam to pro-
tect -a satchel. containing precious
costumes. He nearly froze one winter
day when posing im the nude for an
artist, who, fully clothet himeelf, for-
thet res neat was turced off,
‘These are only a’ few'ef the ex:
penlences of Maurice ‘Hunter, Negro
model apd creative artist of flariem
who Js now being hailed ax a genius
of fantomime,
Poned for Gibson
Chartes Dana Gibson,. Eugene Savage.
Walter Biggs, Dan. Chester Frenct
and other fsmious scutpiow? and:pnint-
crs. He.is the original .of the ‘xtatne
{Je landers Field" done by Hrench.
Tiinter’s face and“figure have gare
fm over the nation on magazine
covers, in illustrations to storias and
similar forms of art, yet his bouna-
jese ambition “has cacried him for-
ward to. still greater -achievemea!s
Dosing for artista and sculptere WA:
only watep in bis climb toward higner
creauive art. .
“an “Silent Drama’?
The Goncéet platform ix ow Me
medium of expression. ‘Assiated, hy
pianist and a vorallet, he aqw’ ‘Rives
What he calla a “sient drama’ re-
aa + ty which he impereondlex xix
Noted Attress s
. Says Robeson .
” Creat ‘Actor
ciitinn Gish, ane of the leadine
agrenes in Anreries, beautiful ant
aeciaimed on oth fac stage and
reseons stated this week ta tie New
York prent, shit she would be RI66
to play oppasttc Piwd Robeson (p
motel.” > . «
- oisa Gish image thin statement just
fag she wan returning trem Buren.
[phe tated that eke would never play
Gh thie anevics wy, fot wiih remain
on the legitimate stage. Mor appear.
fuce iaal Aeaion. Waa a HERSRLEOE,
Paul Robeson starred in “Othdlte”
in bonded fart acavon, ” The play Wu
angiot (itera cucces fel jn Fantini
Heeause Af 1b? clog intimayy of tie
Nene getor and white aghrss pay:
ion bpnate, lim, 2 ceustoe jot
Bit ofeantrevetg. do fceiatiy a At
‘the pisy Hay be prorentd Jn ARE
eran fe ta tysetin, the prebie
“Pua Gebeosn ah geet aster, hun
ame hears, the wtedient gbtar ‘of
‘agmete ME the world, 1 shevhd: bs
sed fis ploy appcedte gem an “Otte
Be eeaon be ae
O“Latiian Gish han plexed tm reste. of
she peeatest. plebare, spredireds | Xe
Mitayed inthe ‘Minis ag 2 Sta tien,”
tatkie, “fine Reagantle Sythttt
Piely at.vhe Olyeapis
Mage? Cliville, middlewergst cham
pon of Porto “Rieu, with three
teaiphs sietorkes RC Cas Olympia Clu
to fis eradit, WA) attempt to secig
Hie fourth Priany night when he
hecka up with Heddle Hultgren, rid:
cleweipht, chavapion of Sweden, when
they mest in the fecture wiz-reund
yout, 5
Einte coniing.to this cnuatyy, Cl
ville hae keoelted ost Teddy Eeter
and Jimmy Tach(tt aud outpointed
Gheriey Karche, Sins champion. He
shapes Up ne G grea prospect ane
undoubtedly wit he up there with
the fppnotelgrs.of hin division In AR
other racs!h or two.
In ‘the semi-fina! six-rouned int,
Oscar Latosn, x stable maie of ®il
Chocolate, hooks up avith Pete. Cov
[veria, the seourge of Coney 1nianc.
La Rosa, a smart boxer and har’
‘hitter, ia a big favorite with Olympia
‘regulars. 7 ‘ 7
he remainder of ihe card conaints
Jot seven four-round bouts. Tom Ei.
ancht, former Maduel Training High
‘School. al! #round «athlete, |" g0es
against Knockout Jose Ramos,. of
‘Cuba, iq one of the fours: Bianchi
‘has a atring of ten straight kayoes
to. bis credit aad confidently expect
to make Ramos Ne 11. "5
‘Tato Pire, of Bouts Brooklyn, op-
poses Tadic, Neleom, former amatets
champion, and Bemest Torres> of
Cuba, facca Domaco Seda, of Chine
town, in. two. otner feature four
rounders. ‘The Femaining bouts ‘are
‘Side; ve. Jimpiy Payhe, of Por
Rico; Yack “Merman, West . wide
va. K, 0. Brown, of Byrecuss: Jact
Senwarts, Browz, va. Johny Winters
‘Chjengor Larry @eheiter, Bronk, ve
fea. Brown, Ateata, = |):
Some people Gb = deci of vonsting
about chemetees Deeauan iaty cen:
at ”
ot yeiede mars rete ans
aay
a orl 3
characters of widely varied types
without iising “his votes ”at~ail.-—A
eadek whlch "Wa BEd Troe: ohlldkood
‘for, twisting bis features into gra-
‘tongue appearances and whicit he has
‘developed into an art now stands him
in good stead.”
| Same of ‘kw characterizationa’ are
those of a bal fighter, a pirate, an
Afab In a baraar, wn original drama-
tization of folksongs, and oné of the
Wise Men ‘from the Hast. All are
accompanied by a singer or a pianist.
With his headquarters in Harlem,
at "188 St. Nicholas, avenue, . where
Mra, Cazl Diton acts’as his manager
and adviser, Hunter js slowiy,'becom-
ing factor In the advancement of
this typé of art. we
Born ‘of Zulu parents “in Dutch
Guiaa, Hunterycame to thg United
States-when Kelwas 12 yea old.-tn
the horpital where he worked aschore
he had picked [up a, smattering of
Engilsh. He Icadned miore of the lin-
guage In two yoars of sen life before
he landed here. :
Beenie a Waiter
ut this ambitious youth who had
han away fronk bospijat. chorea in
Dutch Guiana apa who thought. mat,
in the Untted States, ke would Jm-
medintely find Work that suited him:
was sadly dieagpointed.when he was
wrett to bevonie x waiter and then
an devator boxl 7
fark finally Heeeme his adly avhen
a gltl model, ving in the apartment
hota, where he ran the elevator, Rot
him a job at model foy the Art Soi
dont Leagan . :
(Ta Be Contiound Next Week)
Howard Agademy —*
| Grid Coach Wants
A Driving Eleven
OORLAY Kia, Aug. 10, Avoirda-
PA Tes ee ae
for sa the 1929 Maweurd aradeay forte
Tail teat. :
“Tn not looking; for tig mens" iste
James Boss, tie WH Bulls
Foneh, “ies wiiat a sang has diving
hin that unkes hia worth while,
hol howe navel he Baa ta drive, Give
Riv apiayer who won't be Keitee abe
Towontt Worry about the weigh.
Sth qinedeheations af Hort Lot
‘pail Mlayers.it the onger oF Gieir i.
porlanne nee brains fnigatinal fort
Taide, «peed, Inte ef the game “and
welth e a e e
ML piaesttiaine af! the head of the
Has eenise weithest anenta aleeines
Apher dopeat in prerd Mie tan
tat be ghde te suet past ail get
SEA Be Op penttit congo teat ‘eke sat
Tea for ao saiai thump iter te
Peferge will he at iting babies ih
“Lave of the game, ‘Fei in verte-
thing That 2 $a e2 comshen avevions
Vian Ineiing fob the chap who
ft eeu fhe Wave, the te
PS eyabe eta, af ke des the nonve
archueatiot’s, Sql conse stony fa te
Jihonanntier whe fait The above qual
anatase bay fo srerey wot Bec
Shin girk tinettomesd to aint hana tf ty
did pet gout fer the train,
pao tab as Tom comoernett, weight
ig the it, thing # lonle for inn saat
pial payer. [ovens 2 ie shee he
cfirat part oa” Mist heanoa because |
[aged seeigh( ten muen, Sox tht
itogin, Hf the bigg Callow han ty
: see quakgieation?, way Wh twit 26
Uhest call over the Hette fellow.”
Cricket
St Neal Orleine On, Tabor. Day
"Pao Cresvent. CC. tact the Loult
inna ¢.C. al Now OFteaus oval, After
the first lontag “no ene. state. iach
which of the team would, beat, A
Doth were.ae goad on the walle as
theyavere on the feather! fut In the
Maeand Inning the Crescent GC.
could not atandathe howling ef Ter.
Seeae at rhe lawnoece Co nad 4
‘mor of Bridrelowg. ‘The Lonisiann
peat the’ Greseent by three crams and
five wleetn to fair. = :
‘Toa much cannot. be said of Mr.
Parker of the Louisiana €..C., who
caught out four men two runs. Crick-
Jeteta arn, hoping to -meet the New
“York C.°C. an the near future.
‘Tne umpires ware the Principal of
the Comaopoiitan. School: and. the
Captain of the New Orleans ¢. G. The
game terghinated at 5:80 P. M.. Sep-
tember Ist, 1930. . _
Hamp t Lines ay
“Are to Play at = A
: Yankee Stadiug
or tte
CHARLES H. WILLIAMS
Hampton Jostituté, Va., Sept. 12.
‘The athletic departments of a.
Institute and Lincoln University bas
completed arrangements for
second annual game ‘to be played it
|New York City, Saturday, November.
‘1; 1830, at Yankee Stadium. :
‘The game last. year in. the \ Palo.
Grounds marked the first appearanse
nf two Negro ‘college'‘teams, The
sam@ is true this year of the game
to be ‘played in the Yankee Stadiuta.
|, Many".qiiestioned the advixability
‘of playing the game in ‘New York
last stéson, but it turned out to be
whet the New Yotk fang have long.
Uesired. IL brought to the very doors:
nt, the Jargest Negro community in
‘the world one of the maiof* sport
events of the, year. \
_ The game-ard the crowd surpassed
the expectations of many football
fans. Hundreds of enthusiasts trom
different sections of, the country who
missed the contest in 1929 are already
making arrangements to be at the
Yankee Stadium when the two teams
meet on Novembér 1. -Igquiries are
being received al the Hampton office
about the game from football folfow-
¢rs ix the Soiith, East, and West.
Every “indication: points to national
‘interest in the coming contest bee
tween Hanipton and’ Lineoln at
Yankee Stadium.
The omanagersent af the Polo
Grouxis and? the Yankee Stadium
believe these games offer an unusual
‘opportunity for the New York public
to res each yenr Hampton and Lin-
coln, txo outstanding Negro college.
ents fu action... For that reszon
they. ate cooperating in every pos
sible way to make the game this
Near a Wexer anecena than the finer
palmar Inst fonron,
lineata upset the dope last yoee
hy defeating dampten 15 ta 6, Thte
fait! thee ‘Searvior nee working’ te
avenge Int year's detent, Phe conch
Hinkthig agjiy possiile preparation for
ihe contelt, Conebes ‘Tayior and Walt
of Linesty and Cone Smith of Ramp.
fen all etgended the. University ot
Michyjzah's -conehingy schoo! daring
the past summer, Terman X, Neil
ron, B faothell ster, who graduates
froma.” Springtie#t Coliege an’ June
AISA; WA Joss The Hamstan star 1h
ail .
‘Thore rerponite ter the! esnsi
foe the gatne and vie miaaacene:
aver MG. Serrow, represent hye ta
FAmerigan Leagiy, Basketball Shwe:
Sew York. Jac. Dr. Fraunis f, dant-
ron, Giadunte Manager af lines!
alvorslty, and Charles Gf, Wiles,
teem anting Giamoten laaitats
oan nro hadng heteitert hy Whagt
+ Rees st Nevihaurptac:
*ARRON, Ghiq, Aups idm Melton
Untven, sale speed kauta of the race,
let tan Bato pace at Northampton
cpobiway Runaty, having the rere a2
the hele cat pehine ham.
ca gop ee
ise
a, gS
RS i oe See
aA ee ma
sates, aaa 2
Gledya Max of Stullte’ Sees Cow
Follow’ thre lead of Gladys
‘Mav, vivacious actress in,
Sinflin’? Sam front Alte
bara wha seys she finds _
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> ‘Atuata,; Ge. t's
El elemento de nuestra raza negra no debe dejar la solución de sus multiples problemas, a merced de aquellos que injurian su caracter y usan su valor económico en beneficio propio, como aconteció en la época de la esclavitud y como acontece aun en la mayor parte de los puntos, en donde el hombre negro se halla en contacto con las actividades del hombre blanco, especialmente con las del anglo-sajón y el anglo-americano.
Rubber Bryan, de 24 años de edad y compañero de Fund-Gras, que fue linchado acompañado en Daria para haber participado en un triteto que causó la muerte a un policía y heridas gravas tra las uñas, acaba de ser herido y arrestado en los alrededores de la población.
Fuertemente custodido, por una fuerza de la guardia nacional, se le trajo al paquebro y ha quedado en la cierre donde recibe tramarimiento por sus heridas.
Ese elemento de la raza blanca, por el hecho de servir fielmente a su prejuicio, ha llegado a la conclusión de que el elemento de la raza negra es un grupo inferior, incapaz de gobernarse a si mismo o de participar de equidad en la maquinaria de los gobiernos existentes, siendo considerado solamente cuando puede ser usado para contribuir al poder raqueza de los demás.
Una gran, cantidad de personas toma parte en la persecución del acusado que se habia refugiado en unos pantanos de los alrededores de esa población. Después de herido y arrestado Rubber Bryan, las autoridades reciebon noticias de que el inviduo que tienen en su poder es Willie Bryan, hermano del culpable y por lo tanto se esta investigando acerca de la verdad de estar seme
El mismo principio que cobiera la relación del blanco con el otro blanco, debe gobernar la relación del blanco con el negro; pero ese mismo principio es generalmente ignorado. El espíritu de independencia, sin embargo, se extiende por toda la superficie del globo. Los pueblos oprimidos empiezan a preguntarse porque debe subyugárseles sin justificación. Toda vez se pone de manifiesto un sentimiento tal, podemos ver claramente que serios trastornos amenazan al género humano.
Suspenden las Negociaciones
Les negotiationes de pariñen la India entre el gobierno y los dirigentes de la desobedición ciudadana, inclusive Mahatma Gandhi y El Nehrus, quedaron interrumplas oficialmente.
Los refractarios a nuestro movimiento de enaltecimiento ya empiezan a ver que el hombre negro no puede vivir para si, porque el poderoso no se lo permite. Si de algn modo ha de vivir y sacar algun partido de su existencia, debe realizar que sus problemas, mientras aparentemente tienen un carácter local, son realmente de un carácter internacional y para obtener el mejor beneficio de su valor civico, político y económico, tiene que llegar a un entendido y cooperar con los demás elementos de su raza universalmente.
Sit Tej Bahadur Sapru y M. Yakar han estado tratando de resolver las dificultades entre el gobierno británico y los dirigentes nacionalistas de la India. Hicieron varias visitas a Mahatma Gandhi y a El Nehrus en sus prisiones. Outante un tiempo los observores esusuvieron, creyendo que persidían a los nacionalistas hindu a que cedieran lo suficiente para llegar al mínimum de las demandas británicas. Esta esperanza, sin embargo, se ha desvancido y solo los más optimistas esperaban que en las negociaciones se llegara a un acuedo.
El honorable Marcus Garvey percibió todo esto al crear su movimiento de emancipación, fundándolo en las bases de entendimiento y cooperación mutua entre todos los elemento de la raza negra. Sus enemigos sienten ya la solidariidad de sue posición y la efectividad de su propaganda, la cual ha enseñado al hombre negro a pensar por sí mismo. Este tiene aun que apreciar su valor como pueblo. Tal es el objetivo capital de ese movimiento emancipador.
La félicia final de Maharashtra Gandhi a las proposiciones de Sint Tej Bahadur Sapru y Jayakar se estaba redactando en consulta con los oros dirigentes del congreso. La carta será entregada a los dos moderados.
Mientros tanto, el gobierno did nuevos pasos para poner fin al anunciado descontento entre los agricultores de Islampur, en el distrito Satara de la provincia de Bombay. En respuesta a la llamada de auxilio de la policía de Islampur, la solida pora allí una fuerza de policías armados en canciones.
LO FUNESTO DEL RIDÍCULO
El arma mas poderosa para prevenir el progreso de nuestro elemento es el ridículo. Desde que se abolió la esclavitud y la fuerza legal no puede ser empleada por mas tiempo para mancener la subyugación, el enemigo se ha mofado del hombre negro y ha continuado llevandoole a un estado que conceptua de inferioridad. El ridículo es mas cruel que el látigo, por que azota las almas de los sensitivos y desconcierta a los apocados de mente.
Le Liga de Naciones
Las ceremonias comunas el primer din de reuniones fueron necesamente motivo, para que vijos antigos y antiguos rivales canibaran las protetorias frases de corresilla y sonticas, que preceden con frecuencia a los irides debates de los días subsiguientes.
Nada de lo que nuestro elemento ama y reverencia y porjo tanto muy sagrado para el, se ha escapado a la sardónica risa que le brindan sus enemigos. Cuanto mas grandes son los ideales del hombre negro, cuanto mas altas sus ambiciones, más apoyasadas se presente estas actuaciones progresivas a la vista del hombre blanco, quien-las afea y las tilda de atrevidas e insolentes, por el hecho de que son actuaciones nuestras, producto legítimo de nuestro avance en la lucha por la reconquista de nuestro derecho.
Entre los delegados se encuentran veintidos ministros de Relaciones Exteriores y' estidistas de tenombre mundial de todos los países que pertenecen a la liga.
Presidió lo sesión inaugural el delegado de Venenuela, César Zumman quien expresó sus deseses que el próximo año sae más frecuencia en verdaderos esfuerzos coquisuir la paz muralidad que el actual. Se refirió también al parco de Londres su objetivo, sentó una, base que puede en el futuro ser completada efectivamente.
Por espacio de medio siglo el hombre blanco ha tenido éxito burlañose del hombre negro, sometiéndole a un estado de subyugación y servidumbre. Depende exclusivamente del hombre negro el acondicionarse para no seguir haciendo el papel de toto y continuar esa actitud irisoria, patrocinándose un medio selvático y no permitir que su semejante de piel clara, crea que sus gestos, esfuerzos y luchas para conseguir una orientación progresiva, han sido perdidos para siempre.
Hizo alusión al proteco Brisnd sobre los Estados Unidos de Europa como un plan que tiende a la consolidación de la paz europea y cuya sola formulation indica los progresos altanazades desde la fundación de la Liga.
El elemento de nuestra taza al presente tiene que pensar y prepararse para decidir por sí mismo lo que mejor convenga a su condición racial y distinguir lo que importe o no importe a su sensibilidad. Tiene también que preparar su mente de antemano y una vez hecha su decisión, no estar sujeto a los desvaneos y prejuicios que la raza opuesta tra ara de hacerle, toda vez que se diera perfecta cuenta de que está en lo cierto, y concurre abiertamente a las exigencias de la época contemporanea.
El Proyecto Briand
El Sr. Briand, ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Francia, declaró haber recibido una de las satisfacción más grande de su vida al su proyecto sobre unificación europea pasado al estudio del consejo de la Liga de Naciones.
El distinguidó estadía francesa aseguró la los periodistas que consideraba la rápida aceptación de su proyecto en principio como una verdadera victoria para la causa de la europa.
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BENNETT
REGALIA SUPPLIES
Officinales and Cops, Books and Manuals, Clerical Supplies
Banners, Badges, Journals and Regalia of all kinds—administrators and Designers
Supplies for all Societies and Organizations
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Nov. 15th & 19th Stocks
HOWELL
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8000 BENNETT AVENUE
Attention 8000
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Time Office Serves to Bennett Plaza—One of Church Press
Attention 8000
Dichago
Pireo el Dionzo enchate con las Angillas, en el tiempo abajo. Primero Oba, después Pitero iba con el terribile cíldon de "San Pellejo" ahora Santo Domingo, debatiéndose entre las ruinas dejas como restro pot el tréndemo huracán del miércoles. No es mbimento de la mentaciones, sino de actos, practicos. Y los dominicanos, como ya informamos en un estro número de ayer, se han puesto inmediatamente a la tarea.
Es ella generosa praternal y deberia tener la cooperación de todos, absolutamente todos los hermanos de raza ve Santo Domingo de aquil. En el sufriimiento, precisamente, suele verse el geneto de ley que tien los lazos familiares, la consistencia cordial que conservan las leyes de la sangre comings. Y no huda de que, para cuantos hablamos español, la noble nation dominicana—de tan limpie estirpe colembina—es predilecta y grita hermania de nuestras patrias respectivas.
En su hora de dolor presente, ante el horror de los centenarios de muertos, de los millares de víctimas que el tráfico recuento va presentando en lista luctuosamente creciente, la caridad fraternal, el impulso generoso de los hispanos de aquí debe ponerse inmediatamente junto al esfuerzo de los dominicanos, para ayudarles a recaudar lo más posible—y lo más rápidamente posible—en bien de los damnificados de la bella y malventurada república.
A ella han ido ya, socortos pecuniarios y médicos de los Estados Unidos y es sólo justo acusar la diligencia en el envío y la delatada disposición de la autoridades de Washington, de no abandonar a los dominicanos a sus propios-recursos en esta ocasión. Washington tiene allá una efectiva y fuerte responsabilidad y no puede, civica y humanamente, eximirse de hacerla efectiva a fondo.
Mas no se confie todo a la ayuda de los extramos. Santo Domingo tiene viene hermanos de su raza y de tellas debe y puede llegar, auxilio considerable en dinero, en especie y en efecto. Y sobe todo deberíamos tener todos en cuenta que, en la angustiosa crisis del momento, la noble nación dominicana, que siempre ha tenido la más sensitiva emoción hispana, hallará doble comportamiento en el socorro de sus hermanos, flasch dollez hispano, en efecto, tendrán para los dominios el significado intrincado de la fraternidad que los ha recaudado, junto al valor paramutante municipal de su unidad monetaria.
El Consulado general dominicano ha organizado la recuadidad ya. No solo los dominicanos, que sin duda se dispirían el honor de acuerditade el primer instante, sino todos los hispanos que puedan materialmente llevar el agua, deben figurar en las listas de suscripción. Yeros, sobre todo, deben, producir inmediatamente cancidades que remitir a Santo Domingo, donde las necesidades deben abumaradas donda la urgencia de salivio ha de aumentar por horaria. Donde la palabra de los hectamos de fuente debe llegar a probar a las informaciones vicarias de la fatalidad, que no conosan solan. Y que con su dolor, palpatan también los millones de millones de hepianos que les cuenran como sangre de su misma sangre, parte de su propio espiritu.
— La Prensa, N. Y.
Bishop Gregg. Cheered by World Youth at Berlin
BERLIN, Germany. -- Thirteen thousand eager and anxious people, the majority of them young people, representatives of all nations of the world heard Bishop John A. Gregg, presiding Bishop of the Fifth Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, address a ringing challenge to the Christian world in a major address that was the dramatic climax to the World Conference for Christian Youth.
The conference, held in the great Exhibition Hall of Charlottenberg at the Kaiserdaimn, was declared to be the greatest international gathering of its kind within a generation. Bishop Gregg's address was the only radio address of the entire convention, and was broadcast over a nation-wide hook-up. In his address the Bishop declared, "The church stands indicted before the new Christian world as having failed adequately to represent the spirit and teaching of its master." He expressed his belief in the growing spirit of tolerance through such agencies as the Endeavor movement and the many interracial organizations, but called upon the church proper to lead, "I must maintain," and he, "that of the Christian church had not, because sinister (especially in these latter years), but had prepared a vigorous presentation of the principles of the Christian world of love and of love for others, and had laid down by the members of the church that they would be the most bravely love of the Christian community in the world."
Spoonful Blues
by Charley Patton
HERE'S a record that "worst behave"—its another by that famous star Charley Patton who has returned us two other sensational sellers, "PONY BLUES" and "DOWN THE DIRT ROAD." His guitar playing is "out of this world" and does he sing—you should hear him on this latest Paramount record at your dealer or mail us the coupon.
[ 1800—Shake It And Break It But [ Dont Let It Fall Mama ] ]
Vocal Novelty, and A Spoonful Blues, guitar acc., Charley Patton
18075—Bad Spring Blues and To To Blues, Vocal, guitar acc., Blind Lemon Jefferson.
18076—Grown Stormo Blues and Florida Bound, Vocal, guitar acc., Tenderfoot Edwards.
18080—Potion Blues and My Man Blues, Vocal, piano-trumpet acc., Alto Moore.
18090—Head of Being Blossomed, Part I and Part II, Vocal with guitar, Clifford Olson.
18100—Gray Blues and Boney Booster Blues, Vocal, guitar acc., Charley Patton.
18054—Bewy The Dirt Road Blues and It Won't Be Long, Vocal guitar acc., Charley Patton.
18083—Bakershop Blues and Long Distance Blues, Vocal guitar acc., Blind Lemon Jefferson.
18090—Forty Four Blues and Frisco Bound, Vocal, piano acc., James Wiggins.
18095—Down on South Alloy Blues and Five Minute Blues, Vocal, piano acc., L. Green.
SPIRITUALS
18076—Belly Tone Bluesdown To The Lord, Vocal, last acc., and Telephone To Gry, Blind Arthur.
18090—The Good Strength and Dreams in Series Blues by Nighttown Blues, Buffalo, California.
PARAMount
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CIVIL SERVICE NEWS
Proceedings of the New York Association of Business
1896. New business is shown. Like a
old year Civil Service. More than
1000 new jobs are requested by the
budget for 1891 by various city and
county departments, not including
The Polkon, Fire, Sanitation, Public
Welfare, Water Supply, Education,
Transportation, etc. Considering all
the departments, there will be nearly
5000 new employees added to service
to the 1891 Budget. This number,
of course, has no, bearing
whatever on the usual number of
examinations and positions to be filled
during every year.
TENEMENT INSPECTOR EXAMINATION SOON—A request for 200 Tenement House Inspectors to enforce the Multiple Dwelling Law has been made by the department. The dates for the examination will be announced soon. Salary $1800 to $2760 a year.
FACTORY INSPECTOR & PAROLE OFFICER TO BE HELD IN OCTOBER—The State Department of Civil Service announce that 130 state and county examinations will be held October 4 and among the examinations will be the two nuemed above. Applications are expected to be issued next week.
ASSISTANT LAY INSPECTOR Applications now open. Issued from Clinton House, N.C. September 23 is the latest for filing applications. Age 18 to 45 years of age. Salary $1620. Duties—To assist in connection with the inspection of meat and meat-food products.
Applications for Bookkeeper
(Male), Gr. 2 closed August 28,
1,300 filed for the examinations. The
written examination will be held first,
late in October or early in November.
The following examinations have
been ordered and will be held this
Fall—Nurse's Assistant. (no experi-
ence required). Women, 21 years of
over. Salary $800 to $1050 a year
for part time work. Telephone Oper-
ator, (Female) Salary $860 to $1580
a year. Court Attendant, Salary
$2,000 to $2,700 a year. Pursue Ore-
cer, (male and female). Pursue Ore-
cer, (male and female). Present Too-
k for 50 vacancies. Salary $1700
to $2100 a year. Open to male
citizens only from 18 to 45 years of age.
During the summer months it is
estimated that over 3,000 persons
were certified for appointment in New
York City and eligibility for the
various positions in the City, State
and Federal service.
Decide on the examination and position you would like to have in the Civil Service and start working toward that aim. Do not wait until the examination is announced. Be ready when it is announced!
Certifications and appointments—
3 Law Examiners at $1560 a year.
107 Typewriting Copilot at $600 a year.
2 Plumber's Helpers at $6.50 a day.
8 Inspector of Repairs and Supplies at $2400 a year.
80 Social Investigators at $1680 a year.
103 Stationery Engineer at $1500 a year.
6 Production Officer at $600 a year.
20 Nurse of Amputation at $600 a year.
100 Assistant Engineer at $600 a year.
3 Inspector of Photographers at $600 a year. Many examinators, hospital workers, typists, clerks, and laborers are on this enormous list of certifications for Summer.
NOTICE
*
To Abraham in South Africa, You can secure our paper. The Negro World, at Jack Davenport's Book Store 176 A Committee Store 312 Johannesburg. These of you that have not read this paper regularly can do so now by securing your copy weekly from Corridor, New Depot, 11 A 15.
Of the many infectious diseases known malaria has played a very important role as the cause of death. It is to be met with all over the world.
in a more or less degree. India, especially along the great river basin it furlsures. Throughout the Southern States there are many places where it prevails whilst-cases are to be seen along the Central Atlantic States. In West Africa it assumes a very fatal form known as black water fever. At the present time the Rhodesian Government has taken a very wise step by asking a prominent English scientist to make investigation and recommendation concerning malaria in the regions-round and about. It is also reported that the French Government is carrying on an extensive health campaign for the people of Madagascar. The Isthmus of Panama for hundreds of years was the hot bed for the disease which carried off the white inhabitants in countless numbers. The French during their occupation of the said area were unable to combat its ravages. The Americans, however, through able leadership succeeded in a few short years to so cradicate the scourge that today the cases are as few as in New York City. In tropical regions generally there are periods when the disease assumes a great height.
It is presumed that all or nearly all of my readers are acquainted with the fact that the disease is due to the mosquito. Whilst all mosquitoes bite it is only a certain specie which conveys the disease. The casual onlooker is unable to make a differentiation so it is a good plan to kill in all sight. The malarial parasite is found within the body, of the mosquito. When it bites a person the parasite gets into certain of the
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The fever which malaria causes
very characteristic. Anyone who has
had an attack remembers quite well
the unpleasant feelings previous to
the onset of the chill. The accompany
ague might last from one to
four hours. One cannot be too
careful as the fever might rise as
high as 106 degrees. The annoyance
caused by the upset of the stomach
is great. Food is not much relied
and the long continuance of a case
usually resulted in enaplation. The
spleen, as a rule, is hard hit. It might assume such a large size as to burst under slight interference.
Certain measures must be attempted in order to exterminate the disease. The destruction of the mosquito by draining infected areas such as marshes and swamps is one of the foremost. The formation of puddles should be prevented by clearing away bushes, weeds, and undergrowth. Containers of water such as barrels, tanks and clarkers should be well protected. The stock pond should not be tolerated close to habitations. The attention to pools along the sides of the road, wheel ruts etc. is desirable. The use of petroleum over breeding pools can accomplish much good. Use screens and nets in the house when practicable. Shield the child from bites as much as possible. Smoke produced from rags and feathers is useful in driving away the insects. The fumes of burning sulphur are effective. When traveling to a malarial region it is a good thing to be provided with some quinine, but it is better to see a doctor when necessary, so as to avoid becoming a chronic malarious subject.
Some people cultivate a good disposition but fail to fertilize it.
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Phone Cathedral 7433
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some schools that we still need to
someone to start to school. Today it
is organized in such an attractive
manner that the older ones, regret
very much they cannot take a ruler,
a pad of paper and a pencil and
fudge into school, to learn some
of those things they have no
long forgotten. It is fitting, indeed,
that schools should open following
the last summer holiday. Day,
for there is a degree of relationship
tween the increased num-
bers of children in the schools of
the United States today. Better, wages
and standards of living have enabled
many parents to give their children
what each "parent years to give," a
better chance than he himself had.
Almost two million more children
U. N. I. A. Wins 2 Points In Famous Marks' Case
(Continued from Page One)
amendment of a judgment.
(2) Interleader appeal.
(3) Liberty Hall appeal.
The First-Appeal
The original proceedings (for the amendment of a judgment) were on a summons for judgment in summary form. An order was made, giving the plaintiff leave to enter judgment. Instead of entering judgment, they entered a copy of the order, giving them leave to enter judgment. If that had stood unamended, the whole subsequent proceedings would have been void and invalid. The chief Justice, however, amended this, and the appeal was against the chief justice's amendment.
* This appeal was dismissed, but the contention of the appellant's has been upheld in the other two judgments.
National Negro Business League, Brooklyn Branch
The Brooklyn branch of the National Negro Business League had its first meeting of the year on Wednesday evening September 3 at $80 at the Carlton Y. M. C. A.
The local branch can, through local meetings, help solve problems of personal, trade expansion and have touch with direct information.
It can directly and indirectly make places for hundreds of young men known of our group.
It can inspire many to go into business and help build Negro business bigger.
Any person who is engaged in agriculture, honorable trade, a profession or legitimate business person and wanna character or reputation are above approach in eligible for membership.
You can join this group of earnest men and women who are banned together to give service to the public and build up their community and to appreciate the value of Negro business to the Negro and to America.
It will be interesting to discover the conditions in the later decade, when the figures become available. The number had nearly doubled in 1010-1020, and there were then 67 women. In 1020-1030, the contrast with the decrease in the total of all women, in that line of work, one-tenth of 1 per cent.
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to be educated more and more
provide it and equally finance it to
all children to work with what
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greatly by the great prosperity of
American industries, the children have
also benefited by their opportunities
for education, in college and university,
as well as in elementary grades.
For the past hour you have been
listening to a program of "Food for
Thought," which came to you through
the courtesy of the Negro World
Manufacturing Company. The program
was broadcast from the roof of the
Garvey Hotel, over station UNIA,
owned and operated by the Negro
World Broadcasting System. So long
everybody! De Mena announcing!
Negroes' Lot is Only The Poorest Paid Jobs
(Continued from Page One)
all Negroes engaged in gainful occupations.
In domestic and personal service but 8 per cent of the total working population is engaged, while among Negroes in the last census more than 22.1 per cent were so employed.
It may seem that 67.3 per cent of the colored workers were to be found in the poorest paid occupations with the longest hours, as against 30 per cent of all working people in 1890.
The Negro has slowly improved his status in occupations through the decades since the Civil War, as shown clearly in a little manual by Dr. Charles Wesley. "The Negro Labor in the United States."
The conditions which obtain today need some such federal agency as is making a study of the general employment situation in America, and the President, by his control of the Civil Service and the large number of people employed by the government on merit, is in a position to remedy the facts.
A great discrepancy is found between the proportion of all the people engaged in trade, 10 per cent in 1930, and the Negroes so engaged in the last census, but 2.9 per cent.
In clerical pursuits the last census shows 7 to 8 per cent, but the Negro had but eight-tenths of 1 per cent engaged as clerks, stenographers, agents, bookkeepers and messenger boys in 1920.
In professional service the nation shows 5 per cent, of its population engaged, while the census of 1920 showed Negroes with 1.7 per cent thus engaged; and the majority were ministers and music teachers.
One-third of the total population in engaged in manufacturing and mechanical industries, according to the direction, in 1920 18.4 per cent of the Negroes were so engaged.
Among the Negro women engaged in manufacturing and mechanical industry, 37,646 more were employed in 1916 than in 1916, according to a study by the Women's Bureau of the U. S. Department of Labor, entitled "Negro Women in Industry in Fifteenth States."
The houses were long, however, and the wages low when the total days employed were taken into consideration.
In the last census each person genuinely employed worked on an average of 275 days per year, thus necessitating a wage that permitted living the other more than half of the year, when not at work.
The number of married women employed among Negroes was discovered in 1923 to be greater than the whites, and the infant mortality among Negro mothers was found to be correspondingly high among those women in the 19th principal office for women with figures were below.
From these facts it can be seen that President Hoover has a special task laid out in improving the 'more permanent and profitable employment for the Negro citizens of this country."
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"It is time to define an open, but the abolition of the military government."
Tunjunk states: "We have no time for leaders who want to be dictators. Our leaders must do the will of the people and lead the campaign of refusal to pay poll tax. Prow carries out the will of his class. He is more than an individual. He is told by his people to drive the slaves this way and that, and he does it. In the same way our African leaders must do the OVID campaign. We are who will be honest and determined to carry on the battle.
A Campaign of Resistance
"We must not be afraid of goals. Goals were made for the oppressed people. Men will die in this country as they are dying in India and other countries. But we must launch our campaign of resistance and not give up until the Act of Union is repealed, the Riotous Assemblies Act gone, and there is no more talk of pass laws."
Other forceful speeches were made by Comrades Leepile and Vumazonke. The chairman (Mr, Ismael) acted as a wet blanket trying to restrain the leap of the national intentional" action. In spite of his efforts, however, the reception was a fine advertisement for the fighting leek-wing leaders at the A. M. C.
Lincoln Secretarial School
This internationally known school is now in its third year, and an enormous enrollment has been received for the fall term.
Within a few weeks the school will remove to new premises on 125th Street close to Lenox Avenue. The premises have been rebuilt for the purpose of the school and will have a seating capacity twice as large as their present premises. The premises have been especially built and adapted for the school purposes and the building will be known as the Lincoln School Building. As soon as the school is occupied we understand that a special invitation will be issued to the public to inspect the new premises and the increased complete business school equipment.
During the comparatively short time the school has been functioning, it has had among its students representatives of every South American country on this continent, also from every southern state and this term a student has enrolled from Liboria, West Africa, while three apprentices have been received from Africa, two from Capetown, and one from Johannesburg. The executive is always pleased to receive visitors who are allowed to attend classes without any obligation to enable them to see how the classes are conducted. The school is unique in its particular class and is doing great work in the interests of the Colored Rescue.
White Press Thinks
COLUMBIA, S. C., Sept. 31. —Organized labor defeated Cole L. Blieson for the United States Senate, tabulation of the vote today indicating his defeat by nearly 6,000. James F. Byrnes, former, Representative, was nominated in gubernatorial primary. Blease was a former champion and idol of organized labor men in South Carolina, but they now regard him as a traitor to their interests and they contend he is a well organized campaign, virtually every branch turning its biggest guns on Blease and its best efforts for Byrnes, whose record in Congress met with their favor.
Bleise was caught especially by the textile crafts because of his proposal that the mill workers form local unions, with state charters, instead of affiliating with the American Federation of Labor or the National Textile Workers' Union. Labor leaders put off to the opposition. In a series of textile labor difficulties in this state last year he made speeches that were regarded as favorable to mill owners rather than to the workers.
In 2012, the New York State Department of Health announced that the dogs were attempting to steal milk from the cow, that the cow, obeyed by stealing the dogs and the dogs regurgitated by stealing the cow. The dogs were ordered by the Board of Health to be kept in leash for two weeks, the cow to be examined for traces of rabies.
Negro Serfdom Must Be Wiped Out From Earth
phases, to the more absorbing issues which manifest themselves in the ever-increasing cry for independence. For the native African has awakened out of his slumber. He has begun to think, and whenever a man feels that he is the subject of injustice, his perception of right and wrong is wonderfully quickened. There is no slavery but ignorance. Civilization is the child of intelligence, and as man develops he places a greater value upon his own rights.
"Not only in Africa, but in the West Indies and elsewhere, the Negro must unite to recover his lost place in the world. The only thanks he has earned for the civilization he has transmitted to the modern world is ingratitude and contempt. He has nothing to fear and everything to an courage him in the struggle. He has already experienced a high civilization. Both Greece and Rome have borne this testimony as inheritors of Negro culture.
"Discrimination against the Negro is manifested in the hate for the "one drop of Negro blood" in the colored aspirant to so-called white society, and we hear of curious descriptive epithets arising from this discrimination, such as white blood, black blood, colored blood, etc., even though they are all red blood. Subjugation of the Negro is a crime which must be stamped off, the face of the earth. To this end we are working, and we need for the help of all those who share the same view."
August Lynching Orgy
MARION, Ind.—Thomas Shipp, JP,
and Abe Smith, 19, were taken from
the county jail on the night of
August 6, and bung on the courthouse
square.
MOUNT VERNON, Ga.—S. S. Miney,
70, active in Republican politics,
was beaten to death by a mob after
being abducted to another county on
July 30.
RAYMOND, Miss.—George Robinson,
28, bell hop, was killed in the
county jail, by Deputy Sheriff "W.
L. Ford. He was being kept there
for "safe-keeping."
CHARLOTTE, N. C.—Lee Townsend,
40, toshawk driver, was mysteriously
killed near Charleston, N. C.
His body was found in a well just
week.
TENARKANA, Tex. — Herbert Richardson was killed by a federal probation agent here on August 7. The stock failure excuse of "self-defense" which is usually accompanied by planting a gun on the dead body of the victim, was the officer's story.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Milton Dorech, 37, was killed here on August 5, by a policeman who fired three shots into him. The charge was the usual fake excuse, "relisting arrest." Wife Slim, Farmer Kills Employee BRENHAM, Tex. (ANP) — Angered when he returned home and discovered that his wife had been chained, Travis Smith, white, suicided a rile and shot to death Covius Bob, one of his farm hands. Smith told officers that he believed Ben had killed Mr. Smith.
TARBORO, N. C. (ANP) — Oliver Moore, 23, charged with attacking two women, was taken from the Edgecombe County Jail Tuesday by 200 masked man, hanged to a tree, and his body riddled by bullets.
CLARENDON, Ark. - To escape from a mob of white Acadians bent upon lynching him, Boots Wright, a Negro worker, was forced to swim across Old River near here. The planters organized the mob after Wright had beaten up a white foreman, Tom Winfree.
military occupation in the war. The war was a success, and the war was a success. The war was the first to realize how odious and inhuman these practices were, and he proclaimed seven acts forbidding their abrogations. His successors followed the example, but the slave trade had taken such a firm hold on the people that the slaves were not strictly observed.
* Only when the unity of the empire was attained under the Emperor Menelik II, and the chiefs of the provinces as well as the chiefs of the kingdoms under the suzerainty of the emperor were definitely subjected to his authority, could the slave trade be effectively suppressed.
Use Harah Measures
The present government, headed by the Emperor Ras Tafaril, which adopts energetic and ruthless methods against the slave dealers, has succeeded in almost totally suppressing the slave trade.
But in Abyssinia, as in all countries, although the law is severe and always inexorably applied, there are still persons who violate it. When the imperial police are able to arrest any of the criminals, however, the latter are ruthlessly dealt with—as happened in July, 1922:
It may be said that at the present time the slave trade no longer exists in Abyssinia, except in isolated cases, which are becoming increasingly rare.
Underdeveloped Country
Abyssinia is, however an immense country in which communications are still in a very undeveloped state and the pursuit of bandits who carry on this illicit trade is very difficult.
Deny Alyssinian Slavery
The present government of Abysinia abstolished the system of selling slaves in 1923 and made stringent laws to end that practice, according to statement which has been made here by Gebirate Kebirab, former Mayor of Addis Ababa and of Gondar, Ethiopia, and L. J. Malaku E. Bayen, who are in New York on a commercial mission sent by Haile Seslacie I. Emperor of Ethiopia. The envoys took reception 16 to a remission of Lady Simon, wife of Sir John Simon, who declared at a meeting of the English-speaking Union in this city recently that Abysinia was "the only Christian country that allows human beings to be sold as property."
"The degree of 1923 abolished the sitting of the declared the Abassian officials in a joint statement. "It was recognized that if all slaves were freed at once many might turn to robbery because of the difficulty in earning their living. The possibility of civil war if all slaves were suddenly freed was also taken into consideration, as was the necessity for educating the slaves to earn their livelihood.
"Therefore the law provided that no master died their shaven would become free automatically."
Youths Invention to
road is clear. If not the path will be blocked.
Barron was been in Tennessee and studied for the ministry. At times he preaches now, but all of his life he has been interested in mechanics. He moved to Ohio at an early age and has been working on a gate that will be controlled by a helicopter, from several of the school libraries. One of the big railroad companies inquiring about his invention. Barron guarded the principles and mechanics of his discovery with the utmost secretory.
Frank R. Crosswash, writer for many colored newspapers, has been chosen by the Socialist party to make a fight for Congress from the 21st New York District. Crosswash was nominated by the Socialists for lieutenant-governor at the party's convention and the nomination was greeted with applause. However, that he would rather make the fight in his home district where he has built up a large following that will enable him to enter the campaign with strong hopes for success.
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Four days later than the arrival of the Sini-Bethina party, William Pickens was to arrive on the Morro Castle of the Ward Line from New York. Mr. Pickens thinks he would have met similar treatment, and would have been threatened with being sent to Tiscornia, the Cuban "Ella Island," if the Club, Atenas had not heard of his coming and made representations to the Cuban government to prevent any insult or inconvenience being put upon him. The president of the club, Senor Cornelio Elizade y Lima, and the secretary, Senor Ramon Valdes, had made representation directly to the Cuban government and secured the written card of the commissioner of immigration that Mr. Pickens would be treated without discrimination upon his arrival.
Other colored Americans have recently been treated with great indignity by this American-inspired policy. The Rev. Mr. Downing of Tennessee and four high school teachers were kept at the island of Ticorina several days and made to pay for the "accommodations." The contributing editor of the Associated Negro Press, with the wife of Secretary Stimson of the State Department in Washington, advising him of the situation and protesting against it. He also is establishing contacts in Cuba among those who will fight for equal rights for Negro tourists. And any colored person planning to visit Cuba is advised to notify William Pickens, contributing editor of the Associated Negro Press, 3423 Indiana avenue, Chicago. Ill.; Association secretary of the National Association secretary of the Advantage Colored People, at 69 Fifth avenue, New York, N. Y. Mr. Pickens can then notify certain people in Havana and the traveler will get influential assistance if he finds it necessary to fight for his rights when he reaches Cuban ports.
Meanwhile, steps will be taken to influence the right attitudes in American government officials, where the "color" discrimination seems to originate.
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