The Negro World
Saturday, November 22, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
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{SOM MAVEL—Ne 7 ec NE® WORK, NOVEMBER 22, 1999 me re
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Nesroes Must Stop fighting, Obstructing tacit Uthet
Be Evie ae |We Must Not Stay Forever. Children Stop Building Churches, Says _
ects Two. Judges, One to State Of Discord, Di. ° ° i Mr, Greene; Divert. Money to
i iscord, Disunity, Distrust; |." 2T Nee eee
Assembly; Other States Do Well) . - Df ee > ae 2 . Solid, Productive Enterprises
Biinois Also Has 5.Aseem-
blythen; Judge George
Defeated in Reelection
TWO STATE SENATORS
Justice of Peace in Mis-
souri; Negro Vote Split’.
in. Many States -
CHICAGO, Iil.—Congressman Dé
Priest muiccessfully withsté¥ the. tid
of Democratic votes in Cook.Caunty
Ilnols, and: was re-elected to Con
rece. 4
Judge Gedrge Defeated
Pudge “Albert B. George was. de
‘feated in his race to.be reelected one
of the twelve municipal judges of the
city. . iG
State Renator Adelbert H. ‘Roberts
was re-elécted ‘and all ‘the colored
representativesgjp the Milinois state
segisiciture won. They are George W.
) Blackwell, Harris B. Gaines, Willem
¥, King, Charles J. Jenkins and Wii-
liam - Warfield. Langston was de-
feated ‘for county commissioner.
‘The colored districts ignored the
dodgers prepared by Mayor Thompson
and went for Mrs. McCormick, who
was snowed under by J. Hamilton
LBwis. 2
Harlem Results ‘
—Hieriem—miarcted_tothe polls here
Tuesday in the state clection-and
elected two’ colored Democrats, James
.$. Watson and Charles E. Toney to
the municipal court bevch. © "~
Watson and Toney defeated two
ccidesd: Republiczns, ‘Francis E. 7
Gt Me Soha Chitent- Hawkins. “The
BnofBclal Agues were Watson, 14,660;
Cantionéd ou Peta)
Colds Beat All
Tness in Cost
Poli Not Only of Days
Work, but Time, Money,
and Future Health
Tac’ tremendous economic * loss
guused by colds war stressed by Com-
missioner Shirley W. Wynne id’ his
weeltly talk over WHARF. “Colds take
more dollars and ents out of the
qworkér's pocket in one.year than any
other sickness.” be vaid. . “Phey. are
lao responsible for x Sreater loss ‘of
time from school aud work then.any
other single .catie. I consider the
coramon cold one of themosi-formid-
able enemies of the public’ heart,
with? which the Health” Department
Kas to deal. an
“ntortunately, 2 cold dges "not
s:op at stealing one day’s work, Tt
stien takes a far Idrger toll of time,
snoney, future health and usefulness.
A corftmon cold, neglected, ‘can pre-
pare the Way for’ other and’ more
‘terious diseases such as pneumonia,
bronchitis” beart disease, and tuber-
culosis. Ta hany cases, the person
who has managed to overcome tuber-
culosis and Is leading a beaithy life
ean be so weakened by a cold that
his old disease becomes active again.
“It, is, in fact, these sequelae of
solids that cause death. Our vital
stalintics give no hint of the preva-
lence and importance’ of the cold,
because there ia no actual mortality
as the result of colds. .But,-cculd the,
sum total of suffering, inconvenience,
ihe sequela, the economié loss re-
sulting trom common colds be plated.
before you, you would be eppalied at
the dreaful reckoning.” .
. Few Exempt: from Colds
. Commissioner Wynne jaia great
emphasis on'the fact that few ped:
ple are immune to colds, “It is the
coramonest and most widespread ot
the communicable diseases,” he said.
Mint mihue ihe <
: Live Agents z
-s. TO SELL 7
‘THE NEGRO WORLD
} ; =F MATTERS NOT
pene Pom ea eee
x “MACE WEEKLY .
fs apa s Rove Foren,
igi sete ms
me id
iede—Cireabation Pope,
ar oe oO
Haiti House Elects ~
Anti-Occupationist |
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Nov, |
11—Jolibols Fils, avowed “antl-oc- |
cupationist, has-been elected Pres-
| ident of the Haitlan House of
Deputies. Hud election was on the
first yallot. |
‘The Haitian Senate has not yet
been organized, but met today for
settlement of one remaining com
tested seat. It is lkely that a
Haltian President will be selected
before the ‘next weekend. .
+ Joseph Jolibols Fils ls the man
reelected to Haitian Parliament
on a Labor ticket. . He is president
of the National Confederation of
Workers and Peasants of Haiti.
se
K.K.K. Dwindles
To Only 34,694
Once: Boasted Great
Wealth .and. Power; -
Now Cries for Help -
A RACKET OF HAFE
Excesses Demoralized the
~Order, Caused Downfall
—Suill Strong ‘in Pa:
| The gradual decline in power
‘anu mambereiny jn the Ku Klux
ina io aineuened $a ‘hose of the
‘order recently made public here. What
was considered once as being thé
world's most highly organized “rack-
et," both politically and financtalty,
ts’ now looked “upon as merely &
crumbling shell, hastily approaching
oblivion. Nevertheless, it is making
u,lent desperate stand ‘to’ controt the
PAloe hox “and exact a tribute Yor
political power.
‘A history of the most “infamous
orgnatzation+ shows that beginning
with 8% incorporation in 1920, with
Atinnia as Rendquarters, it grew br
untold leaps and bounds, reaching the
pinnacle of its political and financial
powar in 1925. Accoraing to the ree-
ords, the membership in 1924 was 8,-
9014,$71—~-comnprising: chapters in every
state In the country and the District
of Coimbia, |
* Fahwious Wealth Diseppears
“Certain members of the old or-
ganization stele from time to time
to obtain an accounting of its funds.
Te is a mystery to them what wos
done with the onee fabufees wedith,
that was amassed: | Fhousands of
them Rave Rever been‘able te learn |
from Impetin! Wikard Hiram W. Hy-|
Fn Aaa Gea a ween 1
Haiti Hates Russell,
‘Praised -by. Hoover
President’ Accepts “Resignation” of
former VJ. S, Dictator; Replaces:
Hita by a Civilian *,
MUNRO NEW APPOINTEE -
| WASHINGTON, D. C.—Prestdent
Hoover Iast ‘Wednesday accepted the
resignation of Brig. Gen, John H.
‘Russell as Anierican high commis-
sioner to Halts. .
Tn letters given out at the State
Department ‘tes services in Haiti were
praised by President Hoover and Sec-
retary of State Heary L. Stimson.
Manro to Sail .
Gen. Ryssell will be replaced by a
civilian minister, Dasm G. aynro,
chiéf of“the division of Latin-Ameri-
can affairs in the State Department.
Dr. Munro $s sailing for his new post
on November 11..Gen. Russell. will
retupd to duty with the United States
Marine. Corps. He has been the Amer-
ican vhigh Commissiener at Pprt-au-
Prinee since 3022. His resignation ts
ettéctive November 12.
. , Febes Connleston
‘The ‘replacement of Gen. Russell,
who has been'descriled aj’ the -reili-
tary ruler of Haiti,” by a' civilian as
the United States minieter te tt ac-
cordsace with the recommendations
of the Forbes commission which
be dope, sxtil. “the inaugerstion <f
» permanent peapident”.of Salt «|
A natiqns? sagseahty bas heen clect-
Tan nb Maktan provident hes. xot
joven te an ae oe
plenipotentiary wt the
bo, thy Mepabite of =
oe aaron
ts Ltt
. j = oJ
|We Must Not Stay Forever. Children
° g ° ° ° :
Of Discord, Disunity, Distrust;
_. .Let’s Forget Ways of Weakness. _
7 fee : 8 ele
We See Victory Before Us—Victory Through U. N. I. A.—Rally
to the Cause—Let Us Close Ranks—Let Us Stand
. ve “Together as One: Te se Pg :
Have We Not Learned. the Lesson- That Bickerings Léad Us to -Self-Destruc-
‘tien #—Aitinternal Quarrels Should Cease—Let’s Prepare Earnestly to ~
ison ° _ Make Vision of Africa Redeemed a Reality .. ,
ei : (Special to The Negro World by Hon. Marcag Garvey) 2
FELLOWMEN OF THE NEGRO RACE, Greeting, :
Once more we have to appeal to you universally, to *tow buckle on, yout armour of
racial pride and co-operation to go forward in confronting the oppositions and obstacles|
thar stand ‘like a. mighty mountain in our way. . oe 2.
i ; : Grand Hope ~ : . |
3) © Unfortunately, the report’ comes. from all over the world that we are still the children’
4 sé diccocd, GE disunity, and of discrase‘even though we-have eamestly:besoustit you to:fot:|
Ty. S. Moves to Relinqnish ; ; ‘
2 >. Treaty. Rights in: China
| get the ways of evil so that you ma)
Decome the proud possessora of thal
grand hope to which all self. respect:
ing people should look: * :
) On Te Vietory
Characteristically,, we have devel-
oped: disposition to fight, agitate
and obstruct each other, but have we
rot learnt the lesscn well that this
does ‘not pay? Surely we are not
going to continue om the road to de-
struction? Because, if we change
not our course,‘ sad acd Gohappy
shall be the end. We have hopes—
grand bopes;—hopes of prosperity;
hopes” of ‘mucesss that aball give ua
new courage to live. ‘That ix why
the Universal Negro Improvement
Association now ‘mukbe the “appea}
to every. son and daughter of: scat-
tered Africa. We qnust unite, we
must ¢d-operate, we must as one
mighty ermy match on to the given
Koel; abd 50 the scene fa” being set
and we confidently feel that we, the
actors in this mighty play of united
good-will, stall lead on to victory. *
Wb ave victory before ure view
tory «throngs the Universal Negro
Improvement Asrociation. Let every
unit therefore, of the Ruce, maice up
& pare of the ipighty.throzg. Was,
went mien; we Want women and chil-
dren of the Rece cverywhere to
rally to the colors of the Red, Black
and the Grog,
-_ & Gand Day.
are looking forward to a grand
and gldgious day that is to come; we,
shall co-operate, we shal! work for
te AL Ate present time we are wns,
yersally Ye-edjustings ourzelves for
the great Convention of “sig,
1931, but before this day we must!
with our financial-and moral support |
20 encourage the: Unlvercal Nexro|
‘improvement “Ansociation as to matte |
hose of us who lesd feel taat everys
mne fs in-carnest'and we are no long: |
ar the victimé. of tis Orgenization, |
Dut thd: werhave caught the vislon— |
he true.vision of Africe redeciced, |
hose at home and those abroad. |
‘To Win Successfully
We are making a ‘stirring appeal
o those within the Universal “Negro!
provement Association who have|
een. bickering with. and fighting
gainst cach otlier. Lot us clove]
‘anks; Jet’ us stand together ay a}
mniversal, throng because it iz only]
y this method that we can win: suc-|
easfully. <¢@ :
The Great Drive. +
“Those who have not yet-pledged tc
he Six Hundred Million Dollar Fund,
hat Is being raised to capitalize our
reat work, are asked to send in
heir names and addresses and: the
mount that they will pledge so that
ur registry cap contain each and
‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 13,—S8ubmise-
ston by the American- Government of
Proposals to the Chiness Government
for thé gradual relinguishment™ of
Américan extrateriitorigl rights tm
China wis announced today by Secre-
tary Stimsoo. 5 .
‘The. proposals are in tins with the
Jast year thay, the Unites Btates was
prepared (o negotiate on a method fer
reltaquisiament: ¢¢ the treaty rights.
~At thet time, the United States
it aoe! You °
+ Sent tes Your: Contriivation "|
Bo Ae ae '
THE NEGRO |
4 ‘wh Tour's > ier a
ie: 1 BY aa a
Por es Sa ea
; :
fl i
ae
ve) ae oy
ae ee ape was
2A oer Dt oe
fe - a eae
| Pe eo:
: ;
* -
z eee ee RS
oe A or ee erties
fe eS ne
Meer ca Rams CntGe ear Gt oe
every loyal son and daughter who
will do his wed her part. , The names
of cach and every member of ‘the
Race who desire to pledge towzrds
this Fund chouid be veut to the Sko-
retary’ General, “Universal Negro
Iraproyement s.ssociation, “Edelwels
Park", 67 Sipe Rosd, Ctoss Roade
P. Os St. Andrew, Jumeica, BW.
Let everybody who hy not comtrit-
uted do so nbW and those who have
pledged, are respectfully’ asked to
send it aud pay something on their
pledges, for the time is coming for
us to start our particular activities,
With, very best wishes for your
success, I have .the honor to be,
‘Your’ obedient servant,
* | MARCUS GARVEY,
President-General Universal Negro
Improvement Association.
weadlweis Park.”
67 Silpe Road, Cross Roads P. 0.
St. Andrew, Jamaica, B.W.1.
P.S.--Again I inust crmind the
Branches, Chapters, Divisions, of the
aid relinqushment would apply to
‘designated territorial areas in China
or to particular kinds of jurisdiction,
guch as civil or criminal rights held
under -the treaty, Under these rights,
Americans are not subject to Chinese
courts, ¢
‘The condition attached by the
‘United States to its policy was that
must proceed along with the en-
actment and effective exforcement-6f
Jaws by Ching “based on midern con-
cepts of jurisprudence."
Fae propossis of the Aamérican Gov.
Shes nee
om te
of: jertettetien. Se tik Sout specition
areas, They ero. ctmlier fo but not
seeations win sreponiia Wy ee Brite
Govetemapt to the ta: Bop
tp. Mideter. Wa: ot here vans
a ae
‘Universal Negro Improvement Asso-
ciation, and Garvey Clubs to hasten to
send. a-thele report, and 40. gon. think
cueh member pay im tila or her Ace
sesument Tax which hes been over-
cue. ‘Thin Tax must bo forwarded
by the Divisional Ofticer in iz re-
port to Headquarters.
aunyoné who wiuhes the Parent
Body well, will not withhold its re!
port and Assessment Tax. All mem-
ders should vee! {hat this te done,‘
MG
. Achievement Week
Celebrationin To. Be Held Throughout
Country—Gigantle Programs
5 Arranwed
Babine: — National Negro
Achievernent week as sporsored by
the Omega Psi Phi fraternity, wil
depth next Sunday and during the ep-
lire.week, over the country, celebra-
tions will be’ held. Gigantic programs
hive been arranged for by the elghty-
four chapters, comprising this Greek
setier order Witu & view iv imu, uly
helping*other groups underatand the
good (he Negro has been in the build-
ing of our great country, but to in-
form the youth of our own race as to
the accomplishments of their sireat
Several radio programs have been
arranged’ for and Dénver,.New York,
Baltimore, Atlants, Chicago, and one
or two other places will vie as to the
best ‘programs tobe staged from
Negro composers and writers.
BUY — BUY — BUY .
Mysore terse
Buy Yeasty. Subseription to. the
Negro World Naw amt Sate
“ Ametent Rataen pettetioas.
Bf “Rustnesn
‘Thist ta the only thing that will get™
“gha waat wtsbigual wey of bay
"most way
- ing [eo to buy’ pubpeription +0 the
egw pullches inemy the Reoe— -
Bosley wae Be toes
fer Chek
Stop Building Churches, Says —
Mr, Greene; Divert. Money to.
3 Solid, Productive Enterprises
Trial “Marriage Tdea Negroes Suffer’ Most’ in
Old Stuff in Desert || Crisis Because They Are
RABAT, Moroccom-Trial *mar- Mere Consumers
riage, offered as & modern’ idea a —— es i
| few yours se°, is sasdare! Dees, RACE WEAKNESS HIT.
pun ‘ef cuustion here, or at || Day of “Nigger Jobs” Is
teeny? newerera pair waicn {| Come; Must Develop .
hadn't heard of miodero law con--}; ~ Labor Consciousness
-tracted to live together for a year ————.
and ‘a half, Each retained the. | LYNCHBURG, Va-—Lorenzo I
right to leave at will, carrying off |] Greene, research investigator of the
whatever goods were contributed || Association for the Study of Negro
to the household, Life and History, ‘spoke to an audie
————! ence Tuésday night, at the Court Bt.
* Baptist urch. Mr. Greene
Dr. Haynes Backs fimey scsress on unemployment
. we” | adiea 188 portraped tule dunpiacenen
From So. Africa (33.2.2 ee ae
Whites and Natives Eager
to Know Race’s Prog-
ressin U.S.
A 10,000 ‘MILE TRE
“Character, Power of Na-
tives Wonderful”; West:
ern Negro Should Lead
Dr. George E. Haynes, secretary,
Comminsion on Race Relations, ‘re-
turned on tbe Steamship Oympla,
from a survey tour of South and Cen-
trai Africa, ‘including the Union of
South Africe, Southern. and Northery
Rhoderia, Congo Belge and Portu:
guese Angola. He ‘made a special
study of Ue Young Men's Christian
Association work. which bax been
done during the’ past ten years by
Max Yergur among the native stu-
dents of the Bantu peoplé of South
Africe.." He traveled about 10,000
miles, much of {LY autorionite, Jn
the remotg:t parts of Soule Aires.
Congo Beige, aad Anyol:. Me vise
ied ‘and atudied the ‘work of e musn-
ber of minions of the American Min-
sonar: Sneletlee, giving special nite
leation to the question of Negro mis-
rionuries ané the possibility of their
work in Central Afrien. *
Commentiny on’ the probiews of re~
lations pelweem waite aud Negro pap-
ples in that parte! the world, Dr.
Hayacs sald: “There gre many phases
of the race problem ia South «ud
Contra? Africn suck ac we know in
Americ, und there ate 2 numtisr of
things in the conditions: there witch
nro different from ours here: For tx
zmpla.. There are many’ languaser
which make it difficult fo different
sroups to communicate with each
sther in the effort“to work oxt shelr
yrobleme. White and black are wide-
* Sekiceacce wa Gat Guanes: j
Race Altorney Sits
On Bench ai Tulsa
Acté“an Special Muster in Chancery
Jn Suit Involving Church Mermbers
TULSA, Oxla—Ben C. Franklin,
colored attorney, has bad % unique
honor bestowed om hi: this week tn
sitting on, the bench: in district. court
here as special master in’ chancery
in a-suit Involving imembers of &
colored church. ee
Franklin was named fo b-- the
case by Judge Saul Yat: on agree-
ment of ull parties involved. He in
the first race man in Oklahoma ever
tovelt on a-district court bench.
‘re 18 one of Lae vent Knuwu lariai
attorneys in the city, and frequently
appears in the-various courte
‘After hearing evidence in the case
for two days, he took the matter
under advisement, to rule at a later
date. The case was that of a number
of former members of the Church of
Gow if Christ, who sought court re-
Mef to Yorce Rev. William Strassman,
pastor of the eburch, tog gdmit them
to membership, after.he Mild allegedly
ousted some 65 of them. :
(The! court action.was brought by
Prank Fugett and Hi. G, Brown. They
formerly bald poditions as trustess,
but clainied they were ex-communi-
gated. when they protested 10 tbe. pas-
tor. regarding bis handitag of the
church’s fisaneet, 00 7.
_He.bed been pictured ac: 8 “canr,”
a ““dietator- in ehurch affaie whe
comperes.to Mussolini! himeilf,” and
hakged with Htemlly rumahig the
— to, sult himestZ. neni
present case is thet ‘he jag. sought
1 purghhins. «new e Saas
FIRST SO-HONORED
Negroes Suffer Most \ in
Crisis Because They Are
Mere Consumers
RACE WEAKNESS HIT.
Day of “‘Nigger Jobs” Is
Gone; Must Develop .
~ Labor Consciousness
LYNCHBURG, . Va—Lorenzo L
Greene, research investigator of the
Association for the Study of Negro
Life and History, ‘spoke to an audle
ence Tuesday night, at the Court St.
Baptist Church. Mr. Greene delivered
a timely address on unemployment
among Negroes, its catixe and its rem~
edles. He portrayed-the displacement
of race workers on the farms of the
south, in hotels, homes and in other
fields of employment, such aa street
cleaning, railroad labor, garbage col-
lecting. end in mechanical work. *
Mr. Greene then astounded his lise
tenera’by asserting that the Negroes’
own, unreliability, lack of punctuality,
waut of training, and their general
failure to take care of their jobs have
ell colahorated to drive him out of
his customary employment. ‘The Ne
xv, continucd Mr, Greene, must de-
velop a new inbor consciousness, in
light of thin dispiacement. ‘The day
of “nigger” jobs, exclusively aét
apart for race workers, is gone, nev
er,to return. Negroes must become
producers instead of consumers, he
aéded, in order to create jobs for
their own gtoup, for in times of eco
nomic strees auch dx now faces the
nation, they can hardly expect white
employerr, no matter how kindly dis-
‘AContinued on Pexe Eight)
South’s Women |
Hit Lynching
A, Good Citizens Called
te Fivin Eradieate
Nich Viglenee
| ATLANTA, Ga—Twelty-one wor
men, prominent, iif thé reliziotis, edue
extionnl and socizt life of the South,
met in Aunt: Saturday, broadcast
to the world a repudintior of lyach-
ing ax "a defense of womanhood,"
and called upon Amerien to maice
amend of this crime Fwhick diseredite
oir civilization and op teligion
around the globe” wBight sduthern
stutes were represented in the meat-
ing.
"We are convinced that Ivaching
is, not @ devense of womanhood o: of
anything else,” chid the women iz
thelg sittemen}, “but rither a men-
noe U6 privific and publiq safety “ane
a deadly blow at’ our racat sacred it~
stitutions."", Lynching, secording to
the group, “ic pot. clone the ‘crime
of ignorant und igresponsible racbs,
but every citizen “who condones it,
even by his silence, must accept a
share of its guilt.” .
. AntlMoh “Crusade Planned”
‘The meetingt called by the Commis~
sion on Interracial Cooperation, spent
the day planning a sustained south-"
wide crusade, throigh all availabie
senciey, against moh violsnee. Forts
will be made to entist the organized
podies of women, religious and ctvle,
and a special Appeat Will be made to
he govéMpors.of the. various states,
in the elif that their jnfterice may
pe made on effective. factor in the
prevention of lynching, as has beet
‘tmonstrated in Alabama, North
Carolina and other states, “Most of
Fram AMainlly ananantad with: levee
and influential bodies of ‘women,
hose-present at the meeting’ were:
"Mrs, -Uga Roberta Lawrence, St.
.ouls, Mo.; Mrs, J. Morgan Stevens,
*aatiie a ies rece
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Phin fs: Nie edhe 5 ‘ Gentil gf muciad Ages Leta thas ¢ | ai. aiteaenty: a ah eeeiing eterna, fie wan Jk Wiad. | RE eae
eet “oilak Ethiopla Be an Tnspiration” ji, Gutscerssatice st wit Tan hes os ily ‘ae Not of weit a ee and ia fee agen 8
eee Re oe ts gee ~ : : tm thestate bad a hatter ina: | masks & cooperative ‘Bais. stat “ot |gsory Uk toms op ection ance toe |: ein i thie alter, ate. What can Oe oe Alvin,
ey : as eect We ceils Sf 1 de tor yout” nL ope
(Garvey Gjeb Merabore Eatertained 67 iuose tines, for our own interest” |ing between te racial Eroope. | | coiton, production: tx organited am | South, accacdiog to "Mr Cook First, | sayeu, alr, I sbe-t8int you went tot? Be: Amegitam: Fepeene
Maman Hants ‘nga? ees even,
‘York “Oty, Nox, Sth, 1990—A
lively and enthusiastic paeeting
was hel at 8:20 p. m. after & won-
derful day of ¢elebration in horier of
‘King*Haile Setassiee I 6f Ethiopia, at
_ the’ Commonwealth Casino, ‘The Gar
‘vey Club wishes to thank all those
presidents secretaries, ‘members and
friends of the variops divisions of, the
‘U.N. I. A. of, August 1929. of the
‘World, who made it possible to attend
and joined in the celebration of the
greatest event of the twentieth’ ceh-
v.tury—the crowning of &, "Black King,
of the Lion of Judah, ‘And King of
Kings, Ras Tefari of Abyssinia.”
The foliowing were the speakers
of the affernoon program: Rev. C.
YP. Green, chaplain; Hon. L. W. Mc-
Cartney, mistress of ceremonies; Hon.
E, M. Collins, Hod. Col. Grant, Hon.
Charigs Mills,.secretary of New Ha-
ven Division; Captain Charles, of
Abyssinia; Major Woodiey of tie
Royal Guard Division; Major Derrick
of Monroe Street Division; Hon. Mme.
Callender, lady president of the’ Tiger
Division‘ and. secretaries.
"We were treated to some fine musi-
cai solos by Mme. Bailey, Mina frown,
‘of New Jersey, and Captain “Harris
‘and the juveniles. They drew ‘great
anpliusaand encertar™ "= |
Hon. L. W. McCartney, acting pres-
ident of the Garvey Club, Inc,, made
a very impressive address, aid sald
that the coronation of: the emperor
wes looked upon with much slgnifl-
Cance, and it was our duty to show
our appreciation of so noble an event.
Hon, E. M. Collinge, second vico-
president ‘and idecretary of the Gar-|
vey Club, Inc. also spoke encourag- |
imgiy, and stated that the call ot
‘Africa. for the Africans “thoae at
heme and those abroad had sounded
the world over, and tial we are now
coming, into ‘our ow: :
Ata p.m. the moes..ge of the Pres:
ideal General was Tend, and the hyma
“Gea Bless Our Present” wer eang |
ieatiiy.
of the bowl nurse. Kave « very spicy |
Feeitation and delivered herself very |
handsamely., She was greatly “ap: |
panel: |
Rev. Green then read the notices |
of the evening, and introduced the |
speakers of the evening. «
Mr. B. Bluskt -
Mr, Bluski, who 1s.from Abyssinia, |
spoke very educationally” and Umely |
iA the happening of the tmey, ax!
reeinag the black rece of which le!
J igentified, He wsaid, “This: {e un-|
Balveng tre: grote of nl coronnc|
ns ef the tulers ‘of. the Ethiopian |
Loveramgnt, EAhiopia was ‘again!
reiewng fog5h hee handa unto God, |
ind princes “were coming out of]
Hon. Sifiinee Dughenn a
Shed for beler cooperation 6 the
Dart wf the members OF fhe arpanint|
fiom, fe said thts as mo time we. pe!
vided among onrselves. ‘The time |
walls for untied getion on Ure ptt of |
‘it hiwrk ian and wontun, The reed |
‘aien todt and sprung up in some}
arts wi! the world. A few cays BRO |
n Binck “King was crowned, Kung of |
ings? the Lion of dudah.s +. oe
The collection wae then Gan up.)
ced Me. Mudgel, editor of ‘The Negra!
Woyld, nextentertained tNe mudience |
vith lantern slide pictures of, Africa |
yn the screen, His lecture wer very")
nteresting and educative, All meni-|
pars gre asked to utiend these nfect. |
Agi more revulzrly thaw 'they have |
stra doin, ‘There is much to lenge tn i
“Bp FRENCH...
gis, ie LOVE DROPS
BS LR asvenranating muito peiters
PRs Cees iscenaer cule aus
GP AR ELE
a Viet pono co,
Nee A ol Be Fe
| OPPORTUNITY
| ‘TO MAKE MONEY
|- WE WANT GOOD |
| LIVE WIDE-AWAKE
| AGENTS
>To Sell The 3
NEGRO WORLD
_ * inthe , :
Following Countries
HAMILTON . .-. Bermuda
{JAMAICA . Brit. West Indies
|ST. KITTS . Brit. West Indies
|ST..THOMAS . Virgin Islands.
ST. JOHN . . Virgin Islands
ST. CROIX . . Virgin Islands
PORT LIMON . . Costa Rica
TORONTO .... . . Canada|
CALGARY... . ...' Canada|
Af you 4b met want te kindle the’!
jenlo of- cur paper, Suid -semecne|
‘WB, and toll heme to write as
for. fil partioulare. a
"ACT Now! :
‘ lation Dept.” *
THE NEGRO WORLD
'- $53 LENOX AVENUE
[yp New York City
those times, for our own interest.”
‘The Ethiopian, Nations] Anthem
oe ee _Blayed, and the benediction
by the chaplain brovg! ‘mageting
foacees fe z
The office of: the Garvey Club is
now locited at the Liberty. Hall, 266%
8th avenue. Open every day. Miss E.
M. Collins, resident secretary,
Washington Ready for,
Anti-Lynching. Congress
WASHINGTON, D. C. +S. W.,
Green of New Orleans,” Supreme
Chancellor of the K. of P., and A.
Morris: Williams of Illinois, supreme
head of: the Knights and’ Daughters
of Honor, have forwarded their sup-
Port of the open national Colored
Anti-Lynching Congress to be held
here in John Wesley Zion Church,
th ang Corcoran streets, November
24 and 25, at invitation. of the Na-
tiongl: Equal Rights League whose
own annual meeting begins the 26th.
They: have been added to the advisory
committee, Dr. W. H.“Higgins, presi-
dent of the National Medical Assocla~
tion: J.-Finley Wilson, .G. E. R: of
‘Elks: A. “Philip Randolph, organizer
of the Porters Union; Noble .T. M.
Dent, for. the Shriners by designa-
tion of Tilinois Pot.; Caesar Blake,
Rothiachild Francis of New York, for-
mer, Virgin, Isles editor, will speak
and Bave been added to the commit-
tee of management, which Rev. T. 8.
Harten of New York, president of the
National Afro-American Civil League
has-been invited ta join.
Pledges of support have: come tn
from many places. Colored Washing-
ton awaits the coming of individuals
and Otganization delegates with cor-
digi ‘‘nterest. Intending “ind annual
Thanksgiving Day visitors are urged
to come early in oder to attend the
sessions. Everything is in readiness.
Much interest-bas been expressed in
the league's. proposal of a national
“Anti-Lynching We8k” November 23-,
28. The league asky ati churches and
éther organtzations to make Sunday.
Nov. 23 "Anti-Lynching’ Sunday” to
begin the “week” wilh, scrmons*on:
lynching as @ national’sin, For Mon-
dny mace meetings i sop ast
ing, as subversion pt fovernment;
Tuesday as fosteriig rece prejudice
Phursday, eapceiaily a2 Union Tan
RIVA services, aa breggling” blood.
Iust¥and disrespect for Jaw: Friday |
as uid to unrest and anarchy.
‘The fee for individual repremeata-
tivea ix $1, for, representatives of |
churcavs, lodges, vommittees or oF-|
ganizitions $2. fivery kind of race]
body it urged to send, and anti!
Inching citizens gommiittees, to hokt
Mass. Meclings nckt week to wend!
representatives, the ‘object belng a]
national race demonatextion of pris|
iat, and evolving UE plans for rae!
eetinn Of yeihow And methods of pra
ontion, , :
+ President Hoover nas been asked
0 spostor “AntHLynekings Werk.” |
Rew Cline Added to
Harlém Health Center
| ‘Bie Medical .Guldance Chate - the
most recent-service to be added iv
the Department of Health's now eon.
iter at 108 West 138th Street -Sexen
to fxaction on “Wednesday, Noven-
ber 12, at one o'clock, Ht is open every
Mongsy, Wednesday and Friday at
terncon,
The elinte vittiskave medical exami:
nation fnellities, aviilnete- only to
tote ‘who cannot afford to Ko to, a
private dictor.. Suet facilities will in-
chide the periodic healti: exumination
for well persons ddeziring an “inven-
fozy" om the atéte or their health,
a well as vompicte medical examic
nation of sith ‘persons stuttering: from
a ankmnown allment. :
It iW hot the purpose of the clinic
to treat any .ot those given these
examinations. If sitch persons are
found -sulfering from some detinite
Gisogder, they well be referred to
the proper Institition for treatment:
The "Medical Guidance "Clinic will
algo operate an Information bureau,
open fo all those seeking helpful ad
vies,”
Dwight W. Morrow
- To Be Trustee of.
Hampton. Institute
| HAMPTON, Va., Act. 30--Tho Hon.
[Dwight W. Morrow bas expresued bis
jqitlimguons iv evcopt the hnvitatlon
|to become. a member of, the board of
| trustees of Hampton fnstitute, here.
| He will be formally-elected-at a
| meeting of the trustees shortly to be
held. 7
‘This announcement. on behalf of
the frustees, was made by J. Henry
Soattergood, vice-chairman, acting as
‘chairman in the absence of Arthur
Curtiss James of New York,» who is
traveling in ‘Europe. +
Hamptop Testliuge was founded by
General Samuel W. Armstrong at the
cles ‘of the Civil War. It has al-
ways been a leader in practical Ne-
gro education; special emphasis be-
img put upon agriculture, the trades
end the training of Negro ere.
‘Many’ Negro Iseders bave reek
‘thetr trataing &¢ Hampton, tncinding
‘Booker T.. Washingtom, the founder,
and Robert R. Motos, ti present
Prtigpal of Twahegee Tnauitate, Us-
2 hig death, Justice Taft was
éhelrmen of the Malptte hoah of
{The men are wondering wey we
arez ore fe ttle when they day =
MMs te
et ee ee eet
3) EA asia:
Sere Sate hes ge
FSS. pweere BR.
Ping sunfire ly Din. oe. hase
fear ichioe petgaa icbeyiege oie ve ngs Se
Se celal a seat Aes te
Ton, Cualtomprereditee aa palit
epreed tose Sraniment of Negry
tn the-state bud «hatter | A
ing between the racial groups.
‘Mr. Milton, -after ‘pointing out that
raciat problems become more acute
during economic depressiqns, exhort-
ed his hearers to oir Mandx with the
state interraciaf” commisaida ‘to’ int-
prove the, feeling, betwegn the races
and keep down raalal-trouble.-
‘The speaker pleaded for justice in
the courts for the Negro, equal dié-
tribution of educational funds; more
school and recreational facilities and
requested that the Community Chest
Committee apply some of its fund.for
the ‘promotion of more amicable reia-
tions between the two groups.
10 After 12 Bridge Cub
Miss Cecilia Bennett entertained
the ‘Ten After Twelve Bridge Clut
at the’ residence .of: Mrs. Virginie
Hahhmond, 246 _West.- 150th street,
Wednesday evening, Nov. 12. Bridge
was playgl until ten after -twelve
after which’ a delicipus buffet supper
was served. ays
Those present were: Mrs. °VitGinis
Hammond; Mrs."Mattie Clarke, Mrs,
Eva Grant, Mrs. Sally Mandlett, Miss
Beulah Baxter, Miss Leona Penning-
ton, Miss Hylou Lore, Mids Mary
Dyson, Miss Kestelle Brown, Mist
Bessie Joncs, Miss Gussie ‘Hughes.
Mz. Richard Latlimore, Mr. Fred Me!
Sweeney and Mr, James Mitchell.
Obituaries _ €
MRS. VAUGHN PASSES
| - YOUNGSTOWN, O-—The funeral
of Mrs. Armelic C. Vacgbn, wife of
Gbuncijman W: S. Vaughn, was hele
at the Tabernacle Baptist Church
Rev. S. P. Zhiltips, pastor, officiat.
ing on Friday; November 7,.1930 at
2 BM. Mrs, Vaugha-died at her
home, 927 Lincoln Avenue, ‘Wednes-
say, November 5, 1920, at 4:05 A.M.
Ste had been iN, suffering with ker
eyed and shigh ‘blood pressure «for
xbout nine months. Buried. in Tod
Cemetery Friday, November 7, 1830.
She is sirvived by her husband, Coun-
ciiman W. 3S, Vaughn, Six. children,
four*gitis, Ada, Mac, Janeta, Jenn
xing wo boys, William Samuel Jr.,
and Lawrence Edwin; all at home,
and one sister, Mrs Bennie Mac
Harvey of Detroit, ‘Michigan,
AMPS. "Vaughn was formerly Miss
Atmetic Celeste Curtis, of, Cohimbus,
Ga, where “she wan born, reared,
Rruluated And taught in the Public
Schouls. She’ was married Co William
Sunuel Vaughs,» July 4, 1917, Rev.
J.°8. Miller, D.D.. officiating, and
cathe lo Youngstown thirteen years
agin She has A vide range of Criends,
in Youmgstown, Mrs. Vaughn’ stus an:
active member of thes Parent-Teach~
ets Association” of the, Covington |
Street Senool, Mother's’ Club nd
Taberniel: Baptiny Church, Her ace
qufintanve in other eiteles: Aad]
brounht her many Giehdy and ade
"the fanerst precession sean ted BY
Lhe “Uredtie police oticers under silrect |
aipervinion Of Paul 12, Lyden, Chit
mi Duties, wad Carl OE, Trae
MISS 1. WELCH GF CUBA *
RELA, Camanney, CubasoWe Te-
gret tw announce Me death of Mus
1. Weieh whieh” tool pltce on Oct.
20th ail her homte Santa, Laces, Came-
kuey, Cubs, Mise Welek was gn ay
dent supporter of aur division No.
754, during her Une of service with
bs" Axa member of the Black Cross
Nurses stuit rhe served faithfully,
and site iia served Lyd terms ae
oureLady Uresident, She tonk part
in everythinys uplittiny for our Givi-
slop nd the Universal Negro Im-
PIO. snett Avsocintion aa a whole
She won tip aifeetion of all who
game im conizet gvith her, "os
Her funeral whieh-was hekt from
our Liherty Hall, was well attended
by the tnembers and friends. who
wished to pay, their lat respects to
our beloved ee-worker, .
Although Miss, Welch has gone om
ahe shall always be remembered. for
the fafthful serviees rendered during
her lifetime, - .
| We, the! officers and memaers of
the. Garvey :Clpb, Inc. N.Y. Cty, re-
Ryet to announce. the death of one of
cur most legal’ ind faithtul officer
aiid treasurer, in the person of Mrs,
Wihelminis G. Pant, who died on
Nov. 15th, 1930, ater a brief illness.’
She will be geeatly missed by ali “af |
us, for her sterling qualities, her noble
womanhood, her genefous spirit to the |
Organization of the U.N. I. A., Aug..|
1929; of the World, and racial uplift,
and « lovmg ‘und devoted wife of Mr.
George Paul. She was buried ’én Sun
day, Nov. 16th, *
Special memorial scracea witt+be
held at a later date.
“Gone, but..not forgotten, ~
E nae ae
We also regret to: antiounce the:
death ot another of our loyal ang|
Giltiful meriber, Mr. Frederick Storie,
of 478. Waverly Aventie, Brooklya, N.
¥., who, met with an accident résult-
ing in a fractured akull, and died Nov.
4th, 1080. Fyneral ‘aanouncement
Will DE made later at- Liberty stall,
“May he rest in Peace.”
Dfhienee and members, Garvey Ch
Inc., 2867-8th Avenue, N. ¥. City,
E. M. Collina. Secretary.
erect
Cairo Bans Wafd--Rally
‘CAIRO; Egypt, — The Government
today bansed's. Wafd meeting ‘sched
uled“for Thursday la celebration of
The Government expreesed the
opinion, Unet the Wafd leader, Nahas
Pasha, ‘sees such cocasiens 'tb.pretch
a? Waser AON care ee ei SPR SEAS L IS Shs
pra ne Sy pcan ake geet deer 2a re ES te os, Se ane 7
oe TR sO Da Le stg oa
is Begun in Seythierd States
ee re ae
32k inn te Soe aac
Aeondtan, ee, been aon os Stee hier. are Segepancy ta“ tao-
make ® cooperative ‘Belt, gtoty Of |\srave the trys of eotien 10 the
cotton protinetion tn organived com- South, according to Mn Cook. First,
munities in the Southeasters ‘States, |tne superipr. varietiea developed by.
With special attention.to the 00°! nant breeders must be .gen-
nomic and sociological phasew: “80 teraliy;: aiyt toe wittormiiy ot
object of the study, which: wilt. be.| sn5, Wiley be. maintained by
conducted in cooperation .with the’! con} { Uiileas “Hew. ver
Bureau, of Agricultural Keonamlcs,| rieties arv adopted by: whole
ig to"de' ‘the advantage. to oot-| munities instead of Ey. a few indie
top growers fram “onewariety. com-| viduals, there. is mo prompect that
munities,” and Ye develop methods | they. will remain pure or that grow-
of adapting. this system of produc- | ers wil} realise the full value of their
tion to sections of the Cotton Belt |cropg. In a community producting
im which local’ conditions vary. several varieties: of cottoh, the, seed
Cotton improvement on @ commun-| becothes mixed at the gin, the varie-
ity basis was initiated in California | ties cross-pollinate in the ‘fields, and
and Arizona several years ago, says} the seed. stocks rapidly deteriorate.
O. F.. Cook, in charge of cotton-/As farmers say, thé cotton “runs
breeding investigations for the. de-| out,” as s, reault of mongrellzing the
partment, and the feasibility'of the | seed stocks. Monk
plan in the southwestern®commun-| ‘In its figld studies and subsequent
ities has been demonstrated. -Uni-/ work in the South, ¢he Department
formity of staple is tbe mbst. im- | of Agriculture will cooperate’ with
pottant factyw ‘in ‘determining the|the State agricultural colleges and
quality of cotton, und to: have Uni-| experiment stations, and also locally
form ‘crops of cotton ‘the seed must | with county agente and agricultural
ye kept pure.- Experience has sHgwn | high school teachers.
Black Shirts Now.”
- Will Come North
| CHARLOTTE. N. C.--The’ Black
Shirts are not confining their activi-
ities to the states of Georgia and Flor-
ida, im the South. This has been
brought to, light by. statements made
aemeeat telat maneest e
white lawyer of this-city, who,, from
his own’ statements, ‘has | made
speeches at twe Incetings of the or-
Kanization, both of which, he states,
were largely, attended. ‘The order
claimé x membership. ranging be-
tween 200 and 300,- "growing every
day," Mr: Ritch's latements are
taken as authoritative, since inthe
past-he has been connected with la-
bor groups in his professional capdc-
ity.
Despite these facts, the public
manifestation, has been {drthcoming
from: the Black Shirts, and has not
been established as -to whether or
not ‘they iutend to attcmpt to secure
a charter. ,It will be recalled that
Florida ‘Bikek, Shirts fought the
shartering of the Georgian’ party. be-
cause they “were imitators."
It is imponsible to say just what
will be the renction of the colored
workers, but no ilarm hax been
shoan over. Use influx of the, agita:
tors,and local leaders are’ expected
to" gather soon .to develop plans -to
fight the machinations of the Shirts, |
ia enze an attempt ix made to inter:
fre with ‘Negro. labor, The situ;
ation, however, is beginning to {roy |
tense, and sudden developments ate
Mkelpyeny'time.* «> oo: . |
Lecture on India
+ Responding to the widespread inter=
ext which fs ocing manifested in the
question of the «rugale of Indianfor
independence, the citeiffeance of the
round thble converence, the relauos
of ihe Indian sirugste to Ireiand and
vther similar quevtions, a lecture hay
been arranged by the Iris Ameri-
can Friends of Indix's Independence
for Mr, Satlandvanath Ghose, the well
koown leader of the Indian Nation:
Congress of Ameriea, Tate lecture
will be held on Friday eveain, be-
comber 5, aL Y pom. at that well
known Irish center, Tara Hall, 66th
street-and Broadway. :
Mrs Ghore ts beyond doubt the fore-
most ntthority on the Indian ques-
tion, Iurthe United States. He ts the
author of numerous articles and
works on the subject. Mr. Ghose will
give anveshaustive and Miminating
analysis of what on tekiagr plice ia
Indit today, und it is expected thht
there wilt de a tremendous “turnout
to’ hear him,
Mental in |Tathing Eike
}. INSTABUL, Nov. 11.-—Ambassagor
Joséph Grew ‘today introiiuced. Presi=
dent Mustafi Kemal Pasha to the
American public turough the medium
of Fox Movietone und the Gazi made
surely.” ote
“Phe, filming, which took pluce xt
the President's farm at Angora and
lasted four hours, will give s-compre-
hensive idea of’ the efforts. he is mak-
ing personaily to. solve man} of the
agrigwttucs? problems whieh confront
the Yarers of Anatolid
a NN
Free to ~~
Asthma Sufferers
Fenn ‘Prtat af oo Methnd That “Anyone
Can Use without Discomfort
= or Loess of Time
We have @ method for.the control of
Asthma, and we want yoU to try It at
our expense. "No matter whether your
fate sof long standing of event devel
opment; whether présent. ab occa-
Sonal br chronie ‘Amhme you, aboutd
Seng for a free trial of our method. Ne
matter in what climate you live, no muat-
ter what, our age or gccupetio, If You
are ‘troubled | wi ‘method
Should help goa
‘We especially want to send-it to those
[eine of Tonelers, Goushes,"opfina bey
aration, fumes “patent mookan” ete,
have failed. We, want 10 show, evecvane
si cur expense, that our method will ead
al ammcun creaning, all wheesing.. ana
a}i those terrible ‘Paroxyeme” in “many
ae i otter ts too important. 20
Mier on Seated th aoe, a
money. Giieely mail deupest below. De
=e.
ed free iri of your wetned' tox
: Ey Speen yamine cue ;
Subseripiion Campaigua
“71°. WOW STARTED . :
_ WHEE BEST GFFER EVER MADE BY US
: We Must Secure * ‘
|. Phe year 1932 must be one of organization enc rece soli
1 . davity, We ave going to give car reddess mows from all *
i aver the world. : ;
i There is ac cther better VRESEMNT io sive to your Muiiier,
i Father, Brother, Sister, ox other Relatives, than a YEANS. |
__. SUBSCRIPTION F6 * s
se <b 7 ei. ok
THE-NEGRO WORLD -* ©
i Soe i
And why do we say this?-Because the Negro, more than | >
any other group at this time, needs Courage, Backbone, and
| Self Preservation. THE NEGRO WORLD to the Negro is’ |
’ like gasoline toa motor., Tt. gencrates.ACTION of mind, ‘
' .-and stimulates ‘their souls with mathood that sends them |
» | FORWARD TO-DO.OR DIE. -, - yy. i
Our Special Xmas and New Years’ Offer NX :
. DOMESTIC . i
q One: Year’s Subscription soe + 82.00 mi
. 5 oe, Generutly $2.56 °°.” =
: Six. Months’ Subscription = - + -+ $1:00 4
. . Generally. $1.25 8 ony
% FOREIGN’ . -
One Year's Subscription: -...- - $2.50
; “Generally $3.00.
Six Months’ Subscription . > soe, $150
z. . *. * Generally $2.00. es ; *
Dl ace apie gd aaa ue
fern oubdcription Metwaon now end Hesmery 1, 1931F 2
, Come-er show y do. .make THE NEGRO ~-
Wom AS pape Roald Seed yo sie snd re iO,
+ meenahay smeunt.te the Hubstsiption. ope Whe. ateg de ods
ane: : / THE NEGRO WORLD: -
AS. Seert Thin Creat Doive fot Sebeeribart to a Worthy Newepaper -.,
SN Op aN RS, ." ee
CTT Lt aed 6S Abcrus, testteoe, Managers. |
tly “ane: OE RBS 2:
|: Te Ripe are. mecogeary ta*tn.
prove ‘the tig of! ection. events tha
South, according to Mr. First,
‘the paste. aviation developed by
plant breeders. must gen
eraly. sat pera Sor wlormily is
Seokinoat oan + Unless: ew. va-
Hollen sre adopted by ‘whole. cota
jaiunities instead of by: a few indi-
viduals, there. is no prospect that
they. will remain pure or that grow:
exe will realise the full value of thelt
crop, In a community produsting
several varieties-of cotton, the sced
becothes mixed at the gin, the varie-
ties cross-pollinate in the ‘fields, 4nd
the seed. stocks rapidly deteriorate.
As farmers say, thé jcotton “runs
out,” as a result of mongrelizing the
seed stocks, wort
In its figld studies and subsequent
work in the South, ¢he Department
of Agriculture will cooperate: with
the State agricultural colleges and
experiment stations, and also locally
with county agents and agricultixral
high school teachers.
Revolution Triumphs in .
Brazil; President Captive
| RIO DE JANEIRO—The Brazilian
|government of President Washington
| Guis teh with a crash today int a, vir-
‘tually bloodtess coup d'etat in the Wp-
{ital,” following three weeks of clvil
jwar throughout Brazil‘in which sev-
eral bloody battles were fought.
j rebel ultimatum and handed his res-
| ignation ta representatives of a mili-
| tary junta soon after 9 o'clock tis
i morning when it became evident that
‘his government's cause was hopeless.
| A few hours earlier, Rio de, Jay
inciro was aezcd by te reba when
most of the federal troops q@@etered
|in the capital ‘mutinléd, and the navy
Went over to:the revoltitionaries.
|The revolting troops: had-hetd. the
[presidential palnce in a state of siege
since shortly aftér 2 p,m, |
Machine Elkiminated—
: To Giyg More Men Jobs |
———
| MANCHESTER, N. H.— Steam
shovels and other machinery" will be!
dispensed with-in -woric on the munlel-
Pal" sewer projects to be started at
once as a step toward ending: unem-|
ployment. : ” |
Manual labor will be used’ as ex-
tensively as possible in the’ work!
which will cost $85,000, . t
The white man at Tampa, Fa.,
who a few days ago gave 2 blood
transfusion to save a faithful-colored
woman servant, belongs to,that class
of white men whose souls Are free of.
race hatred, More men like Mr. At-
Kingon certainly makes the world
better.
Da ga ar ae Me dh
ER TOES ee Sy:
2S Pon On hee
roast sprees bad ft oon
in Sas alter, ae What. ca
Kdetor war
ann ‘air, I see. that you ere
our paper bigger. We
a digher papey, You have beer doing.
good. ‘Work, sud ao Llwant to help
your wat:
‘He put his hawd into fis pocket and
counted $2.25. in good silver. re
‘This Is; just a Iitsle, sir, to. nelp
you. Cave ny reiatis'to ie ioyal
staff of th Negro World. : “
‘And ‘this gentleman's name is Ed-
“e ‘Headley. He lives in, Harlem.
Hindu Wins Nobel
Prize for Physics
Second Prize to go to Nop-Europeans
—Tagore Won Prizp for Idbalistic *
Literature 7
STOCKHOLM, Nov. 13.——Two Nobel
awards were made today, the prize
for physics foing to Sir Chandrasek-
hara Venkata Raman, Professor of
Physich at Calcutta “University, anc
that in chemistry. to Professqr Hans
Fischer of Munich. im
Sir Chandrasekhara won the’ piize
for bis work on the diffusion of light.
Sir Chandrasekhara is the discov-
erer of the Raman Effect, which
bears his name and which déals with
the scattering of: light through trens-
parent media of all kinds. His .ex-
periments ‘and discoveries. throw
muck: new light on such basic prpb-
lems in physics as the constitution
and structure of molecules, | their
mimber, arrangement fang thermal
movements. in gascous, liquid and
solid media, and on the nature. of
radiution itself. :
‘Sir Chandrasekhara 1842 years old
and was educated ut the Presidency
College uf Madras, He won the Cur-
zon Rescarch Prize ia 1912 and was
Woodburn Research Medalist. in 3913.
He, was general prevident of the In
dian Sclence Congress ix 1928. In,
1924 he, was research aasociate at the
California Fastitnte of ‘Technology st)
Pasadent. He also is noted for his
study, of sound aiid aviusical instru-
ments. - =
This ts the second prize to go to:
norErpprans, and both are won by’
ndin. ‘The first Hindi winner of these
oveted prizes was Rabindraiinth |
ragote,’ the eminent pout-philosopher, |
vho Was adurded the Nobie prize for |
healigti¢ iterates In 3615. |
. Indian Poet Gets Year
BOMBAY, India, Nov, 6.—The In-
dian poet, ‘Narindranth Chattopad-
yaya, who Wxs arrested yesterday
Wile nédreseing a proscribed meet-
ing “on Chowpatti Sands, was sen-
tenced to one your's sgoroun impris-
opment. He was charged with mem-
deramp in “an unlawful association,”
the All-India National Congress. °
sygpbical of Alton, wace sesuabiad
to Ce pa pinuccy a
‘nig coronation by Bxnperor Hutte Se-
Jamsie fuat before thelr departure
ea
i 0 2
ray Jacoby, a teconednaer of
Presidegt Hoover, ‘silver, and ‘gold
encrusted : Abyssinian award “anda
hippopotenyus hide shield embellighdd
fo O08. j
‘a Mrs. Jacoby he presented
hand-woven” Ethiopian national cos-
fume, trimmed’ in gold with superb
bracelets, anklets ahd necklace to
match, - o
Brig. Gen. William W. Harts ‘re-
ceived a silver embossed hippopota-
mus hide shield and Charles L.
Cooke, secretary*to the special mis-
sion, a long, steel sword and scab-
bard.’ .
Bddisouis. Southard, United States
Minister Resident ay acts ‘Abeba, Te-
ceived the most: go} gift of all
—an Ethiopian warrior’s ‘costume, a
lion skin with e*magnificent helmet ,
of lions’ manes and a silver mounted
lance. .
‘The Emperor “today expressed to
Mr, Sduthard deep appreciation for
the hetp received from the United.
States in ek ol the coronation a
success. As @ ‘Special mark of his
gratitude for Mr. Southard’s per-
sonal assistance, the monarch cop-
ferred’ upon the Minister the Grand
Gross of Haile’ Selassie I, which is
che “higliest decoration ever con-
ferred upon any. foreign diplomat ;
are. =
: . oe
- Publish Book on South |
“CHAPEL HILL, N. C—“An Ameti-
can -Epoch,” a new book cn the South
by Dr. Edward #¥. Odum, director of
the University Institute for Research
in Social Science and one of the coun-
try's most™distinguished sociologist,
has just come froth the press of Hen-
ry Holt and Company and is’ being
given highly favorable ‘reviews ‘by
critics.
"The book is the result of 10 yearn
of preparation and, as one critic says,
“itis a veritable compendium of in-
rormation on the South and its tis~
tory, from 1850 to the present day.”
Cooper School
S16 W. 180th SZ, NX. C
Aud, 5470
“HELPS. 7
= TO PREVENT
FAILURE IN SCHOOL
) . BY EXPERT
TUTORING
* DON'T DELAY
name "just." The Negro wants to be THE NEGRO and an INDEPENDENT NEGRO as just.
Japanese Headhunting in Formosa
JAPAN has recently her hands full in the farmland at Formosa which formerly belonged to China. This territory is one of the spots of Japanese imperialism. The other being Korea which was also wrested from China, unhappy China.
The white imperialist press passed without comment one of the cruelest warfares conducted by imperialists in modern days, for the simple reason that they would do the same as the Japanese imperialists are now doing. But the Negro World feels honored to raise its voice against the barbarous treatment meted out by Japan to the original settlers of Formosa. The Negroes of the world stand with all the oppressed peoples of whatever land and champion and fight for their freedom.
The natives of Formosa are supposed to be "head hunters." The Japanese gave out propaganda that the Formosan revolt was nothing but one of the natives "head hunting orgies." From what has now leaked out it is pretty clear that it was the Japanese soldiers that had gone on a head hunting orgy. The revolt broke out because the Japanese administration has been a curse to the native population.
The Formosan natives are fighting to save their lands and the honor of their women from Japanese encroachment. When they went on war field their women courted voluntary death lest they may fall prey to Japanese rapacity. And how can any people with such a sense of honor of their women be savages?
In order to suppress this rebellious race of brave fighters Japan has used, it is reported, gas warfare. Where is the League of Nations that is supposed to prevent it? No civilized people should contend this Japanese barbarism for a single moment. The Negroes condemn it unequivocally.
The Formosans are still fighting the Japanese.
SALT OF WISDOM FROM AFRICA
SALT OF WISDOM FROM AFRICA
Wisdom makes no distinction of the color of skin.—A modern
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Why Aren't Leaders Sincere?
NO organization can properly function or prosper if all the fraternity, the leaders on the field, are not sincere in what they preach. Lack of such sincerity among its field workers has been the greatest handicap to the progress of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Marcus Garvey alone cannot do everything, cannot be everywhere, cannot bear all the burden, you know.
Because they lack sincerity the appointed leaders, instead of doing their duties faithfully as they have sworn, indulge in selfishness and snobbery. From there one step more, they will fall into a bottomless pit, which will make them less than useless as leaders.
Lack of sincerity is an awful thing in a leader or an organization head. He will mislead not only the local staff and membership, but will try to mislead the real head of the movement. Just think what this means, especially when the real head has to base his policies on the information that his field workers send in. If the latter do not send uncoiled and uncooked information, because if they did it would spoil their personal ambition, the real head of the organization might make a false before he is aware of it.
Wishah makes no admission
Hindu Poet.
He runs into debt who cuts up a piggen to sell it in parts.
pig, everything its its price, but who can set a price upon blood? Blood does not willingly leave the body. A wild boar, in place of a pig, would ravage the town, and a slave, trudge king, would spare nobody.
If there is an sincerity among the field workers their information cannot be dependable, authentic, and trustworthy. All the modern Big Business relies on well-trained, unbiased observers for its prosperity and expansion, even paying for their services an enormous salary. What our movement needs most just now while we are preparing to launch big things, is reliable information for perch, so that he can legal us to victory at the earliest moment.
The influence of a fountain makes the brook flow:
What is really a load should not be called, an ornament.
The jaw is the house of laughter.
The jaw cannot shave a man's head in his absence.
Since a field leader ships into insecurity he would resort to all sorts of petty politics and sabotage. Politics is not there within as organization like the U. N. I. A. And these petty politicians are so busy with their little schemes that they have little reason to serve their organization whichever suit not to cooperate with the earnest workers. The chances are that they would begin to have all earnest workers and ingrate in backbiting tactics. Since they have no courage to look into the eyes of honest, grateful men and women they generally would travel a thousand miles before they look and broadcast damaging rumors and half-truths before guarded, sample-minded people.
If they do not want you in their company, go aside. We cannot dwell in a house together without speaking one to another. If who boasts much can do very little.
Do not lay hold of a man who has a drawn knife.
By such behavior, these potty politicians commit three sets of harm: first, they harm the innocent and honest workers; secondly, they hurt the organization and thirdly, they hurt themselves since their group will reveal them sooner than later. Once they are found out they harm they will have to get out whether the organization is the U. N. L. X. or an ordinary business concern.
NEW YORK AND NORTH CAROLINA
Does designating a white man a Negro constitute a label? North Carolina says yes. New York says no.
An asterisk appearing beside the name of citizens in Ashville, North Carolina, indicates that they belong to the Negro racial group. The publishers of the directory made the mistake of so designating a union of the Negro community for damages against the publisher, he complained that he was greatly humiliated and his family embarrassed, resultant in a judgment of $200 for him.
There is a beautiful message this week on the front page from the President in general in which he applauds every member, every leader to class, abide by faith, party internal politics and personal blackness, and makes a commendable lead the Race to its DESTINY, which is a PRIZE and INDEPENDENT NATIONAL OOD in AFRICA for Africans at home and Africans abroad.
The Negro World applauds to every Negro union and council to come together and cooperate and build up the U. N. 4. A. to its former glory.
Emilio Salamone, N. T., white man, was erroneously referred to as a Negro "conditioner" by a daily paper of that city and immediately made the publication for $100,000, outlining that he, had been humiliated and discriminated against, and that other children refused to play with his children. Supreme Court Justice James A. Dunn, in doing so charged, insisted the unit and pointed out that the United States constitution makes all men equal and asserted that all men are equal before the law.
Communists Rutinu' Wild!
TEAM Communists become bankrupt! Have they despaired of bringing a 'red revolution' in the United States by baring within such bourgeois organizations as American Federation of Labor, Grand Flappers of the American Revolution, American Legion, and so on?
That the communist movement has become a dismal flop in America is no secret. According to the official report published in "Pravla" in Mogoy, the entire membership of this over-advertised party in these United States is barely eight thousand. And no doubt, as a result, the Third internationale is putting pressure upon those "communist leaders" who are on pay toll here to step on the gas and "bring about the revolution" before Christmas comes. Hurrah for our conrades!
The decision of the New York Juriat is at least interesting and gives assurance to those who contend that the Negro is an inferior human being, and that he is not against a man because, of the color of his skin, or the texture of his hair.
"It is our guess that it was the DICTATORIAT at Moscow that suggested the brilliant scheme of "picking up the Negroes who were all ready" for a revolution and have it delivered by Santa Claus to the whiskered "usovarish" in Russia by the end of 1930." In accepting this suggestion from the ignorant Russian communist bosses for execution the American communists have played a huge hoax upon the Third Internationale. For it is really a hoax to expect a revolution in America with the sole support of the Negro. We might even state that if there is any appreciable number of Negroes in any revolution in these blessed States they would be the first ones to be made short work of.
There is no question but that certain classes of human beings are inferior to others, but such inferiority is due to a lack of character $p_r$ a condition or circumstances. The tendency to humiliate members of the Negro racial group by, referring to them as inferior to other races, is the most fragrant type of injustice and unfairness. The practice has prevailed to such an extent that even many Negroes themselves, have begun to think in terms of inferiority and oftimes there are found those who bemoan the fact that, they are Negroes.
And what are the methods the communists are using in order to "win" the Negro? They promise in the manner of all politicians to "abolish" lynching and bring about "social equality." The Negro World has exposed all this communist humiliation, and we are glad to learn that all intelligent, independent Negroes are dejecting the communist party. The only ones that are sticking to communists are those Negroes who are known in the United States as Uncle Tom Negroes. Only those "red" black Negroes would eventually be called Uncle Vanya Negroes. Last week a correspondent of its exposes the hypocrisy of the communist platform on lynching. The communist is not interested in suppressing lynching but in spreading his "ism," using lynching as a lever. When Rothschild Francis and Grace Lamb, two independent and courageous Negroes, wanted to put forward plans to suppress lynching they were not only not allowed, to do so but were expelled from the party. The communists wanted to discuss only communism!
Progress of the Negro racial group will be seriously impeded until its members think in terms of racial equality based on the grounds that so long as a man lives unprightly, takes advantage of his opportunities and exhibits the highest type of citizenship, he is as good' as any other man. Justice Dumne deserves the thanks of all fair-minded citizens for having properly defined the law of our land which declares all men equal.
We commend the brave, stand Miss Lamb took. She boldly told the communists: "I came here as a delegate to speak against Lyding, not about the communist party. Your refusal to seat us is steam-roller politics which has no place in united front meetings, especially against Lyding." At for their social equality we print elsewhere on this page a letter from Mr. Francis who holds membership directly from the headquarters of the Third International at Moscow. In it he tells us how two Negro children were JIM CHOWED by COMMUNISTS and called NIGGER! Let the communists watch their step if they want to play with the
UNEMPLOYMENT
The state of affairs confronting our nation is which thousands of persons are unemployed, but that is difficult of solution. Much suffering will very liberty result as the cold winds and wintry weather hover over the country. The action of President Hoover is calling to his assistance, experts who will endeavor to relieve suffering in very timely. Cities throughout the country are also applauding committee of citizens who
The house-rat said: "I do not feel so much offended with the man who killed me as with him who dashed me on the ground afterwards."
A delicate thing is not difficult to be injured.
Inquiry saves a man from mistakes.
He who makes no inquiry gets himself into trouble.
He who has done you a kindness should never be ill-used.
Anger does nobody good. Patience is the father of dispositions. Anger draws arrows from the quiver. Good words draw kala nuts, i.e., presents from the bag.
Inordinate gain makes a hole in the pocket.
Poverty destroys a man's reputation.
Diy and night the hostil is always
at work. When it stops life is at an
end.
Strife never begets a gentle child.
are willing to do everything possible to remedy the condition.
The naming of Meurs, E. W. Ogden, George Dempater, John W. Green, C. G. Guizo, John T. O'Connor, J. Basil Ramsey and Rex Wallace, by our city council, to advise with the city employment bureau and find work for many worthy people, with, without, a doubt, bring much relief to Knoxville's citizenship.
The committee is deserving of the utmost confidence and it is extremely hoped that no race or class will be overlooked as they put forth effort to provide employment. Unemployment, like disease, knows no color—East Tennessee News.
THE NEGRO MAKING HISTORY
N. G. C. CHICHTAN
The election is now history. Never before in Franklin County and for that matter in the state of Ohio, has an incumbent sweeping victory been the lot of the Democratic party.
This unprecedented victory has even astonished those who worked hard to bring it about in the colored sections of the county and state.
There are a few points I would like to call the attention of our readers to:
First, that this overwhelming victory is partly due to the new birth of the Negro race in thinking for himself and putting his thoughts into action.
Second, that this victory ought to be an give-opener to both the major parties to the extent that we Negro gets "blood" in his eye, because of injustice done to him by any party, he is going to unite solidly and, average through the ballot, those who purposefully wrenched him.
The victory is so overwhelming that the chairman of the national organization of the Republican party says he has to come closer to the scene of action and study the whys and whereforces of this ignominious defeat before he will make a statement for the daily papers. Surely nothing like this has ever been done in Franklin County before. We of the colored race hope the Democratic party will learn a lesson by this election. The daily papers in their reports have not mentioned anything about the part played in the vote of the voters, and why they have united in support, but we are satisfied that they know that the Negro wish is that the Democratic party will note the waking up of the black man. Let them begin to undo some of the bideous things that are laid to their doors by the colored race, and they will get our confidence for good.
Remember it is never too late to do good and if this wonderful victory will brush the scars from the eye of the party that will control the local government in the near future, the black man will be satisfied that he made the change. The Morge has made history in this year of our Lord 1980 and we hope that it is just one page of the history book: that we should write for the next year.
U. N. L. A.
The U. N. L. A. a dagger of love
Sent by our Father from Heaven
above.
The good of our people we all should
If not we had better make a right
turn.
This great Ethiopian race of old,
In the greatest nation the Bible told,
Our ancestors were kept in darkness
long.
Not knowing the place where they
belong.
The time has come now thank the
Lord.
Ethiopia's name is noised abroad,
Brave Marcus Garvey thinks it best
To summer jail that dreadful test.
Oh! Never look behind you boys
Behind is death think of the joys,
That now in Africa await.
Go on lest you will be too late.
The time is now before you girls,
The brain is yours, think not of curls
The other race may think of dress,
But, "Unity" will stand the test.
Officers of this "Union" grand,
Now you are not building on the
sand.
Take Christ our Saviour as our
friend,
Marcus Garvey as our leader to the
end.
Brave officers on you we depend.
To stand with Garvey to the end.
Then friends and members will make
to pray and plan, to speak and fight.
New officers and members all
Be true and brave we cannot fail.
We need but four things in this fight,
Perseverance too will make it right.
U is for unity the meaning we know,
N for nobility in us ought to grow,
I for intelligence we want for our
band,
A for attention. Oh! then we'll be
grand.
If we should all get these four things we need.
Twould lesson the trouble that Garvey now lead.
Be up boys and doing the call comes
Toddy gives us sunshine, tomorrow
may rain.
Supporting Race Business
Editor: The Negro World:
In your issue, of October 4th, Mr. Harry Pace, President of the Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Co., by contrasting premium-incomees paid by Negro policy-holders to white insurance companies on the one hand, and premium-incomees paid by Negro policy-holders to Negro companies on the other hand, and jobs given by each company to Negroes, revealed a startling and interesting situation. He showed that over $67,000,000 were paid by Negroes to nine white insurance companies in 1920 and that the companies paid to colored workers jobs to colored workers. On the other hand, only $23,000,000 were paid by Negro policy-holders to twelve Negro companies, and over 5,000 persons were employed.
It is difficult to understand why our business insistently patronize other businesses so well and pay so little attention to our own, but it seems to me that the explanation lies in the fact that we have not yet become unidentify race-conscious. In this we are not like the Jews and other minor groups; we do not seem able to bring about that close co-operation between our business men and their patrons which is necessary for success. The Negro will not patronize the race's businesses if there are increasingly greater advantages elsewhere. Moreover, our business man have not yet given modern business demand as compared, with enterprises operated by others. There is a general feeling on the part of the Negro that we have a serious problem that has reached an acute stage.
It may be easy to see the causes of the lack of Negroes supporting our businesses but the remedy is not so apparent.
Ten years ago Mr. Garvey, organizing the N.U.L.A., began making great efforts to encourage the Negro to support Negro businesses. Although many of the business men themselves did not give their whole-hearted support, it is a noted face that since the coming of the N.U.L.A. with its doctrine of race patronage, the Negro enterprises have been receiving ever increasing patronage. We see that to bring about a better relationship with Negro enterprises not be an overnight development, but a gradual growth and that the achievement of this end will depend upon better organized businesses and a greater informed public.
We, the followers of the U. N. I. A., would like to see our Universal Weekly exceed at least twelve pages for a while. I do not know but that there is a whole lot of universal news coming from our enthusiastic Negro writers and well thinkers that would like to see, or hear, Our report published.
Yours, et al.
Leynard, et al.
Humburg, Germany.
(We are pleased to announce that Mr. Armstrong has contributed generously $8.00 to "Make the Negro World Happier and Better" Fund.)
Dare to Be Foolish
Editor, The Negro World.
The person who says there is no such thing as luck or as wrong as the person who believes that everything is regulated by Jack. More than half of the successful man, if they are honest, will admit that chance played an important part in their rise.
Some people wait for Lady Luck to come along and hand them opportunity on a silver platter, but Lady Luck doesn't function in that way. She's a cafeteria where you have to do your own picking. It will do you little good to go into a cafeteria hungry and expect the combination salad to leap down your throat. You would starve to death waiting. You must go after the salad, and you must go after the luck.
In last July owing to unemployment, William Kempbhart Hbart of New York went to Nigeria. West Africa, on adventure and he is now associated with "Lagos Daily News." The success of this young man should be an incentive to those Uncle Tom Negroes who believe that only America offers opportunity to them. I congratulate Mr. Hart on meeting a loyal politician like Herbert Macauley, the sole publisher of "Lagos Daily News," and the founder of National Democratic Party, a party which is numerically strong and ably organized. They easily captured the three Lagos seats in the last election. Herbert Macauley was not only prominent within Nigeria but he was well known and respected in West Africa as a fearless critic of British administration in Nigeria.
West Africa Not Invaded
There are few Negroes who conceive that only Liberia in West Africa could offer them opportunity, but those with such a belief are in the savage class. A savage's chances are pretty slim because he is beset by the darkness within himself. He is so ignorant that he must take life as it comes; Nigeria and England have been bound with trade and commerce. Lagos is the gateway to Nigeria, a great distributing center and a great receiving center, denying largely with railways which with the latest extension exceeded 1,000 miles. Nigeria, with its population of more than 20,000,000 blacks to 5,200 whites, 250 languages are spoken within its borders; is the second greatest in population of 'all the colonies and dominions of the British Empire. Its population equals that of the united total of Uganda, Kenya, Nyassaland, Tanganyika, Rhodesia, the Sudan. It has thrice as many people as the whole continent of Australia. Some of the states are ruled by chiefs and princes. The resources are still untouched. The Hon. J. W. Speer, speaking recently to the interested gathering of students at the Oxford and Varsity Clubs in the heart of London, on "People and Problems of Nigeria," reminded his hearers that Nigeria is unlike the dominions and parts of Kenya, Nigeria, he said, is not and will never be an area of European settlement.
To assert that the disturbance encountered in last December at North east of Nigeria was influenced by the Communist propaganda, such statement is greeting and intinsic. West Africa knows no unemployment. It was recently W. W. K. Wille, the veteran mining expert of South Africa suggested to the Gold Coast government for an importation of 20,000 Chinese. Fortunately the government frowned upon the suggestion of alien labor, and he was replied that Gold Coast has no intention to be in another, as they have one racial and social hell in South Africa. The people of West Africa have no religious or racial hatred among them. The cleavage in religion, a serious factor in India, has no significance for people of West Africa. Whether he is Mohammedan, Christian or pagan, everyone has a strong belief in one ultimate God which transcends the petty jealousies of bigotry and sectarianism. West Africa will welcome any foreign Negro as a visitor or on business venture but not as a political agitator or those imbued with color prejudice. The Africans at home are proud to maintain the purity of their race.
Admires "Kiddie Corner"
Editor, The Negro World:
It is gratifying to note the burolo
effort that Little Miss Berniza de Me
is making to develop the minds of
the young folks of the race through
the columns of her "Kiddie Corner
in the Negro World. Every division
chapter, etc., should see to it that
every juvenile with talent assists the
Kiddie Corner, editor, now on
her column. It is a page full of
knowledge, both for young and old.
What a manifestation of interest
and enthusiasm there would be in the
principles of Garveyism exhibited in
the exchange of youthful ideas from
the youth all over the world! Such
a step will make the Kiddie Corner
the brightest and best pege in the
Negro World. It is worth doing
young folks.
Likes Our Promptness
Editor, The Negro World:
This is to acknowledge the receipt of two books of Jack Johnson's Life and caries; also two week's topses edible of the Negro World paper album, for your prompt attendance. May God dwell with you and may you never tire of doing your duty, is our sincere wish.
Koopa faithfully,
Daniel Putter
The newtonia feeling of Negro Priefied that has plotted Georgia, Louisiana, and other southern sections of the United States on a land with the amphitheatre of Ancient Rome, has at last found its way in the cities of Colon and Panama. Although the Panama Canal Governor, John W. McCormack, called "Gold" and "Silver" policy (meaning white and black) from the time it took over the task of digging the "Big Ditch" from the baffled Frenchmen, still, we never suspected that within 26 years Georgia's bitter feeling against the Negro would have passed the boundary line of the Canal Zone, to make its appearance in the Republic of Panama.
A quarter century ago, when the dreaded Yellow And, Malaria fever threatened the lives of the white American workers who voluntarily entered the service of the Panama Canal, but proved unfit for the task and were shipped; back to the United States; where thousands died from the effect of the fever; when Spaniards and Italians, were tried with equal failure; when even the hardy Frenchmen died like the migratory butterflies—1,200 having died in the famous St. Charles Ward, Anson Hospital, Canal Zone; the only hope of the American Engineers, then, were the West, Indian Negroes, of Bafados and Jamaica, principally. These willing and doctile Negroes were transported to the scene of labor by the thousands. Not until a sufficient quantity of these Negroes were settled down to work, that a visible start was made in putting through the Gigantic Job.
These valiant West Indian Negroes waded through the slimy and againt area of the Carial Zone and the Republic of Panama, spraying from their automatic pumps hung from their backs, solutions of carbolic acid, caustic soda, black oil, over the oozy breeding ground of the anopheles, so that the country could be made safe for men to live, to work, to recreate themselves and ultimately to complete the greatest engineering feat of the 20th century.
Our men cooked the food for the surviving whites, built their homes, forged the rivets for McClintic & Marshall, and hung the lock gates of Gatun, Mirafores and Pedro Miguel; had steel rails over which the passenger and freight trains from the Atlantic to the Pacific travel and humanly submitted to the insults and disadvantages that were heaped upon our heads.
And for all these services and sacrifices, rendered at a time when our Uncle Sam stood in dire need for just this kind of help, the thanks, payment, gratitude and recognition that we are receiving for reduced wages, no privilege such as the white employees enjoy—vacation, free homes, etc., etc., replacing our jobs with cheap coolie labor imported from India and the steady and systematic elimination of Negro clerks and artisans.
Even the unclefish Programman who a few years ago, knew nothing of Negro Prejudice, have barred us from re-entering the country and prohibited the entrance of all Negroes. The famous Law 13 of October, 1926, and amended by Law 18 of 1927, reads as follows: (Article 2) "The individuals belonging to the races referred to in Article 1 of Law 15, 1926, shall not be admitted as immigrants, notwithstanding their having been born or being naturalized in countries different from that of their origin."
In the City of Colon, today, there are bars, canteens, and eating places that have barred the Negro, although this is against the Ramananian Law. It should not be surprising, if even within the next ten years, some southern pioneer attempts his first pynching in Colon. Anything is likely to happen to Panama between now and 1940. The young country is already indebted to American capitalists to the extent of $20,000,000, and when it is known Uracle, Sam's warships and army units are at the disposal of American capitalists, always ready "to protect the lives of American citizens" we expect anything to happen within ten years, from lynching of Negroes to ——————
Communists Jim Crow
Editor. The Negro World
Two Negro children and the sympathy of their parents or the entire race are not as valuable to the official Communist Party as one white member who as manager of the Workers International Reflect Scout Camp at Bacson, N. X., practiced "White chauvinism" against these children and got away with his stunt. "White chauvinism," known among our people as Jim-Crowman is a pardiginal offense in the Communist Party. However, this manager has not been expelled.
Mrs. Lillian Makel, mother of the two boys residing at 100 Heral street, charges that she was discriminated against at the camp-her, children were frequently referred to as "biggers" and finally returned to her before the official closing of the camp in a most desperate condition.
In a series of letters, Mr. Frederick L. Makel protested was majority of the leaders of the W. I. R. and the minister Party against the ex-convict in which his family was imprisoned He received no redemption.
Plans are on foot to give the case elaborate publicity over the country so as to expose them to preach one doctrine and preach another.
He Raat FS VN OCR ge te Re GE NEBR pt GON ARCs Sinemet wae aay aha eee Ove AmaVek NoWgry on ya Coc rs ae er
Bee Sek La ness Sn ae sue, a a ete nas ee i
a teh a Een St re RA OL 2 MGR ESTE STO AROS eR cP Em AOE -
eI i Ee aS, a I eR ao soe a a
Sea eS 3 3 @ i. a, : ‘S Se oy | wee fan Fe oj a ee ae tas Oe
* POXING SBHAGOWS i heatricais—Sporc
1. ob hg wid Te are gem Bg a Ont aie pete Doha Ser So tgs Rie se 28 eon ge GRRE ESRI NRO ee
t ww ae -
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THESE BOOKS ARE GOING LIKE-HOT CAKES |
| Hav You Taken Adeantaice of this Special Offer? |
With a yeat’s subscrifgion co’ our paper we Will give. sou a copy |
of the, book on the life of the-world’s only Negro Heavyweight
Champion. * . ic x we
JACK ‘JOHNSON |
i i ly. it i id thrills it deals with his
ite im nod ove of the "ian te ceites bow be King, Gocm,
‘Dukes,. Pocentares, Presidents, and what they thought of hi Also
bis est macige 40 a cole gi and ihe cel of; this, fice
martiage. How below theechumplocship ile, "+"
In all this book shold be-read by all negroes, 1s JObason “ke-
vexed the stteation of the entire work, . ;
will . gf this wonderful book with
pos whore Sate REGRO WORLD, for $5.0, *Rortign
conics $3.50. 2) aa Seals :
3. tion . We wn x
act So Smal tas wea ee 7
i orwaed your Sibwcgtoa todiy, = 9, 6 ot
eo) ERE NEGRO-WORLD 1) 5.
FS Tt Som: me_{p aver pede
Nanya: ° Whenever. aniythiey ep:
lumns that may seem
to a direct shot at anyone, it is
-caly dene. to develop some good.
TL have openty: gated:“that Kall
“Kolo wie not handled in train
Ing. He is left to work just as be
jploanes.” ‘There is-no oné interested
-im him: that ‘knows By reel art, of
Doxing _ associated ite -Bner
points.
Kolo has wonderful réach. He. uses
his left as # parry to’hold off attack,
when he could be running up’ points
‘by teft-hooking and jabbing. Thus
he could set hizopponent in @ posl-
tion “for a right cross. He lost the
‘Slavin bout through this fault -agd
he comeg right back to lose to Feld-
man, in the St. Nicholas arena, last
Tuesday evening the same way,
Kolo. coyid have easily “won -this
out on points had he been taught
to use his left to. far’ better advan-
tage. The gang says that the kid is
right-hand crazy.
~All men eannot,be.kapcked out by
rignt to the Jaw as dome of them
can take it betteron the Dutton than
they can in tpagelcrsaction.
‘" Therefore, Kolo’s: manager should
lay his"boy off for a qonth-and put
‘nim ‘through a good training slege.
Get a good trainet for him. One that
can teach him something, and I-as-
sure you. if this is done, the Kid-will
arrive as w finished fighting man,
INCE ‘Sharkey offered to sight
So Wie Sting tor charity, and
the Southerner refused, we find two
cHamps that want to go out of their
respective classes Lo. mix with him
‘This in ridleulous on the face of- it,
New York fight fans, will not stand
for either of the wo Sxnting Kay
other than challengers |
S"Wrat do we find? We fing siTiey
Waiker . refusing to mect Harry)
Smite, colored, in “Gefonse of hin
crown, We also find Maxie Rosen-
bloom refusing to meet Billy Jones,
colored, in « champlonehip contest. «|
"FeL'you nd these two would-be
chirps clamoring for publléity. say
ing they would Ike to meet Sharkey.
Jack could tae on the two of them |
in the same ting, and at the samo,
time, and sink thea: both. Te is good)
that’ no one is paying them serious |
attention. 1
WH the only way that, they will be!
able to. fight in New Yoi state x io|
letense of their atrawy crows. That’|
ae 72
a eee ee ne
USC Pash," took a sixeronnd deck
fion'feomn Jonny Lawson last West
Wsday-eventiig at the Rockland Pal-
nes, 200th Street ‘and sth Avenue,
IL was @ well contested battle all the
swiy, swith Bon Bon doing most of
his work in close.* *
Lawson had £0 rsh sn. all the tine
go save being smancked fi the 3806.
“Five duumiea flawd deat not 22000 i
ee quite climatized yet to the ways
of hosting in our city. Hie could ve
fots fastés, Te moves and punches
fey slow.a Speed We whet he" shoul
develop. Y cumnot understand jst
how’ Jgid: Cheevlate Dunphned t9 paes
him wi op challenge.
The "Yash" will hove too some
und quite more heforé ke eeakd over
feipest, to do anything with the Have
aw Special, :
(FRORILLA JONES Was in cones
"AST tef Inst Tuesday -cveninge and
took a ten-roiind, decision from "Abe
Lichtenstein, The GoriZia is evident-
ty in for a very, baay season in-New
Yoic State. *
Tovkindi” think Dave Shade would
nave meeeived such a set-back, hed
he gone through swith Me Fone sgt
rome weelsk Back, that he weutd ot
Shave clipped ine Zondon battle, ae
ft wos the Englishman gave hin i
good boxing lesson, in Baglish feshion,
J would Me to sce the Garitia i
seems 10 stand up g0od down there
sind does ‘not allow the row ef fone
jermination to win. *
Laney: Real Mesto Feit
__ Littman Friday, Nov. 2}
Horry. Smith, colored middieweight
chhmipion, takes on Tait Littman in
the semifinal ten ypot at the Garden
thts Friday night ‘Thin fellow: Litt-
man, f anew coméir’, hese parts,
as bo halls from’ Milwaukee. Tt. is
claimed that he ‘is. good boy; too.
This {a,.the second time that Smith
has shown at the Garden: the first
tinfe he did vot seentyto do so well.
We trust that he makes, a business of
it this time. In his Inst Sight with
“Gorilla” Jones it is claimed that he
was sick before he entered the ring.
Well, that can happen tothe best of
fighters; however, the colored boy
seems to be fil as a corn mouftin for
Friday night's fray. So there 19 all
IkelRtood inis bout wil BEul of ac>
tion. @
Then, in the. main eveit~dimmy
MeLarain meets Billy Petrotle of fat-
go ume. MeLarnin has not shown
sin@l his three-round knockout vie-
tory over Ab Singer. Both boys are
geod punchers, and the fans like this
type of Nghting machine.
Action and More of It
»., At the Rockland on
Wednesday Night
‘Sammy Chornoff, popular Bronx
lightwelgnt opponee, Bodie Guide,
Bee Oak Pace cn ot ee
Brom mingles wilt’ Mick, De: Salve
of Harlem is the double windup ve
six rounders at the Rockland Palace
jon Wednesday ‘night:, i
ya tre roa Bouts Jeu Restauots
vs, Leroy’ Wilson, Jimmy Turco vs
Risay Halen Bovey Bris vm Petey
Syfvetsi_ and Danay London vs. Al
Stains pt tne taure Jeek Liviogoten
vn Nathfanct Hogan, Lou Molter vs.
sae Chava and Age’ Levine’ ve
Sammy Fortitta. ae
peer NE
Jose Diaz MeetsBilly
“Wallace in Philadelphia
nigh BN Weiner met Sony
BEt diay tusso, ia tue teat of
the Tee Antoun fauice bouts he
Wease lene Dasa ae i Al
ee Era ay never atiearoe
Ber te he eal Reaine. feos nee
ae Ot itet Get ehecy elort
eeu a mart ial cian fea ote
MS Wane Ds wisvon nee
other “wabobs of, the sing.
Tetaniy JOA and TY HOR
ni Onaingpie the iat conan
the locai fad will he inwhere trying
i cacatup tae cones wit ne eon
Ree ee cur cee aeaties rer
By Wie i tnstteat wane
tee dk wees = j
QUARPREPLNTS BORN IN CATO
CAIRO, Beye Nov, HbiecAn Ara
wontun of Ciro bes giver bith this
Work lo qusdruple, three girls and
one hoy, <The father is employed
Be jindler at a atlnfy, cquivalent to
S450 per month,
MOONY CANZONERE is the new
iste chasipton, S26 weal the
chiwi alter one mmute and ix xe-
onds uf sgtitingy én Uhe frat round of
a fifteen vound bout whn Al Singer.
They say, "30 You aequire so skal
you fave." and believe me that ceems
to ft in here just right as Singer wen
the title from Sammy Mandell 1 just
te qiicle time as-he fost it, and hey
flaim that good money exe paid Man
dell for the transfer,
"Bul T dm inclined to think Uist Cane
nonere won st on mepit. :
It won't be tong betore Hie Cyoco-
Ine will he in here trying for this
same crown, ogorke wha Tie you!
‘Trie Kid with be possessor of tivo
titles: he will surely win Zrom Bat-
alino and that. is for the” fouther-
weight crown."
‘Then he wilt bute himself up’ atter
defending his crown against Fidel La
mista cor ike Teeheweiene apalidint
Winy Slavin to: Mest |.
~ Miki Sans Ar Olypla S
~~€lub ‘Thureday ‘Night
Fighting ve and far % ae sos
‘gaye axe few and far between, With
the exception of Jynmy MoLarnix
and one oF two others there are hardly
any Celtle boxers worthy of mention
But over.on tho West Bide, where you
Have to know bow to use your fats
in order to exist,’ there lives & young
fellaw by the name of Jimmy Slavin
who seems destined to Tevive the tra:
ditions of the race.
- Slavin was born in Quincey, Mass.
‘ut came to New York as a child and
has lived practically ail of bis life on
the West Side. Beginning as a pre-
Mminary boy in the amaller clubs. he
has fought his way up the ladigr to
a position where he is now recognised
as-a leading contender for Bat Batta-
line's world featherweight champicn-
ship. * a
‘Thursday night &t the Olympia
Club in Harlem, Slavin goes against
one of the most formidable .oppo-
nents he has yet-beon, ciilled upon to
face, Miki Gelb, of Hungary. Gelb
carhe to, this country only a short tfme
ago, but he has already proven his
worth by winning 13-out of 14 fights,
the lone: decision he,dropped being an
extremely questionable ome.
It is typical of Sie¥in that he was
willing to meet Gelb, who has been
causing most of the other feather-
weight contendersito seek cover. Jim-
my Is determined to"become champion
of the world and he bas vowed to let
nd one,stand in his way,
‘The Slavin-Gelb out is scheduled
for ten rounds, i distance which will
leave no -room for doubt as to, the
superiority of one or the.other.’ In
view of Slavin's recent kuockout of
the highly touted Kole, il would not
Se surprising in the least if the pout
aid not go to the Minit.
Writer Says: Boxers
Marry-All Too Soon
Atteshutes Downtall of Many’ Fight-
fers to Barly Marrlages—Managers’
Greatest Frovimle with Young
‘Deoweet.
‘Too"much sociatizing, or too early
lsverlagon tao ‘been the downfall of
more colored fighters than could be
counted onan adding machine, That
{ie tue preatest troubie a manager hss
ith a young prospect. As xoon as De
ge. n tow victoiley in. preliminary
bouts, he is either’ rerdy to iisten
tothe cell of faine, trends sho
urge him to came blink te dize
Hy white lights or he Tushes, head:
Tong into mucriage "although tne
aule {3 support himselZ. properly.
‘Although the tendestey In ‘prentest
mong. colored ar’ Siesican” pugas
iste, Ue Selves boners hive tel Ue
ghd romain snigie so tot tHe teyte
hes of comestie life end ameersatnts
o¢ facome sell not detroet, trees the
Gloce.nppiteation to the ght. qhtne
Among ‘the lecal hoys who married
Sehife SUIT in the five-dofiny 2 round
est is Leonard Porter.
Thuis Remos is slagle again atter
Bog ‘Newton maried during? his
participation in a marathon et
fered beewsise he could “get. bit fear
fits aadythe atials aly lested &
few “weeks. *
‘There ave’ many others, but most
ail. gmong the lost edlony. have
hud the syjem onding?- Meanwhile.
Sammy Judean, the Zroutent ‘local
atiraclion,” dodges inetrimany™ ike
itis the meaaiese eltaouss he hits
plenty of money to marry on. |
Mew %. ©. Sensation "|
LOS ANGELES—(ANP)—One of
the coming junior Nghtweight con-
Jtmderr. hereabouts showing plenty of
promise is Loon ‘Thompson, Charlie
Wiltums' great coldred prospect. He
is one of the best of the boys of that
weight here on the coast. Boxing each
week most of his recent bonts have
been won. by knockouts.
""Earlior bouts were: Frankie Diaz,
draw; Freddie Marino, draw; Oriel
‘Astudello, Won; Tomiay Thatcker,
K.0.;.Tommy Flores, K.O. :
eee
Godfrey .Kayos- Seal
+ Harris in’ 4th Round
. LANSING, Mich.—George Godfrey
2 SS. Soret aie
via ites by Rutvning wut Seed Tasein
of Chicago im four‘ rounds of a 10.
roubd bout hers. |
a0 7 UA
Crs
ee ee:
senate aa pry Smet
ES SSSuess
me see:
aie => OB.
fat al ee in 5 Oe
we age 0) 6 se =
LE pe git aged
Kid Ch a late,’ “Hay ) as a Spe ee 1. iy
He ‘Earned, oe
Women-Hating Quartet Take - _
Four Brides at the Same Altar
When He Retires He: Will
* Go Intq Real Estate’
Business in Cuba
‘TWo years ago last June 4 gangling
ebony-hued kid came, here froin Cuba
He was, a boxer, lis manager said
He wore the strange nom de ring o!
Kid Chocolate, Just, because be re
sembled a bar of chofolate more tha
anything else. _
Nobody would believe that Bligh
‘Sardinas, which is the fighter's re
name..was a fighter, He didn’t I
ike one.” His style had no uppe
those who saw him go through tfatn-
tng paces at the St: Nicholas gymns-
sium,” Hix mfnager, Luis Gutierrer,
who came to this, countey with him,
‘could not cohvince any matchmalyr
that he cosldssighe wTRER NA
Fingily ont of the goodness of
somebody's "heart Kid Chocolate got
a chance'to go"to Milchel Field on
Long Island and make, his American
debit. He knocked out Fddie Enos
in two rounds and then. everybody
began taking some. notice. Kid Choc
olate got $40 for that shot and ail he
wanted was a fow'more ike it and
he was xolg<back heme to his na-
tive Cuba. “ America, he thought, was
too cold for him, 4
But time, har wrought! a great
ghange, my, brethren. It's junt « little
inore than two years ago, «remember.
That, $40 sake due grown into hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars for Kid
Chocolate, and the boxing. ante fi
turn*has been,benefited by the pres
jonce of, much “X little fighting demon.
| Toduy Kid Chocolate rates the dig-
gest money maker the featherweizht
class ever knew, dating, oven trom the
day of the immortal George Dixdn,
Today Kid Chocolate is to be regnrd=
ed us one of the wenlthiest young
men who found his way to, fortime
with his fists, ae
Tas Quarter Mitton
His fortune Is in six figures tnd.
every cent oft iF Inkict, "Th S10
row intl, Oxo yeurs after-his Tatro-|
duction i@ the boxing fans 62 New
York, -he pulled down 45,000, that
piece Jf money” coming Yo him for
his battle, with Al Singer in the:
Yankee Stadium-a year ago. Then in|
the past season he yanked down $40. |
060 more for that tie -with Jel
Berg. Other important money was!
Sorenied by hm ia intermediate fights |
until his total earning’ tr the ring are!
nore (haa $200,008 to date, And win |
vas its portion ef iia ati he with!
nterest, aeeumiiated according. to]
hank fzures and hy the advance of
iroperty value tn his native Havana,’
‘There is whete in money bas ;one,
ethewgat Ing ia the fushfonithle
Mariano section of tie Matsa expltal,
ook the money ap ne made St in
Ameviean tings avd hilt, sine twos
ing houses, Taday be wins eeche
eh homes, sll rerited at an aver:
ge Of about S14 a month, sad there
# more laud en which nivre -hou: es
till Fite ae he geen alongs with itis
istie fa Uke cuanesioan ring
Such thrift grew in Kid Chovetators
Boxing Experts Sax
Zorrifia Earned Draw
SBATELE, Wink -Aconsding to
ophalen. expremed by & barge divabe
of boxing writers keen, Buatfege Be
fine should et teazt der been given
a rane swith eaccharoplon Pane Taster
Ha ike Uout between the pale here wi
. Inekson Bout Off
LOS. ANGBUES, Cal—aypy
Yona: aud “Aghtere*bots were disap:
painted wien the bows xenohna here
From Philedetphta whore Sgt, Sammy
Baker and. welterweight champion
Tommy Freembn were to box, that
the titicholder wag sick witha old
Following the Baker bout sched-
uled for the 28th, Freeman was to
come here to Aght Sammy Sackoon,
‘The Santa Monica sensation was to
nave eft for Sopar'e Ranch, Wella.
tay, to begto active tratning for the
anwiounly‘ewaiged melee. "A. hater
eeu SO
Street Musicians, 1] Years
_ Inseparable, Will Start
F Housekeeping f
CAPE GIRARDEAU, ° Mo—Four
Women hatersgTarl. Woodclick, Ani-
on Autrey, Poter Jones, and ‘Andy
Welsh, Jr.,-were married’ last week.
The’ brides ae: Martha Matfeld,
Myrde"Hudece,,Irise Relgl, and
Myth Long. “The “ceremonies ware
yorioreaed by the Rev. Lioyd Deacon,
of. the’ Baptiter Church on” Themis
a Tae oak Musteidag” ‘wore Knows
heretatere an evelerate bachelors
Who.trad So tine Sor “skirts.”
_ Fer .slevem years’ these . partners
a the oan a ht with the ap
3 | ts 0 labor
‘spc tap lk ap atetel ape he ale
time. after he had gathered’ abou
five or ten thousand dollars in tal
country...
* He was walking along a Harlem
JAfreet with bis manager, Buis Guti
errez. Approaching them was'a brok-
en-down, bedraggled Negro, . older
than bis years. He was. polated, out
by Gutierrez as @ forinct’ ghter,
‘Chocolate was impreksed, He was
awed by the sight. —
“Luis,” be said, "IU never be ke
that. -Ii-never allow myself to be
punch-drunk: Tl never squander my
money. ‘rhat tan is a gréat lesson
to me." aoe wap
And only once ager thai did Kid
Chocolate give a threat to stray trom
his promise. It way’ just about the
time he was to fight Pinkey Silver-
berg. He didn't ain. He way kick-
ihg around a dil. He waa out of
shitpt and didn't show his best tight.
Gutierrez calied. him to, ‘account.
reprimanded him pa’ a father would
his son, and the boy beokt down cry-
ing, aiid promised never to dé ax he
had again, He has kept his word. His
money fins gone home. When he runs
short of money for a fewtittle pleas-
ures he “puts the arm” on is mana:
ger. When he wants another uit of
Clothes to udd to hix wardrobe, whieh
now losets-about forty, auits, oF needs
wom shirts to add to hiv list of pos-
sibly 100, he borrow from Las unt
the next fight. :
That is the reusoh lie ja one of the
richest boxefe in the ring today and
why he appears destiv®l to go into
Something close tow million dovars.
An obedient kid ix the “Keed.”
Gutierrez'n word js daw with him: fe
neyer disks how inuch be is*going to
get. He fy just told Beis to sight
Sd yest eget ren He har
never “assumed “the compl of x
lighter who has reached, the $10.0U0
cis OF Une’ $10,000, clase of fighters:
ns he might do—qs Others have done.
Hix inbt bigs shot in New York yas
when he got about $10,000 for the
Ken; fight. 1 failed to turn his head,
It wasn't to be hi: price, A ssmurt|
id. He knew there weren't that:
ud of purses dangling sl) along the
intighighway, He intended to retire’
whe he, teit here after the Berg
pet ecwtine he believed he had been
wronned in heviag the decision gives
gaint fim. dle wax going to quit,
He wax prevailed pon to eebsirn.
When he sid he would st wes with
ne provi that Ne was always to De
paid in Gve tignres, He was the same
yd Chozolnte, He vse bee's and |
ook 12200, whnielt was, ie preven
age sigre ty fight Kerny Nabors, |
whom he-bnocjied oat in a Foun, ad!
tewent Jower Sten he pat only seao|
svat ; te i
Wha he Gunz gitut, whieh mage be |
oithig mt Ue rotate avin
lait ever tuna tuctine Sn the rings
bad whoa he oetiees tie wil) be mate |
iter he tees Tero an 8 pbatuon 40}
Clot of bags miata tate! which ey
agit Well cope. A buy whe datn't |
et Pood featune ebling> heist i
iQhds on Negro Han
@f Navy’ Demanded
| pan ly
| CEBVELAND. Ohio. — President
|Georsze Rightmire of Ohio: State Ush-
versity, war nscod yentordiny bye State
representative Furry i. Jackeon, to
invebtivete reports that Oui sets
Negro theite, was kept frnin the Ine.
fap ia Saturdey's Sootball irante bee
jisgen Ohie Rien and Navy heraasse
Joc incint prejudice in taltigore.
The request. was contained in le
Netter from the Rezro representative
who demanded that if the reportr
[were veritied that "ke party or pare
es. responsible bu discharied from:
| the employ of Ohio State University.”
Introduces New Hits
| Ree -
Billy Joxies, the popular singer and
musiem entertainer, has introduced
the new song hits, “The Organ I4ay-
ed at Twilight," “HC 1 Could Be with
You! and “Loving You the Wry “1
40" nt the Rinito Theatre, Brooidlyn,
‘Monday, Be
ever they stopped, sometimes even in
the country.
» They lived alone ina house on the
summit of Lover's Leap above Main
Street, overlooking: the Minsissippt
River. They did their own cooking,
washing, and gardening, raising the
bulk of their foods, having s garden
spot thist covers. almost an acro.
‘They are, nest dressers, immacu-
ee manage to live by taking up
s tlan at the end of each con-
cert they.’ give in yhe peighboring
towns. They have srranged a anes
wis which names etch stop, tlie
and tedetalle preparatory. tg cack
peogras. In the winter maoed wey
play dances ta belle, with, not ttre
questly, a cquere Gince et their
bouse on the igh itl
~ They.witl talce (lat brides into the
va - ‘Kaap, where they
Pastures” Is Active
Ta Church: Wior k
Buchard. Harrison A Read Preach
iaatiy: a Sen eny panees: et inky
ard B, Harrison, the Lord of “Phe
Green Pastures.” is <invited to
cbureh by the pastor and asked tc
addreos the congregation. During the
fa) and spring be was guest of scores
of churches of @)} denominations.
And tlie invitations’ haven't beer
Mimited solely to churches identified
with the’ race. -
The Announcement of the weior's
‘appearance ae’ speaker is always
The. occasion of a good . tyrn-out
Everybody: Is anxivus to Ket a cloee:
up of the\/man ‘who RAR had the
strange experience of ptaytng the part
of the “Lord” and at the same time
making his first appearance on the
sage At the age of 66. .
Provided: he has. no. previous en-
[gsgement, no. lnvitation, bo matter
‘howe aniall the church, gode unnoticed
by thig man, who before the prodie-
stiun of. Mare Connclly's play wae @
comparatively unknown reader on the
iyeeumn elreutts. \
As @ general rule Mv, Harrison. in
roquesied.to tell the stury of the play
sud to describe the effec of the play
upon-the actors thomselves. He is
occasionally asked to. recite from
Shakespeare's plays and to read dia-
fect pdeins from the. collection of hia
old frend, Pant Laurence Dunbar,
in-speaking of the effect the play
tons had on the sist Mi: Hagplaameald
fo actor dare to Uke his work Inently,
He admity that It in a Wenting thing
to work ja play. like “The Groen
Pastures.” Some perforimunsen ecm
lo run-off without say tram bul
Ihbne ave otherm-when i seemin ag
Choued the plasers could hnedly get
Hieongh to the finish,
LCR not cay me.” he said, MCS
that way with alt of 1.7, :
Behind the seonongyt Che AtansCield
‘Tatitve, where he pray is sow in TH
nindh mouth, a revoretice ssirrminids
tha dignified white-haired man. When
he eames to the tthowte Tin the per-
Feemuance he fs greeted ye hie aseo~
Gitex in the -rale of the Saver,
Daniel 1," Haynes, who played Sp
pestte Ninw Mae MeKinney jt “Hale
toga,” and who carries the ‘role Bt
Hexdvel, $w also yout after by the:
clerns. "Thogh he dacan't have the
opportintiy in the “Pastires™ drama
10 ulaplay his “Heh haritane vole,
practiently sal congregatime herr
Sitch ne appears, request that he:
sim
“Ainonis athens: tothe eestor of Ane
pray who have been wnleed £6 appeat
in local chureher te. Coc! MeNase.|
MieNaty in the, phy does nat come on |
he stage, but singe “Go Down Mapes
nn the aie af the stage Leriyn thre
ell, ietiatemt chair disectos af tine
jing, ubually sets ad aecompuanish. |
PIE Rohinsor Muhing Big
stn HN eueqwa Bydaios
AS Hroatway Gore Wild
EAL Robin + dhe werki's Tinest
inp bower, A. ceddred chap witw as
ene of tne whitest men Lever tne
When Will gances he Woks Bho
boy of 20. hay Un atrest you'd gay
he war Abeut BB" He is caetustly’ th
the neighborhood of 3%. iy
_ dant know af 2 colored man ta
tho world who t# treated with more
rerpeet Ghul Bix Robinzon hy al
classes of pospte, he Mroudway Zl:
love him dgenuse of hie honest ef:
Torty to nely others. Whea “it comes
fo chatty’ work, he stands ak the
A! of the gatne. T don't know how
many benefits BM plays during
your. But T do Rnow that, side front
Smith gad Dale, tigre are no actors
in the’ bushiéss wh ‘will voluntees
their services at all timee quite as
cheerfully as BAN Robtnson.
Robinson wig bore in Washingtoa,
D.C. Ae ihe age of 13. he was Just
xboltt. tm toughent Id im his nelgh-
porhool sind his neighborhood waa
plenty tough. He had a .bubit of
making the younger hoys—Awhite or
black—miserable by hix various ifttle
tricks, ‘The Kida hig thetr exndy
when Bil! Appeared on the scene.
‘Phere Is someting Im Robinson's
nature that has ‘Rover chouged, To
this very day he énjoys a feeling of
anthority. For Feasons best known te
himself, he lz never without. < gun, T
think he enjoys « fight better than
agy man 1 know. Something tells me
Lani sons pouce iorce iostse geet
member ‘when Bill Robinson hecame
a stage favorite. .”
A great character, this Biji Robin-
son. A colored mun who in white, A
hard man with the mmile of a baby.
A great charity worker who always
carries a gun. And with it alte man.
who dances hia way through life,”
Americanism: Used gum ynder #
movie seat. oe
LUCKY -.BE - LUCKY
musi indies gdbd Wok bag, Devam and
Tati, k fie herssease gteine ee
Macey @ays nod ery seers. Arslan
ety teeny ott for haexy igre eaire, Ralpe
you lawn ty. money matirts, tai
‘eats and everyting you mars 6 Pere
en hety saoraae mation oeary Gay of ver
hate a>ety oom, ene e
#140 and date of Mirta to
FMM. ELA BANNERS -
tus Powe. vemes >”
1, Ba elton, s
SOR te ead
Howard aad Cheech
Teen been ter tee
WARHINGIOM, 0D. “Se
making’ sintorate rn
the “original football chiegie" |
Sith Stadjum in We
Thangegiving Day. Furs
age andthe “will call” on =
ited for Novemtler 22. Partiag,
are scarce aud nobody's home, Bf
tadabpeving. Day in We
from dawn "til dusk and a@
everybody entertains in ‘the seance's
social elimax, ae
Railfoads will run secures
New York, Chicago and Atlante alg:
motor car caravans will pour in froen
every direction. Those who can’ He
may walk, as did Kelly" Miller Jey
from New York, in.1923." _
<A Roman holiday in Wasbingtom
has w twofold attraction, both par
lotic and collate, which account
lor the 30,000 people expected to ats
fend the game. :
“ Contrary to the Tule of coaches but
true to. buman nature, Doth Howard
and Lincoln are directing thir etar-
gies toward the big game at Wash-
ington ‘on Thankegiving Day. Weeks
apent in. the perfection of intricate
plays which are held in, reserve, and”
the accumulated experience derived
from all other games combine to pro-
duice the “football clneste of the year.”
-While evory game is presiimed to
be a challenge to the best that a team.
has and good feith with the fais re-
quires @ creditable performance, it is
a cominon praciice ia football not to
show everything that you have, Many
teatns would rather lose an unimpor-
tant guine than uncover in the pres
ence of seouts,.with the risk of losing
to their catef opponent.
Coach Verdell of Howard and Coach
Taylor of Lincoln both will open thelr
bags Of tricks in Griffith Stadium:on
Thanksgiving Day, and intrigue the
inferest of sprctators and Wetermine
the final score, :
‘An alumni terdition in both insti
tutions emphavizes the Howard-Lin-
coin game above every other on their
respective schedules. As last year,
“Lose to everybody, cise but hake Lin-
coin to'n scorelese’ Ue and you have
wan & moral victory in x fairly: ane
coonfal xenson.” “Let Morgan swamp
you nnd Bampton. hold: you to &
sworelear is but beak Howard and we,
are satisfied,”
Vendomes Booking
“the Hotel Vendome» basivethalt
club, formerly the Bison 4. A. play
thelr opening aime don on out-of
team floors, Goone Sarsnett, 177
Cuinton Street, Buffalo, N.Y.
The Collegiate Five -
er Collegiate Claw, wiitelz will put
Gyo Pusan bicketiodt. eotrs
wine oF Use best teaane fy Hse eit,
woking xamen, Marlon MeResy <f
Logue Street, Paishargh, Pa.
‘Satin ates fee. ta. trace
LA GRANGE, Ul—iu Grange
trpunced York nigh sehool of ine
\auendeech Nou main ep dita Steet
tie mean ee
Bow fo Win fhe Gne You Lo:e
ity EE
SE Se, Cates a Se sts
SSN cae IS UR Se
NOSSO a Nee aati!
2 Yo ut
crowning ~~.
‘ charm”
ra "ea
BS: 3!
Hid Did eat be arene
in say ple 2,
can have it by using
EXELENTO
fa Sean Segoe =
ee:
of maaan Es ="
* ral bape a ee
“ced kia
WOMANLY WAYS
My Five Years' Experience in Africa
My Five Years' Experience in Africa
International Literature for the Negro Race Should L In Every Home
Philosophy & Opinions of Marcus Garvey 1st Vol. $1.75 pp.
Philosophy & Opinions of Marcus Garvey 2nd Vol. $3.00 pp.
Petition to League of Nations by Mar-
All the above books, passphlets and pictures can be secured by Jarrowding cash orders to Hon.. Marcelo Carvey,
Edwards Park, Kingston, Jamaica, B. W. L. Sand Postal
Money Order, Bup. Money Order or Dollar Bills registered.
The word death brings to us solennity, grief, bereavement, tears, and whether we turn our packs upon the word for fear of it or its use, we must some day, in accordance with Nature's laws or, the law of the Divine Providence turn to face, the grief that names our name, the grief that guest, axen
Death, our unfinished guest, were we in fear of this grave enemy and willed to forget him his horrors until he shall be called upon us personally, cannot do it, because he unmitigated law he is continually brought before our mind's This cruel and unsympathetic vector accepts no excuse when he, like a thief at night or an unwelcome guest, pays his visits. He tears tender youths from the loving breasts of their mothers. He deprives us from time to time of the love and admiration of those whom we love
beat; our parents, guardians, friends and relatives. His frequency in our city is such that he must constantly be remembered, and in general be dreaded. Whether he came yesterday or comes tomorrow, he comes; and whether his visits are within our immediate circle, for as we know that he visits us, for as we pay attention to his writings we see the symbols of浸染ments being worn by the bereaved, and as we journey by the cemetery where the last remains of the dead are inpired, we see monuments raised on behalf of the dear ones who have succumbed to the cruel grasp of death.
When in the heights of mirth, enjoying the pleasures of this world, we hear the muffled sound of the drum and we witness the procession which accompanies the corpse of death's victim as it is born to its last resting place where we see the relatives and friends paying their last tributes
BY J. MILTON BATSON
(Continued from Last Week)
Hardy, the Jamaican stoker, of H. M. S. Trent, fleet messenger boat No. 14, was a sick man, but with the memory of the fate of his brother stoke Ashbey in London Ighas in his mind, he complied with the order of the fleet surgeon and went down to the stoke hole on his watch. About an hour later, however, he was brought up from the fiery stoke hole to the cold and jey main deck by Ashbey and Bartlett, another Barbadian vomiting and with a high fever, a victim of grip, a malady that overtakes its victim with an unhasty taste in the mouth; an itching and irritation of the nostrils; persistent sneezing and profuse vomiting and a high fever which, if not taken into control at the sign of the symptoms, develops into pneumonia and later to the fatal stage of double pneumonia.
This was indubitably the condition of William Hardy, who, in the absence of D. Blull who was 'off duty' was sent to the ship's hospital by the naval depoter. Whatever medical treatment he received while he lay helpless in the hospital we will not volunteer to state, but Hardy was a true Ethiopian. He was Hardy by name and hardy by nature. When land was sighted a fortnight later, the islands of Malta and Gibraltar in the Mediterranean and the perimeter of a submarine (British) simultaneously were sighted about half a league of the port bow, that caused 'n little anxiety' among the entire crew outside of those who knew! Hardy 'strung out of bed and continued to walk around a bit in the hospital. The next morning after our ar-
1994
to the dead, when we lament to the funeral dration and moor the solenity of the obsequies, each made impressive by the sincerity of the officiating minister; when we hear the pronunciation of the dreaded words, "ashes to ashes, dust to dust," and yea, when we look and behold the corporeal form of him whom we love, best being covered with dust and with this, the mournful song is sung, "Sleep on beloved," we shudder and the fear of God Almighty is awakened within us. Then we begin more earnestly to concentrate on Him who is the maker of all things, who is the creator of all things, omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent. Him, who breathed in man the breath-of-life by which man be came a living soul. We feel the inner-man 'speaking to us and 'urging to us to be more mindful of the soul (man's uncorporeal existence), and whilst reflecting on this, the words of the poet Longfellow come so applicably and so soothing.—
"Life is real, life is earnest, and the grave is not its goal; Dust thou are to dust.returnest, Was not spoken of the soul." We acknowledge death as the destiny to be shared by all that breathe, and while we think of the question of the soul after death, Bryant in his Thanatopsis gives us his words of admonition: "So live, that when thy summons come to join, the innumerable caravan that moves to that pale realm of shade, where each shall hide his life, in silent halls of death; they go not like the quarry-slave at night, gourged to his dungeon, but sustained and soothed by an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave like one who wraps the drapery of his couch about him, and lies down to pleasant dreams."
rival at Velletta, Malta, the first port of call from slovenche, he was again ordered on-watch, in the stoke hole, but Hardy was obviously too weak and broken and on this occasion bravely protested to Captain Fullerton, R. N., commander of the Trent and convoy, before whom he was court-martialled and sentenced to thirty days with high labor in the naval prison at Velletta, Malta. He was immediately taken from the Trent by an armed marine escort to the prison for the execution of the sentence.
The convoy remained at Malta for thirty-one days making repairs to the casings of the monitors which the heavy seas had shattered a good deal, and on the day of its departure Hardy was again escorted on board looking very much like the mummy of King Tut, a living skeleton. Notwithstanding his puffful condition he was again ordered on watch and warned with court-martial and even more dramatic measures if he fled to obey. There was only one course, and that was the stoke hole and the one this obviously sick man took, but with the assistance of Bartlett and Ashley who attended their own fires and those of Hardy's while he hung on in the stake hole.
After leaving the monitor "Humber" with the foot at Sie de Barr, the Dardanelles where British troop ships were landing men by the thousands on a pontoon bridge from the舟登 steamer River Clide and the dreadnaught Queen Elizabeth which was playing a tattoo with her sixteen inch gains on the Turkish forts. Harvey collapsed and was again taken to hospital where he was pronounced "a levy man" by Dr. Elhull, the fleet surgeon. With the aid of Bartlett, Ashbey and the writer who snuggled to him in the hospital from time to time all we thought he needed in the way of medicine, milk and fruits he struggled against the attack of pneumonia splendidly and was up on his feet again when the convoy and arrived at Alexandria, Egypt, at least, temporary.
By A. Norro. Theozonhist
By A Negro Theosophist
There is no better preparation for a clear comprehension of Theosophy than a broad, general knowledge of modern science. For science deals with facts, tabulating them and dis-
tributing them. Theosophy deals with the same facts and the same facts and the same facts are tabulated differently, the conclusions are in the main, the same. Where they differ it is not because Theosophy questions the facts of the scientist, but simply because before coming to conclusions, it takes into account additional facts which modern science either ignores or has as yet not discovered.
There is but one science, so long as facts remain the same; what is strictly scientific is Theosophical; as what is truly Theosophical is entirely in harmony with all the facts and so in the highest degree scientific. The greatest achievement of modern science is the conception offered to the thinking mind of the phenomena of existence as factors in a great process called evolution. Let us understand in broad outline what evolution means according to science, and we shall be ready to understand what it means according to Theosophy.
If we contemplate life at large in its ascending forms, we see that in the lowest creatures the energies are wholly absorbed in self-sustenance and sustenance of race. Each improvement in organization, achieving some economy or other, makes the maintenance of life easier; so that the energies evolved from a given quantity of food, more than suffice to provide for the individual and for progeny. And even some unused energy is left.
As we rise to the highest types of energy, evolving more developed structure, we see that this surplus energy becomes greater and greater and the highest show us intervals of cessation from the pursuit of food, during which there is not an infrequent spontaneous expenditure of unused energy in that pleasurable activity of the faculties we call play.
This general truth has to be recognized as holding of life in its culminating forms of human life as well as of other life. The progress of mankind is under one aspect, a means of liberating more and more life from more toil and leaving more and more life available for relaxation, for pleasure and culture, for aesthetic gratification, for travel, for games.
From the chaotic nebula, once upon a time, to man today, thinking, playing and loving—this is the process called evolution. A chaos has become a cosmos with orderly events that the human mind can tabulate as laws. The unstable "dilathma" him become the stable "dilathma." We see the principles observable, up the one becomes the many, up the disorder becomes order, of a truth, no mind saw the beginning of the process, nor continuously watched it to the present day, and so can describe from direct observation each step in evolution. We can observe the fact. We can only reconstruct the process of observing different kinds of nebula by studying the structures of extinct organisms, by piecing together here a tail with a wing
None can say that the universe did not arise in all its complexity a few thousand years ago, just before historical tradition begins, and zone can say that the universe will not tomorrow cease to be. But man cannot be satisfied with taking note only of the few brief moments of the present which his consciousness can retain; he must have some conception of nature and postulate a past and a future. Such a past and a future is propounded, largely, from the analogous in the process called evolution.
In a sense, evolution is a hypothesis; but it is the most satisfactory hypothesis so far in the history of mankind, and one which, when once accepted, shows evolution everywhere for all to see. Fascinating as is the survey of the cosmos in the light of evolution as taught by modern science, there is nevertheless, one gloomy element in it, and that is insignificant part played by the individual in the timeless drama.
Nature at work: evolving, "lavishly he spends here energies building form after form. But a terrible spendthrift she seems producing far more forms than she provides sustenance for. Time is of no account and the individual but of little, only indeed so long as he lives, uiring the brief life of the individual, nature smites on him, caresses him as though everything had been planned for his welfare. After he has given rise to offspring, or has slightly modified the environment for others by his living, death, comes and he is annihilated.
That "I am T.," which impels each to live, to struggle, to seek happiness, ceases to be; but it is not we who are important, but the type—so careful of the type she seems, so careless of the single life." Where are the day Niswah and Babylon and the glory that way Greece and the grandeur that was Home?" (Continued Next Week)
(Continued Next Week)
THE NEGRO WORLD
will feature
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ADVERTISMENTS
Our readers are requested to let
us build their own room if there
is no space. Please fill in the
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A characteristic of the spider is that the female spider often eats the male.
R JYME AND REASON
R JYME AND REASON
Lines to Dunbar
By Henry B. Willinson
"Black pioneer whose suppliant lays
Impired at length your, brothers
here.
Your star still shines, us mariners to steer
To promulgate, refraining not a whit,
Bringing fresh plaudits with the
present time:
I gaze upon your picture as I pen
These teeble lines in bourgey to thy
fame;
Though commonplace I am among
such men
Merely I utter-"Spered be thy
name."
Despite the taunts of men, Blacka-
moor,
You peaceful in consigned to quiet
sod,
Constrained to cry (though bolted is
the door),
"Poets are born, the handiwork of
God"!
Epitaph
"Lies here a spirit, victim of the red,
Lent for a while, returned now to
God."
"It takes a little courage
And a little self-control
And some grim determination.
If you want to reach the goal.
It takes a deal of striving,
And a firm and stern chill.
No matter what the battle,
If you really want to win.
"There's no easy path to glory.
There's no rosy road to fame.
Life, however we may view it,
Is no simple parlor game:
But its prizes call for lightning.
For endurance and for grit:
For a rugged disposition
And a 'don't-know-when-to-quit'.
"You must take a blow or give one.
You must risk and you must lose.
And expect that in the struggle,
You will suffer from the brune.
But you mustn't wince or faller,
If a fight you once begin:
Be a man and face the battle—
"That's the only way to win."
YOUR FUTURE FORECAST
Are you worried, unhappy, successful, uneducated?
Scientific ASTROLOGY can help and guide you to
a life of happiness, joy, success, and HEALTH. Write for FREE PLANETARY
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DEBA
"Is There A Class Struggle?
(Auspicious of Frederick Douw)
WALTER STARRETT
Says NO
FRIDAY EVENING, DE
Eight-thirty
H. G. MUDGAL
HOWLAND STUDIO, 1680 Ful
ADMISSION
Tickets on Sale at Revolutionary Age, 63
888 Broadway, and at 1660 Pulton Street
DEBATE
"Is There A Class Struggle In America?"
(Adapted of Frederick Douglass Interparallel Forum)
WALTER STARRETT vs. D. BENJAMIN
Says NO Says YES
FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 5th, 1930
Eight-thirty O'Clock
H. G. MUDGAL, Chairman
HOWLAND STUDIO, 1660 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, N. N.
ADMISSION 25c
Tickets on Sale at Revolutionary Age, 63 Madison Avenue; Road to Freedom.
888 Broadway, and at 1660 Fulton Street; Lafayette 7392.
MAKING HEAVEN
Feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless,
treated, that is our mission. Truths that not
will train and ordain our ministers. Address
Church, 310 Wash Idi St. New York City.
Special
GEE WHIZ HA
Feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, assisting the jobless, inspiring the disheartened, that is our mission. Truths not Fabes. Workers wanted! every country; will train and ordain our ministers. Addres. REV. DR. R. R. PORTER. T. L. M. E. Church. 21 West Idle St., New York, NY).
Epitaph
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By ARTHUR S. GRAY
One of the worst impatiences placed upon modern society is that of real estate profiteering. It is a diabolical scheme inaugurated by designing individuals in order to exploit the masses.
Capitalism is based primarily upon this form of taxation. One may obtain exemption from personal property, but this reality possession must yield its quota—there is no escape.
Now that unemployment is causing such hardship and suffering throughout the world, we should seriously consider the system which permits such conditions to exist.
Labor should be the basis for all wealth, and when no labor is available government agencies should not expect the same returns—from the people as they did during periods of prosperity.
Such a policy is inconsistent and tyrannical. Whenever the people are forced out of employment, taxation should be reduced—and all public servants (officials) should automatically submit to salary reductions, a temporary suspension of same. The condition of the people should at all times determine the compensation of its representatives. By such a method, we might enjoy the scarcity of many potential grafters and self-seeking politicians.
Governments should control the partitioning of all land space within its boundaries, subject to the vote and decisions of the people. Land leasing should be wholly in the hands of competent officials selected and chosen by the people, and the private manipulation of land for private or public use should be outlawed.
In America, the national anthem opens with these words: "My Country Tis of Thee, Sweet Land of Liberty," etc., but how can the people who do not own any of the country, truthfully and patriotically sing that first verse? Every citizen regardless of his financial position" should be able to sing the national anthem of his country in spirit and in truth, similar to the wording of the American anthem. Houses and buildings represent certain expenditure of labor and material, consequently a market valuation is appropriate for such construction, but the land on which these structures might be erected" was here from the beginning and from all indications will be here until the end; so I suggest that land holdings be shared jointly by all residents of the community, and assessable in proportion to the economic status of the assesser.
It is not to be expected that any real estate broker will welcome such a casual departure, but nevertheless, reforms which will benefit the people are the order of the day.
According to a recent report from Moscow of the activities of the central publishing organization of the Soviet Union, that institution is printing books in fifty-eight languages, in record, probably only exceeded by the various Bibly societies. Aside from its publication in what might be called "regular" languages, the Soviet organization puts out works in a number of toques spoken in various parts of the vast territory of the Union which never had been written before Soviet linguistic experts supplied them with ready-made alphabets.
AFRICA BOUND?
having traveled through Africa—East, West, North, South and Central. I will be able to supply information to My African inquiries to go to Africa. Open request. Write to:
DATE
Bruggle In America?"
Angles (Interpretive Forum)
vs. D. BENJAMIN
Says YES
DECEMBER 5th, 1930
by O'Clock
L. Chairman
Bulkun Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
TON 546
83 Madison Avenue; Road to Freedom;
Lafayette 7362.
**Garvadham A Religion**
It will also come to pass in that Jay, that the Lord shall sit his hand again the second time to recover the remnant of his people, which shall be left from Assyria, and from Egypt, and from Pathos, and from Sinaan, and from Elam, and from Shinar, and from Hamath, and from the islands of the sea"—Isaiah, 11; 11th.
Buddham of today does not represent the true "Eight-Path Way" as taught by young Gautama, who was taken to Jerusalem by the Sinaan. The same is true of Christianity.
I do not know whether, or not, Marcus Garvay is aware of the fact, that he has given the world a new religion, nevertheless, he has; and the sooner he finds his Paul, the better it will be for all concerned.
When Jesus sold himself to the masses, Jaspar, Horr and Lamaar traveled throughout Ethiopia, Tibet, Egypt and India herding the good news, and finally Paul made the Christian Religion a reality. Buddha (Gautama) had his disciples who carried the new message to the Asiatic peoples. The followers of Buddha and Jesus were true to the truth of things. Today Christianity as well as Buddhism have their priestships, which are contrary to the teaching of Jesus, and the teaching of Gautama Buddha.
Just as Jesus and Gautama have been misunderstood, the same holds true of the founder of Garveyism. The early Buddhists misrepresented things to win converts; the early Christians did so for the sake of sensation; the Mohammadans did likewise to outwin Judaism. Mazdaism and Christianity; and many of the present day followers of Garveyism are misrepresenting true Garveyism simply because they do not know of its sublimity. And those who openly oppose it for no other reason than that they do not hold its founder to be a sublime person, should remember this:
IT IS NOT ALWAYS THROUGH SUBLIME PERSONS THAT GREAT THINGS COME INTO LIFE.
I am not trying to champion Garveyism; I am not a Garveyite; but I have based my findings on Garveyism from a practical living standpoint, and not from the view—out of that of the honest, but unkindly noisy Garveyite.
Garveyism in Reality
I know absolutely nothing about the crude something some would have me believe is true Garveyism. Garveyism. I maintain to be, is something spiritual, but practical—something real.
I outline Garveyism thus: A Reflection of God, which teaching is harmonious on all planes of being, and in all worlds:
ONE GOD: God is the Father of all;
He has made man in His own Likeness and Ignace—hence, man should see and recognize the Father's presence in man, but especial one of his own color.
ONE AIM: Righteousness.
ONE DESTINY: That all men shall enjoy God's Kingdom on earth—The
MIAA, Money, Health, Happiness, General
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Medium, Mosquito Decten, Fortune Teller
and such line, to which many people today
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their knowledge of what their profession, business or belief is no matter what
NEED HELP this or that in question.
WIN YOU
BUCCESS. Now, while it is fresh in your
heart, it is time to send it to one of the
seal rings. Send seal of one, mailed in
plain wrapper. Attend to it now.
THE GARRY, DD!
220 EGG POX
HOLY LAND, IL, 615-220
YAGA
Testimonials That Tell of Derived From Taking
TESTIMONIAL
This is to certify that I have had Asthma about and in a many man's hand walked the floor. I think about one from doctors and also went to two hospitals. She济南 hospital, to get medicine to get medicine to help me but without an prepared medicine for Asthma and I have not especially invite all those suffering from treatment such as I have gotten from these and I don't regret it.
TESTIMONIAL
To whom it may concern;
This is in certify that I. John Butler, B.A. not understand. So finally I want to. John me throughly from head to foot. They said I was a little nervous. I was six months and instead of getting better I to my doctor and he said I thought you had not try Dr. Kenneth of 1048 Enter St. So I 1980 and he said he could cure me. I felt he was a little better. And it was the same thing: feeling better and giving a lecture about curing people of I needed a tonic and gave me a bottle of B. Johnson's. I improved and have been getting better ever without it making me sick. Since I have been taking my stomach alone, my stomach alone see Dr. Donaldson as through I can only recommend Dr. Donaldson any stomach trouble.
Bahadhood of God and the Brotherhood of man; perfection rightly established.
A simple, practical religion—free from trinities and doctrines. In the light of reason it challenges every Christian to live a true Christ-like life or give room so that the real children of God may possess the land as God had commanded. God will not withhold His promise from its followers, if they would only mind their own business. Followers of this new religion have much to gain; they are those who shall lead the world out of darkness—greed, dishonesty and intolerance. They are too noble to be knocking other religious beliefs; they know that once they honestly believe in the "ONE GOD, ONE AIM, ONE DESTINY," no powers can stand before their God.
In passing, may I say, let the followers of the new religion accept same as such; let them cut out "horse play" and unnecessary noises; undue attacks on other movements, religious, fraternal and otherwise. Let them devote their spare time to a better understanding of true Garveyism, a religion which is same, practical, inspiring and satisfying.
Garveyism is of God, hence, a devout Garveyite cannot, deny the existence of a God; but sees God in you, I and the world. He knows God, because he is a part of God, and is assisting in the making of the Kingdom of God on earth. He respects all religious beliefs, yet holds fast to that which he believes is best—Garveyism. He regards the rights of others; and obeys the laws of the land where he resides, being mindful of the fact, that once he is true to himself, others, and his religion, through the right understanding of the ONE GOD, ONE AIM, ONE DESTINY, he, too, shall enjoy life and live abundantly in the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, and that Africa shall once more become the Land of the Good, Strong and Wise.
(An inner usage has forced me to write thus, therefore, if I am wrong, please accept my apology; yet, I shall entertain the thought that the inner voice speaks wisely. I thank you.)
You will find business by going after it, not going from it.
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