The Negro World
Saturday, December 20, 1930
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Not Who You Are But What You Are Counts In Life-Garvey
Foreign White Labor Now Chief Competitor of Negro Workers All Over America
Mechanical Pursuits, Municipal Employment, Gains in North
IN NEED OF PROGRESS
If Skilled, Labor Does Not Increase Negroes' Advantages in Vain
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The chief similarities between the north and south as regards trends of Negro employment are that, in the border cities, the whites are competing for jobs formerly, held exclusively by Negroes! in some other sections Mexicans are replacing, Negroes; and the principal expansion in opportunity is in the mechanical industry. Other factors in the north operate differently from those in the south.
Such are the findings of the Committee on the Economic Status of the Negro appointed by the United States Secretary of Commerce. The report of this committee is based on a careful survey of the situation made by Dr. J. T. Woofter, Jr., and financed by the Rosenwald Foundation.
In the north, Dr. Woofter's report shows the use of Negro labor, considered a necessary experiment during the war, was resumed after the 1920 depression and augmented by 1929. In certain plants it had become a definite policy. Before 1920 Negroes were chiefly common laborers.
The report shows that, in addition to mechanical industry, there are two definitely expanding fields of Negro opportunity in the North; first, the municipal appointments in
Supreme Court
O.K.'s Nullifiers
Arkansas. Primary Ruling
Nullifying 14th and 15th
Amendments Upheld
PARTY "VOLUNTARY"
WASHINGTON...Holding that it
included jurisdiction, the Supreme
Court of the United States, Monday,
declined to review the case of J. M.
Koblman and others against L. M.
Holman, and others, involving the
right of Negroes to vote in Democ-
ratic primaries in the State of Ark-
ansas.
The case was on appeal from the State Supreme Court of Arkansas, which upheld the right of the Democratic party in Arkansas to make a rule prescribing that only white persons can participate in a Democratic primary in that state.
A review of the decision of the Arkansas Supreme Court was sought on the ground that the court erred in holding that party primaries are not a state function but purely a political, party matter with which the state has nothing to do, although the state fixes a date for holding primary elections and provides for their general supervision.
The assignment of errors also included a statement that the court erred in holding that the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the Constitution of the United States were not infringed by the rule barring Negroes from Democratic primaries and that such a rule did not deprive colored electors of the right of suffrage guaranteed them by these amendments.
Voluntary Organization
It was also claimed that the Arkansas Supreme Court erred in hold-(Continued on Page Eight)
Five Teeth Extracted, Woman Regains Sight
CHICAGO. — Mrs. Lillian Wallace's jaw hurt after she got home from a digital office where she had five 'teeth extracted. She rubbed it to ease the pain. As she did so she placed her hand over her right eye and discovered she could see out of her left, which had been sightless fourteen years.
The dentist said 'the teeth had long been infected and that the resulting pressure, he believed, had paralyzed the optic nerve.'
Negro Superior In Many Ways
N O N E G R O W O W S E R S!
The Trouble With Negro Is That He Apes White Folk's Sheepishly
"If Negroes threw off their preschers and holy men; who are nothing but racketeers, they would make a huge stride forward," says Henry L. Mencken, the editor of the Mercury Magazine, and called by many the most distinguished professional moonstalk in the country.
Mr. Mencken is posing these days at a Fifth avenue studio and his likeness is being transferred to canvases by a Negro artist, O. Richard Reid, in a studio at 25144 Fifth avenue. There America's most distinguished professional iconoclast sites on a dahl and discourses on this until that while the artist transfers Mr. Mencken's likeness.
"Be careful about the eyes," admires the Baltimoreuron. "I drank some excellent beer last night with the result that they are not so clear as usual."
"Try to keep the mouth still for a few moments, Mr. Mencken," implores Mr. Reid. "Remember, I am not doing a talking picture."
Mr. Mencken likes his portrait, but has no intention of buying it. It would be intolerable to be forever confronted by a picture of himself he thinks. He adds, however, that this portrait will exist after his writings are forgotten, prophesying that, one hundred years from now few will know that, he had lived. Still, as he points out, he was never one who yearned for Altergy immortality.
On Education Issue
Criticizes G. S. Asks for Private Donations, White Teachers Paid Too High
HAITI HELPED AMERICANS
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The report of the Moton Commission to Haiti made public this week upholds the Haitians and declares there is substantial grounds for complaint against the Service Technique, or separate vocational school system, set up during American occupation.
The report is signed by Dr. R. R. Moton, of Tuskegee, as chairman; Dr. Mordecal W. J. Johnson, president of Howard-University; Prof. Leo M. Pavrot, white, need agent, General Education Board; B. F. Hubert, president of the Georgia State Industrial College; Dr. W. B. T. Williams, dean of Tuskegee College and field agent of the Jeanes and Slater Fund.
Sixty-one Recommendations
The report makes sixty-one re-
mendations, the most important of
which is that the Service. Technique
be articulated with the national
school system of Haiti and that fir-
nancial- and administrative aid be
given by the United States in
developing an adequate system of edu-
cation.
Be Conscious of Your Self, And You Will Be the Master; Nothing Is Impossible for You to Achieve
God Created All Alike and Equal; Do Not Worry Yourself and God With Your Petty Worries; Instead Apply Your Intelligence to Your Problems
God Cannot Help You if You Are Not Willing to Help Yourself—All Great Men in History Stood on Their Own—If We Do Just That We Can Create Our Own Heroes
(Special to The Negro World by Hon. Marcus Garvey)
Fellowmen of the Negro Race, Greeting:
What is "LIFE'S PURPOSE?" I would preface this question with the thought of Saadl, the Persian Poet: They will ask you: "What have you done?" Not who were your ancestors?
The famous veil in the sanctuary is not reverenced by the faithful, because it came from the silk worm. They will ask you: "What have you done?" I am asking you a similar question tonight. What have you done, and what are you doing to justify your existence; to justify that great gift that God has bestowed upon you?--His gift of life.
Subjects of the Creator
We are subjects of the Creator. Ablund us stand the mysterious yet noble Universe also the subject of God. As far as you can see, as much as you can understand, as deep as your imagination may be, there will you see the great work of God. And with all things visible and invisible in the Creation there is nothing that God has exalted above man, in that God has made man a part of Himself; next to Himself and above everything with life. In our Creation we have animate and inanimate matter—matter that has no life and matter that is charged with life. Wherever there is life there is God. Wherever there is God, there is sovereignty, there is majesty, there is authority and power, and God has made nothing with greater spiritual enlightenment than man. The life you live, and the life I live.
In Not An Idea Portion
is a curious proposition. The few of us who understand life and praise this sovereignty of the Almighty God, feel confident at ourselves that all things around us must bend, must how to our mastery, to our sovereignty and power. The man who appreciates life to its abundance, smiles at the world, smiles at Creation and moves on with nature happily and pleasantly. The fortunate creature who possesses life and does not understand it cringes, shows, defaces himself and complains against the miseries of life, complains against the misfortunes of life, things of his own invitation and of his own creation. As I have said to many of you before, the difference between you, the cringing, bowing sympathetic, bleaning yourself for your failure and worrying the world and your God with your complaints and the man who holds his head up as sovereign of the world and master of everything around him, is because the one man is conscious of himself, is the master, and the other fails to lift himself to such a position of intelligence. When man gets to know himself, man no longer piles after the things that are above his reach; when man gets to know himself man no longer complains against the ills of the world, because there would be none, because everything that there is in the world visible and invisible are placed at man's disposal to yield to man the happiness, the prosperity that nature intended when she made man.
Knock at the Door of Prosperity
I look at the hundreds of millions of miserable souls in the world and I wonder why it is that so many people remain so long in misery and despair when the entrance, the door to those happier things, stands before them just to knock to let it be opened unto you. I want to get you to knock at that door to get entrance unto the reign of plenty that should be youps, that belongs to only a few because they alone understand the language of life and have the information how to make it worthwhile. Let the place this worshipment before you!
You read the papers week after
week and only the names of a few
men are mentioned in these Journals.
You can read thereafter to read
this question. Why is it that some individual
stand out prominently every day
and the chief of the people who
spoken about, are not heard of? The
answer is this: The weakness of the
one to Rit himself from the common
lot of the common people by the
patience of accompanying where all are
mild enough, honest and rewarded.
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a grayscale image with a blurry background.
because of the very fact that the individual has been able to lift himself above the rest. And you see the individual every day, you read about the individual every day; he may be your Governor; he may be your Member of the Legislative Council and when you look at him what do you see? A physical person, just like yourself, having two hands like yourself, having two feet, the same passions, the same feelings, the same gray matter to supply knowledge as you. Therefore the question is: Why the difference? The answer is: The appraisal and the appreciation of the one of life and the non-appraisal and non-appreciation of the other. You the common people help him burden and cares, because you refuse to appreciate and appraise the value of life, because you refuse to think and understand as nature intended you to.
All Beings Created Equal
When God Almighty created man,
He created not a superior being in all
the human race, but all men were
created equal. He said: "I am not a
respector of persons, peoples, nations,
nor races. God is not a respector of
persons. He is not a respector of the
Yellow, nor the Brown nor the White
races. Man was placed in this world
with an equal gift of mind matter
and soul, which is the common endowment of all men. You suffer terribly because you refuse to understand and appreciate all these things.
Because of that only, you are so different from the rest. The world is young and so we have time before us.
The Philosophers and Theologians tell us the world is over three thousand years old, but we will not discus-
whether it is one thousand years old
or a million. We are satisfied that
we have much still to do.
The Great Difference Between Men
The great difference between men,
the great difference between you and
Lincoln, between you and the Napoleons,
between you and the William the Conquerors, between you and the Florence Nightingales, between you
and the Edith Cavellies, between you
and the Catherine the Great, is that they found the knowledge of their souls, and understood the gift of life,
and the knowledge of appreciation of that gift lifted themselves to the highest, in the region of men's geographicalments, and so they have become the memorials of their world.
The millions of the people who have passed like way helpless no man-men beheld, because they never thought.
The few who thought they have left, behind them misunderstood,
and that is why I am able to tell them more and learn and learn by all the means we believe by the means we
cause they left no monuments behind.
Negro, what are you going to leave behind for unborn generations to remember you? That is the question the Universal Negro Improvement Association is asking; and that is the suggestion I am nothing to you now. What are you going to leave behind you for another generation to remember that you lived in this age, and to allow posteriorly to go to your shrine as they go to that of Napoleon and Washington and to pay homage, because they appreciated life and lived it abundantly. There is nothing in the world that must have achieved that man cannot do in the Twentieth Century.
Celiae, British Honduras, G. A.
P. S.—I beg to remind all the members, officers and divisions of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and Carrey Club, that it is only by the divisions sending in their reports that we are rendered able to carry on the great work that is before us. When divisions fail to make their reports they handicap the Parent Body and keep back the movement. In this way our enemies are not those on the outside but those on the inside.
There are some divisions that are not reporting to the Parent Body, and whose officers are using the money or the organization for their own personal needs. This should be stopped, and only the members can do this, by questioning the officers of their divisions, if they have sent in their reports to the Parent Body. We are expecting to have a good convention next year, but this will depend upon the reports we get.
Where members are in doubt of officers reporting, to the Parent Body, they should send in their dues and assessments and report direct to headquarters, "Walters Park," 67 Ship Rock Road, New York, P. O. S. Andrew Johnson, W. W. L., and be only registered and get benefits in keeping with the rules governing the organization. M. G.
Philadelphia Bank Run by Negroes Looms as One of The Strongest in Country
Important Notice
To our Agents and Readers in Australia. We are asking You will be very attention to our programmes that would lead to display the exhibits of the NEGRO WORLD Foundation the ORGANIZATION, in the recent programmes should mention in photos your name, Witnesses, Highlights. We have taken the opportunity to give you an opportunity to see what is being used by superintendent of the NEGRO WORLD Foundation. Our Gurup has followed on the success of our previous fundraising programme. We are looking for any group that would be interested in supporting us.
Watch Our Next Issue,
The Christmas Number
Watch our next issue! It will be the Christmas number.
It will contain the most interesting and educative articles, poems and sayings on and about the race and Africa. It will be full of meat for you at Christmas dinner table.
In addition to literary surprises the honor roll of distinguished contributors to The Negro World Fund will appear in this issue.
If you have not sent in your contribution make haste to do so. There is still time for your name to appear as one of the honored donors to a worthy cause.
De Priest Vote More Weighty
Republican Majority of Only Two in Congress Presents Opportunity TO HOLD BALANCE If Jury Box Is Denied, Let's Use Ballot Box Effectively CAMDEN, N. J.—Addressing an audience of 2,000 citizens in Convention Hall, Sunday, Oscar DePrint (Rep. Ill.) said there is only a majority of two among the Republicans in the next Congress and they need every vote they can get.
"That means in the next two years my vote will be more important and weighty than that of your own Senator" said Mr. DeFriest.
William Pickens, field secretary of the N.A.A.C.P., also spoke, criticizing the Camden county prosecutor office for failure to present charges of police brutality, declaring that citizens should present this at the ballot box.
Mr. DeFriest took home with Senator Earl (Nep, N. J.):
"I have been told that Senator Earl declared here that I was putting the Negro back fifty years and that I should be harred from Camden.
"Great influence was brought to hear to keep me from coming here. I have a letter in my pocket which informed me that this way to be a Democratic meeting.
If I inform your Senator by adving you to protect yourself by
Continued on Page 117
Appearance and Need
Blamed in Lynching
Group Studying Causes Say Mob
Violence Impartant Where Schools
and People Poor
BEAST IN MAN POPS UP!
Districts in which the economic
status of the people is considerably
below average and districts that
have only meager educational fac-
tilities are potential hotbeds of lynch-
ing activity, according to preliminary
findings, of the national commissi-
sion studying the causes of mob violence.
Reporting yesterday on the work of the group, George Fort Milton, editor of The Chattanooga News and chairman of the commission, declared that in the final outcome, "a definite relation will probably be found between inadequate education and readiness to give the law into the hands of the mob."
The commission is making detailed case studies of all lynching In 1890, sending three men, one of them a Negro, to gather first-hand data on the conditions surrounding the demonstrations. Of the twenty-one lynch-
State Banking Dept. Commends Citizens, Southern Bank & Trust Co.
NOW TEN YEARS OLD
More Than 300 White Depositors—Major Wright, the Financial Genius
PHILADELPHIA.—A prominent statistician, whose business it is to keep familiar with reliable figures, data, and information concerning the various business activities of the country, recently made the remark that the most liquid bank in Pennsylvania, as far as his knowledge goes, is the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company, located in Philadelphia.
This statement alone is enough to make the people of Philadelphia lift their heads with pride. Especially is this true when it is recalled that in the last two weeks several banks failed in the South and the money stringency is still very acute in the North. There are some features about the Philadelphia bank which Negroes evidently do not know. First of all, the bank has been in constant operation since 1820, and during that period it has successfully weathered two periods of depression and is still doing a healthy business. Some Philadelphia people may remember that a very unwholesome gesture was made several years ago by some misguided Philadelphia Negroes who felt to cast some reflections on the Times and Southern Bank and Trust Company. Some of our recent false reports that appeared in some of our colored newspapers. These
Ways to Help Negro Workers
Ways to Help Negro Workers
CARB MEXICAN LABOR, ELEGHTON WHITE UNION LABOR, TEACH NEGROS
DIGNITY OF LABOR
ATLANTA, Ga.—Definite recommendations looking toward, the improvement of the position of the Negro in industry, in which he has made some gains in recent years, were announced here today by the Committee on the Economic Status of the Negro appointed by the United States Secretary of Commerce. The recommendations were worked out and approved at a conference of governmental experts held in Washington recently.
For Western workers interested in present, in this respect, in residence in industry, the Negro in choosing a number of obstacles, among them being increasing competition in certain sections, with Mexican labor, lack of recognition by many local and international trade unions, lack of emphasis on vocational education and industrial work in the schools, and the need of more employment offices manned by Negroes.
List Recommendations
Following is a list of recommendation that were offered:
(1) Since the Negro is found in competition with the Mexicans in the southwest and midwest and since this competition seems to be increasing, there would seem to be good reason for protecting this American-born laborers from the foreign-born by selecting the Mexicans under a quota system similar to other immigrants.
(2) The union situation might be bettered by a more effective policy of the American Federation of Labor in urging the organization of Negroes by the internationalists and locals and abatement of discriminatory practices by these bodies.
Show Opportunities
(8) Efforts should be made to show the Negro the dignity of labor (Continued on Page 818)
Per eo IR RT ny amr te Oe th ete nae a
ee We. Bad aoa stmaue ly Ae
re aM a BN iL Kiteientag ot Martuas tnt Atel
0 17 acieema i cia cores Areas hake Se A Lee ee A ere Se de LO ID AMEND
oda Ne a: hee at fox eae Ree
Mees ware te oor Paes
Ree Se ATCA Se Serres ane BORSED?Y-
ae re anes Barthgers
fy & mortgage’ “He also informe
sup, that his company Yoes not ‘manu-
eon saying 4] take the ‘itpie”
BURT snc t Sine gig
the. Meroe mansion” of the. late
Mime. C. J. Waiker; wore not head, to
fatisty nom to raise money! to pay a
mortgage of $38,000," stated Attor-
ney F. BR Ransom. . tag
“We. are cloang dhe villa prepara-
tory ae sale of the same for the
sole re@on that Mme. A’Lélia Walk-
ex bas never ocoupled and does not
intend to.ccoupy the villa as a home.
‘Me beautiful home has stood tor 1%
years without-an. occupant and the
‘furnishings were depreciating . in
value. The villa we feel, has served
its purpose ax a memorial to the late
Mme, C.J. Walker. Mme. A‘Lella’s
reasons for nat occupying the home
are purely personal.
“The upkeep af the house was just
as: boutiy without" her wsing It as a
residence as"it would huve been had
she lived there since we Kept a full
corps of servgiits on, the premises,
pad salaries, purchusod food, etc.,
Attorney Heaagom adidot :
Thankfol Negro Dities
1,500 Idle by Wire
SACRAMBN'TO. , Calif. — Charen
Bowinan, a muccesstul Negro of Fait
Biver, Magn, played absentew host
to 1,609 unemployed men for Thanks-
giving Day, nen be tolegreptie 8750
M Thomas A. Martell, atidrney, re-
aqueating that every unemployed mut
tipable lo buy w real dianer-fer Wit-
geif de fed through contract with
restaurants.
“Ye Wd said that memuttes. of &
‘Moankag!ving Pay passed fr acta
niente Lwenty years ago, when ie wen
hungry, cold and without a sire i:
ig: pocket, caued Mr, Bowman to
order read diner for the unem-
ployed of this ily.
Seoramente old timer remember
hau, Rowman worked in West Abd
reivGng snd prepared free hauche=
Hater he operwted m barber shop.
ditsining; enous Ione to avgaltre
fa tavern on the Kiverside goat. 10
rubasquelity craisferted bist busines
to the Eat,
State: Legislature “Asks” |
To -Emplov Whites Only:
COUCHATA, Jae “Members af Lie
Jante: feausiature made a plea te the
frei goatyactar here To caploy an
‘ehtie tahiy BL the camp, as There are
mang White workers opl ot johe, Mrs
Hie ty thle plea, 10 Negi workers
tere dewen fram & construction
cians BY % ceGwel af MARL: mem, tho
fuutted dynanite At theme TRE ub
had vinled the ends peters aut
Whe Werroes Seale gleen rokye ta
foe le Red ileer poets Jew ‘eat
Mie Aetinns of Ge inceabets uf the
Bate Wegisiarnse Lact range! cone
Greater Fron the Nerrae fivine
a UBL: evinty, Al extagen fo es
Fok Ungee Betavine ab tae) Nescree:
AL Ihe mrt clectwt iy oeing pained
by Rotts Nuaztoen ‘oak whet
PSE rennin at eanmnnntl
fo ogiAS, Ravormny |
: EN siciaitath it SCHL, t
Se Fa are osrets 4 be or Ee
PP REY ERE AME EE
i 2 BE YOu | :
SAG a TaD sr, GeNew GE
E Aud, pete :
; 2 }
; + College trames Pacuity i
Here is What
| Comes to You |
WEEELY
IN-TRE
| NEGRO WORLD
| Feature Articles
Rs hse foatvey,
Sound Racial Editoriats
» News on’ Abyssinia
Boxing ond General Sports |
Interesting Notes for Women|
General Nevis on Africa
News for the Children
Interesting Religious Articles
Oy Bee Be wen Poxier
Health Talks for the Family
pT" Ry Be 2. Willems
Phe Pi Fe
7 ing tata ict”
eS our Renters :
: Full’ Pawo of Ness From
_ Yarions Ports of the World
Colanin. on Poiery and Veree!
|. Spaniels Roatton
bina ert mee ia al
mons Oe, ws rae aac
Fes Seer, Reet
Ere eee oO tas eel
I i Neca re Ae eee
Fee ee wy FEE
fe ee eee ae
fee
= of Jérae) ‘City: was: ‘$214.20 to
Adie cmreaelag oo natural and,
| George Menkderef 311 Oc{hh Ave-
‘ad hin The po, and te HD.
Hein & Oo. of PaUaderphia,: who
sold ta banat the migoe, iucat
‘Phe Firat District Cour, Jersey |
City, awarded @hechan $214.20
damages ‘against the Helnz com-
pany and the. Supreme Court here
today aMrmed the’ verdict despite
Tagore on U, S. as
Blind ip Caste Criticism
, Rabindranath Tagore, the Indias
poet. and piillosopher, gently took
Americans to task Sunday for ‘theit
iaconslatency “in protesting India’s
treatment ef .tho “untouchablps,"
while they adopt tie same attitude
| at home toward the Negro. :
| “Mt amuses.me to read ia your
same he said. ia his ‘taultoss Ox-
ford Ehglish, “the tellg about the azn
touchgbtes tn Indiai:* vs
‘ieee Sutte Thing Hero
| “You approach. the subject as
though tt wet something uplmagin-
fable. Yet in your ewn country you
haye the.sameé thing. You trent them
‘in almost the same manner."
‘He recalied that when he started
to sit in the. part of a bus resdrvnd
for Negroes the conductor resirn-
strated with him. He pointed Gut nat
Negioos are barred from many res
iatirants, ust’ ey Ja‘ India des nen
of caste refuse to vat with the un-
tonchables.
Mans Heroic Rescue
Effort Proves Futile
| JONKESZORO, aArk. — The heroic
efor’ of J. Witkeraon,: white fire:
Man, ty Teme Usreevenceald booty
“DRatls from oe burning Imllding,
Proved Lute, butahe 4 no leas x bere
The He tot find been lucked in
the Route AY der garemt wlio. tad
‘sone to the store to ao some shoe
pant A dire eras left burning brighily
in the jrete, amd ft ia thought that
Chis eanacd the fige which resufted in
the Iragte denth oY the child.
“\hen the firemen arrived on the
seone Use Gweilig yay enveloped tn
facnes. “hey were Informed that the
chit wes tapped ia the burning
stealing and without healtation, Wik
jeeaM Wrapped & coat saturaled with
Water aboutotiie heat ond.entered the
Bume where the ehila wan tupiprd,
Fron revi bo dyin ite went, rave
ing death by fire and sadonation, uti
ie renched the ream in whieh the,
chit way left, He found ker under
the Le, pfiled er out ang browmit
her front She buildin hat she waa a=
sraviin: Wihwersan int the: dorune ate
FEMME tte terene fixe call whe was
the datzater of Mev nti sins, omy
SUURVED OMT, £:.—Potes troke
SA a2 uneaihuysiont cerammerrsticn
Bwhieh betesen ea aad fd anen
Plated mea porticipated hare hh,
Tal otiae tiwarted ect oi the
group fo laze a parade throngs beds
Hesi-ntreets amd Corend & ta setter,
There was ae ‘vicienee,. Houde bY
Charles Doulas, ta prow istended
to marek hekisty & bonace wiles reais
“We wane werk ov fac."
SOR COADOAKIES
i The Westar Negro should form
feonpany orig CarpurGen with
geod subelanlial eagle, xeng ive to
Abysiiita to select what Mae -of
Company or Corperation to sore
also alles of the Company's, Geta
eopy ef the kaw so we could ‘build on
fn strony foundation, T euygese tat
Wwe Like immediste steps in forming
natch Cosiparites or Carparations,”
Bu yan he Gone ait silt bo dune,
. NORMAN WRISNER
ROBERT LOWE
a. W. RORINHON :
MARKY COLLINS
GARDOS STEVENS
3 Sua. Harbor, Ind.
‘To Wis Majesty, Emperor,
Kings of Kings of Biniopia:
_ We the negrosx of this’ section
apork ode of the desires of qu= heart.
We-express the Cesire of aay of
the Negrves of the Western world.
We Mesire to consolidate along all
lines with our Afrigan Brothers and
we hope to recive all information
cap be given by His Majeaty. |
We are. déerly interested tn ‘our,
fathers, °° ys :
» NORMAN 'WEISNER
: AgatET BRAVE. :
- |‘ MMERLY BIS. |
JESRIR HOWARD. -
+ Wnlbe cq *Grepeien
‘Tee purpose of. thie gsepcghum is
to ete plans amd opinions cf sll
ob to how eiget qu ondautag
eiatact. with ~~ tha) oaty
poerdrtci. Negro bation inthe dorld,
- GET TOGETHER MEETING ~_
. EXCELSIOR Division, 446 ‘Lenox Avenue, presenta a terion of Mass
Moatings, on the following dates: Mondayy Tuoedsy, Thuraday apd
Friday, which will be the 15, 16, 18 and 10, respectively.
INTERFSTING PROGRAM EACH EVE
‘ATi-are invited." = : . | Mestiag. starte at 8160 P.M.
= EN 1g34- se
Vad rchdyl
. .
~ “on Saree
, . \ - é a
TRS Acces
FD i en Reale co A erie te
perenne Seeier
| Taina, Sek bese Hie ae Booties
Lett geeaveehd an a Saw:
aa re eae ee eens een
by et Be Ftp ie apeaste
Be Lee, Ave llican pUren ere
Aiba 94-sgilbuiplawtic- edaatoeny and, wal
‘Wiahste: Ae the promt: "garnets: eng
sBaseor eevee woos: wae cine ts
name at chrlytening of: Marcus Hoaiah
| Garvey, Jr., while his sponsors, My,
os Preece hoina ioe
‘ak Town, “Pt, Samuels, dentigt. of
Hing-Baltway-Tree, ‘volunteered their
-solmen ‘vows! of respansibility.
‘Fhe beaming mother and father
who wera present“at the. cerpmony,
Were somunelieg’ te yeapond ta, aust.
erous hapdshakes of congratulations
and -particulasly to. the. father the
wish Of “bon voyage,” belng the day
prior to his defarture from bis home
‘and ‘baby, to travel.on'the tens. *,
Among those present were Mesers.
J. G. Edwards. J.-¥. Denniston, Roxis
Jyittians, Fustare Whyte, Mra.
ques Frangs, Mrs. Peart, Mrs.
Jones, Misses Peart, F. Clarke and
Una Prancis,
Rosenwald Gift Q. K'd
By Harlem Physieians
| Rejection by Manhattan © Society
j Orpeed by Gsgup of Negro Doctors
| The executive committee of the
North Harlem Medical Sczioty et
i terday voled approval of the proposal
‘of the Julius Rosenwald Fund for a
| donation toward Negro hospitals and
| fore survey of the Negro physicins
ja this city, coiutering the coaaurel of
| the plua expressed Wednestay by (he
| Manha!tan Medical Society, another
| aié commmittea slecided to invite the
mitionaire philanthropist, or repre:
, semimives ef the fund ye speak at the
faert. rusetiig: ot thy North Ryrlen
Soeity, at S827 Suveut avenue,
| December 18, . a ne
“The epcivion @f the. Manhattan:
Medical Suciely az resorted tm the
press dees tick reptozent the opiaion
ref al! the Negro paysiviase in Har-
ivo.” fead an annourloeniest made
pubife Ey. whe emauuittes, “Phe Bev
“tation fompkee a wey wile extend:
ral fo nigay physicians who are mem
ters of Bath meinte. Chore is @.
hax body abl alitixted with oitier,
Whitcs ‘Want Wark: ~ |
POvnamite Negroes!
( SOUCHATTA, Lae-A, praup ot
nearly sty eulgred me, driven from
(a coasiztedion vamp by erowvd! of
fwhite mem, ere dagt Tuesday, were
oaported Jisbsed teiapocurily in the
fold sede River packs jet tor. save.
jeeping, The nul aed dynamite,
| The fang Wuiter tee onfeuuerion
Feamp carly in the bearing’ and warne
Fedt colored anen by feave ths vicinity
so Unt whke mei yew usemfloyed
Toniht obtei wor. offers said,
When tie mul. toured @ ouont
tie and Found the sew att at work,
they Bembed the emp with alles
fe the feud dentreccer br enipley ents
Hse Faeyr Millen
« Fasnrened in Faree
JURELAD, Ny Cy--Mecent’ reports
Jor The Wert: Caroling fintuei “Lite
innienee Company shew that this
mmtiluion naw Bas nextly $29,000,-
Git ne Mieiaess in forse dnd gewels
at approniauterys 34,699,000, During
i9QY the company ian average
nf S2bud.o4 aktiiy in ciauma.te bene
fefarias,
fas poee who pines aver at, hare
Tucie needy lorapeuce up a pity
J-tbysdain, We shot pring aft inter.
esting ind instructive pling, amd ou
proseut and’ pruspective renters enn
fallow Oieia week ye week,
DS no, forged at a cnn et the
Sento Workt uoes every week to he
Immpgeor of Aly: nin’ Z
Bivery reader Shoutd diacuas his
phin with give or hore Tethers wito
Bre ROL sitbscrthers “ov rojubar, rend
ere cf The Nepro Werld, avi, the
hameg cied sddrecws of el the pare
HAD UML whoa recompnae? the plan,
The visto lmmtoass to all the partici.
pants, vet
The plan cstioutd be deserted Min
hot mote than éxe Landred wards,
Tt shonld be written om one side 06
the paper in Ink and testhly, 1c woirt
Wie bettor oti: i you var typowrite {e.
your plan will not be printed.
Bi i SSC ES sO et ARM ac LAE
ALLURE, TA SCP TR
Ore Caen Maing Se
tet aeh San aa ay ASRS A ete terete wore
pO a Se Ne ace amet oe aE a
RUAN tink bale a _/0T a ea ae ole
es X eae teas ne OE a ame ob enti
Sen OREN | He A A ae en
eobverelty For satmenk Re ue}. ) He, SBOE be amet "and
hustand, “sou inet Hive dea! CY He wows be willing CO make
budget or af sHowanoe, keep 9 fund] you an equal ‘partner. i
for yourselt pale te}: @) He. sould posses tact ahd 6
oi step Ping | (a) He ome Bees eager
men. to. marry fapre-|" (@) "He should be of & goog: ad
SiS SE lesa epee |e a oe mina
, ;
SS Honing ic 8 “a ae ~ aie ee
40 Yegrs' Service ‘Is [ome Common Tongue.
_ Honored by Co-Workers} A-Hindrance, He Says
SPRINGBIBLD, Maas. — Aftel
forty years*of service with » perfec
record, George W. Frasler, weteraz
letter carrier, retired from the Fad:
eral service on November 1. Mr, ra-
ziet, who resides at’ 169 Alden street,
received g eall to report at the Fed-
eral Building where he was. teodere¢
a gold watch by his confrerea,
‘Mr. Fragiet arrived at the post
office ta fing gathered @ group of his
former fellow employes, “including
Fostmaster Jantes P; Smith, who had
suminoned hit on a pretext so that
they might present, him a goid watch
as a token of their friendship. Pose
master Smith made the presentation.
“{ want to take this oppartunity.”
he said, “to tell your it is with deep
regret that we lose your services.
Whea’a ‘man has given so many years
of his lite with as high & record of
faithfulness | and achievement as
yours, it ia Gnly natural.that his re-
tirement spould be regrelted by’ bis
uasvolates Und thal he be aemitod of
the hijgh esteent iil which he hax been
ile hy al. #:
“8 um sure that J express the sen-
Umut of all the ‘Springfietd posal
siapluyees as weil as myselé, whep T
wish you in your retirement: mony
years of happlieas and provperity.”
The Asteal Whist. Club
Ry ROTRSCHILP FRANCIS:
ae TENG TeoRet eye OF bve. a
udivice ax Uke sardingi potnts’ o:
| brotherbuoul uy Christ presetied i war
Mowlon Studie, 2660 Fulton Street
'Broollys, whens the Astrat Wiis:
Gheb earried ayer, the top & mobster
enol entertainment, for the Jud-
‘ean Avermte Boye’ Club. ‘The build.
ing way packed, sgrvite excelient, and
“ie entinisiazns ‘nf Use crowd Kaew no
pounds,”
Bitraa, Setianiin, Shateen, Coben
and Mariand cphatiakSistay toxettier
with -oiher 7Hend. in (he nelshive-
Rood, Gonated prives and refrexte
rents, : .
Whiat, bridge, snd chth touraments
AWhist, bridges ang elub-tourziments
rovenamen) Was AA engraved sliver
lnvings cup, Hid" Taylor well Ienown
jams hounds farnisaed the music,
guewcns og Gp entontedamest ana: 2,
&, Hinkcon, preddunts Zany flies
feat Chartieh, vieesyrenicenty ry.
Mane Granzey, seeretigy: Jour Dane
ent, Jv. traacurer; Mss, CHE Fine a,
soctal mentur; Hefuard (2, C27 yy pie
Hleky divactor, and Mir. Lites Cre.
Congress Tighieza
|, CAPE TOWN, Santa Airicam4
Yivdige bas been served yt Pirow on
[remedy Falobe sus thot vongent
| prohtbitiny: hean' ram, ontettiat the
[istrieis of sNorseate’, Hebertaen,
[pivaltendeie, Montag oad Caceye 28
Letpevind pf six months from: Cetober
benucie, ‘Tant-qeatiamen roses be.
[divuige cnyttting, hut his requont yhte
Hts to the ©. foB. Reviqueriers “At
‘Cage ‘Town indies’s that be is pers
feurbed whowt comnthiny, We Jeamed,
thy ather dey thet Major ‘Thomes,
CHAT E the G. 7. D., who commanded
the police on Mayr4 at Worcester, tan
6 “very bigh opinion” of Theele,
bo arr
Award of $3,355 ts + |
Won by War Veteran
CAPE GIRARDEAT, Bo--mtke |
best Sieker, World War veteran of!
Méucrri County, was awarded a yers!
ditt in hia Suit for war risk: Insurance|
by tho jury ta Pedefal Court ast
vyeets. He will receive $3,935.10, repre-t
senting monthly payments since he,
breame totally disabled, May 23. |
Sere Scat BAAD aan cendtnnton
RE lavike titieae 2 ]
. ee ee ee ee a ee . :
niGre GEST GRRE LAYER AIDE BY US
Oe Tiksase Secura .
= OE Re EE ae UE * 7 7
Re, Pu WE syirn eo ee ee Ge
cP LPT A: iow LEAGErS - HE ASU?
‘She year LOBE snuat bo one of qrgambmatian and ssce sol
_daeky. A¥e-ave geiuy to give eur readers news front nth]
oe at Pe itier PRIERENT ro aivete your Mother,
» Mashex, Urother, Shver, oz adhe Molitives, hep, # FEARS 7:
REG NASIR ES U/C ieee ae 2H
Aud why de we soy is? Because the Negro, more Ui 1
any olhor groun af Gris Gime, needs Courage, Backbone, andy
Self Preservation, PHE NEGRO, WOWKED ic the Negra is iq
like gusoline to a mptor. It genceates ACTION of mind," i
and stinvulates their’sovls with manhood that sendy them 4
FORWARD TO BO OR DIF. 7 ‘
Our Special Nosas ‘and Mow Years Offer oi
DOMESTIC, . a
One. Yeux “Subséription 5 => = S200 7 |
. Generally $2.50 4
Six Months’ Subscription “= + = $L00°-, |
. a a Cenerally STIS: - ok
ze . FOREIGN ~ ;
One. Year's Subseription c- 5 - +) 82.500)
: Generally $3.00 s nO :
Six. Monthi’ Subseription = -- 81.50. | |
. . Generally $2.00 ; '
* With your same on our mailing Met the paper ie delivered tight at your
seer eae ae ce get, 500 up anid doing peons to send eo
race. persons to 20 -_
+s faa pe Sription Betwoen now and Jenary 1, 29318 og
Come on naw, show I ability ty do. Help sake THE BO
WORLE the ayer Jt senda by ead vont same’ amd address with the My
. + Siete Tite Croat Drive jor Sabeorthers te « Werthy Peres
ee feet . T ES art Lith Te
AB abo aatthy hs
aL Re ee tm Smee a
Pee) Re Bowls os willhe inate
you an equal ‘partaer, |i
are nae oe, oe
: hm wee Soeeeaern
{0 HE Maotne be OF 8 00g earn
10) He’ abeuld maintain’
fio) Me. suet na pod
|Our Common Tongue
| A-Hindrance, He Says
LIVERPOOL. ~- 4 belief ‘that thi
common language of the Unité
States and England is somewhat of
‘a Mability aga not an asset was. ox:
‘pressed “tonight by Lord Mayor
Phompson in: a specch advocating
Satablishment in: New York of a
"branch of the Liverpoo) Orguniza-
tion, a semi-public group, to boost
the Port of Liverponi, s
Discussing the comman language
used ‘in the. two countries, the lord
mayor sgid: "We gre likely to Jock
ap a nation with the same langliayre
ip ours ax having the same outlook,
whereas the British and Americans
haven't the same outlook. -
“To @ certain extent,” be ‘said,
“toia haw hindered our relations with
America”;
A Brave Maid Saves
Lives of ‘Two. Children
; PRILADELPHIA.—-A brave col:
‘ored invid saved the lives of v0
[smell rons of Frvderie GC Wheslar,
Msorintly proniinent wealthy . veal
| esiate broker, wheg’ she carrled ther:
“from, $hgir smoke tilled bedroom. to
Lsufety Saturday at the Wheeler ar
‘burban homé,
Miss Tit Waker, rethed feorm her
room on Une third floor to the second,
where Artinur, 9, and Frideric, Jv, 3.
were seeping, be cieried bolt boys
outside and “etepnonea the Ardmore
Hive Department, ‘The Gre swos TS
flue and was guibtiy extinguished.
Mr. and Mes, Wheeler wete away
at the time, ;
> Obituary .
Cur correspondent, J. R. Redpin
Gasine of Rozeau, Domitiea, informs
te Qiat the Jbm, Ciady Hayford, a
miominent West African Tnewyer nue
thor aut politician parred away in
Augurt last in the Geld Coast. Mo
Hevtord was grewtiy interested in 3,
Geter gat Ms ieernutions) anove-
eoak.
He aka Se oe Paes a ea oe
a hee Wea 8) thc CRA | kata iA tae parents
Drebeteen tn: se Pcncrarsca™ Ree reer
ip Fighe 1), Bc ned CAMA Bada Aenean
Reming Taisen RON: SP ae
fe opmbcesdelaneter
Peet Wee Barta paint: 6
eet of Us eatepaie’ ed
the arieni “ubersoes’ and Hoste
Berta il Sipe ra
fie mae seme a:
“MERI ISTMAS 2
| aces O.
nt LNG SA
OD) 2 pra |
wy)
1 ara
HEALTH TO ALL 2.
| Public Schools Nos. 139, 103, 68, 5
89 ang 119 umong the schools, and
vocial agencies and “churches ‘of the
district, are cooperaling by using lit-
erature, posters, molfon pictures and
talks describing preventio:t aud care
Over, 500 posters and almost -20,-
090 Ieailets already have becw dis-
tributed, and special spice for win-
dow-exhibits hus heen offered hy te
following stores: Empire Shae Store,
Sth Avemis_ near 125th Street; lenox
Avemw Departinent Store, 197ih
Street and Leask Avenue; Weinstein
Peparusent Store, 7th, Avenue be-
tween 42nd and 143rd “Streets: The
Charleston Skep, 512" Lenox Avenae;
Peati Store: tw) Lenox ‘Avenue:
Hoostlen, tik Aveane and 720th Streot
and Henrietta" Scop, 2742 saghtn
Avenite, é :
Public Hoxlt:” Stations, the Hope
Day Nursery, the Hospital for Joi.
Discawes and, Sydeniia Hospital are
also assisting an"the exsapaign."
Interracial Forte
~ Under toe auspices of gg Fred-
eric Houle Totervaciat Rerun om
Sunday inc Prot, When, C. Seifert st
Howland: Studio, 3660 Valten Siree?,
Brooklyn, spoke on “Western Cit
union from the Seventh to the Pit
teenth Centarys”
In the main he pointed owt, the nue
mores contributions made by the
Moors and Saracens toward the cut
Inril, scieniiiic dit religiows devet
opments of Europe ‘diving the so-
called Eric Ages.
“The tecture waz well received ant
tie professor will de heart Aizen
by the members ef tig Sarum 1 the
mibly bket BF anebee,
Careers
Bapeenegcso tert ap toighior Pose
Aha rene within. ap last:
seas vase be =
gio’. unselfishly’ for the rate,
haw veaulted in sacrifices on bie part
of great pagal, Re nee fe tae
tameibie | of bis a and be
1a, news ak need f- the. Ralp.
veo can te what he
ere
mt bid
‘that the tlag is opportune for bis
friends apd, admirers to cume to Bis
‘saalatance. oe 4
. A fund is now open to raise » sub-
stantial amount to help Afr. Garvey
out of his difficulties: caused tbrough
his struggles for the race. All thom
wha’ desira ta contribute ta the fun
can address their donationg direct to
Hoo. Marcus Garvey, Bdgiwelg Park,
67 Sipe, Road, Cross Roads P. O..
Jamaica,-B. W. I. All amounts sent
to Mr. Garvey for the Fund will be
acknowledged in this paper week by
week. Do your bit now! Send in
$50, $20, $10, $2, of $1 to help the
fund. :
List of Contributions: :
‘Viger Division—Majar St. Wm.
Groat, New York..........$10.00
#2. Lewis, Kingston, Jamatoa., 1.50
Wm. H. Palmer, Baltimore, Md. 2.00
Miss_ Jane “piannings, Cedar
Cie, Pope Yirnon:......... . 3.00.
Mrs. Emilia Edwards, Bocas del
TOR seieseveveverseserssas M00
Hubert Rice, Chicago Heights. - 3.00
Miss’ Mary Jones, Eadt Cleve-
Jand, Ohio... +... ese eeeee 3.00
Mrs. Josephine Bastion, St. .
(Pedro de Macoris.... 040+. 26.00
|
»Seroil your own" is a fine ‘slogan,
‘wheo it comes to bankre's, :
[est
“eh INDIANA AYENUE
: ‘NOIANAPORIS, IND.
| esis of thm Bible of) she thIanian. 74°
ont eee ata eRe dnse TH RS’ wie
Es Ge Sa a Saas
HESS Me Ugh nd taeda Bincben. Aisa
Cie Ghecttracler sonae wich mine’ an 3
“The Pactot Prlends 72), he, Teaciness
caer eR Son pent ay he
thd ee Enttseee's Bread eh tase of
ESnonecs Oe Whang Una si ave a tre
SENG tha matt eae aan Be oon it
Chul NE goign teal Boson be sham dna
fot deogutod. ne apetheerss hort oat Dd
fy Tee napinge Satie or’ wink “Bate,
Teta eink" Eoiamens ena at ere Vine
DORE of dient aduce Gest GH
ane DSc Beart vt seen Cominae
Route ida Eke aAptiatia” Gatemonpr tie)
the’ Gearsings Ceremony: (18) Burial Cte
Ince Hey ae price Ne adr alone:
TEP pant “niehaan' Stine Bie an
Bae mea, Fee, Me eS a
Tae That end aries fee Deu? oe Fhe
CSiestte ute eat eh Ses WAY the mechs
OPE tly GM as taal he hanes een
in Metts teas “she avecsign> thet Curis, athe
the orld line need of: GON Cuttunes oe Ine
rPenctimuat Barrier. vat will gel ail mee
Ora MP ira Guoughit and 29 henge
Peper cee rete ne ea ne ee Nee oh ee TOUR er ens NE pe a PP cam Scary Ren Pree ren SRR AERO piEKeT ee
Be ON ane ec Sun o eA ced a i a SO ne Te Min eC ee F
St Miasieubtacee ke ac aceeea eae eieeteceme times ieee ote creer era Nee aa
Cr See oR aT Loe cee ee ee ee a ee Sr ene
eo ee WW fa) FC i NA cee be Oe) ey eee eR 8 ey ae “a oe a Fa ee
Whe Wise Survive and Fools < |°* « Keexdne Diy." (Peer cen Coban! Diy. 1“Crand Serviesét Saree” OE
ROM aren Cee “4 cpcige gaps sgillies priate Wi see: slf am NwGRO WORLD] — pen iahorea @ vo rand Service of Soagy opt cag
os: “Perish in Life's Sth Seeeee mee ll ay nacre ome. - Staged at Macarena Diviek
Ale ABTS ils ea oak paar cme ae aammeaee ee reer aman” fl tt 0 ile, NR a ea
UNL A; Wants to Make| wore vise Setoctal|"onlieegig oe a, ve mall] ORES |W ser wegen] Onkland, Gal, Divisos K Hest With: Basen
the Negio Masnce Wise, <| great <2 suis 1p te ceraee: te yoloefal tine at the Ditton Il] poazawama Criss: | of te new carter No 258, | ppg, xovenence rer _|- snd “Immortal King’*y
Wealthy and Healthy _ | 420.to work for better'oonditions ti] tng intermational grguninen ‘Madease {ff «RIAU AA ° The musical renditions were pre! Despite the terrific rain storm. and, Add Color E
Qn Tessiay, Noyember 11, Hon. J.
‘A. Baitrant, president of the Savan-
‘nah Division Bo. 183 of the U. N.L
A.and former Commiseioner. for
tate ot Gedrgie, addressed i
<Bvangelitel Ministerial Alliance’ of
‘the A. M. E. denomination of’ this
ety to, behalf of ‘the Universal -Ne-
gro Improvement Assocation,” of
‘which Hon. Marcus Garvey is the
founder, lsying out the plans, pure
poses and object of the organization.
| Following some of the important
‘parts of the address of Hon. Boltram,
who kept his audihce spell-bound
from the opening sentence to the
‘hose; by keen logic, knowledge of his
mibject, and flery earnestness, you
‘ould hear all over the audience
voloes’ qf approval and songs of
we. 2”
‘Hon. J-A. Boltram said:
* Gentlemen: “Yous hove Lain nate
of the signs of times which’
into existence the age of the survi-
‘val’ of ‘the fittest, that means the
wise will exist and the fools ‘perish,
and as we take 8 peep into the mirror
of- the day and seo the activities of
every, race group, we come to the
conchision that they ate.consclous of
the Ganger'of this strenuoits age, bY
striking cut on thelr own inisiative
sn utilising their brain péwer in com:
petition with: the brain power’ of
other races in creatiog tangible foun: |
dation in agriculture, industry, com-|
merce ang government for the pres-|
ervetion of their respective group, |
which wins for them’ the admiration |
and respect of the rest of humanity.|
“We jleo sce the condition of the
position, ti human endeavor: which |
won for him hate and prejudice, sore |
or us may sty that the color of ox!
kin has caused the world te be preju: |
Lice against us, I say to you not 30,
put rather the cause of our condl-
Yen. Nobody eares for a bum, whether |
tbe individual, «race or nation, if]
chat individual, ‘race or ‘nation sur?
ounce itreg win poverty, Uae reat of |
pumanity’ will FUR away, or do, not!
in to identity themacives with that,
sroup. z |
Sethe world recognizes each indi-!
jidual, race or nation accordidg to} |
eit ackievement, The activittes of ||
be Surg since Abranigin Lincoln of}
america, and Gueca Vittoria of Bag- |
cod have berated his from chats |
ravery, have failed. (o win the. id= |
ciation and Fegneet of ottér racea
cause the larger part of these ae-[}
; than production, whic: makes him j'
‘depending ree. is
“Genttemen, if the white man |
soutid step in here wow sith bis] *
ising ail the, goods shat yau Rave |}
urenaned frum > ¢. Gentlemen, nett
id start from, our thoes, and wher |!
2 pels throu with ws, we would! 3
worse off She. the birds of the |
+ chegaues they have fexthers on] ¢
rir bédiee, HT they should xo to our | &
vnes eine make this came densand, !£
2 wauld bets a very bed fis, Gen- i>
omen, thats why fe are pointing |
ri the danger of being only a race | ¢
“eonauimers, apd Rot a race of pro-| ¢
iors. Our rage must Jmow that reat |
jonrers 9 nn attraction “to $he/ 2
snd: mny Individual, race oF nation | 8
no siirromds "itself: with progress |
‘bound to win Ate admiration, re-}
cu’ and renogniticn of alk ‘they 2
sslds every bedy thea wishes to ve| ©
batified with, the Sndividuat, race]
pation who stasis promres. to
“his is why the Universal Nepro/
sproveriest Asrecintion copies to! t
i WISE He program to estuptish | &
iversities, colleges, academies and |
noois for tke racial education and | ™
I Advertisers
We Want You fo Try
Our Newspaper
* FOR: |
| ADVERTISING -
YOUR
MERCHANDISE
- Because :
|” NEGRO WORLD
READERS ‘
ARE GOOD BUYERS
: +
aoe
a te
Therefore for - quick results
ape: our columns, Call er!
Rite Th for our’ epoca tn
Bes se = :
i leees Ave 1X. C
| mee. of Independent. Negro, nation
‘| miei of. indepemtant. ¥ nation
fl Nigre compocnion We need
|| cooperation of our Denne omens
regent ufifavorable -condltion “that
J now axiate, :
|The number: of unémployed Ne
| are being given to- the white men
|] who are protected. by white corpora
| tons, would not now exist posatbls
}it our racial group bad letened t
| Marcus Garvey, plans which he out
Mined, and asked to be accepted tc
make places for.the employment an¢
Protection of our people.”
‘Mr. Boltram emphasized that. the
organization and its founder are mis.
represented, even by men and women
in our own face as well ax those from
without. He continues by sayihg:
“Any individual -or _ movement
which seeks to bring about a change
‘or the benefit of a people, is bound
to be miispresenter bY the powers
that be, who seek continually to tn:
ringe upon the rights of the people.
That's why I am here to give you
tho right understanding of the or-
ganization, and wat it edvocatte,
__ “The program does not niten that
every Nogro must gv to Africa, No,
you may’ remain where you are and
Werk for the cause of Africa. We en-
gourage the Negro to do any thing
which is for the uplift of the indivi-
dual or the race’ 4
| He. also stated that the program
jneither advocated the Negro creat:
‘ing a goveroment, withm a govern-
ment, ner does it preacs race hatred,
as Tove humanity and respect the
rights of all mankind,
“The thovement docs not. inspite or
encourage its members to fight the
Preacher or the churches, The asso-
Giation does not teach Negroce to
Giseurd oF throw away any oppor-
tunity which may’ be beneficial to
them. On the contrary, we say to
all Negroes everywhere; 'Selze all, op-
porfunities that come to you, but
never forget tat our.real success,
cdveationally, industrially,” politteatly
ar! otherwise is based upon tise pro- |
Wetjon of a government founded *y
ourselves on the continent of Africa.”
“The building of a nation ts one of |
the greatest tasks any group can un-
dertake, Ubat's why some of our peo-
ple only sce failure and impossibill-
tles of the programs, gcauwe seit |
minds are tof smiall t8” accept: big |
projects. But ive say what men and!
women of other ricer have done, we!
also ean do, because there 8 no in-|
fesior man, or inferior race, «AS far}
as the creation “of humaniy gocu,|
God civated al men and ail Zuces!
equal, Dut it I up to the tan or the]
rave to mele themselies what they |
wish to, be, We of the Untversat Ne-|
sro Tmprovemant Astecintion do reel |
iso endowed wih UL God.niven |
rower. To create the ener. 10 ar}
ib find change the eireuipstinews
lividua!’ may eoncciounly chanye the}
ondition of hic lite. By coaporative!
xereirs of the same power, four
wundred mailtion ofrs the sore over, ||
i like manner may consciously gen
mae energy sufficlent fo offeet |
very evil influence that dave intrude |
seit inte the way ef ou progress |
f ayticnhure, industry, commerce |
na grovtemment, yoga THe
“Tha U.N. 3. A. ts not decking for |
uything that is tiureusonable to us|
min-endenvor, We teal that if al,
ouutzy is good for the white sation |.
nit other racial groups, then ia cus
aivey says that a eeuntry and a
overmAnens te lo goad Zor ta pede |
ction of Diack iMiraanity ait over!
ne word. : ste
Responve Uy tae Rev. B.S. Han-!$
2, DD. Pastor of St. Phiip A.l;
. E. Chureh,-who vaid: Ep
“We are proud tevhuve Prof, Rete!
aa with jis tediy, and we are ine! -
ved tencitled by gg visit, The able! =
mone fa whieh het tine’ the pr0-|
ram of Mt. Garvay, no intelifzent | ¢
dividual or people wilt attempt to| §
ght such 2 noble program. I am|™
lite sure that there {s-no one in| %
ig part of the country fighting the|
oirsim. The saan who mado erors|
the ran who starts to do xome-|
tng, nnd with all the evrore that!
ve been made, we cannot -get away
om the fact that Mr. Marcus Gar-|
y is the gceatest Negro leader, who
ought the greatest program to the
ce, and speaking for the’ alliance, |
wil asure You that Wwe endorae |
n pracram af vane argenizatton "| ™
Rev. J. 3. Stripling, D.n,, and] >)
esident. of the Alliance said: | f
“With the rigut understanding | 1
rect to us towgsda this-organisae
m, we should eke part and give!
F support to this great program. |S
d we welcome the gentleman here] %,
‘one saa aie thee
Mathematician Tutor
OCOUNTING --- - REGENTS
aed
eecerye Octane Taw?
a
and
on ee
Of Naner. aes.
a RO Ae a
Keoxvilie Div.
. he eo Division Wa S66: te
‘dotag fp work We hare
‘kagt. There ace these
= Kirage ue Dut we hate
-
Qn. , the we hed
* Tin af the Odatetion
the ‘nadenasionst an oe, aadeos
De Hee seta tae ‘awakened
quite a: few ad, was enjoyed ‘by ail
(On Sunday our meeting opaned at
3:30 p; m,. Program follows: Beng
by. the president, “Mra. B. Watkins;
Bible reading by soting chaplain, Mr.
W. R. Watkins; solo by the president,
Tho weekly message was read by the
sdvocate. Mr. W. R. Watkins, the
president gave a few good remarks;
@ few remarks by-Bro. Marsball snd
Bro, Hargy; also @ quartet “Garvey
Mine”:
% —_—_—
The, meeting of t!> Knoxvitle Di-
vision No, 584 was called to order at
3:80 p. m. Sunday, Dec. 7, 1930, open
ed with the ode; the first speaker was
the advocator, Mr. W. R. Watidins, |
who spoke very fluently on an in-
teresting subject. A ‘song by our
president, Mra, Bessle Watkins, sub-
ject “F Am Going On” The’ Hon.
Marcus Garvey's*meshige in thé Ne-
gro World was read by the advocator,
Mr. W. R. Watkins. “God Bleas Gur
Preaidént” was sung-by the audience.
A few Yemarka by our Bro, Smith,
Afterward Bro, Harris made a few
good remarks; solo-by Bro. Marshall,
after which we took in two new
members, Mr. and Mra. G. Reeder.
The preamble was read by the ad-
vocator. ‘The vice-president ‘made s
row remarks, We are working to
julld up this division and we are,
crowing. 4 Knoxville Division 584°1n
not ‘dead. ‘There was some misunder- |
tanding about our new, charter, but.
wit are going to get.one. The mect- |
BE came to a clonp by singing the |
Anthem. Please put this report in|
our paper... ‘|
T. J. COUSIN, Reporter.
Knoxville, “Tenu.,
- ‘December §, 1920.
Garvey Club of Chicago
. Clebrates Ladics’-Day
i Os Sunday, Nov. 16, 1920,” whit
| was tadiew dey, the Garvey Clad o:
jULNT. A. held its mess meeting a
| 2834 South State Street, at Liberty
[Hall at which’ time about sty white
students from Chicago’ University
visited the club, ‘Their business’ wa:
to hear the aims and objects of the
U.N. TA. explained. ‘The ledy pres
ident eatled the meeting to order i
tae usual way. After which the ta
| dies of theysiud rendered » very in-
[treating proxram. ay
Reniaris by Mra, Gillen. A. stort
Itall: by Mrs, Clara Wihiltild, subject,
| "Negrons Ave Nols Heads." Paper by
Mrs, E. ‘Themes, sabjeet, “imperial:
ism." Afterwards Mr, J) E, Wilestoa
)Yendered one of Paul L. Dunbgr's
[piece rublect, “Eke Backs Met's
Bisco: remare by our bay pres
Fideat, after cwhieli whe Girned the
Jenvel over to oar aviviy elected pres-
ident John S. Beynon, iinder. wes
leadership our ehib ts mahiny won-
destul progress:
“After shies atler speakers spoke.
‘non them were our ex-presicent,
Mr. J.B. Wilson, « auin of real £bib
ity and Acaess spuite in briet, subject,
“This Way Out afterward the prin
cipal _speatzor of the evening, 2r. W.
A. Wollace, member of Dive X72, was
ssked to éxpluln the.ainis and object
of U.S. EA, so that-the students
of Chicagé Usiversiiy. may uncer
stand the priitelples gf the U.N. L.A,
and thet great philosopher, te great
eat genius, pature ever fashloaed, 2.
clever way hook the pillars of the:
cuity! the Hoh, Marais Garvey, at
wiih time WW. AL Wallace in’ his]
ine cloned by singing the Nallona!'
temple atte explained to the. studs;
ents ef Chicago University We ims!
sng bbjects of the organtzntion, em |
ners congzatiiated “Mtr. Wallace 0%;
ns able way of expressing Iimsvii.,
We had somo wonderful setections
crom the Carvey Olub eheir. The Le-
rion of Garvey Chibs are doting svlen-:
did work tnder the Jeadersnip of |
their new colone}, Mr. Wiliam G.!
Brown, who just left the City of Cht-/
Sago for Cixcianatl to pend two or!
three weeks with his relatives, wien |
he Legion are hoping for him fo soon |
ve hack with them agalz. Tae meet-|
ing closed b_ singing the National!
Anthens, y |
| ELINOR: WHITE, Reporter. |
inston Diy,
|. Ki Di
Kineton Division, N. C., No. 757,
| met at Liberty Halt at 2p: ma, Sun
read by Mr. David Warren. The
speaker of the evening was our pres
ident, Mr, 8. T. J. Moore. Ottar
speakers were W. W. Stalen and Mr.
JW. 3 Newoer, The meeting came te
a close ‘with our motto’ “One God,
[One Aim, One Destiny.”
: W. J. Membara, Reporter,
-. Idlewild Div.
The. Idjewild Division No. 126 met
at 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon. The
meeting opened with the singing of
the opening ade, followed with prayer
by the president, Geo. R. me
‘The front Page of the Negro, =
was read ¥. the lety president,
macs by Jott Dorsey; See he
Word ng eos lady ‘provident; @ diatt
talk by Oster Bienkenshtp,, talic
Mrs; Mery Motley; = fow ve
by ite. LG. 4
ad 3 1 EPS
eS) -% Di ST. Resse
Marcus Garvey Delivers ;
‘.’ Inspiring Speech at Belize
er OL
pay + apa of
“rooys vars
: ‘ae
++, WOLLOWENG Crrixs:
era 00K ane s ‘
sanooee ae ‘conn.
| a A, GA I
DANVOLLE, 11.
“DECATUR, SLL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. «
LEXINGTON, RY. | ~
+ SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
WORCESTER, MASS,
BOSTON, MASS...
ST. PAUL, MINN.
DULUTH, MINN.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN,
BATTLE CREEK, MICH,
LANSING, MICE. :
ELIZABETH, N. J. }
ALBANY, N.Y.
* LORAIN, OHIO
HARRISBURG, PA.
BETHLEHEM, PA,
CHESTER, PA.
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
SAN AN’
DALLAS, TEXAS:
' FORT WORE, TEXAS
| PORTSMOUTH, YA.
ROANOKE, VA. :
Jur agente are maliing good mosey
selling our nowspaper. Here In
your opportuntty—don't pass It up.
Send in your name and addresa to
Circulation, Dept.
THE NEGRO .WORED;
: $55 Lenox Avenue
“NEW YORK CITY
Gamboa, €. Z., Di. No.-19
! ‘The assistant secretory, Miss Hilda
Wilkinson. pf the above agmed dv.
[sion h + been removed to La Boca,
“House . >. 1068,
- Miss \viiKinson” was “appointed as-
sistant secretary since the reorgani-
zation of the’ Division in 1827,. by
Madam L. 7. De nena, internaticaul
organizer of the U.N. 1. A. Sbe has
given her services free-to the divigion
‘by coment of hes parent,
Ditiiy such" Ime sie wasn't n
wunber of the etvintor, until July: of
this present yea when shy was re-
ceived and enrolled asea merber.
“Misa Wilieincon was graduated from
the Gamboa puiftie school, recelved
her dipioma after passing the Eighth
Grade: undér Teather JA. Parch-
mint és pringigal. She also thrther-
td her studies under some teacher
nod sat for exuminetion for Cdjored,
‘Teachers’ in the Canal Zorte und pas
ed succeastilily. ~ : |
“PE “Ctinntunity of Mnmbox and
the Gabe: Divito rearet the di
parture of IMiex Wikinedg. On Sun.
day, 36th fret, Une divisioy met in
draws up Yor the renéins off ef Mls
Wilkind’s, “AUR: Lush Shen, erat
tuts prenided for the evening. |
‘lis progran wad ss follows: |
Ofgcn solo by Miss -Berrit Francis;
ongen selection “by Mixy Minerval
Chase: reeltalten ‘ay Gulia Greene:
vegan selection by Mian Evelyn Chase: |
address by Bir U. Greene: organ se-|
jegiton by Miss Birdie Shan; address!
ny Mrs. Joseph, lady president: orzvan |
selection by Afias Julia Greene: soto]
ny Mrz, “Gertrude Acfall; reettation |
wy Mis Rvsdney Greene? organ ro
rest by Mr. dA, Shan, recretay; adj
ees by Me Callender; farewett|
dress by Mi’ H. Wilisincon: ve-!
marine Dy Mivs Laila Shut, the chate- |
uly; alesing romurks by Mr G. ha)
iiliams, prosident. ae
AMt the cloning of the program a]
mired” was handed te Mien Wilkineop|
or her servicen rendered to the Gom-|
0% Division.
Sex, Suan, the seerctary, delverod |
spley and faughing address, recent.
nf, the. vacaney of assiztant secre-|
ery be filed by. anotier brigMe nd |
ascinaling young lady, as he te [1
over of young Madiex. : 1
JPNe program sas terminated with |:
ne. singing of the Ethiopian Anthem, |
hen the entire audience wishing |(
ise Wilkinson au revoir. {
BELIZE, British’ Honduras — A
very inspiring lecture was delivered
by Mr. Marcus Garvey, the prem
Race leader; at ‘Liberty Hall, Bar
rack Road, on Wedneeday night Inst
‘The audience while not os large as
it might have been was a highly ap-
prectative one which . undoubtedly
taade.up for fla defcteacy in .num-
auspiods of the Iocal division of: the
Universal egro Duprovement. Asso-
ciation ef which Mr, Garey is the
Presisent-General, On the platform
sim snag willr'the saeasbers cf the
Beck Croge Nurecs Auciiary. MY.
We. A: Coney the Pretdent, was
stick ete
uy the Treasurer of, the weal Gviaten,
be 2000 sak stdnented the eationrs
ie.
patience Ste the + ;
aay te tee Mare ee ao
tee day tn tha: hedrte of: tte nce
‘bets of the ‘@ivislod, aso. sod-memn
pare and well whabora ot ase
TC waa thé occagton of’ the
of the new, charter No, 258...
* The mausloal “renditions ware pre
pared by: Bro. C. HA.” Shepherd
cholranater, nd Mra. Letecia Might;
acted. tn the capacity of Th
Bro. J. A. ‘Reena hs
peat and sounded the gavel for the
commencement at 4 p. tn. Opening
‘ode, ‘From Greenland's Try Moun
talne;” was followed by prayér by
the chaplain, Orhnlel Evans The
president maddths address of wel-
come, and introduced the chaplain a
master of ceremonies for the evening
‘who in turn made a, brlef aulogy op
the cause before’ us.“ The, program
was ad follows—Recitation; by Mas-
ter Krim' Woodcock; Anthem by the
‘cholr; recitation by ‘Master N, Mon-
roe; duet by Miss M. Irons: address
by the representative of the I. 0. of
GS. & D, of 8 who spoke’ with
warm mirth, on "Uyity and Love":
and admonished his hearers to. bury
their grievaces by [thd side of the
old charter No. 753!"‘s0lo by Mr. Li-
onel Bailey: recitation’. by’ Master
John Woodcock: anthom by the choir;
recitation “by Mise M. Monroe: solo
vy Miss Celestina Lawrence; address
by the represeatative of Theodore
Roostvelt Lodge, G..U. 0. of 0. E;
Recitation by Miss Ina Woodcock,
and during ‘the reéital tbe old. char-
ter No. 758 was displaced, The un-
velling of the mew charter was per~
formed by Mian M, Monroe, and ties
Iria Barrett; during the singing ot
the hyoan “G Africa Awaken.” After
the singing, Bro, Ohrniel Evans pro-
nounced, God's blessing om the eee
charter and’ asked that every har
mony ralght exis} under the working
Breacmes “ACRE prayer a guertel
wag sung by Bro. J. A. Clarke and,
others. Recitation, by Miss Iris Bar-
ret; solo’ by Mr. F. D. Stewart, The:
Presidential hymn and National An-|
tugm of EAhfopia were sung. AGdeoss
ny/ the: representative of Suclais Met |
choir und. Agnes Court, B, A. 0. ot
Dh, Inc., who from the extracts ot |
che previous addresses, admonished
nis hieurers to the fact that hone vac |
rious represerdatives were respen-|
ible for the crisis existing” In the]
livision and when they’ realize. same.|
hey cnn argulaxanate , tkensselves |
ogether, to Fesist the common et |
my. knowing that most of thelr!
members belong to sald division. The!
lysing. Femariex were made by the}
vraxldent, who thanked all preact |
or thelr couperation and ‘assistance |
n forwarding the program for anid!
veiling of chatter, and asked bls
carers, {0 bg-on time for the nuuss
peeting. Hl
CHARLES'X. SHEPHERD, |
Hensrter. 4:
i we
Fi SUBSCRILTIONS:
formar ree SRS CR ONS
SEEM So! ho Newemdsivedoury
ft See Special Ojjér
i ee wise ¢
I de Take Two of ‘This fens
Mobile’ Div. 15
oa asndans So eeanlvors
sot eee See amt
Hall, 36% North Scott. Street, with the
He SE Noth Seat A
ebatr, whith ix thé Von, Marcux Gar-
ee ee ee
Peay Sea ae Careers oe
orystal celebration to the 402,009,090
sien seesesit io
coeton ete aps, adl nile
sae ee a ae
pee CE ee Tens Oe
ie De peseeile Th, Be
chanter, YGtly verse, by Hex. seater:
See atte are es
gre plea et eo
World wns read by tht Sret vice-pren
ree ee ee
he chairman trestee beard, Mr. 3G,
“archadl; remarks by W. M6. Joseph:
Sea as Se Hee
be ae Se 2 nee
he wouse speliuound with, Joy and’
ipplause; the president, Mr. C. Pope |
puyanae; (Oe Nees She Fone
ext" meeting, whieh ‘brought our]
og Pete ee rei a
if the National Anthem, “One Gad, |
Ine Aim, One Destiny." . |
a ONE Destine vs
him: while he. was somewhat -disap-
poidted at. the attendance, he was
rattafied as he {elt those present were
Interested to hear what he! had to
my. .:
Taking as hia subject “Wither
Bound", Mr. Garvey spoke in snnpir/
ing terms; urgiog bis hearare to
think serlously of thelr condition and
to determine their future. He felt
that. Negroes could ‘do much for
themselves as there were opportubl-
thes before them. , He. reterred to the
efterte which other peopies had mace
to sdvance and -by their
petbaverance the uitimately attained
the goat of thetr ambition
MY. Garvey apohe st grest length
ie, canis wt Was unsoydteds
thie ecere sien coyphemnented 7
© tow vocal’ tame which were wel}
rareigrel : “ ak t
F aad Quly’ oeo-
aes eme arts =
sated, exh caning by sestamelion,
% Teen dat
HELLO UNITS 1 | HOW ARE YOU
; 1. There. Wil BoA ys
.- | MILITARY DANCE.” -
Sofa Ete en _demeney 16 190), 06 0.80 Caer, -
At S27 Grand Steset, Sepooy City, New: Jovewy: 5
ALL Unica are inivived Ww ‘With, us. “New York. dad 38
insane sane eas
ee APPS? BT OWN i be: Joss,
Abie IDS, EI aabbe e
Oakland, Cal... Division.
bite tas! textes aaah
Dejpiie territie xala, storm. a0
Pacioc Sone fs te et fortes
Const £38 the last forty-eigh
ours, the Ladies of the Oakland ‘Dy
Vision braved the wind, storm an
rain to put" over their program. Th
faithful, “tried and true” disciples o
Gterveyinca, though few they wore’ 5
Jaumber, were present, to aasist an
encourage the brave indies in thel
efforts, ‘The meeting was preside
over by Mrs. Leo Kinsey, Lady Pree
ident. Mrs. S. T. Murphy, 18t Lad
Vice-President, acted as Mistress
Ceremonies.”
Among the ‘humbers of merit pre
dented on the program were the “Ju
goalies” who inogiged tbe. audienc
ita thelr Uttle Mies. A. selectict
‘by.the Chor £olloW@. A solo by Mis
Zeplya. Wiggan wah bentitully ren
dered. ‘The Objects and Aims wer
ext read by Mrs, Viola Jackson
This was followed by’ solo, excel
Iently rendered by Mre, Louise Cher.
ty.
‘The “Current -Toptca" were nei
read by Mrs, G. E. Taman; the topics
were very tuteresting. A solo by Bis
Lee. Kinsey, Lady President, was fit
ugly rendered and well accepted. A
select feadiug by Mrs.'G. Greer was
very instructive and sntecesting. ‘The
reading of the Presideat-General’s
Message by Mrs. Louise Cherry next
followed after which the Choir, sang
one verse of “Where He Leads Me.”
The offering for the day was now
taken, followed by the "Anpounct-
ments.” ,
‘The Speaker of the day in the pez
son of Mrs, P, §, Johnson was ui.
Avoidably alixent owing’ to sudden Mi-
nbs. Mra, Elizabeth Smith, one of
(he £GlUhEul, firm’ and true ex-Presi-
dents “of the Ladies’ department,
kindly consented to°Rll the position as
spenker of the day. The speaker
ald in part that the Hon, Marcus
Garvey. just come in time to save
the Negro Race from complete ruin
imd-destruction, THe brought a prot
sham for tite Negro, to make him eco:
iGtnfeally" independent, aad mate tiv
bat, “ty maize hisi Hace Conscious,
tuce EWVing sind Hactally Indepoas
lent. The Yon, Mares “Garvey,
aid the speaker, “awoke the Negro
rond iis ionic sleep wht RR great
rogram of “Africa for the Africans, |
hose nt home und thove abroxd"—- |
id insso dota he wlee up the “Chie |
ese, the Indinns, and also the Auge: |
AOU, to the seave of ‘National Bey!
utity!" She closed by appealing
or Kearers to wake up and organize |
heavatves for the grent tusk of Une
Redemption of Africa.” The sldress
ras bolt instructive and vaspietng
ne swan well received lip the candi |
The visitors were next introduced |
tie Mhlopian National. Anthem wus
jen sami amd the Henniietion pros
PONT. Guha. Biv.
Freledrited the ladies’ dsy, We hid a
qfair @atherings amd the incetinge. was
WH groctt cathusinan. The Inttes
Intute” couibertand Chel see
"At Bite efetoee pe aaa Me, ale
Natrn ealleg'the aieeting (0 ender
{the wine) shanner, and proceed Ul
the cheer. de aphed the Indy presi
Lindy. Ptaram foows: Song by ait
ldlenée"Oh, Adrien Awaken"; Speech
Phy ihe a¥iatrens of ceremonies: Mies
read she, Vres-Generals intsayee
fy 8 Ruswstuneten, Com. see,
bine et Sootinsen, 2m it aera
By MMe A. Wrickgit and Mrs, 8,
[Horaie: cole hy latte tee Pt Mow
‘teise and rechation, too, Mrs. D.
Baugh tendered a besutitul sole, Mece|
itetion by Master Jven Were.” and!
aang ether internling features: the
hight was well spent. ‘Tne nizccing
Gf the Blbteplan Matlnal” Anthen
trong, the meeting to a, le,
nS Y, LONGMONE, Reporter, |
New British Doniinion | |
In South-East Africa!
BULAWAYG, Soutnern Rhodesix
Atrica—A new British dominion, te
be formed of northern end souther:
Rhodesia, Bechuanaland and Nyasn
land, is being projected by lexisiativ
leaders of these four territorien
seasions—the colonies of ighadcsi
and the, protéctorate of Nyasaland
und Bechuanaland.-would result i
& dominion of 758,000 aquare miles
with © population of 6,000,000 of
wham 60,000 are Europeans. The ter-
ritorles, largely undeveloped, posaens
mich rich tnd, thelr principal prod-
ucts belag gcld, copper, grata, cattle
ind thicos. 7
“iad “Immortal Ree
_“and “Immortal King”:
Add Color
EMpy. were the hours sypat tx;
Div: on Sunday
Seat ‘The members’ sag
the vicinity did not, fail to attend
the most tusual numbers, to
& “Grand Service of Songs’
by Mr. N. Pie, rootless
‘3:30 p.m., the mecting was
order by Mr. 8. EL a
chaplain, with the ot
68th hymn from the ritual, Afteg
the devotiona! part of the
the acting president made the
ibg remarks and tritroduced Mr. 0
Ay Brown to the audience ds chatty
than for the evening. :
‘The enthushstic’ program was aa
fouows
Selection by the choir entitled “A
host with Banners"; Recitation by
‘Miss “Gordon; entitled, “Welcomes
Greetings"; Quartet by Miss A. Stow.
art and others, entitled “My Ghep-
herd"; Recitation entitled “Welcome
to.All", by Mrs. M. Palmer; Solo by
‘Miss C. Henderson; Recitation Uy
‘Miss Pearl Archer; Selection by the
choir, entitled “We. Gathered in ‘the
Sabbath School"; Recitation by Mine
Lucll Danale: Dust by Mrs, M, Pat.’
er and Mr. 1N. Pile; Recitatiow by
Miss Millings; Solo by Mra. Archer.
Recitation by. Mise Lilly Green;
Selection by the choir, entitled: “The
hittle Bird." Recitation by Miss U.
Calender; Soto'by Miss M, Hunt, act-
ing lady president; Recitation by
Miss Rubis Henry; Organ Duet by
Mrs. M, Palmer and Miss A. Stewart;
Recitation by Miss ‘T. Turner; Recl=
tation by: Master Darcle Green; Se-
fection by the chofr, entitied “In the
Wintry Heaven: Recitation by-
Master Milword Frances: Recitation
DY’ Mjse Ds Blake; Recitation, ene
titled "*¥ted, White and Blue’; Solo
hy Mins U. Calender which wa re
ceived with great applause, Recitae
tion by Mr. ‘T. HM. King; Recitation
by Master Lloyd Frances; Recitation
by Miss Gordon, entitled “Little Soh.
diets Recitation by Master 8.
Waugh. Gur glorious meeting’ ads
jouried “st S pam, with the loging
of the psrling hymn by the ehoir,
und the Nathinal Anthem. At #
pan, Liberty Hall was agaic filled
silled to order by Mr, §, E. Bachelor,
vcting clfaplain, with the singing of
‘he Processionil hymn “Shine Bter~
nal Tefcht” followed with the Spirits
he! procerding. ‘The imeeting was
ured aver to the chairman, Br."O.
A. Lrovin, whe gave an fespiring
Reaing of the front page Of the
Negra World hy Mr. . 15. Bachelor;
Seléetion by the ehoir, entitled “me
ortal Kin": Addrese by Mr: 38,
Villans: Quertet by Miss 3, Hunt
nd others, entitieg “Seoklngs the
\. Stewitrt,” The Pry: ident-Generat's
rina we swig, followed! With we
retion by the chote, entitled "t Fixer
ot Watehnes.” ‘The program enue
© a clr with the, sluging. of ihe
cthlophss Anthem wand prayer by
he ghisisin,
OSCA A. CROSS, Renorten.
|" Los Angeles Biv
bk Oa: Sunday, “November 230, we
bad a sueceratal mace mectibg.’ Gus
EA Vieeprecldent, Mr R. Rosies,
seted ‘as* chaplain.” Opening ode,
yvPinm Greewiand's Tey “‘Meuntater,*
wha led by the cholr, |
1} Tae chaptain inured the meetins:
{Over tthe master of .ceromonica,
ps, AT aSorzan'swhs pleaded te the
Faces nt large for unity and coopers
ation Sang by the eheds. Aime we
iveai by 2ir-Surry, Cornet sole by
[3ir. Baind. “president of the band.
| Hotesror’ Hemand was greatly re.
[evived by the peonte, R
| Next was Mra, B. B, Watson, tats
Hfzom “Adrien, She gave un a-gosd
{tiie about Afrlen, She lved. in Li
‘bern for eight years and has given
jus all the encourzgement to follow,
| Marcus Garvey and. Afrien will be,
relieemed. f
The prestdoat ar. 3B, Williams then
[introduced the Speaker of the eve-
ning in the person of the Hon. Fred-
rick Roberts, re-ciected nssembiyman
from the Gind District, of Los Ane
goles, Crlif. He rose with & forceful
hess of Gorveyinm. "He aaid be be-
Aleved the time Js fast coming when
Africa will be free. He closed by
Unapking. the vbtern who re-elected
him, He aleo deerme member.
Christ and the Virgin Mury are. de-
picted black in many parts of south-
PROSTATE: 3
at dampen siesta
ee ee cea te) Gt el a i a or eens te pire ene
eee eee ot en | hone eae eens As
Fadi has cad” heehee “hay Bibi ar ee Raa ills hie ee Bie Be
ee eA ea ee ee ee ee
Sabon esha Banta int bette, 34 aS
ee ener eee orca cee eet ee
fears cae wea caste ee i BION ae
hc see Pgh hiaaln che bcaes ek Meek ae Dk, Goa hd thes
ssw ok ay et ek wo Be ero
throne agiinsé: 4 mar of ‘thé’ wpeld.”. And when the meni ofthe worl
jumped on toa table énd deinended. five smifutes 00 feply fo. the bishop,
fbecguse bt want fost dae so bid teosiek che-phod Chtlsia. congne
(gation showed “is ugly tempany 79 8S Le ae
If i was w debsting forum’ or lecture ball ob cae wodid hhgwe ques
tioned the. justice of Mr. Tindsey’s dewmind.’ But. there are paople, presum-
ably of religious inclination, who queitior® the wisdomn of the: judge in fol-
lowing the procedure of a lecture hall in a Cathedsal,” While such an argu
‘mént asstimes an air of righteousness it seems. to-ud that the bishop erred
jin taking « highly explosive and oggtroversial ‘subject to the pulpit, which
he himself messed up very ‘ally by sssumit to dicrate-to his own’ clergy:
men in s bigoted manner.” eH
“But. what concerns us most is the-aftermath of this scene. The con-
gregation of. the Cathedral of, Se. Jolin the Divine is reputed to be the
most elect of all white congregations in the country. And how did they
behave wheo they were, 36 to say, struck on one check? Did they. turn
their other cheek Jike good Christians? Not at all, That might ‘have
offended civilization and Christianity! 7
These elect people outdid the thad“mob in the South bent’on & lynch.
ing. They pulled the judge down from che table. They tore his clothes,
kicked him, knuckled him, spat ac him, and the cljmax of it all,’ they
shouted LYNCH HIM, And this in the North, "in 2 cosmopolitan city
like New York, inthe Cathedral of Sr. John the Divine! The good bishop,
ic is said, did’ not even raise his voice co save his congregation from thar
FALL! . ‘
Fromi this ‘Sunday we ate talking of Christmas was only two weeks
off. And the spirit of Christ is to be found’ nowhere in this lanl though
there arc Christianssand Christians everywhere. As we became engrossed
in this mocd we became sad... . % = |
SALT OF WISDOM FROM AFRICA
Editorial Opinions of the Negro Press
Re SNOT G SN MMR RRR SS RON Gy Best os
ee ee ee
heaiege te 2 Pa eee 29, tase
| raed ee RII
, eee Soren ee 3 Reo fees a Wa SAS 130)
ee aor ote ae Ome
RS URTES = Oi T STy
ae _ERSROVTIGN nates 70 FER MORO. BeeeD oe
Rees | Bae
a ae Tack Neve oat PL
= ‘PRICNS: Fire com im Greater Ge *
. ope da as
‘The Negro World doce not knowingly accopt questionable
or fraudulent advertising. Readers of The at World are
earnfatly requetted to invite our attention to any failure on
the ‘part of an advertiser to adhere to any repropesitatlon
contained in any Negro World advertisement.
er eer he eat
VOL. XXVIHIL NEW ‘YORK, DECEMBER 20,1939 No. 20
Why Factions? Why Insincerity?
TSE te Near comes suicide racially? s
We are tempted to ask this question because we receive reports
from various cencers which tell us the same story, which ssgiae he con-
atinues*to divide himself almost designedly, deliberately. Did we say de-
signedly. and deliberately? But we dare say that ic is noc his design, not
his deliberation. If the average Negro were capable of any design or de-
Iiberation he would hiye seen long ago that to be divided into factions
‘was for him tantamount co committing suicide, not only, 2s an individual but
as 2 Negro. Alas! who is responsible for this’ wretched plight then?
~The average Negro, in his sincere desire to bemer himself, takes hold
of say Negro that can talk sweetly to lead him, But his tongue no sooner
proves ro have a bitter sting bebind it, for he turns out to be an insincere
person: “He, instead of serving, is trying to ruin the common fan.
Te is such sweet-tongued, gentle-vocied men and women that “have
been the ‘curse af the’Gacvey movement. ‘fe is they who, by their’ insincer-
ity and misleading information, foil the spletdid plans of Marcus Garvey.
Tt is they who set up factions to promote théie little ‘scheines in several
. Jocalitics. "Te is they who. breed -dissentions, suspicion and disceost among
the rank and file, Ic is they swho stand as a stumbling blodk in the pach
of piograss of our movement. .
* "We kriow that these people are’ insincere;* because’ chey~are selfish.
But they arc also stupid. Their selfishness is nor even enliluened. They
are of the sont who*would cut in two the goose thut Inid golden Bes
‘They are ding infinite harm to the entire Race by exaspaceting che masses
by théir teeachery. “They make it hacd for ‘the sincere workers to do ay
work at all, ‘The thasses becoine etctnally distrustful. :
«df any of the Negro movernents are to progress and bear fruit the
factions among vs myst go.“ And the ‘only way the factions can disappear
issby eliminating allinsincere leaders, whether men or women, This the
Presidént-General miyst sec done, Tn the iracrest of the movement the in-
sincefe and stupid should be replaced by the-sificere, hontst, efficient, in-
telligené, and: imaginative, "And their virtues should be insured by proper, |
wise and judicious -contsol. * : |
Wisdom makes ne aisiinchon
Hindu Pot.
3ten think that the poor Is siot
ag rise ns the rich; for If we were
wise why te he poor? * i)
‘The monkey {8 sure to'toar the
gloth of any one who Js like him-
Belt, \
“E almost killed the bird!" No
one ean eat “almost” in a stew.
"ne great one fe trying to show
off a little. ia
‘Tho pin ts, driven Into the
ground; the question is now bow
forpull tt oot.
‘Tuough the white man's gauze
came all the way over the sea, yet
what clot may’ be compared to
clam of Akese cotton? |
= If a.chitd is not old enough to
ye an oye witness of ancient mat-
tere, be -must Be Tenet Vash,
heresay. ‘
=The™ busbind’s death ts the
sridow's eorrow.
‘A giit ix 9 pitt, a sale is a ale.
but mo one will toanie you for “I
shave #534 Wt. thdap™ °
'Dhe Negro Woman, the Equalizer
INTIL cveutly the Negro, all ae the United States was so much fed
SY ug sith the so-called social equality myth. Bue fortunacely#tinac.mych
is now being exploded by continued pressure from-various -points. -
it is no sceret that the so-called inter-racial groups which back up
such groups as the NLA. ALCP. and Urban League, which are supposedly
soos fer dhe uplife? of the Negro, are mataly careyhg on dhe work
SY hurtressing che shite suprematy, dry fuse for dar ressop why che atid
_ argenizetions are supported by Hbere! donations from the wliites, why their
membership consists ‘of whites to the extent of fory per cent, and why
tie leading executives are whites. No wonder: then, that some of the
iecterthinking ‘amung the Negro intellectuals shoahd‘reyolt agsiast_prevail-
ing Uncle ‘fomism under cde purple banner of Social Equality.
The revolt is scking vatious fons, A new definision af Sacial
Haualiny is being formed, and its noved advocese is none-echer chun Con?
‘gressman Oscar De Priest, He understands. ffom Social Equality chic it is
Rothing but+an equal opportunity befere the baw ta-peotecting every riphe
of the Négea in thelcouniy, whereby he could build up his own economic
‘seats and carve bis own social standing as he sees fit. ‘his, The Negro
Word submits, is Gatveyism pute and simple, applicable nor only to Ne-
toes in the United States but to the Negroes ail over the world. Only
tisse-the scope ef Gaeveyiem is Wider shan that of Mz. De Priest's.
Some of the witite patrons of tht Uncle Tom orpanizations have been
forcing the Negro to revise his notipns about Seval ality! ‘Recently!
un indlieatiat yhite woman tavmber of the No A, A. Cl 2. at Boston was!
slieged to uve fouered. jim-Crowisen’ ce Boston Univessizy. Although, un-
official denidis have yen made, that Indy seems zo have been sticking c
her guns and insisting upon hee rights co pgench segeegation if she saw
fit to de so. » 3 Poy oe .
“More stariling chen this cise way the ene were 2 Negro Jady writes
about 2h influential white lawyer, an equally important busindss "man and
a highly “spiritualized” preacher,tamong members-of her inter-racial com-
mince Which made “sexy advances" to hee. Te seems chat ar least some
.of the whice men whd join the various intér-cacial geoups that are supposed
to foster ‘good will do so with’ ulterier and fess honorable motives. ‘They
seem (0 be under the impression that if Spcial Kqualityts what the Negro
craves for he should’ get it through his women fotk. No wonder that.the
Above mentioned indy serites indignantly as-follows: “Iam too dazed foe|
Words. Surprise, resentment, hot anger, cach strugglés ‘within me’ all the
fiercer Because T know { have in nor way brought upon myself ‘this -alfzont,
ere.” . . at
Le.tis hope that it is high time to stop chasing Social Equality and
sini] for 2 bald ind idspendene peagesm which alane can amancinate|
our rece, of +f go te te = oi
[Mois TGP ON -TEnEROULONT
i ye de & welt stabiished Get tnt
\egreos dle faster from tuberculosis
han white people é¢, That fn to sy,
fru deaths rate In proportion to pont:
| tied is muds bipher among Nesroe7
Pm hes aeca oo marked for the past
thirty years Jiat it has become ¢
axed opinion ‘i the minds of many
jutudents of hesidh conditions that Ne-
I ves are tnore suzeeptibie to the aki
jease than whites are, and once they
nave iz they ave less able to reist &
[shan white people are. ‘there Jy
I remendons aszount of scientiie dats
jto support this opiziou. SUI open-
[minded ond unprejudiced autkoritics
jon tubereutovis are fading —and oe-
Haitkg—that gives. the, zame 6co-
nomic conditions under ‘whfeb tee
[wits live adhe eéath rate, rom fe
[poresieule emanr Negravn rapidiy de-
clints, If ban Soon established alsa
Foy recognized nuthorities that wine
jotir death rate at the present time is
higher then that among Use “whites
E tr ceclining at spout the, same rite
fg among the whitese An editorial
ih the Journal of the Outdoor Life
(New York City) arf&es at ie fol
lowing eonchiston:
“ivhether the Negro hes kay in-
herent biological susceptibility to tu
pereulosie that 18 differeat front that
of other people; is a much disputed
point, Ibis, however agreod even by:
Those who contend most vigorously
for the biological hypothesis, Unt tha
enviroumental factors ‘of scanty
means of support, overcrowding, ig-
noranco: of the elementary rules .of
personnt hygiene, muperatition and!
many other social and economic evils
that attend a lower standard of liv-
ing, have played alprime role fa the
large fuberculosis mortality and mor-|
vidity among Negroes.
wy ce Tm many respects the Ne-
gro tuberculosis problem is analogous
to that of the white problem twenty-
five or thirty years ago, anc there is
every reason to believe therefore, that
if the same type of intensive effort te
expended on. the contral of tuber:
culosis among Negroes that bas ‘been!
employed in the last two decade
ecpeg whites, equally favorable re
‘can be obtained.” 7
That, tx a mupeall: te the enlight-
eced viewpoint ‘om. the whole quee
Hon of tuberous. It te not Waared
Js ad {0 relate, by: all. sathoriies
na the diteaee, nor by afi the machin.
sry that has Weds wet up for the etm
vet ceaseless s0-
ne tional re bases
ically. Caer wee. tO
rupee of the Journ of the
wes devoted to article.ca
x d camng beak sutnott-
tee are ty fer ihe!
rented ‘fréte “Yaberenieste |
ad that théir death and imextidits |
: ° Christian’ Spirit at Its Best!
Ww! THOUT being: intercsted in. thé conttoversy now saging between
the good Bishop, Manning of che Cathedral of St, Johm. the Divine,
the greatest sttonghold of Anglican Protestantism in America, and Judge
Ben Lindsey, the humanist and the advocate of “companionate marriage,"
we wouldlike to ‘point out certein human foibles that always try to bolscer
themaelves up under the garb, of culture; rcligion,.-spitiquality. ind sych
‘acher florid things. “The bease in man sticks out his rongue if bf J. given
© ormble. chance, a oe: -
- "The contraversy berween ihe Bishop fad the judge is very boring’ to
;the thinking and’ imelligenr. Judge ‘Lindsey has been. sdvocasing the 30-
ebiopenicose macriage which ix simply, in the final enalypis; a: mod-
i; form, of ‘easly marcinge.. He is seuply 2 refpciner’ in. dye incerest of
= thas Yao} say, We is «sacral. bplpapeepepignen
‘wich opes arené By Bi ing, if the Lancer fred only e:
Riles oe
#01) che heads af exmblished inainstions Bishop Meaning is averse
et ‘however seniible they mey be....A chings.is,diogewuy! “He,
potion: deathbed the theories of Lindsey in «rather officitas way. The
iiplipal . cxzienin "waged 66 hear Lindsey explain his “philosophy,” if
the cotor of shin.—A modern
If jou send’ no one to the mar-
ket, the market will send no one
to you, Pog
Brom tie time that the owner
otfthe worltappeareg in the world,
thé world: begani. o
Covetousness is the father of
disease,
A tren belénging to an avaricl-
ous’man bore abundantly; but to
stead of gathering the fruit little
by ittie he took au axe and cut
st down that ke might get all at
‘once,
Laziness tends helping hand
fo fatigue: one must persevere,
Because fatigue must be ft every
any.
=A lasy ian’ seeks easy” employ
eaten: could never choose &
laborious ees
‘A cutting’ word fs a5 tough as
a bowstring: a cutting word cane
not be healed though m wound
py
THtes are much Higher then fs true
6: the whites, and as a matter of pub-
lie health, and in view of the con.
tagious nature “of tuberenlosic, 11
would seem that the men eZ scienec
would went tovattuck tubereulonis at
Ms chief source. Tuberculosts will
never be removed as a source of Gan-
ner to tae whiter until 12 4s eradt-
cated or controlled among the disel:s.
The racial contacis are too close. The
spread of the disease from one ace
fo the other fs imevitzble. So, Until
the whole attack upon, tuberculosis
taltes the: spirit and form exgrewed
Bo the quotation above from the Jour-
nal'ef Uxe Outdoor Life we shall have
siow and tedious progress in its exad-
leation.—Norfolit Journal ‘and Guide.
| The uatives in some parte of Afrtes
nike very How prozress heesuse i
He the aleategy 6f the: ming white
to Welcome Sato their eireles the mex
fit.to be lenders: provided they coas:
a8 cosociation with ekeir racial breth-
ren. Hero it Js, ditferent We ary
aecuétomed to the Heveling’ hand" of
prejudice Which Enis together the
best and the worst, end forces the
mest progressive to elp the back-
ward ax the price of their own ad
vancement. But even here we have
cecasional examples ot-men and wo-
mien of our race who have: trained
themselves in the white man's meth:
da so long that they “think white”
on the Teast provocation, <
Such was the case with the Negro
woman, n teacher in the mixed schools
of Los Angeles, who called a Negro
trate officer a vdirty lon-down aig-
ger.” Had she been truly'« superior
woman, she would never have stopped
proper defense was in the courts. Her
tfouble was thet she felt nothing in
common with this police officer, even
though like bim, she was a public
servant. Having “nigger” as part of
her. vocabulary, as. too many race
men and womet have to their shame,
tt burst forta,from her, tn = moment
of stress, as she attempted to se-
estan ta ul whlch oopated Des
iadgadiy’s upertority from.
latows tnwortainga
Of course} this teacher should’ be
put out of the school ayutem, not be-
cause, abe drove coutrary ‘to trac
rains, sot beckuog ahs Dewasne angry’
AOd. oven, abusive. Not She mows
be dismninped ftom pubtic servive, ‘be-
to <a sod ne mee
have operste: wy
monnent. Whescevor: wees the. werd
aches ted eager: Were of 90
aa ia. sowarlly ry a
iow fe be thine
gras », ~The
ee er: Tee Ree
oe ee ic F prea
i Agee SRR Oe Ee OR CERES
ee re ee
Pe pee E ances Ee
ere co sen De wo
ee See
who aéstly ‘wiped acy Fenn, [Sak Dest of hie Ssttien Bol
Pee te lca ae sa
“Sibiit= [Eeeress
You age @ f age prpeertrt enls Pu
‘nd ty an, thi cay, there te naraly «mainte ‘of his th
And joy fiat son hath ek eae teeta etc
T will cheer thee, alwaye— Bie nat sonttane seabatta i
[dertul. structure when" "
My lave, shor abd’ tan co” .,'| an bie Bawapenn tour soe en
“JR BR Caspar. | Powe af petitioning the 6
Dominica, BLW.E- ~ * | Nations on Dabaif of the race's ex
5 ‘Tmmediat his retura be 4
Doherty, ‘Not Irish! |aametac tne ne es
Editor, The Negro World: :
‘Wi you please permit me to e6r-
rect an ‘error made in your recent
publication about .an Irishman who
Dequeathed $3,000,000 to 16 wives (al
‘Negresses) and 60 children?
‘Mr, J. H, Doherty was’ from’ the
‘Yoruba tribe, and had not a drop of
any ‘allen blood tn ‘bia. veing Ha was
& great merchant 1n Lagos, Nigeria,
West Africs, and’employed morg than
500 clerks. of his ‘race. Bealde the
fortuoate children, it was revealed
Inst. week in the “West Africa.” a
weelly pews published in London,
that a trust fund. was lett for the
misslonery work in Ni ‘Two of
Mr, Doherty's childrey” are holding
doctor and lawyer degrees, The Inw-
yer was one of the Lagos honorable
members and he bas already taken
his fathers bysiness since his death.
Tt ts ioupossible for white men’ to
have two wiver in-Nigerla, though.
the native born may masry five as
long as he can support them, but
the women would not extend much a
privifege to allens, They consider it
an Insult tor their-race.
E. #. Wussu.
+ “Summit Black”?
Se eee eae
| So the Negroca of “Chicago have
won thelr Aight with the: Woolworth
Sec ee eee
indeed; and we hope'that will servc
a3 an example to other Negro com-
munities all over the world. Why
shduldn’t © community, Uke Harlem
Rave members of their race in busi-
neag ‘positions, when their principal
customers aro Negroes? . And ss to
the West Indies, where about 90 of
every 100 ‘prsons are colored—4vhy
can't the Negroes be employed?
‘The Negroes should not let such
an excellent demonstration’ go for
Fnathing~-nor for too Ittle, elther.
Thoy sbould organize vow and picket
stores, bankg and other - businesses,
‘aud never stop untif.the whites re-
dress his wrong and know, practical-
ly, that it {4's scriptural end reason-
aéle injunction that: “Thou shalt not
muzzle tho. ox that treadeth out the
But F obrerve dst the girls who
were Aired were refersed to 28
“brown.” ‘That, Tam sorry, I do sot
bk, Jt fe not that T have aay objec-
Hen: to brown; but T am suspicious
that Ie is a eotoline within a flor
fine; and that “kill defeat the bery
ypaore of the Skt, What's the gE
for with “Garis” or “black”? Ft wil
ho a ridiculous favee and = pity that
some colored folie should think that
the whites should givedfiem constd-
erations which they impidently re-
fuse to consiage an the right, aed priv=
Hoge of all within thelr ova race. IF
biseke folks sould a dented thera,
3 iy logical that the "Nordlea” should
think thet droit or Yellow sould be
Genied that which they now buve. |
‘And ag fo shades, which fs the ma‘!
jority of tke Neqro rece, anyway?
There wet be equality new, unt
cach a thine that we have x refer
enduma, if we ever’ gotiseliich and
stupid enouga. zt
Perhaps the Woolwertit stores were
Joath to go tue limit of the colorline:
and the colpyed folk compromised.
Bul if they fought up hill to point
“Brown,” they might have fought a
littie more to summit "Black".
Youre sincerely,
i “ANDRONICUS JACOB, *
Brookiva.
Mom, Dad an’ Chillun
Ssitor, The. Negeo World?
It ig, gith much rogre! X notice
from week to week,. that many of
‘the Jocal’ divisions have given the
Prosident-General- the occasion of
calling upon them to do thetr. duty
towards the parent body. Thle ought
not to-be so, but-rather. every diw-
sion should feel it thelr duty to’re-
pOrt regulary 10 Beauquariers.
But may I suggest for the good of
ail concerned that: the mother also
do her-duty towards her: children.
For example) it is very. discouraging
to the child abroad: thet is sending
her regular monthly support to her
mother at home without receiving
wy acknowledgement of same’ fot
3 ths, she is likely to think her
‘mother hasn't received it; and tn
such case, all ahe can do.is to write
aa one else a ale. to find out
totter. hasn't replied or ‘ac-
knowledged the remittances sext_to
ber; tnd M that pesmi written td,
Rappene to be dad and if be Lbiies
sales ne, reply -to nib. cars deter
ot tegutry,, them no ‘cae wilh think
te. ive ‘88 che pratenh te
wait 200 ads TE
vows remit apenas ee
parents mere: fen e
at eae ey ne
dat te npnmy ‘scores
al be npeny Wy oe
oer Sar Gaty ieee
‘m piplig's nite. move Sent 50
— Y = sare
Ma Seadeiars Walkie
e083
Beane
maiagt boast. of big tatehiess hecolen:
even im, “ad sald of bis Tat
ioe, be Sep Bile Bas
'@ vecteation groend. | b-would. seem
oo is hardly 6. minute of bis time
1s ot for tha eeention of wom
plans for the, upliftment of his race
‘He had "roatbats oonipleted ‘ae wos:
erful structure when'te embarked
on Me _Denpenn tear for tbe. par
Poke, af petitioning the 18 of
‘Nations on behalf of the race’s eman-
‘ctpation, 2 :
|. Immediately on his retura he de-
nounced the corrupt Judiciary of Ja-
mach tn am elect 1g _speech
when] be stowed Tow Say a ‘man’
right was “amoked,"" “ "OF
“gamed” away at clubhouses, atnco
the poor man may not appeal,
through financial embarrassment, and
moreover there was no law to im-
prison, during which the case of Rex
vs. Ashenheim brought out concrete
facta to support. his contention.
Hie was not out of prisad tty
months before the Appeal Cour!
quished the conviction of Judge Ag-
ara court that sentenced him con-
trary to British law for six months’
hard labor. As a city councillor, bis
political genius led him to abproach
the gavernor on the economic stress
upon the Inborera of the isiind. Be:
ing unsuccessful in thia attempt, bo
took the matter to the imperial gov-,
ernment of England, which, will be
sending a royal commission te'report
on the matter, thus assoclating the
councillor’s pame with @ precedent
case of Jamaica, *
‘And last; but not least, we find him
refusing to alt among the city-graft-
era of Jamaica. Now that the city
councll 1s dissolved is it Garvey ot
the city grafters are the moro hon-
est and honorable? .
‘When the news of Mr. Garvey’s de-
portation was heard Yo’ Jamaica, a
jection. of the people cried out. that |
“trouble” was coming to ‘the island. |
it bas been proved now who were
yore afraid of this “Trouble—yes,
ne 18 trouble to the gratters and
heir cabinet. i
‘Yours tory truly,
. GON. gDs. HOWLITT,
Florida! Camaguey, Cuba.
October 27th, 1930,
‘White: Propaganda
Re tae eee Veer.
“Miss Ellzabeth Kirk of Water.
bury, Connecticut, fa enthusiastic
ubout South Africa. Many people
[nave no conception of the up-to-date
cities in South Afeion, Miss Kirk add-
ed and she went on to nay that she
thought the people of South Africe
very progressive. Indeed, tho whole
country Srapseszed her as going ahead
fast. “It $9 a wonderful Iund, and
Laighly elvilized. Paoisgh the wert: of
he Union Goversmont's Priva) Sa-
‘reau,in New York City fs gradually
Gispeliiay the cloud of uncertainty
shout the amenities of South frien
which Boo co gencraRy custed all
dver Bis countay..it fo apparent Ghat
the cid idee of the sub-continent is
hard to cradicaté,
For example Miss Kirk states she
was told by several people in the
U.S.A. thet snakes would spit-at
Her sutomoblle 23 she rode through
the “Garis continent, and, morcover,
zhe concluded, many of /tke blacks
believe that moct of te dareign born
Negroes are cunnthals, :
A few years ago a friend of mine
related the following story tome. A
native African of groxt popitneity,
abillly and refinement was addres
ing slerge crowd of peonie in Bar
audios, “British West Indios, at the
YMC. A. “Fam ddighted," ssid
ie, “ie Ace sy people over Mere 50)
highly clvilized, I was told before
leaving sMerica tbat-youpcopte were
all ‘runing nude.” :
‘he readers will no doubt under
stand thet such teaching was only
the part pluyed by the white man-to
Koop us apart, We miist link cogether,
for we are from the samc common
stock. 5
- pesnre Bisnop.’ 4
Support Negro World
Editor, The Negro, Veorid:
‘The ‘Negro World to my mind {s
the boat paper in the world today
for Negroes, but tt seems that we
as a race do not care for our own
[iterature ‘and rather have the white
man's paper knowing that there in
nothing in itso interesting about out
people. Tam riot xavine not to read
the white man’s paper, but ‘just think
of 18 million Negroes in the United
Stater and approximately two mil-
lion people spending two celts a day
for the white paper we give" $4,000
per day to the white press, and in
365 days'we spend four million and
sixty thousand dollara’ if we would
givo the same: aificunt to the Negro
World press then the Negro World
press would be able to give us all the
ehgertene news of the world.
white man has too mych race
pride to allow bintlalt to fnence an-
ether man's preas ‘and leave bib own
poees’ go to the wal. -Every min
eboulg bs mare Interested in binseit
papteae fk. me ott atest
pe Sais ante
fe ive hin,
ee: We expect any. more. from’ tnd
reay We ubOUAd sutrenins ‘the press
mote. I em surg Hf we do cur part
che cflane wil do tie part Se sew,
- eee aly to tie
yt ova 9 es ara
7 . RC Whites ——
dh a, Be
a Ss tax’ ates
piganges: aoe gael:
Fans Se Ye Cath Rewoaha a
os rae crane None
pareete 9205: 6 a ioe mer
6 thn Bhat = -
cm iS Nei Asn Oa aE
Drastic recommendation ate to be
made, according to .Dr. 7
‘the report of the interdal ie
Fa pane
' Tbe: coming year of 106k twit ba
‘a tuvbulest year of readjustment te
Liberia", Dr. Harley reported, “No
nation Isao much the -ctild of phi.
anthropy ‘and saver’ has Methodten’
‘been 80 closely bound up. with =
growing nation. We rpust atend
stoulder to aboulder with’ them when
thelr heartstrings will be tom this
your az fow people, bavy bean tor
in history.”
Dr. Harldy further. pointed ‘out
that: the world: was Woking to Lie
berla to seo what the black maz
could do if given the opportunity to
govern himself.
“Now the world wil say, ‘See, they
cant’, he commented, adding, how~
ever, that what the world could wee
did hot fepresent the full story.
“The tragedy: ts,” he sald, “that
people descended. trom freed. slaves
bave- uceepted-from. the. natives. aa
age-old system of domestic slavery.
It is a situation that needs careful
study, god we dont know enough to
make “many comments now. ‘The
American’ people are-partly to blames
they sent the Liberians over and if
bad conditions arcee, they must Deer
pert of the respousibility.”
-. 6%
Gandhiites Win Kite Duel
CAWNPORE, United Provinces,
India—An amusing kite, duel be-
tween Gandhi supporters and the po-
lce restored the good nature of- al
political factions after the forcible
Temoval of a Gandhi flagstaff from
the public gardens here appeared
lixely to precipitate a riot,
tne Gandhists scored the’ first
Jaugh over the police when, the next
day, the banned flag was flown from
the tail of a kite, Tho Indians are
expert kite duvitsta, the alm of thelr
Jousta being to cut’ the enemy's,card
by crossing it with one’s ‘own. For
this purpose the cord often i soaked
fna solution of powdered glass.
‘The police, unable to tolerate this
provocation, accepted the challenge
and seat up a “legitimist” ite to at
tack the seditious rival. A thrilling
series of aerial manoeuvres ensuod,
during which the police lost their
kite, but soon obtained another, .
Skilfull handling of the Congresa
kite, however, insured itq Immunity.
When thelr"honor had heen sattstiod
the “Congress kite-fitors withdrew
thelr flag, to the delight of a’cheer-
Ing. multitude, z :
Darrow Lectures at
Heward U. Law School
Lost ae ae ae Rem Clactnds
Darrow of Chicayo, and Achar Grr-
| field Heys of New’ Yorke. aro anon:
tee lestarers scheduled for the How.
ard University Ew Scheeh duving:
| the prevent" schoo! year,
[ate Darrow wil deliver cigbt lec:
[tires on trial practice the Gast weak
a January, and Mr. Hays is lectur-
ing on civil iberties of the law the
Hirst, of which was given om Novem
ee 22, on the subject of “Freedom
of Residence.”
| Oa December 5 kor will speote on
‘“Freedon of-Religion"; February 23,
“Brecdom of Specch’ and Ascent
blage"? Sad'on Barek 21, “Preador
of the: Press.” 7
Diembers of the bar and otter ine
teverted friends eve invited to,atione
these Yeetures. No one will be soaze
aiter the lecttire bogine,
Negro Pepulation In B, C,
Tnereases 29 Pex cent
|W ASHINGZON,—the Negra poris-
lation of the District of Columbia ti
|erecsed trora 109,09 £9 1920 to 12.2
068 im 1930, 2 zain of 20. per cont.
The percentize of gaia’ ia ihe
velite population in the same period
was only 8.3 per cent, giving a white
Fpopilation ef 353,914 os against
526,860 in 1920,"
‘The Negro population which total:
led 25.4 per-cont.of the total im
3920 increased to. 27-1 per-ceat in
190 with the gain of "22,309 -over
1920,
Wonien fed shen im. the District
254,988 to 231,862: and of the Ne-
gto population 62,225 ame males and.
88,843 femalos,. Of the 341,465 per
gons over 21 years of age in the: Dis-
‘trict, 88,388 aro colored-—divided as
"44,584 mialen and 46,804-females:
= q
Goes on Bureau 3
Of; Negro Work
WASHINGTON,| D. C.—Dr. Em-
mett J. Scott, of des ‘University,
has been elected a ‘member bee
Bureau of Negro Work of the ;
of Home Misttons and Church Mer;
tension of” the ve
Church. During yer ..
5 erattag «
toward program
doard eet ‘pastors and for.
Programs of the burean, 73 4:
UNL A Menta gie
preas| Rdtior’s Note: A cormkpentenl 9
part | curs wants to become’s an
Bow,| the Ontversal Negro
tie tad destres to.
on t=Sme 3
7 tem, ete, opt bie $1 amd S
O,,.. das (areatior ae 35. omic:
Rc Neiaien 50s Boag on ie
THE BEST OFFER FOR THE YEAR
With a year's subscription to our paper we will give you a copy of the book on the life of the world's only Negro Heavyweight Champion.
This book is really interesting and thrilling as it deals with his life in and out of the ring. It relates how he met Kings, Queens, Dukes, Portraits, Presidents, and what they thought of him. Also his early marriage to a colored girl, and the results of this fierce marriage. How he lost the championship title, etc.
FILL, PANI, New York had its first glimpse of the twentieth champion of Porto Rico, in the person of Antille Sabatino. This boy hits like a Mack truck, nothing else but power behind each and every punch.
He battered his opponent, Irish Tommy Jordan, to a pulp, dropping him twice for a count of five. I doubt if Tommy will recover from the bruising punishment meted out to him for quite some weeks, although Jordan was six or seven pounds heavier, did not matter to Anto, he just kept shooting right and left all through the ten rounds and at the end of the bout, he was just as fresh as when he started.
The Champ received the well earned decision.
This column welcomes to the isle of Manhattan, Antille Sabatino, colored wetterweight champion of Porto Rico. As such fighters as he have a prominent place in the fastic life of New York, just at this time.
Every fan present was well satisfied with his showing as he did not fail to give them action for their money. Jez let's have more of this wonder boy. He deserves work and plenty of it.
I told my readers a few weeks back that Koll Kola was an game as they come, if not gamer. This you will not contradict if you were at the fight last week. This boy came through where many others flop down cold and out, but not Kola, he is what you could easily term a "Master-General" of the roped arena.
Koll fought a tough boy and one that set out to do more to the Kid than Slavin.
Leo Dazzo was the white boy from the Bronx that was sent in to knock Kola higher than a kite, and at times when it appeared that he was sure of completing his job, Kola would take a deep breath, step around and tear in it it were to even the score. He dromped Leo twice, for short count
I am still crying for this boy to develop his left. If he would only hook and jab more effectively with this weapon, he would be the grand master of them all. He has the heart, guts, and will power. A good right and stamina. Oh! if he only had a left, he would be unbeatable.
Koll should at least, received a draw in this fight, and the decision which went to Dazno was booed by the entire crowd.
Augie Perce made a fine job in his work-out with Jack Sivestri. This was a rough and tumble affair with Augie getting the touch down in every round.
Jack received a wonderful boxing lesson from Augie for which he should be thankful. He had to shake his head for clearance quite often from Augies' left hooks.
I had to shout to him quite often to use his left.
Honestly, the chusiest bunch of seconds that I have ever seen are the ones handling Koli Koli and Augle. They must be logger headed. They seem lost, whenever they climb up after, each round to do their stuff. There is usually a gross lack of organization.
It is to be regretted. At least I feel awfully sorry for Koli, because he really needs good seconds. Those that will have the right kind of interest. All his No. 2's were doing last Thursday was talking, when what he needed most was pity of rubbing down, which would have acted like a attendant, and restorer to a slight extent.
I can sorry, dear readers, to the you with an entire dose of Cocoa Cola's repartice, but you know how it is. I just could not help myself, as if it felt a matter of duty to call them as I have seen them.
Good boys that are what one may call the goods, should be given the very best of attention during the rest periods and intelligent men, as seconds, are a lot of help to a fighter.
These contestants won the fight for their prize.
Whenever one goes before the public to perform any kind of trade they must count the cost before hand, and he will prepared, because the public is very critical and are quick to notice mistakes. Check up, buy them double check.
MFT IMPRESSIONS of the Renaissance vs. Visitation's basket ball game as played at Madison Square Garden last Wednesday evening.
*In the first place the team was not properly organised as appearing on the program. The line up did not include Saatch, who to my mind is just as good as any one else on the team, if not better.
*Going into the Garden is "Big-Timing," and it is sorrowful to note that the average race sportsman does not know just what to do, when in such a position.!
The manager, Bob Douglas, had just as well not have been there, because what I saw of him on the side lines was just "presence." Any real coach or manager could have seen and concluded after the first quarter, that Ricks was out of form. So much so that it was inhuman to let him remain on the court. Rickis had at least twelve tries at the basket and missed all of them. These shots were all from his favorite angles. Therefore I maintain that Bob should have relieved him and sent in Harold Mayers, who was on the side line. This he did not do. The result of which was that the bad playing of Ricks destroyed the morale of the whole team. He was guard of the playing "one bad apple that will all" Well, that is just what happened. In order to place Mayers in the game, Siocum had to retire himself and when he appealed to Bob on the issue, Douglas was as mute as a clam. It appeared that he was afraid to make a move one way or the other. He finally shook his head.
Now I want to prove to you that had Riks gone to the lines instead of Slocum the Rens, would have won the game, because there was a change, and the turning point right there. Fat, Cooper and Saith took on a new lease on the possibilities of winning.
Managing a team is different than coaching one. As one has to be a psychologist when coaching and know at the moment what changes are necessary.
So whatever the success of the Rens, one has to apply it to the individual players and not to the proper handling. At least not when playing on big time. Now I do not mean that Bob is not entitled to some credit in the management of the team such as pertaining to securing games, etc. He has done wonders for the boys.
But what I am trying to say is that the team needs an honest to goodness coach, with such an asset the "Big Five" would be unstable. Ferventions or contiment does not make a team.
The same method applied to football goes for hasketchall. One or two errors made by a player and out he goes, that is if you want the team to win. So here wishing the boys better success next time.
BABLO BLANCO, Cuban bantam weight, was in to see me last week, and told me he was leaving for Havana, within a week to meet Bidel Gregorio, in the new arena, recently built in Havana. Beblo is in Chocolate's stable. This is a return bout as Blanco won the decision in their first meeting, a few weeks back. I wish this boy the best of good luck, as he is a nasty boxer, and goes in there to make a good fight of it. Bex Voyage my friend, until we meet again.
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 12.—Dynamite Jackson knocked out Ernie Owens in the fifth round of their bout at Oakland. Owens is a member of the Kearns stable.
THE WASHINGTON AIRLINES had his glorious success last night, flying even further in his effort to acquire the weatherworthy championship from Hat Ratelino.
The Hat dropped Hat for a count of nine in the first round, and failed to follow us and allowed the Champ to get himself together, thus his one and only chance was a thing of the past.
In a championship bout it is expected that the contender for the crown and not the possessor of it should do all the leading and forcing. And why? Because the champ has what the other fellow wants, and the Champ will be the only one he has, therefore the underdog must necessarily, muster up all of his energy and power to wrest from the leader the price and glory of leadership.
The Kid did not do this. You would have thought he the Champ, and Bat the contender for the Champ was on top of the Kid (all during the fifteen rounds, while Chocolate contented himself with back pedding, and jabbing on his cycle. That is what cost him the decision.
Had the Kid met Battalino a year or so ago, it would have been a different issue. As the Kid was unbeatable then, but the change has come and he is not The Bon-Bon of yesterday.
Well another Negro had his great masters, and let it slip into nothingness without anything of greatness to register. Battalino retains his crown, and the Kid has to start all over again.
Chocolate be of African, decent should not have expected to have won the title on points. Things are not evidently done that way these days.
The only way he could have won was by a complete knock out victory, which would be far from the opinions of the judges, and referrer rendering a bias decision.
MA STRIBLING has often said that her southern Rose, young, Wille, would never do combat with a Negro fighter, as long as she lived. That she felt it below her southern pride to allow her son to be in the same ring with any other than white boys, but I learn that Stribling's main sparing partner is a race man, by the name of Coal Harris. They also say that pa clings close to the ropes whenever they work out and keeps shouting to Harris, hold that punch. It appears that he is used simply as a human punching bag. It would be a huge joke if Coal would forget for a minute and let one go but it is evident that this joke would be on him alone, as a party would be arranged and he would be the feature quest. Look out "Coal" don't forget to hold it for your own sake.
Report on Phila. Boxing.
Bouts Stinged Last Week
After taking the point of seven in the fifth round, Sherman Brown, pucky New York battler, won the judge's design over Eating Griffin, of Philadelphia, Wednesday night, after ten rounds of the most interesting mixtures of fistfulness seen at the New Albert Auditorium in many months.
The two fighters with two different types of attack, were also varied in their physical make-up—Griffin, 21, stocky buff, is the true slugger, while Sherman Brown, 16, was the fast-stopping, double-fisted jabber and scientific boxer.
The men entered the ring with Griffin, the local favorite, on the long end of the batting and with a unisex pound weight advantage. Brown was checked as weighing 150 and his onestand 130.
The New Yorker chalked up an early lead when he surprised the Philly fighter with his swift, accurate jabs. Boxing in the style of the masters, the youthful Harlemite had won all four of the preceding rounds when, in the fifth, with a furious rush, Griffin was able to sweep the New Yorker off his feet, sending him to the canvas.
Shortly before the round closed, Griffin had been floored for the count of seven. Coming back, Brown added the seventh round to his collection although many Griffin fans thought a draw would have been justifiable.
Cohen Bests Norfolk
The veteran, Wilbu, Cohen, after closing the eyes of the youthful and popular local fighter, Young Kid Norfolk, in the fifth round, pounded out a decision on the face and mid section of his opponent, at the end of eight rounds.
Bleeding profusely from the second round, Norfolk, who suffered his first defeat in eighteen months of boxing, showed unusual stamina and gameness.
The entire card presented by the Monumental Boxing Club was unusually fast and the most interesting presented here this season.
Manager Boston says this is a good sample of what he will bring to the fans in future cards.
In the preliminaries, Black Paddy, of Chester, defeated Batting Wong, after six rounds of mating. At the final both fighters were virtually out at their feet.
Nik. Donnie Moody, after being beheaded from the sign in the third round, came back with a burry of skis to R.o. Tabbie White in the same manner of their scheduled six-round bout.
Christmas Hall wipes in a jubilee royal first with a odd-opening exhibition that gutted the audience into spasms of laughter.
Newspaper Quotations on Work Of Roland Hayes During Tour
"To hear him frequently one has the opportunity to recognize new facets to his art and depths to his artistry. If one accepts the test said to be applied by Fritz Kreisler that a significant artist must thrill the hearer, or if one accepts Felix Weingartner's dictum that a true artist majors the hearer say to himself that is how I should like to interpret, the remarkable Negro tenor is secure in his niche. "By these or any other touchstone he made his hearers feel once more the sincerity and greatness of his message." Greenbrook (So. Car.) News: "The supreme art of Roland Hayes has just acclaimed him one of the greatest artists of the age, and his place of eminence is unique. Possessing a voice of indescribably beautiful quality, with perfect mastery of its use, there was noticeable in the singer, a subordination of self—a characteristic of the really great." Roanoke (Va.) Times:
"The exquisite art of the singer captivated the hearers throughout the concert, but it was the rendition of the negro spirituals which brought
Jimmy. Slavin. Meets
Miki Gelb Thursday
At the Olympia Club
Miki Gelb, featherweight champion of Hungary, receives an opportunity to boost his stock as a title contender when he clashes with Jimmy Slavin, West Side Irishman, in the feature ten-round, bout at the Olympia Club in Harlem Thursday night.
Gelb defeated Pete De Grasse in his last start so impressively that Promoter Jesse McMahon lost, no time in signing him for the Slavin match. Slavin holds a knockout victory over Koll Koli, sensational Porto Rican, and is considered one of the leading featherweights in the metropolitan district.
Another ten-round bout on the same program will bring together Milton Hutton, New York University law student and former amateur star, with Marty Sanpson, rugged Bronx middleweight.
Hutner's chief accomplishment since training professional in a victory over Alle Wolff, former inter-collegiate, middleweight champion from Penn State. The N. Y. U. scholar has demonstrated that he has that rare combination of brain and brawn in abundance, for he stands high in all his studies.
Four four-round bouts are offered in support of the two tenn. They are nailed up as follows: Jimmy Abley, Harlan, vs. George Terno, New England; Harry Lenz, Actoria, vs. Franklin Becke, East Side; Johnny Pitmanfield, West Side, vs. Friendly Guemond, Brook; Jerry Buckley, West Side, vs. Calvin Holmes, Hurlen.
George Godfrey to Meet
Hearst Wright Dec. 19
ATLANTA, Ga.—All Alanta is joining in the load medium of George Godfrey, ranking Negre heavyweight, and is enthusiastically interested in the rapidly approaching battle between the mammoth uncovered king of the heavyweights and Benetrick Wright, his most worthy opponent, here on Friday night. December 19, he came from Omaha and in addition to his title, he is particularly popular with Atlanta fans because of his victory over One Punch Al Walker here earlier in the season.
Thompson Winner Over
Russell in Wrestling Bout
Flooring him four times and beating him every round. Leon Thompson who is coming along like wild fire under the management of Charlie Williams, one of the few colored managers in the West, took the decision from Herb Russell in the main event at Calver City.
Thompson made a big hit with the Calver City fans and is booked for several more nights here.
Al Brown Planning a
Trip to West Africa
According to reports from Paris, the king of Bantamweights has arranged to give valuable aid to an expedition to be known as the Al Brown-Griaule mission, which will study the customs of people in the wilds of West Africa.
The chief of the mission, a French war aviator, M. Griaule, versed in many African languages, will study, particularly the native music, games and sport. Wherever the expedition goes it will try to hurtil in the minds of the natives that games can be turned into competitive sport.
"When we went through Africa before we were struck by the fact the Negroes of the interior knew nothing of competition," M. Griaule explained in an interview.
MANILA—Young Unisonism, Standard of Manila, was the light-heavy-weight championship of the Orgint by taking a triple-rated decision from Young Sengkul, Philippines of this city. It was the first light in which Unisonism has failed to knock out his opponent.
forth the greatest stem of applause. All the intense emotion of the negro in the expression in him Troubled in Madd, "I Want." It is in the role of the singer of the spiritual that he dills best his allowed purpose of being a vehicle for the expression of the thought and to its capacity. The meeting was the emotion of the music. There could be no question but that he felt the exaltation of the spirituals, and that the religious emotions which the spirituals express had found a home, turbulent though it might be, in his heart."
MULKO (vk.) LEGEND DISAPPEAR:
I alone, while white, is of minor importance to artistry. Hayes goes beyond mere artistry. Hayes is a true artist of public sensibility, fine feeling for dramatic values and above all, dignity. So far as may be judged from last night's recital, he does not stop to cheap vocal or interpretational tricks, not even to cheap music, with the thought of "wowing the galleries." A singer of whom this may be said is a credit not only to his race, but to the human race."
Colored Cavalry Eleven From West Point Beat Crack Passaic Tgam
WEST POINT, N. Y. - The Cavalry Detachment eleven, champions of 1928-29 and 30, finished the season in a blaze of glory when they defeated the unbeaten Passaic Red Devils, white, in a charity game at the Passaic High School stadium, before a crowd of 10,000 football fans. The large and enthusiastic crowd urged the teams to super effort and the players responded with all they had. It is said to be the most interesting game ever witnessed at the stadium.
Passaic kicked on the Calvary on the latters 15-yard line. A pass from Jackson to Bencield advanced the ball to the 45-yard line. From then on the playing was fast and vicious. The quarter ended scoreless.
In the last minute of the second quarter Pekarsky, Passaic end, received a pass and got away for a touchdown. Passaic failed to convert the six points into seven.
A few minutes later Jackson, Cavalry quarterback, received a pass on off-tackle play and made a touchdown, tipping the score.
In the third and fourth quarters, Foster and Corbin each made touchdown for the Cavalry, bringing the total score 13 to 6.
Concert News
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The Music School of the Ferry Street Settlement announces the second of the six educational Churches Music Concerts to be held at the Phiophonie, 666 Grand Street, on Sunday, December 21st, at 8:15 P.M. The program is given by the Garden String Quartet. The members are: First Violin, Jacqueline Gordon; Second Violin, Edwin Ideler; Viola, Joseph Vieland; Cello, Nahoum Benditch. The program is as follows:
(1) Beethoven...Quartet, in A minor, Opus 132.
(2) Maurice Ravel...Quartet in P minor.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va., Dec. 3. S-Playing on a juggery field, the ball heavy and very slippery, the big blue and White grid machine from Hampton Institute effectively shut out the Lincoln eleven. The game clearly indicated the Ironmen's superiority in all phases of the contest. The play was kept in the Lion territory the greater portion of the time—the Scholars scoring eight fights to the Lion's five.
First Quarter
The opening period started with several exchanges of punta; Guessa, Briggs, and Moore hammered their way to the Lincoln six yard line where the ball was in on downs. La Mar kicked out to the forty-five and the Seasider advance was resumed. A series of line plays, brought the ball to the twenty-one yard line where the advance was halted. Briggs nonchalantly booted a place kick for a three point margin.
Hampton, with a series of line plays and sweeping end runs, placed the ball on the Lincoln sixteen yard line, and again to Lions arched their backs and denied the advance. The punt traveled to midfield where Harris made ten yards before he was stopped by Kana. A pause, Guest on the hurting end, was intercepted by James. Lincoln center, who Was downed on the Hampton forty-five yard line. Ten and fifteen, yard runs by Lewis and Henderson placed the ball on the second two yard line. There the Lincoln jumps run against a pounce wall and the ball was foot on down. Briggs punted to the Lincoln forty-eight as the half ended. Three quarters.
Lew Leslie's "Blackbirds" closed daylight night, after a seven week run at the Royal, owing the gallant actors who stuck with him more than three weeks' salary. The closing came after the plucky Leslie had strained every nerve to keep the show going. His last attempt was to resort Sunday night concertes in front as a winning producer. Two Sunday night concerts didn't take hold of the public as Leslie had hoped. Had they done so, there is no doubt that the producer would have resaped even a greater fortune than he made from his first "Blackbirds."
There can be no doubt that Mr. Leslie will take all blame for the closing. At least, we suspect that he should do so. Stage his name placed high in electric lights over the theater the fact that Mr. Leslie was the whole cheese in "Blackbirds." It must be handed to him that his shrewdness kept both his real stars names from appearing in big letters where they belonged in front and high in electric lights. I mean that where his show should have read "Blackbirds" with Ethol Watergate and Flourmiller Miller, it read instead Lew Leslie's Blackbirds. It was Leslie selling himself to the public. So the public now has a chance to lamp the producer who boosted himself instead of the show that was making and feeding him. It would seem evident to the erstwhile Lew that his luck changed for the worse when he took money from Negro actors whom he half paid after making him rich and gave it away in bundles by way of big wages to a collection of "ham" white actors.
To the Actors
Eve performer in this "Blackbirds" production has always laid my best regards, though I know they have turned on me for exposing Leah. Yet they know I have told the truth. I have said what they all know and would have said themselves if they had been in my place and not working for Leah Leah.
Calloway and His Band
Cotton Club Bound
Cub Calloway's orchestra will go into the Cotton Club in February, when Duto Ellington will take his hand on a tour of Eastern ballrooms.
Brownskin Models
DESTROY- Ivin C. Miller's
"Brownstein Moldover" best all man
hardships and pushed him in at the
Koppin theater here last week. George
Phan lived way past all preamble
plugging with his golden voice.
Shannon Hare, Cicely Cockroft,
Shannon Hare, Alicia Cates,
Cecil Riverd and Ralph Hunter
charmed Mothr City patrons. Mid-
night rumble held Saturday.
Whitman Sisters
PHILADELPHIA — "Lick 'Em Go," Mine Whitman latest show is being presented as the standard theater this week. Pops-Whitman, juvenile dancer and son of Bert Whitman, is creating the drama, sensation that he did all over the country. Princess Woe We Are is still in the line-up.
yards to his thirty-five where he was kicked no hard that the ball flew out of his grasp to be recovered by Morton on the forty-five yard marker. Briggs kicked out of bounds on the Lincoln five-yard line and La Mar returned the punt which Harris caught in the middle of the field, and made ten yards before Harrison stopped him on the Lions' forty-yard mark. A pass. Guess to Morton, was good for thirty yards but, the ball hands on the ten-yard line. Harrison made a thirty-five yard end run to place the ball on the Lincoln five-yard tape as the quarter ended.
Fourth Quarter
First down on the five yard line, the Lions, took possession of the ball on their one yard line. The punt carried to the thirty-five yard line where Harris was downed in his tracks. Guess, in three plays brought the ball to the three yard line where Moore took it over. Briggs failed to make the extra point, making the score 9—0 as it remained until the end.
The kickoff was poor, the Lincoln center catching it was brought down on the fifty-yard mark. A series of passes, Le Mar to Marker, was good for thirty yards. The advance was halted when Gaines recovered a Lon fumble on the twenty-five yard line. Guess followed with a thirty-five yard run around left and a sixteen yard, mind off-tackle to bring the fall to the twenty-fifth. Scott, who had been mid-tilted, made five on a backcut on the game ended. The entire Hampton team played a great game with Guess the outstanding perimeter, and Bendurth, Lewis and Hume scoring four team
PARIS.—That Parisians love our American music is demonstrated by the avalanche of letters that have needed upon the management of the "Les Ambassadeurs," so luxe night club hosts following the news in the Paris press that Noble Sissle and his famous orchestra are shortly to return to the stair.
Almost every it brings acented and created notes bearing world-famous names and deploring the going of the Negro musicians. So great has been the clamor that some of the French newspaper*s have commented on the continued popularity of American jazz music.
Among the most famous persons heard from have been such worthies as the Dolly Stiles, Baron Rothschild, William Tilden, Lord Northschild, Ganna Walaka, Alma Gluck and Henry Barnstain.
Peggy Hopkins Joyce, the much-married international favorite, declares that Sissie is "a most valuable conductor of a band that plays divinely," while Jascha Halffx, the renowned and incomparable violinist, says that the Negro orchestra is "a fine band—unmequalled."
Petersburg Negro Citizens To Hear Jubilee Singers
PETERSHURG, Va. — The celebrated Flik Jubilee Singers, internationally famous, will appear in recital at Virginia State College on the evening of Decapril 20. The college is presenting to its students skilled artists in the fields of music and drama. Already Charles W. Southwick, Shakespearean reader of international note, has appeared in recital.
Baltimore Owls Beat St. Christopher, 42-31
BALTMORE. — The Baltimore Owls basketball team handed the famous St. Christopher red and black machine of New York a 42 to 31 defeat here. Google Poles, one of the outstanding courtmen of the East, joined the Owls last week. The team is on the lookout for another capable guard.
PHILADELPHIA. — George Godfrey, giant heavyweight figure of Leilerson, Pa., has been restored to good standing by the Pennsylvania boxing commission. Godfrey had his license revoked as a result of his fiasco with Primo Chimera, Italian bethemon, when he was charged with deliberately fouling the Kalah.
LOS ANGELES.—In a petition of voluntary bankruptcy filed last week by Lincoln Perry, known to movie fans as "Stepin Petchit," shows that he owes $17,744 and has prisons amounting to $6,500.
Carl "Belle" Smooth, wheather been sick for the Cook County hospital, the last month, died Saturday. An anguages have not been completed for his funeral. Relatives and friends write to Newell Ellison, 4822 St. Lawrence Ave, Chicago.
SAN JOSE—V. Allen Haven of Chicago and Los Angeles, fell dead backstage at the California theater here today while dressing for his co-Physician said death was caused by heart disease.
COLUMBUS, Ohio—Smith, Paul Edward and his "Chocolate Sugar of 1630" just closed have just vowed. The crew included besides Edward, Horner Hubbard, Emory Willis, Big Boy Anderson, Two Dancing Demons, Regina Avith, Ty Kimball, Johnny Marshall, Willie Richardsde, a chorus of 10 girls and five-piece band. James Johnson was the manager.
We hear of a picnic now and there
with trotley rides and straw rides
here and there.
CARNEGIE HALL
Sunday Evg, Dec. 28, at 8.50
ROLAND
HAYES
TENOR
NAME WAYTWO—Send us ten letters and
addresses of race people and we will send
you two HERE, samples of MARIE DEMANDEL
P. O. B. 1899 Richmond, W.
FITS FREE
Booklet
If you have Baliway, Pike, Pulling and
Miami, please send me about my present
plan. Kindly recommend—if you have
plan, send me about it.
YOUR FUTURE FORWARD
My Five Years' Experience in Africa
International Literature for the Negro Race Should be 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-
England, by Marcus Garvey . . . . . . 25c per copy
Five of the greatest speeches of Marcus
Garvey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30c per copy
Large size photograph of Marcus Gar-
All the above books, pamphlets and pictures can be secured by forwarding cash orders to Helen. Marcus Garvey, Edelwaule Park, Kingston, Jamaica, B. W. I. Send Postal Money Orders, Exp. Money Order or Dollar Bills registered.
"Educate a man," said a famous writer, "and you educate an individual; educate a won in and you educate a family." This statement is being borne out, in every walk of life. No community can rise higher than the position occupied by its womenfolk. Where women are unintelligent, backward and morally debased; where women's activities are restricted only to tawdry drudgery and sordid propagation of the species, there will be social stagnation and corruption, vice and want. Woman's duty has ever been to inspire, to guide and lead man to nobler things of life. In her the higher sentiments are idealized and she becomes the source and foundation of all good.
A home in which the mother is intelligent and progressive will be a home in which the children are inheritors of every advantage whereby they may become mentally alert, morally clean and industrious. In such home happiness, love and understanding will abide to brighten the darkest hour. Conversely, in the home where the mother is loose, vulgar, shiftless, and ignorant, the child will be under every blindness, every disadvantage. Such as home will become but the breeding place for children who are mentally deficient, and who lacking proper guidance and care, must grow up into demarried and vicious human beings. Good home influence is the great unlawful civilization and early home environments make an admirable, impression for good or ill in the character and abilities of the inheritors.
(Continued from last week)
We arriged at the seaport Durban, Natal, South Africa, which, like Rhodesia, Johannesberg, Victoria, Transvaal, Pretoria and the Orange Free State island, in a gigantic and magnificent city and as modern as any European city in many ways. Its harbor is simply wonderful and deeping facilities including a large coaling station for the largest- and most modern ocean liners can be beaten only by Liverpool, England.
Its main entrance to the city, from the church is Point Road and its main commercial and business thoroughfare is West Street where stores with gorgeously decorated showcases are on a par with those of Pall Mall or Hobson Street, London, or Fifth Avenue. New York City, it has a summer resort on Orngini Beach — that is a miniature Coney Island itself — three white men, women and children may be seen by the thousands. Sailing and freelancing during the entire season — while there is no real winter Natal is subjected to heavy rains, cold and stormy winds and insults aplenty during the latter part of the year—the beach at Orngini is "tily white" where signs are plainly read thus—"niggers are not allowed."
In 1916, South Africa's estimated population was 6,000,000 native Kaffir, Swedes, Botswana, East Indians and a majority of Zulus and about 500,000 white, English, Irish, German and Dutch Reeves. White lynching and burning alive at the stake is not practiced openly; there is no worse "hell on earth" for the blackman than Durban, South Africa, in the matters of aggression, Jim Crowism, extortion and distrustLEMENT in which Georgia, Mississippi, Florida and Texas may be assigned second place.
We cannot here give a full account of our experiences in Natal for lack of space. Suffice it to say that if the writer lives for a thousand years she shall never forget Durban. However, we will delve into a single incident for example. One evening, as usual Muss "Gertrude Fraser" a Kaffir young lady and Miss "Dina George" a Zulu, came down to the
that make me sick, to put it plainly, and I am not reluctant about admitting it, for I suppose I make some people feel the same way. If it were necessary, I could qualify my remarks by naming the peculiar characteristics of some of the people who affect me disgustingly, but for the moment I wish to deal particularly with the individual who cannot hold a position of authority without making himself ridiculous. Some men seem to be born to be the under-dog, the serf, the minion, the patty official, and are quite deserving of a kind of sympathetic admiration, because of their conduct in a low station. They will serve faithfully and submissively, ready to heed and answer every beck and call from all and sundry, and by this mode of conduct, sometimes one of this type is promoted above his fellows.
Comes the day when he is in authority and there you have your "Urlih Heep", all over again. There there was once a fawny jackal there now appears the fierce and sinister tiger. He who was once an adept in the art of "ingratiating himself with, all who came in contact with him", now singles out those over whom he finds himself a superior and bullies them to the point of cruelty. He struts, and replies in his exaltation, but in all this he keeps an eye behind him for the possible appearance of any who may be above him. The presence of such a person is his signal to get on his knees again. The higher he gets the more profoundly ridiculous he becomes, for his spots, and however drunk he may get with authority he still remains a misfit and a poitron, to boot.
docks to meet Jack and myself, respectively, and the group of us started for uptown. As we swung out from Point Road into Wey Street, on the sidewalk we were approached by a Dutch Boor policeman who accosted thus—"Hey! You niggers, get on the road—niggers are not allowed on the sidewalks." I whispered to Jack, "Ignore the foot and let us go on," Jack and Miss "Fraiser," however, turned into Murray Street, leaving the writer and Miss "George" in West Street on the policeman's beat. My Zahn companion who had been accustomed to this form of human hypocrisy began to pull at my arm indicating her anxiety, to comply with the persistent demands of the officer who kept up behind us, but I demonstrated with her to keep on along with me on the sidewalk, admitting her to have no fear.
"Do you hear me, bigger?" the policeman beheld. "Who are you speaking to?" I asked, coolly. "I am speaking to you, bigger; get on the road!" he demanded.
"No," I said, "you are not speaking to me, for I am no bigger, I am an Ethiopian or African, if you please.
"What difference does that make, you are a nigger just the same," he retorted.
As we passed over Omgini Street and meeting Church Street by the Town Hall, ignoring the Zule young lady, the man arrested me, with gun in hand and took me to the Town Hall police station a few yards away.
"Well," inquired the desk officer, what's the charge? "Observation, sir, this nigger with a nigger woman raided to vantage the sidewalk when I ordered him to do se and was very rude," he complained. "I kept up behind him all the way from Point Road and arrested him outside the station, still on the sidewalk."
"What's your name?" asked the desk officer, "J. Milton Eston," I said.
(Continued Next Week)
P. S.: Mall addressed to me is not being received; don't write—political plot. Stand firmly behind Hon. Marcus Garvey and Miss H. V. Davis, our secretary-general. J.M.B.
By H. S. PITTS
During the Pinchot-for-Governor campaign, while speaking before a group of "Philadelphia Politicians," I remarked that the signs of the times indicate that the leadership of the Negro must be placed in the hands of the struggling masses. A preacher, in response to my address stated that I was advocating a backward step, for, as he interpreted my thought, I was in favor of placing the ignorant masses above the cultured classes with a hope of improving the situation.
Well that is his interpretation of my idea and plan, but, my dear reader, I am sure you will agree with me that there are thousands of professionally trained citizens who are compelled to eke out an existence by ordinary labor, due to the scarcity of doors open to their professions. This situation raises the cultural personnel of the masses to a high degree of efficiency—so much so that it is impossible to keep the hitherto unlinking masses in the dark. Besides, the morale of the masses, within the last decade, has been greatly intensified. The only need now is superorganic evolution, or, in other words, a spiritual communication. We have trusted to their leadership ever since we were set free from slavery. They have ushered us out into the "Valley of Sighs and Tears" leaving us no chart as a means of finding our way out. I am serving notice on the professionals, from one end of America to the other, that there is going to be a "Referendum and Recall."
There is no group of men in this country who has had a greater opportunity to develop in the Negro the full spirit of American citizenship than the preacher. The preacher is the only character who has had the privilege to do this, for it is he who stands between the laity and the Negro body politic.
This sounds unfair. But, my dear reader, go into any community, if you please, with a message for your people. If you get that message over, you have got to depend upon the hearty cooperation of the preacher. If you did not get it over, it is because the preacher did not cooperate. There is, no question about it—the preacher has the people. For this season I think I can safely say that it is through him that the Negro is a consumer and not a producer. (On the other hand, should there be a political campaign waged with a multi-millionaire at the head of it, believe me brother, you may depend upon him. The preacher is leading approximately nine million Negroes. We are in the wilderness, and the only hope of this great mass of humanity is in the leadership of a "Fighting Joshua," and without it change "it can't greve to be no person." Somebody has got to pay, and the hasty has already paid.
"You needn't blink and buck and
"pair"
I only give you what is fair:
"The best is yet to come" and then—
"I'll gladly say to you, Amen.
(In the next and last article
"chervonem in relation to the muses will
be discussed)."
There are many successive steps on the way to the "Read to Success," but the one that I feel is most outstanding is "Character." This is something that everyone has individually, and must be developed. This cannot, like most things, be copied. You must not get it mixed up with the word "Reputation," for a man may have a bad reputation and a good character, but never a bad character and good reputation. So you see they differ widely.
In short, to begin with one must have character as a rock-bottom foundation to finally achieve any degree of success. Another step in importance, I believe, is "Education." This means more than actual book learning. It means the capacity of executing and utilizing what you do know, be it ever so small. It is not enough to just know things, but the knowledge applied in the right way. For, if this knowledge was used in the wrong way, you would be just as well off had you never had any knowledge whatever.
Another step on the way to success, is that you must become industrious, and when one is industrious, they are giving everyone whom they come in contact with a fair exchange for whatever they receive. Progressive Negroes must look for opportunity, for it might present itself in a small way, but you must remember the little quotation, "Little drops of water, etc."
"You know, just by standing still crying out your misfortune, pathetically, is getting you nowhere. Things do not come to you out of a clear sky. You have to work hard for anything, it it is worth while. Keep your eyes and earn open. Make the best of your present opportunities; be they ever so small. Make valuable use of all your spare time. Have a definite aim in life. Aspire to something "big," and you will not fall far short of this aim in life. Aspire while still young, for youth is the time to think about success.
"You must, remember that no man's troubles get the best of him, unless he is weak and gives in quickly. You
Bits of Knowledge
BY W. L. GORDON
Tea is the most popular beverage in the world.
R IYME AND REASON
His hand 'gainst every man' — A sojourner upon the desert sands art thou constrained, to dwell.
A sword against thee also is uplifted, because some one hath named thee ishmael.
Thine enemies on every side pursue thy path:
No respite may you find. — A wanderer night and day.
A crust of bread, a jug of water was thy desert lot, yet even angels entered to thy will and you permitted not to die on a desert lonely drear.
Why art thou thus compelled apart from other men to dwell, n. nomad from thine own in stealth to astray?
I may not on the threshold of a stranger find a welcome, nor in the tenta of kishmim earn a sweet repose because my name is only ishmael!
Maybe the God I serve abolished me a space upon the barren wilds to roam because He did not let me die as other men have died.
Yet, solace (from men) can I enjoy in peace, and safe from turmoil here at rest abide.
Then why should I not mock all threats and aggren the thrusts of foreign-swords or spears when warriors fell in thousands? I, too, some day shall fall as well, if it’s my lot, my name is Lshmael!
Death holds no greater tembers sole for me than those reserved for other mortal men, then why should I in jeopardy remain?
Maybe in passing with a well spent thrust I may my secret enemy destroy and thus from my scutcheon crane an undeserving stain!
Among the hunts of untamed beasts I敬well, because at death no one will mourn the wanderer, unloved in life, at death, just Ishmael!
When Almighty poured out his blessedness.
One thing yet dominant in our minds is Israel's stubbornness.
How could a race so wonderfully blessed,
Being even fed, with Heaven's bread,
Be so illiterate with that great SKN,
Known as stubbornness.
But now we look at the great black race.
Four hundred millions in this race.
Having God's special blessing so grand.
Yet we are denying his dear soilace.
The soilace from our GOD—IS THIS,
Ethiopia shall stretch forth her hands.
And yet stubborn unbelievers apparently.
Are denying the power of God's hand.
Alas. He has sent us a. Moses.
And a Solomon's wisdom toarry. One is in the person of Hon. Marcus Garvey. The Old Highness Emperor Ras Tarafi. N. H. GRISSON. 1432 S. Sangamon street.
have to fight your way up. You will have great competition surely, but this makes the battle all the more interesting. You are not going to be one that will lie down, now that you can see light ahead. The man who conelantly looks back is of no use in this present day and age, for he is only retarding the progress of his fellowman.
Get away from the moth-eaten idea of the down-tradden and servant idea. Gain the respect of your fellowman by uniting. When you are bound to receive recognition the world-over, in the near future. If you but watch closely, you can see the stands slowly put surely disappearing and the light is breaking slowly but steadily and if you but keep a stiff upper lip and fast, keep in the race, you will survive and find the land of sunshine and happiness.
BY A NEGRO THEOSOPHIST
In all this cosmic process from atom to man there is an element which must be taken into account if we are to understand the process correctly. Though matter evolves from homogeneous to heterogeneous, from indefinite to definite, from simple to complex, life does not so evolve. The evolution of matter is a rearrangement; the evolution of life is an unlocking and an unfoldment.
In the first cell of living matter, in some incomprehensible fashion, are prototypes (as certain folks that are among us today). Nature may need millions of years to rearrange the substance, "selecting" age after age, till the proper aggregation is found, and prototypes as . . . can come from her bosom to be the protagonists in one scene of her drama. Yet all the while, throughout the millions of years, the life held them (the germs) mysteriously within itself.
The evolution of life is not a receiving but a giving. For behind the very life, as its heart and soul, is something greater still; a consciousness. From thisfulness of power, love and beauty, He gave to the first speck of life all that He is. As in one invisible point may be converged all the rays from the glorious panorama of a mountain range, so each germ of life is as a focal point of that limited existence. Within each cell He resides in His fulness; under His guidance at the proper time, prototypes step forth and we call it evolution.
At the study of evolution of forms, according to modern science, has enlarged and adjusted our previous conception of the universe, the study of evolution is more striking still in its consequences. For new elements of complexity appear in the life side of evolution and their consideration means a new evaluation of evolutionary processes. The first factor in the complexity is that, within the terms as studied by the scientist, there are several parallel streams of evolving life, each mostly independent of the others in its development.
Look Out, Brown Man!
Under the dramatic title, "Look Out, Brown Man!" Sherwood Anderson, the celebrated short story writer and novelist, in the Nation for November 26, issues a warning of racial disturbances due to hard times in the South. In the article, his Anderson stresses that the trouble comes from inferior whites and that the best class of whites have friendship for colored people.
"Well be your friend, if we can big boy," writes Mr. Anderson, "but it's going to be rough going. There'll be hybrids now. It is a time to walk softly. If you have any intelligence, brown boy, Negroes' Negro, remember that it has been by remaining friends with the intelligent people among the whites, by having an understanding with them, that the browns have got, along with the whites as they have . . . Bear this in mind, Negroes' Negro. There are a good many of us whites who are, more than we like to admit, in the same position as you. If your people have been slaves, so have ours; if you have been in a subordinate position in life, so have we. There are a good many kinds of slavery in this life."
At the 135th St. Library
The 135th Street Branch of the library is having an evening of poetry, story and song, on Tuesday, December 16, at 8:30 p. m. Dr. Rudolph Fisher, Jessie Fauset Harris and Gwendolyn Bennett are giving readings. Maurice Hunter is dramatizing "The Three Wise Men" and a spiritual accompanied by Mrs Doris Frottman Earle, well known singer. The library is very fortunate also in having Elizabeth Linkford, accomplished solist, on the program. All are cordially invited.
BOOK CLUB
Book Club—135th street Branch Library, Thursday evening, December 18, 1930, at 8:15. Subject: John Galsworthy, Englishman, Sinclair Lewis, American, Leader: Brenda Ray Morychk
LET ME TELL YOU
"He that gettish wisdom loveth his own soul: he that keepeth understanding shall find good."
His leg is off, only one leg, nevertheless, he is not able to make a living for himself as easily had he the two legs. This young man, a native of Jamaica, but now residing in Cuba. He is only 19 years of age, but being ambitious tried to make good in a foreign land, where he suffered his first loss. This lad had his troubles, and as hopeless as his case seems, there are others just as discouraging. Letters are received daily from almost all parts of the globe from those who are really up against it.
Is this a sign of a universal awakening. A challenge to you to prepare to do things? Are you going to allow, yourself, to be thrown to the wall beaten—a failure? Did God (or what you care to call him) make you so weak that cannot see the truth of things? You have to die, be that day today or tomorrow; well, are you going to die, before having done your bit? Some years ago, the Unofficial Steward of the British Empire, the well known Horatio Bottomley, said, 'The Negro child's life is likened to the fellow who would take a thimble full of water from the ocean, walk around town, then returns and throws the water from the thimble into the ocean.' Is your life worth that much? Are you sure that you are made of the stuff that wins? Since you are a part of a 'superior race, why are you afraid to demonstrate your strength of character? Do you think that God, will number, you among his worthy children?
You know better! *You are sick and tired of the old hand-to-mouth way of living. You know that God had a very good purpose when He made you. You are not a fool. You are sure that once you step out of the crowd of the do, little, that there is some force or power somewhere to assist you to smash down barriers. You are too wise, and do not know there is no law in the world to stop you from winning your way to the desired goal.
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To whom it may concern:
that he was ready to lead his people to safety. God is no respect of persons (afrees). What Moses has lone you can and will do. Act Now, do not wait for something special to turn up. Do the Thing Man and you shall have the Power! The realities suffered for forty years because they were afraid to take the end from the Cansanites. You and millions of your race are suffering now, and may suffer more unless you save the day. Do not say, "Some one else is better able to lead the race." You are the being to do this wonderful work of the God—"And so shall they worship him in the earth, kings shall bring gifts, and sing praise unto his God."
Excuses are refusals. You want to do big things; you know that you can. You are a coward... You fear to step out and surprise the world! You are going to act at once. You are a lead, an honest one. You cannot work against anything, noble and lofty for your race. Now you shall stand fearlessly for yourself and race. You cannot resist this feeling "that you can and will save your people." You are the individual of the hour. Your friends have noticed the great change in you. You can make them obey you, but you must be 'honest'—you are honest; you are energy personified. You cannot resist the desire, you cannot!
Colored Artist Does Cover for Judge
Elmer Simms Campbell, youthful illustrator, has the distinction of having "Judge," the well-known humorous weekly, accept his design for the cover of its November. football issue. Opportunity's cover for November is also by young Campbell, a former St. Louisian, who after doing clever work in one of the best known advertising establishments in that city and studying at Art Institute in Chicago, came to New York, to further his studies. He is employed by a large art studio here.
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More Holly Adams, the weather is not good or good today, and naturally there will be a lot of static on the air, and go the program will be very brief this week. But I promise you to make life for everything in the next program that will be broadcast from the roof of the Hotel Gavrey, over Station UNIA, owned and operated by the Negro World Broadcasting System. Don't forget that these programs come to you weekly through the courtesy of the Negro World Producing Co. Stand by, everybody!
SELF-RESPECT
What gift divine in Humankind,
To spur men forth from common life.
The plan of an Eternal Mind
To weather all the winds of strife?
Tis Self-Respect.
Men may serve loveless as the price of martyrdom and sacrifice
Yields to the cvammy Hand of Death?
Their 'Self-Respect.
Fate's fatherless and motherless
Outcasts and orphans in distress!
What may they hold in hearts empaired.
What corrades reach farte and re-
nown.
Their public praise a deathless crown?
What makes them heroes, hold and
strong.
By which God urges them along?
Their Self-Respect.
When noble Self-Respect stands first.
To quench high inspiration's thirst.
We laugh and gulp, down Sorrow's
And dream men should be brothers
kill.
In Self-Respect.
E. D. C.
Several Ways to Help Negro Workers in U. S.
(Continued from Page One)
and the opportunities for him in industry. It is believed that a healthy point of view could be created in Negro communities and among high school pupils by personnel workers or vocational educational guidance counsellors of the chief of such a counsellor would be to create in the mind of the Negro the right attitude toward work. There is a very natural and strong tendency on the part of Negroes to feel that education consists of a sort of exemption from manual labor and an enjoyment of a life of ease. Negro organizations and individual leaders should also be cultivated in the work of preachers well as in the professions which are too often considered the chief end of education.
(4) It is important to strengthen industrial educational facilities by means of schools devoted solely to trade preparation, or where this is impossible, the inclusion of industrial work in the high schools, always under a strong vocational guidance program.
(5) Increase in the number and scope of employment offices should help to open new jobs and new plants to the Negro. The efficiency of these offices in handling Negroes is often increased by the addition of a Negro secretary to work with his group.
**BLOOD DISCASES** — No matter how Bad or Old the Case or What the Cause rend for N.B.L. should about Dr. Wentz's Treatment used successes in the case. New severe and chronic cases. Write new Treatment papers posted to foreign countries free of date. MARK. Of W. Sawke. N. Room 160. Chicago.
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A DHARANIAN-CALL
Whether you are a member of a branch in Africa, Central America, N. R. W. or the U. S. A., you shall receive Financial Aid through our Loaning Deposits,钻取 and death benefits, nine degrees and initiations. Organized by the National Association Against Order of Dhanara, Inc., 300 West 141st Street, New York.
that when one carries a loadstone, Rabbit's foot or wears a Chinese luck ring and burns Zandras Power incense, they always possess money, which is power—then everything one desires comes to them, so says the great minds of the Fast—secure one of these No. 4 outfits and be a man
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A
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Then fool himself, wearing the cloak of sham
And customs of the problems of his Race.
Better than sages of the Ancient
Cause
Of Knowledge comprehend Time
and Space.
That he must do such chores as come
along
The Greatcut Negro path to higher
life;
That he must hold to Laughter and
a song
Of cheerfulness through all the
storms of life.
To play, a part of an Eternal Plan,
Ordained that he alone should dare
to fulfill.
That he must learn to share each
common task
Of Manhood with plenty "guts"
and legs.
To walk away with Fate, and only ask
To drink the cup of Service to its
dregs.
That he must have a chosen pattern
of desire.
And shrine, of visions deep down
in his Soul.
Where he must seek adjustment till
peace.
Of Faith leads him to his appointed
Goal.
And now, everybody, Station UNIA
bids you good-day. Don't forget to
tune in next week, because: there is
going to be a super-special program!
This is de Mena announcing.
De Priest Holds Balance In the Next Congress
using the ballot box. I offer no apology whatever.
"We have been accused of asking for social equality, but the only social equality we have ever known is what the white race has established itself. We struggle for an equal opportunity before the law in protecting our rights. That is all the Negro wants and he can build his own social standing as he sees it."
Mr. Pickens said he had been trying to prosecute several white policemen in Camden for abusing three respectable citizens.
"We have brought this case before the grand jury and can't get action. We have been blocked and barred from getting the case before the jury box, but cannot be prevented from getting it into the ballot box.
"We can vote against certain men as fast as they come up for re-election. We can retire those from public life who deny in our constitutional rights."
(Continued from Page One)
Recently at one of his settings he turned to E. S. Alexander Bumble, proprietor of the studio, and said: "The trouble with the Negro is that he apes white people. He is superior in many ways. He is better mannered. Who 'ever heard' of a Negro woman? He has a better complexion. He is never pale, or pouty.
"If Negroes throw off their preschers and holy men, who are nothing but ricketeers, they would make a huge stride forward."
a branch in Africa, Central America, R.
receive Financial Aid through our Loaning
line degrees and initiatives. Organizers
provevient Ancient Order of Dharaans, Inc.
R.
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One of the Savings Bank
Higher and lower rates apply. Cash requests are not the bank and good and long and not the Negro business may give to the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company entitled the right, grace and trust of leading Negroes and not only Negroes in Philadelphia pay their money in the bank, but Negroes from outlaws of Philadelphia and from cities in other states put their money in the bank, and today the bank has more liquid assets than any other bank of its character in the state of Pennsylvania.
This bank has constantly paid 4 per cent on all savings deposits and 2 per cent on all checking accounts which totalled over $500, and in the last two years this bank has grown deeper in the confidence of the people of Philadelphia than any other bank operated by our group. It is not generally known, even by Negroes in Philadelphia, that any number of people with Major Wright at the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company than is not alone a tribute to the men in charge of the bank, but it is a tribute to the system of banking employed by the bank. When nearly three hundred white people will deposit their money in a colored institution, that itself is evidence of the stability of the bank because white people more so than colored people investigate a bank before they put their money in it. These facts, except in Philadelphia, do not except to a few, but away from Philadelphia in other cities and in other states the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company is pointed to as an example of fine banking and sound business transactions.
The Banking Department of Pennsylvania is the best source of information about any bank in Pennsylvania, and it is known all over the country that fewer banks in Pennsylvania fail than in any other state because the Banking Department in the state of Pennsylvania is the most
rigid in its examination that "perhaps any other banking departments in any other state in the Union—and the bank can pass the approval of the State Banking Department of Pennsylvania deserves not only complements but support. Not long ago the Banking Department, through one of its members, had occasion to put in writing his opinion of the sound condition of the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company, and most any banker would be happy to receive such comment. The words of commendation came from Mr. Taylor, who is known in all banking departments to be a very good department." Mr. Taylor said, in referring to the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company, "has shown by the record, the trust company is exceptionally liquid and fully able to meet the demands which its depositors might make. I desire to commend the management for their attention to that most important factor in banking, viz., liquidity."
With one hundred thousand people in Philadelphia to draw from in the most few years, the leading bank among our group in this country can easily be the Citizens and Southern Bank and Trust Company of Philadelphia. It requires some time for colored people to learn the real facts about anything, but if they are interested in banks and banking they might to read the History of their own bank, located right in their own doors. Building is unlike other types of business—two and two make four, and you cannot drive a bank away from this equation. Most any other business man can stretch a point, but the banker must stand by the figures. It is because he has adhered to this principle all these years that Major Wright now stands out as one of the first bankers, regardless of color, of the state of Pennsylvania.
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On Education Issue
(Download from Press One)
It suggests a grant from the United States Treasury to aid Haiti develop an adequate educational system, or the arranging of a fund at low interest from private sources in this country at the instance of the American government for that purpose.
It recommends that President Reever use his good offices to encourage private philanthropy in this country to aid education in Haiti.
Education Worse Off
From a financial point of view, the report declared, education in Haiti has been worse off under American occupation than under exclusive Halitan control because the national school system receives progressively smaller proportions of the annual appropriations.
By Halitan standards the Service Technique appears extravagant while the standard of achievement set, up is far beyond the capacity of the Halitan treasury to support.
The service was projected on: too elaborate a scale, contained too many Americans with salaries too high in comparison to those paid Halitians and failed to co-operate with or recognize the authority of Halitan government officials.
No practical results in agricultural promotion or improved standards of living were noted after seven years of activity.
The reply declares:
"The state of mind of the Haitian people following the American occupation has made it difficult to obtain their co-operation.
Haitians Not Beyond Criticism
"The Haitian leaders themselves are not beyond criticism for neglecting the development of opportunities for their rural population for their basis on the cultural branches, education, education, for their apparent lack of concern for the welfare and progress of the masses who, constitute the foundations of their government."
"Your commission is distinctly of the opinion that a change of attitude on the part of officials of the American 'occupation, and especially those representing the Service Technique, from one of independent self-sufficiency to one of interested and sympathetic co-operation will meet with such a response from leaders of education and government officials in Haiti as will yet make that department a welcome addition to the forces of enlightenment and culture in the country rather than an object of suspicion and a reminder of unwilling subjection.
Haiti Helped the United States "America can surely be generous toward the people whose forebears shared her struggles for freedom from a foreign dominion. By nothing she more "assuredly vindicated her claim to be the protector of liberties of the country the less than by the fulfillment to Kill of the plague to leave her lands more productive, her people more contented, her institutions more. firmly established and her liberties more secure, for having gone to her rescue in the hour of peril."
(Continued from Page One)
ing that a political party is a voluntary organization and a party of the state and that such a party has the right to prescribe the rules and regulations defining qualifications of members, including the right to provide that only white persons may become, members of it, the state delegating to the party the right to do by party rule that which it is prohibited from doing by law without coming within the prohibition of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments of the Federal Constitution.
The case arose when a number of colored election sought an injunction against election officials of Pulaski County, Arkansas, and the chairman and secretary of the Democratic State Central Committee of Arkansas.
True Democrats
They alleged that they were of the Democratic faith, had supported the Democratic nominates at the general election November 6, 1928, and that a majorityally primary was about to be had but that, they would be barred from voting in it because of their racial identity. Nomines of the Democratic party are always elected at the general election, nomination being equivalent to election. The rules of the Democratic party in Arkansas provide: "The Democratic party in Arkansas shall consist of eligible and legally qualified, white electors." When the case was heard the petition of the Colored electors was disallowed for the temporary injunction which permitted to vote in the primary of November 26, 1928, was disallowed. The Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court, but allowed an appeal to the United States Supreme Court.
Another case involving the same question is expected to reach the United States Supreme Court from Texas, where the Democratic State Executive Committee adopted a rule similar to the one in force in Arkansas after the Supreme Court had declared unconstitutional a statute prohibiting colored persons from voting in Democratic primaries in that state.
FOREIGN WORKERS
(Continued from Page 99)
Built for politics and security,
the opportunity to serve as sheriff
and even managers of business par-
tners. Nine patrons. The trend in
other lines is not as definite owing
to the scattered nature of such em-
ployment as janitors, porters, elevator
men, chauffeurs, and household
domestics.
In assembling information for the
report, questionnaires were sent to
more than 5,000 manufacturing
plants, including most of the largest
in the east, and middle west, and 24
cities were visited. In addition,
reports of a number of recent surveys
were examined.
It was found that woman's place outside the, home has not changed greatly since 1920, except by way of rapid expansion in mechanical laundries and some increase in industry, particularly fruit and nut packing in Chicago and textiles in Pennsylvania. New York City reported an advance of Negro women in the garment industry.
The report indicates clearly, however, that the Negro's foremost conquests in the north have been in mechanical pursuits, especially steel, meat packing, and the automobile industry.
Openings in municipal employment have been created by the political influence which has accrued from the growth of Negro populations. Here, as well as in businesses patronized by Negroes, the colored man is, making appreciable headway. Stores and offices owned by Negroes have multiplied. In them Negro clerks and managers are readily employed. White proprietors have generally preferred white employees. In Chicago, however, Negroes have been taken on by a chain of drug stores, several chain groceries, and department stores and a number of small businesses. Losses among waiters, elevator operators, apartment house and office building attendants, can, in part, be traced to definite propaganda for the employment of whites.
The survey shows that in the building trades the Negro's position depends on the attitude of the trade union. While the American Federation of Labor favors no discrimination, this is not true of all locals and internationalists and these have the final decision on Negro admission. Among other obstacles to the Negro's progress are his own, scant training and interest in manual labor. This is due to the fact the industrial education is deficient in the north as well as in the south. In the south the expense of teach's technical subjects has been the greatest obstacle; but everywhere pupils have tended to avoid other academic studies because they lacked respect for industry and feared they would be denied the education given freely to white children.
Dr. Wooster's report shows that, all in all, the Negro has won his preliminary contest with industry, and that it remains for him to compete for the title of skilled laborer. In spite of the many objections in his progress in the industry made some skilful occupations. But unless he continues this rise in scale his numerical gain in industry will have been 'only a jump from the agricultural trying pan into the industrial fire.'
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Grammar. Some new laws make this year slightly more in Minton. Id., west of a white man, "Who saws up" we are seeing your after year on the stripe of Munger still well breasted, they accommodate a formidable mass or, instead, a gentle tenacious descending satisfaction. Furthermore, in the majority of studies thus far completed the communities in which the lynchings occurred had less than a six-month school term. Although the South has been the scene of the greatest number of mob outbreaks, Mr. Milton reported that lynching was not a strictly geographical or even racial affair. It is rather the "underlying beast in man which comes out to the fallest in the excitement of the mob," he said.
Among the members of the commission making the study are Dr. Howard W. Odem of the University of North Carolina, Julian Harris of Atlanta Constitution, Alex. W. Spence of King of Nashville, Tenn., and Dr. W. McGlothlin, president of Furman University.
Port of Spain—At yesterday's sitting of legislative Council of Trinidad and Tobago the following resolution moved by Capt. the Hon. A. Cipriani, elected member for Port of Spain, was unanimously approved by council, "That His Majesty's principal secretary of state for the Colonies be requested to appoint a Royal Commission at an early date with a view to making investigations into the question granting to the inhabitants of the Colony to Trinidad and Tobago self-government."
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Furnished Rooms To-Let
Nearly furnished rooms. All private use of kitchen, gas and electricity. Enquire Apt. 4. 325 Manhattan Ave. Telephone University 5723.
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ROOMS- Furnished or unfurnished Kitchenette apartments with private bath. Small rooms, all newly decorated. Rent reasonable, 400 up. Private house. 69 W. 191th Street.
FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET WITH KITCHENETTE, 35 W. 197th STREET LARGE AND SMALL.
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*NANARD CONPANY* 227 West Lord Street New York
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Agents make big money selling hair straighteners. Send for free sample and terms to agents.
PETTIN'S SALES CO.
MEN AND WOMEN who can produce results to sell, camphor ointment. Rub can be applied to pains. Pads for particuliers. O. W. Wiley, 15-27 of 150th Place, Whitestone, N. Y.
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