The Negro World
Saturday, March 28, 1925
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
LET'S PUT IT OVER
The Indispensable Weekly
The Voice of the Awakened Negro
Negro World
Reaching the Mass of Negroes
The Best Advertising Medium
A Newspaper Devoted solely to the Interests of the Negro Race
VOL. XVIII. No. 7
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1925
PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK
SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U.S.A.
TEN CENTS IN POREIGN COUNTRIES
HON. MARCUS GARVEY DISCUSSES PRINCIPLES OF THE U.N.I.A.; TELLS WHAT THE ORGANIZATION STANDS FOR
Hon. Marcus Garvey sends greetings to the Negroes of the world and presents for their careful consideration an article on the principles of the U. N. L. A., the first installment of which follows:
The Principles of the U. N. I. A.
Over five years ago the Universal Negro Improvement Association placed itself before the world as the movement through which the new and rising Negro would give expression of his feelings. This Association adopts an attitude, not of hostility to other races and peoples of the world, but an attitude of self-respect, of manhood rights on behalf of 400,000,000 Negroes of the world.
We represent peace, harmony, love, human sympathy, human rights and human justice, and that is why we fight so much. Wheresoever human rights are denied to any group, whereoever justice is denied to any group, there the U.N.L.A. finds a cause. And, as at this time among all the peoples of the world, the group that suffers most from injustice, the group that is denied most of those rights that belong to all humanity, is the black group of 400,000,000.
True Emancipation Is the Aim
Because of that injustice, because of that denial of our rights, we go forth under the leadership of the One who is always on the side of right, to fight the common cause of humanity; to fight as we fought in the Revolutionary War, as we fought in the Civil War, as we fought in the Spanish-American War, and as we fought in the war between 1914-18 on the battle plains of France and of Flanders. As we fought on the heights of Mesopotamia, even so under the leadership of the U. N. I. A. we are marshaling the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world to fight for the emancipation of the race and for the redemption of the country of our fathers.
New Line of Thought
We represent a new line of thought among Negroes. Whether you call it advanced thought or reactionary thought, I do not care. If it is reactionary for people to seek independence in government, then we are reactionary. If it is advanced thought for people to seek liberty and freedom, then we represent the advanced school of thought among the Negroes of this country. We of the U. N. I. A. believe that just what is good for the other folks is good for us. If government is something that is worth while; if government is something that is appreciable and helpful and protective to others, then we also want to experiment in government. We do not mean a government that will make us citizens without rights, or subjects without consideration. We mean a kind of government that will place our own in control, even as other races do in control of their own governments.
UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION IS THE MEDIUM THROUGH WHICH THE NEW AND RISING NEGRO EXPRESSES HIMSELF
STANDS UNCOMPROMISINGLY FOR MANHOOD RIGHTS ON BEHALF OF 400,000,000 NEGROES THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
NO EFFORT TO DESTROY OR DISRUPT SOCIETY OR GOVERNMENT
NEGROES DETERMINED TO BUILD CIVILIZATION OF THEIR OWN
WILL NOT BE DISCOURAGED BY MISUNDERSTANDING AND MISREPRESENTATION
unreasonable. It was not unreasonable for George Washington, the great hero and the father of the country, to have fought for the freedom of America, giving to us this great republic and this great democracy; it was not unreasonable for the Liberals of France to have fought against the monarchy to give to the world French democracy and French republicanism; it was no unrighteous cause that led Tolstoi to sound the call of Liberty in Russia, which has ended in giving to the world the social democracy of Russia, an experiment that will probably prove to be a boon and a blessing to mankind. If it was not an unrighteous cause that led Washington to fight for the independence of this country and led the Liberals of France to establish the republic, it is, therefore, not an unrighteous cause for the U. N. I. A. to lead 400,000,000 Negroes all over the world to fight for the liberation of our country.
Therefore, the U. N. I. A. is not advocating the cause of Church building, because we have a sufficiently large number of churches among us to minister to the spiritual needs of the people, and we are not going to compete with those who are engaged in so splendid a work; we are not engaged in building any new social institutions, any Y. M. C. A. or Y. W. C. A., because there are enough social workers engaged in those praiseworthy institutions. We are not engaged merely in domestic politics or in church building or in social uplift work, but we are engaged in nation building.
Misunderstood and Misrepresented
In advocating the principles of this Association we find we have been very much misunderstood and very much misrepresented by men from within our own race, as well as others from without. Any reform movement that seeks to bring about changes for the benefit of humanity is bound to be misrepresented by those who have always taken it upon themselves to administer to and to lead the unfortunate to lead and to
direct those who may be placed under temporary disadvantages. It has been so in all other movements, whether social or political; hence, those of us in the Universal Negro Improvement Association who lead do not feel in any way embarrassed about this misrepresentation, about this misunderstanding, as far as the Aims and Objects of the Universal Negro Improvement Association go. But those who probably would have taken kindly notice of this great movement have been led to believe that this movement seeks not to develop the good within the race, but to give expression to that which is most destructive and most harmful to society and to government
What We Stand For
Not Seeking to Disrupt
We ask for nothing more than the rights of 400,000,000 Negroes. We are not seeking, as I said before, to destroy or disrupt the society or the government of other races, but we are determined that 400,000,000 of us shall unite ourselves to free our motherland from the grasp of the invader. We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are determined to unite 400,000,000 Negroes for their own industrial, political, social and religious emancipation.
We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are determined to unite the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world to give expression to their own feeling; we are determined to unite the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world for the purpose of building a civilization of their own. And in that desire we desire to bring together the 15,000,000 of the United States, the 180,000,000 in the West Indies and Central and South America and the 200,000,000 in Africa. We are looking toward political freedom on the continent of Africa, the land of our fathers.
peeUsE-BY-CGAGD SEFENDERS.
,_URTOON OF MA, HEY I PRI
iB
se the Edjtor of The Negro World:..
A cartopn of large dimeiinions Of 3
Bae mat ogning the bares with on
the white of bis tye balls to be seer
jt of @ dark backgrdtind. This in »
Sere rece ‘vppoeed to be fhe
Je the battle forsNogroes. A pape
prs proteated against the caricature
Nearoge by the white man onthe
stage through minstrel shows, In the
reg rere by “Cartoons "(auch as
SUneh ‘Tom's Cabin” tame); having
Gemplained of Iynching, burning and
spec nsuatetan tt Southland 2
dame “World's Greatest Weekly" now
takes up the cudjels of vicioll” Jeal-
quay-and adopts the name tactica of
Philo psychology to belittle, dexrade;
Teemirch, separate and dincburaxe
‘Hose of the membern ofthe anime race,
Woush the editor and proprietor of this
ame “World's Citeatent Weekly” bp as
- flack an the man hin’ paper pokes. fun
aoe
‘And this man, ayl€ In wall known, ts
in prison, not becéuse of any crime he
committed, byt .bectuse of the venom-
‘ove envy and vdlahonesty of Negroes,
Who coult not control or use im, nor
Were able to orgenixe Nexroeseo he
Bin cone ter the purfore. of Selig
something for themselves.
* Nerpen’ who" were 29 eager to get
“Sarciin Gai'vey out of Ui Way and ¢e~
atroy the powerful organization built
up by him, that they’ propared an out-
rageous petition clamoring for his de-|
portation and. the, dissolution of the
UCN. TA, and forwarded tho ame
to the United Staies Attorney-General,
‘Beven of them alened it, Garvey's per-
sonal eniemies; and of all that notorioun
even, only one lived outalde ‘of, New
York at that time, and that one was
the editor of the “World's Greatest
Weekly,” whlch proclaims itself the
defender of the rice, and yet In ao nar-
Fow In-ita conception “of ‘raclat con
-aclounness $hat It goes_out of Ste, way
to endeavor to Uenmirch one of itx own
members, who his dine moro to
vvaktn, the Necro to his own power-in
the world, and bring fear and (rem
Dilng: to his enémies than all. the other
Nestoen combined. “i
Te sounds like the prattio of an tm-
Recile: to pcociaim the headquarters of!
the U.N. 1 A. at Atlanta, Ga, when
out from the oMmces.in New York the
work 20 well-plunted by Baccus Gare
vey goes on ua'thouzh he were pren-
ent, and the, members everywhere rally
ts the program of the U.N. I-A, as
tua,only one to bring emancipation for
the Negro: everywhere, =
“With sour women’ crucited on the
creas of the passions .of members of
the white race, our men hung updn the
gallows of thelr prejudice, and our
race murdered on the. altir af thelr
greed and avarice, jet the Chlcako De-|
fender finds time to moog to the level
Qf a commion: mud-alinger and try to
atrty un the greatest “Negro persone
sity, the world today known, With our]
race crying for juntice everywhora in|
Americn, Weat: Indiew, Haytl, Pht
pines and Africa, with brutal Intringe-|,
ment upon uur rights in all Tocalltter |
he Dofender seeks to bring abot Car: |
her divinion of our ranks und lexaan |
Ur alrength for constructive action, by |
ining’ itn grent clrculution am a medinm |
© vent pervonal xpite und ubtne ite
prortunlty. for Rood, > w
May the God In heaven hey us and
ave us from slngufded friends, st]
awaken “them fran thelr rena. of,
‘melgamation ‘and assimilation, bring
hem into x racial “conselounnene|
hrough" which they will realize’ thet),
he Neri munt come tdgether 16 he}
xpecta:to win for himself betterthings|
nd conditions. And, insterd of trying
o burlesque Maroun Garvey and tho|
7. XT. An, tet them, Ret on the Job of |
katch{ulnean to protect the nerpetulty
f the raco and safeguard the intorenta|
€ our women by fainiilarizing them- |
sivas ‘erleh aust feske rhat“nac onty tal
‘LOST. VIGOR...
_- IN-24 HOURS’
isis taste bah
ne Someday
ng seat of
greta reat Seen seeped, nd
Pr aa ee
Selecta ete bee
SSpe Sor wee ae
postnatal: lathes Barter are
wee Fy = Se Ee
ar Me a ee
: ee 3 : am 5:
cat i ye >
ee oe
Sa 3
7 eee
oy
-{Jawa against inter-martinge, but that
already twenty-olght States of =
[| Union have denrived you of that lt
| Asenebip right by adopting much laws
|" ‘These aré-thinge that will be more
| worthy of the*pen and power of the
World's Greattat Weekly" than en-
| doavoring to weaken; ffighten or dis-
| courage thousands of us who havo de-
[termined In: our henrts.and, souls that
only Yegto men shall be our leaders
Jiho mtaad for Negro Merty, oppor-
[tunity and prevervations overywhere,
mr (thrercost ——————-
je -*Live or“dle. murvive or peribh,’ we
fight it out on this Jine” Aw it was
with Patrick Henry and tho American
white man, ao-It in with Murcus Gar-
Vey and the U.N. J. Aa “Give un Ibe
‘erty or-sive us death.” And the noon-
em auth at tho “World's, Greatest
‘Weelely” axakenn to. this and throws
off ttm white’ prychology and” xeekn 10
advanice “Negro self-ravertion “and
Jolne with Marcux Gurvey dnd the
SN. A. to put over « program of ra-
lat cohesion and uaplration every
‘wherd for the bettersaent, improvement
‘and protection of Neroth, the nooner
will not only Africans in Afrien come
into thelt own, bit Africans In Amer=
[se andl everyvehere em mall
W. ALWALLACR.
[Has ntann ayane Cent.
| aire, Av, Bewell . of the Chicago
‘Ditision han went the Editor of ‘The
Negro World a tony of an article he
tien went lo the ditor of the Chlcase
Detonder Gein? with the Eeutal car~
twon appeatiag/n that newenae. The
article. fs aa follows:
STosty attention hax Deer! called to
your paper, “The Chicero Defender.”
Inted Uner the dain of March 14,
contuliing @ cartoon. headed, “At~
Tanta Headquartern,of the U. No AM
Lund 4uat under the headline of the car-
toon. Jtnelf, the name "Marcin Gar-
vex." ‘The’ cartoon shows two Upr
Toned eyes peering throuch the dirk
ean, and two hands grlpiing the barn
of the prlion cell, Above this cage are
ign reading thun: “General Sherman
had’ nothing on me, fe marched
through Georgia. stopped at Atlanta,”
*OmMce Yours, 1925 to 1990." “Drop
amall change here,” “Hack to Afrion
at'reduced Aten “See Unele Sam ax
(0 why T moved my offien to Atlante”
und “Black Star Line xalling timo as
noon a I Ket ost of here.”
‘Binge avéine tls cartoon, I have been
véry buay thinking, “tring to pleture
just what kind of man one could be|
who would mike’ Dimxelt remnonsibie |
through hie own paper, “The World's
Greatent Weekly.” a Negro paper, for
sich ardiviluy of sicupdly vd res else
ion Of Ienoranée ante produce m car
toon In_an effort to dikeredit himaelt
wit add 0) tain own rliliewle, $n the
cyen-of nfellinent people, for cortwinty }
ihe cartoon whl nevar reflect Atshorior|
upon Maruce Garvey. |
Such w cartoon, Mr Battor. ony |,
mune some vers small people, Ike]
yourself, but F ean vismure gon that the]
majority of the decent, clean peonle,|
race-lising Negroes, look upon sour
artyon with dindiin and upon you as
1 inero ‘shadow of man, «Mx, Felltor./
Ta yur know tat you cannot dixcredit |
ini dishonor one Nero withomt your |
elt.on “Negro, Belge proportionately |
Uncredited and dishonored’? Wheo|
fou aticmnt to muke lixhtof, and poke]
win at the Negro, Mireus Garvey a}!
nan, {€ net your mtipertor, at leant your}
aval, Nou add to your own Ignomins.|
fou, Mr. Editor, should know that It| ‘
Rot on!” Mr Garvey you would]
umillate, but your race and youraet|
swell 1
‘fa white paper should have producea|
hin same cartoon about another Nexro| !
han Mr. Garvey, you, Sir, no doubt,|
rould have beep. one of thé firxt edi-|§
ors to .attack “Wi; you, Bir are not |
nly guilty of thin sume ret for whieh | 4
ou would condemn others, but by the}?
reduction of” thls “eartten” sou have} *
mined_ the condemnation” at decent| *
fetroen and decent whites an well.” | 4
You, Mr. Bdltor. should know that| <
ou ace. put a Negro and accordingly'|®
sv8_averything_sn-commen- wit
ferro Fact, If the race goes up, you| j
© UP with It; 1f down, you also fall
very much fear. that St ts. men_of| g
cor type whe wl be retponalbte to]
Ne. Fetrogression of the race if thit| q
nfortunale time should comie. You p
nould"not “think that because you] F
r¥ an editor you can with propriaty’
reduce cartoons'tn derision, and maka n
tht “of any Nears whore work you.
re nat in’accora with, to the satis-|°
wtlon of the public. Your very dje-| x
receful cartoon, I take, Bir, ‘not to}
en 0 much of discredit to Mr. Gan |—
n7 a8 & refection and atigme wpon | h
Negro rhoe. A reader of your paper | &
f meny Yeers,.1 am now coming ta] @
etm Giegwet for it, tor from time] &
time you Ste proving yourseit ts} &
) ay astato‘, & contentioner and-aa|
wervetionset te “war -reWs-
eet, yather- than 9, ceestrective|
__:THE'NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 36, 3038
REP SSE
i spelkinie ioe UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT AS
Les “SOCIA’ FOR BUILDING UP LIBERIA FOR’ THE BLACK
--RACE, NQW “HONORED” BY FRANCE AND ENGLAND
i i ‘« _—_ vie a Py Ps: se
Charles- Dunbar King: President of the Black Republic of “Liberia, lias been: rewarded ‘for
his amazingly indecent treatment to the UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT’ ASSOCIA-
‘TIOM, which was.to ‘assist in the building up of a great Liberia'for the Black Race
For denying his own agreement with-the orgafiization and for blocking the progress of Africa
in general, and: Liberia in particular, President King has been “honored” by France and England,
the {WS. greatest iniperialist countries in the"world with ‘their millions‘of black’ ‘subjects.” France,
has made him a Chevalier of the Legion @§ Honor, in other’ words, has “knighted” hint, and the
Englislt sent 4 gunboat to escort‘him and ‘his wife from Libcria to Sierra Leone, a British “colony”
‘on the West Coast of Afrigg, where he was received with “equality” by the Governor. ~-
Surely: Prosident King’ will go down in history as the betrayér of our race and Africar Time
was when the native African was induced to‘part awith his valuables, his.gold and’diainonds and,
ivory, in exchange for red handkerchiefs and beads. And jn the year 1925, when Africa is,waking
fromher. slumber, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to. fook even the most, simple-minded, an
“intellectual” black-woutd lése’ his soul, if’only he gain a title and a ride in a warship, Simrely.
Charles Dunbar King will go down unhonored anid unsung by black men.
Although advised to the contrary, I had faith enough. in thé mart to'helieve that he-would
“hot have sqld his race for the usual attery, but, To and Deliold, ttre thing has-happened———2r—
Thanks, however, to the youth of the race, the fight'is still on. Black men. will yet be free.
men. .The'ery of “Africa for the Africans” will not be made in vain. *
” a . MARCUS GARVEY.
HAITIAN. APPEAL
“TO SECRETARY OF
~ STATE NELOG
Seer ten ence ee
“Sin: 1, have been requerted by the
Patrintle Uinfon af, Jtaitt and the
iiaitian jyopte an a whole to ton:
kratulite yout on your appolntment X
the preinternhlp of this country. From
the mere’ fact that yon have heen
choson by Beesldent Cootidgn to. Al
‘hie Important oiler, we are eunvineed
that you Witt apply anew Cartbhean
potles, whic will hasten the end of our
hutteringe.”
Yor the last ten years we have hind
the occupation fh the, sland, conntlons
orkmer, have -heeit committed In the
ania of the American, yrople wighout
hele knowing anything about I ee
who are rexnonsible have trled to make
tus pasa for x lot of savages. ‘The poor
country people’ are sometimes forced
19 .dlaagtive “emsotver an. cannibals
‘ayul to miffer theranalven thus -to he
ihotographed. Afterward, there horrl=
Ue plcuires nf our people axe. sent
oree hte tat the srmeiet Gers
fing Us. : -
Twentyetive high’ nchools have heen
sloxed throughout the country. And
the peer hie fren gaRReA to meh an
extent "that x Journalist dares vot
Paine: a yoivesto devinunen ralmuppro-
elation ef publle funds or exactions
of any Kind hy our present manters,
Text ho-Ix airexted and thrown Into
Sail, where he be subjected to all kinds
of “aufferinss and Auiniitations,
Since the living of the occupation
fn Halt, It haw snuffed out aver 5,000
lives, Ta justify. that tathnrous net:
the vietime were sald to hiawe been
Rrigands: or Cacor, In the dialect of
the country. Likely, Uiore who wish
fo have the occupation remain In the
Inland Indefinitels, will endeavor to
perwtinds yout to httece that 1 ix-née=
cavary for the maintenance of peace.
Quite probably they will teil you that
We have a ptexident. +
Yen. wa hniver hut he wan appolited:
hy Ih Commiinsioner Russel, desuite
the protestuilonn of the entire nation.
Ito If nothinse more than 2, tool In the
hands of the lntter, which ‘hn: unos: to
Rive legal appearances to lt his mis-
deeds. Mr. Rofno (the namo of the
de facto pronidet) ta not even an
Haitian: le tn but a French subject,
sho dexarted his flag during the World
Want 4
Whenever they make ‘Joan they
divide the’ amount, by’ plying them-
solver fabulous sums, Practically.every
petty Meer owne”an expennive, ear.
Toy “WHT Terr you~ ab
aye Deen built: but: they were built
ehrough hard Iabour, by our peasants
and prisoners, without one cent of pay
They will tell you about the presi
dential palace? hut {t was almost com-
plated When the ocoupation landed in
Hait!. *
‘The ‘people are statving: while the
members of the occupation are’ living
in Tuxery. 7 :
We are not at all diairbed ‘by-4he,
upfrue things-they will not fail to tell
hood “at my command ‘your. cartoon
0 Geepitetully: displayed against Mr
Gaevey in this. tenue of the 14th Inet
Ayainet a Begro who has macrtoed
ee mech In’ trying to. arouse, tm the
‘Meare. spirft of self-help, afocting
-ernecteqenees, while ftom, Ste
fer’ tee Gire condition. of yout -Tee
‘woul herdly-sucridee 0 megp es on
ray at erent trem roy Sere
509 earnentiy prey test ow Yr
'evees, wR seen Sad your Tait welt
eatery fe tee tate, ond we
Pek tentoation of inet be
Side Gow pox 0 Ve
wit b
Scere
‘wey may 4
SO ne | oe
The “Cotton Farmer” Says ..
.. President Coolidge Should
- Pardon Marcus . Garvey
rom the Cotton Farmer, Mist, Febn2
‘Thia colton plantation sider holds
no brief for Sturcus Garvey, is’ no
4 momberof the orxanizution of ihtch
he in “Provinional President of Africa.’
und we never expect to be, for ti
elltor haa alyayn helleved that while
Mareua! inteiiions were good, he was
fand Is mistaken In the remedy for the
Ae, nome real and aome wuppuxod, with
which our race {a aftiicted, and that he
could-une hin arent talentgs to a bette
puirpowa Inthe Americag” .-
Ho wan convicted some, time sine
and he rgpiained in jall, mot Uelng al-
Towel bohd fur some fime pending
tinea, £0 whieh he: was. plainly, en-
Uiled." Te was Anally allowed bond
| white the higher courts were cansider-
In hte ouse,— Now the-court-of nppents
han nustained the sentence and he
must now nerve five yeura in the pent-
tentiary at Atlanta rid pay x fine of
one thousund dollars for: tho traudu-
ent uxe of the mulls, Now doubitesn
‘Marcun tn hix zeat to have a ship
owned by “niggers” ant fying Kome
nort of x rag. did technically vivinte
the pontul Inwa,
It Ix piowslngs atraiige, however, with
ax many men we. hava, who hive. robe
‘Wert we “niggers” out’ of our Lodger’
money. grand todge money, bank do-
posits, Inturange-and even the ior
treanure of the church nnd Jost ft pluy-
Ing crapn down at inter Sfamte Craw-
ford's and now alrutting around with
stove pine hats, diamonds und #ilk
whirtx, that Marcus ahontd be: winxted
ont. for vain the malta to detraut
niger. :
Who in It x0 nolieltuoun about “ntr-
era” not betng rubbed. und whut are
thelr real motiven? There tn a rat in
the meal tub and the ext will xeon
catch hin, One ting about Garvey
unit hin gang, Hhey xre not fuabing with.
white folks In gn effort to amsoctate
with them. ‘They are not with hat tn
hand begging the white folkn for
money for them to have: w “talking
meeting” to nave the race, and they.
nro not fussing with white folky about
the white man's shine, butt were trying
to have a ship of thelr own even if
Ne falled. If President Coolidge would
Wo the right thing, he Would pardon
or narale Garvey. It would be bert to
pardon him far they, would frame up
on him we fear.
Now. whether President Coolldge has.
dhe course to pardon Garvey in tho
rice of the opponition of that element
nf northern hailed shirt, whito col-
red, “colored curb, wtatesmen, who
never have done a thing but have talk
Ing meetings, at the expense of somo
white philanthroplet.and yearn for the
lay to come when they could entirely
livorce ther\nelven from thelr own race
Ad ussociate with white folks,” ie
very doubttut to the mind of this cot
on plantation vaper. Gagvey and ‘his
Ik todny’ “are better friends to tho
silted. States~ than ~hts: memy” pur
juera and Uma will prove it.
you; /becaune wa ‘know that yoit will be
fair-to un and do your utmost to batter
otrenecting conditions: -whieh-are- an
bearable. T have the honor to be, alr,
Your obeatene marants
3 Oo 5
SBAN -
Ee! mah
ASPIRIN
rey
Say “Bayer Aspirin”
INSIST!” Untess: ‘909: the
“Bayer Cross” oa aes you!
are not als the .gomios «
Bayer ‘A: proved ake tig
millions and prengped ter Shy:
Se ee
sg ae oy eieya
Set" ie
Set pert ae gee
elle pete
DETAQIT DIVISION
STAGED GREAT
MASS. MEETING
| From the Detroit Mirror, March 4
The Detrait Division of the’ Unt
versal Negro Improvement Associa
Tdou staked Uie biseent and heat mas
meeting that hax ever Deen’ Staged I
the elty of Detrott on, Garvey. Day
March }. at Turner Hail.” ‘The pall wi
packed fo tex capaelts” by: Negroes wh
came to my homage two the greater
Nexto who” ever lived, “The - Hon
Marcus Garvey." ‘Tho association bat
agt apard the frat Sunday” of ever)
month ax Garvey Day, and Negroes
ai over the world shalt respect thi
woe ee
Marcus Garvey founded the Un
versal Negro Improvement Associe-
ion for the purpare of bettering
Negrote’ conditions. financially. edue
caslonuily, religiously, comnmmrctally.
politically and industrially. Tho ob-
Jective of the auvociation alno Ix to
pulld on the continent of Africa a
nuper-government for the protection
nd repreventation of ‘all Negroes re-
kardless of nationality. He muccecded
in alx yekra In orxanizing nix mailiton
Negrocs, and becntise of this enemies
of Negro liberty have sought to de-
sizoy him: but, ah, how little do they
Know that Marcus Garvey cannot be
Gestroyed and the seed that he has
planted will bear frult> even a thou-
ind years hence. Nenroes are deter-
miried moro than ever to Feileom thelr
miotherland, ‘fciea, und build *‘ereon
a government for Negroes. ‘The evil
designs and miachinatfons of France
and Britain have sought to kill: the
need of Necro Nationalism; but have
théy mucceeded? No, a thousand timen
no. They have added tnimenacly to
the work of Afrien’s redemption. They
thought that by: wending Marcus Gar-_
vey {0 fail they would have been able!
to destroy the Universal Negro Tm-
provement Association: Dut instead we
neo Negroes who were not, even in
sympathy with the {déais and {deas
of Marcus Gnévey are now coming in
the Univeraal Negro Improvement As-
soclation #0 much #o that we belleve
mihat Marcus Garvey in Jail t= more
powerful than Marcus. Garvey out of
gail" :
‘The outrage done to-Marcus’Garvey
anal form Peplenaia chapter in Nereo
hlatofy that will-give-them-inepization
to go on and bulla for thelr posterity.
‘The prosram rendered on Sunday: is
ofe not to be forgotten. Amérig those
who addressed the meeting wore Dre.
Stewart, Rainwater and J. A. Moore;
Rev. ‘MeDuffle, Hon, Fred Williams,
ax-prealdent-of the Datrolt branch
the N. A. A.C. P., and Roy. Javoph.
Goines, Dadtor of the Bethel AM.
Church,
‘A resolution was unanimously
passed, to bé sentto the Hon. Calvin
Cooliéae, Prealéent of the Usited.
States of America, requesting clem-
ency for our leader, serous -Garvere|
Thess men spoke with eloquence of
the good work Mérens Garvey bas
done end 18 doing.. and. they dedicate
iMemenives to te working ef te
UN. A 3
‘The keynote was touched when Rev.
domes saié-that W. RB DuBols and
mis’ cohorts were responsible “tor ihe
ncapeerationot Marcus Garvey. WRI
mon, na sald were accustomed to Diol
Negro Yeotern, we much so that th
mayor of, Detrelt Ya trying (079m 6;
jester toy the Noaroes of Detrolt, bat!
ine. time, ian come when Heavoes wil
so Wenger tolerate any bead- poked Joed-
ere. Aa Tony. Gomes platires Bargne|
ara wits movtaain nov Gobet
ab ‘now thi pati
raz. $0 the toute whe Didetet, and 6d
me, Se and wien oe Sit
anata on Garvey. peed. py.
Sica sare
io tar: deeeenney”
one i hiever wae
i aE 9+ viowe’ be Seon oh See
obi os nao oa
ae ent ae
VIRGIN ISLAMBERS FIGHTING: ARO
o> FOSOME SELPOETERMINNTION
«By CASPER HOLSTEIN |
President Viggin. lalande Cengressiona
Councit’ -
Only two weeks ago at the local lec.
ture forum of the New: York’ Board o}
Edueatio#i, the question’ of the’ Virgin
Islands came up for dlacussion, grow:
Ing out of the Iscture on’ the problems
How tucing’ the Bixty-ninth Congreve
Arndng thosenJn the audlence were
many nen “aig, woméh froia the
Inlanus, and thelr’questions and com-
nents helped’ to shed. additlonal Jinh
Seis suileet ae ieeenea BP De
Hubert 1taretuon, the Board of Educe-
Uon’s well knows Iéeturer on the trend
‘of the times.
‘One of the inost significant, Ruatures
ofthe lecture forum wax the way {n
which all tho Negroes present. made
{ta family matter and were Just as
deeply interented In Congron's:treat-
ment-of the Virgin Isinnders us they
ware In the Senate, Mllbuster” againet
the anutIsmchiog BIN, Thecgeabsect
waa suclently aired for the public
opinion “ot Negro Harlem to dlow
Uhrough. It. And. the white portion of
‘Une amdjenice ated necured to enjoy the
Alsouuadon and handling of the subject.
‘Thin local and timely Interest in
the Virgin Telands on the part of New
York Negroes ts (0 Dp utiliaed bY the
Virgin JJetands Congressional Council,
which proposed in the very near future
to wecure the nervices of Dr. Harrison
for a -publle lecture on the eae aub-
Ject, the: proceeds “10 go (0 the educa-
Uonat.tund by which the young atd-
dents from the Virgin Ielunds are aap
ported at Hampton Institute, Virgials,
But the timeliness of the opie te
not merelystocal. Certain resent re
marks in the Inaugural address of
Prenttent Coolldge of March 4 seemed
cent developmenta_1i the Virgin Tale
ands. The President expressed hope
and good will in? that unlque state
document wit so much fervor and
sincerity that it gives encouragement
to our neople to nersevere in thelr af-
forts 10 abolluh naval, government 1p
‘only added thousands of members te
the UN. 1. A. by Sending Garvey’
‘Adunts, because men who have neve
thought of. the organization befor
have told him that owing to the In-
Justice done to Marcux Garvey tho;
will from now and. forevermore -<up:
wert the Ideals of Gurveylim, Dott
Biorally and financially.
‘Tho lawyer's statement to the pres
of the Injustice done. to Marcus Gar-
vey and Marcus Garves's Message. to
Negroes of the “World were reed by
the executive secretary, Ned. A
Craigen, with“emphasia and clearness
band tears from many des.. were
vistbless 2
‘There {8 & question -of supreme tm-
Portarien that should “be erlously
Welghed by every well-thinking mem-
ber of the Race, more esncclully: nx
Uiefe attention In’ being duly engaged
In tho progrens of prejudice, disceimt-
naiton, jim-crowlnn, negregation. and
Uistranchivement whose colostat mag-
nitudes are aelf-evident. We cunnot
doubt the {uct that the tduchings of
Marcus Gurvey wt change conditions
Which have stood for centuries in, the
world. Nothing happens to any peo-
ple without God's cognizance and per-
misnion, thus the wicked acte of men
Ue often turns to glory. .God allowed
un to be taken from our” quiet, homes
in Attica, Liko tho children of Israel
who-sroaned under Bxyptian bondage
for over four hundred: years, "God in
Hie Inserutabe wisdom also permitted
the sons and daughters of Ham to be
brought to the Western Hemisphere
of bondage, ang.during tbls period of
time ‘Maycus Garvey was born to
shape the Negroes destiny.
When ‘some fature historians shall
take up thelr pens to sot down notes
in comparing the rise, progress and
decling-of nations of the-times, there.
will also arise in the: horizon of-thelr,
dark pagt. the Drilitancied which. shail
blond the then existing. glare of the
fast rising meteors which. shall dot
the: celestial “dome of .the canopy of
existence in one harmonising whole
ea to Muminate— wi ie
Deighiness the “pathway of thelr
march-from a land of slavish bondage
to the dignity of a noble nation and
& potential people. Yes, when. Ethio-
pla ahall stretch ‘forth her hands unto
God and Marcus. Catvey's, Ideallenn
and dream shail be realized. :
FT ee aie ee ‘the
White House, Weshinetah, 0. Cc.
ss Mareh'tnd; 1836..
To. Hon Calvin Coolidge, Pres: U.
‘Watte Mouse, Washington, D.C.
We, & National Ori ‘Dereby
pray’ that ou rout shimente te 20
sencese. Garver, Pracigent -General
Ubiedtbal -2esre. 2rorseeenteh spot:
elation, pow confined Ii ‘igen
pc? Eile Meutenl Union ot werd
oe Wetatane ‘ant naletere of |
B,D. W. sari, Wark V-Oom,
set noaltees Meee De me:
ee eT Pe
a ee
a Spor.
a see ee
the Virgin islands.and win for thelr
|intapiante the statuo-of cicero
tie United Staten, For: these. things
We look to Congress, But the last
baie oey momar en pers
Tative, bills In the course of two ses.
dione’oa af sot of mubsacie ale I
we uwant results we aust Se. up and
Suan "erasers Seite sor pices
siuct be trossht to beat’ cpon Coe
Pear engere gerne
Tecan or sie etl ines are
Bey ts ed tay ie eevee
acering-the-promive whch lt wage
is yarrvagnen Bidet once the ‘olande
data thet ce bobs toe Bae
Ae rec bp cue uceeent eg
Sula anger eorigeen
See duit geen bee
Bicloraaa consults hao ack mre
decien Gentle uu oe tie pon
Bic ua sons oc he eeasipe eons
nse ee Ne ae
If Virgin Isluiitet’’ here and in the
aban wore ts erie ten he peor
Sie by mereis usu key ae
See ts ibs bak ten canis oe
lly vkcreor sprue conpresounel
Sonia Wonk cout cccce ae aes
Soa omc Saas tan bs
oS Gh auc at cere came
We eohatr ar wale mace moan
meee citaa ect ee ite
sec oC ihe thuseee eiieh Wer tea
ziet they ve ean te aoe of cor
cine waa Suan of uae wsieee
eats: tet Coeual aenbaoratei
The only organization witch hae been
Se an, creme anion
SR ein istnet Cocotte:
Se oe eee cee
bas ben hottier ka weowted eeatinge
Arvatecpete Hak on" tho second ant
third Sunday) of ench fionth, Its pro
Se HORT wae relleeal
Congrensionsl action. bul Inchides eau-
inset catoatk ond coral ont ne
Traciea of tele areuneation are about
Bee aes
iaruia inuinie ware bece te oe
site nuke ue eenees and Toa
ond compare them with: this and other
Sranntzations {a the aunie field. .-Tho
Scench neeeiweyy acid teegaly
Bil te ee ae atceeee Coon
i i ets wo dee ee
ano of the reasonn why ft han so mani
(lends, gven among thone on the out-
sere cee ae ee ae,
ee ea ae coe
= estas coc
or ew geht MP petro Boom the Vie=
of aataar oer Ihe ake comes Cad
its objects hall have heon realized the
eer waka ner tener
I Sie acta caus cut th toon
pt at foe ee ee
Ren aus uettee oc Serpe and
Berg te mreane eer cears
W does the wath of eorlving ine sno
Be Oe ot chat ea ves Core
Ser a on cate ale rohan oe
mend onthe: Se ant pene ot
aie 3
$6.45
Sie sa cere
6-Shot Finest ¥
Perfected Revolver
sae ances a aa Ge
BRON EP dtrttet cna lt be |
‘Twe Letters
Ba he escheat
wetteen "
cwener years
. ao the
socom
_. ecumety
Mere. 3. B,
Bouvtend, «
‘Prestimes. :
° y
June 2, 1904, she writes:—
e ‘For prnikera™ fon cen
Furcag 6 ths top af may Sean
toration. ily entire “syotean "ee-
game involved sad I worse,
Weseemed as if T ould’ oot reconct
foam by coeen cock at Ce
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woe age
oa es :
DRAWING POWER OF THE UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVE MENT ASSOCIATION IS MORE AND MORE MANIFESTED
Thousands Throng Liberty Halls at Every Meeting—The Much Exploited Theory That Negroes Cannot Stick Together Has Been Exploded—Marcus Garvey and the U. N. I. A. Have Given the Negro a New Vision
THE DISCIPLES OF GARVEYISM ARE SPREADING THE GOSPEL WITH GREATER ZEAL THAN BEFORE—ARE BRINGING INTO THE FOLD THOSE WHO BEFORE SCOFFED AT THE MOVEMENT—GARVEY SENDS MESSAGE OF CHEER FROM PRISON
Mrs. Garvey Warns the Negro to Make Plans Now for Future Preservation of the Race—African Redemption Is a Certainty, Says Mr. Quattell—Hon. C. S. Bourne Tells of Satisfaction of Claims Against Liberty Hall—No Danger of Its Being Sold
LIBERTY HALL, New-York, Sunday Night, March 22.—The drawing power of the Universal Negro Improvement Association continues to manifest itself in the great and ever-increasing crowds of people who throng Liberty Hall Sunday night after Sunday night, despite the fact that the leader and moving spirit of the organization, Marcus Garvey, is removed from the scene of activities. Like faithful disciples of a worthy cause, the followers of the organization having completely recovered from the temporary shock which they suffered when the law laid-hands on their leader and threw him into prison where it was thought his influence would end, are tenaciously sticking to the organization which has been given to them, are supporting it with every ounce of their energy and making it a stronger organization than it was heretofore. Judged by the nature of things, the imprisonment of Marcus Garvey has done more for the Universal Negro Improvement Association than any other single act could have accomplished, for it has proven to the world that Negroes, like other races of people, can stick together and fight together even when the odds are against them and adversity stares them in the face.
The meeting tonight was full of enthusiasm and every one was cheered by the message sent by Mr. Garvey and delivered to Liberty Hall by his wife, expressing confidence in his followers and complimenting them on the splendid way in which they were rallying to the movement. Hon. Percival L. Burrows, Assistant Secretary-General, presided over the meeting and the speakers were Mr. Francis N. Quattell, a member of the Port-of-Spain (Trinidad) Division, who has been transferred to the U. N. L. A. headquarters, Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey and Hon. C. S. Bourne, the Chancellor. Mr. Quattell, in his maiden speech, made quite an impression and declared that the redemption of Africa was a certainty if the followers of the organization persisted in rallying to the standard of the Red, the Black and Green, following their leaders and contributing generously to the organization.
Mrs. Garvey, whose charming oratory has endeared her in the hearts of the Liberty Hall audience, was given, a warm reception when she rose to speak. She sounded a warning to Negroes everywhere of the doom which awaited the race if they did not, at this time, organize themselves, keep organized and lay for themselves a sound economic foundation. The world, she said, has undergone a chance. Since the World War the statesmen of every nation were so arranging affairs as to take care of the interests of their particular group, and it was for the Negro to follow suit and make-provision for the perpetuation of the race or face inevitable extermination.
Hon. C. S. Bourne spoke briefly and informed the members that a satisfactory settlement had been made with the claimants against the organization whose claims had placed Liberty Hall in jeopardy of being sold. He thanked the members for the support they had given in bringing about this result and assured them that their interests were being carefully guarded by the men who were in charge of the affairs of the organization
Following is the text of the speeches:
MR. F. X. QUATTELL SPEAKS
The first speaker was Mr. Francis X. Quattell, until recently a member of the Port of Spain (Trinidad) Division. Mr. Quattell drew a vivid word picture of the horrors of slavery, tracing its history from the day when John Hawkins, of Plymouth, England, landed on the coast of Guinea in Africa and commenced the abomitable traffic, selling for a pittance the native Afri-
CATARRH STOPPED
IN ONE DAY
Hawking, *splitting*, choking *Catarach* and *Bronchial*, *Anatina*, *Head*, *Nibes* and the needles need not be drowned any longer. "Now it is possible for those who suffer from this disease one day's time with the W.-R. Formula," is an amazing statement of one who has taken the necessary steps. Formula is bringing joyous new health and life, where everything else had failed. "I want to say that my Catarach was absolutely stopped the first day," says P. A. L. Hewitt. "My nose was continually filled up, causing my head to be stopped up. I was not entirely hawking and spitting and was a source of great embarrassment before and after and misty, but I was now enthusiastic and joyful, and I was going left the day after that this result was treated called W. Formula, and I feel God gave me."
cans, who were there transported as slaves to different parts of the world. That disgraceful blot and stain on the annals of the human race, he said, will not be erased until the plans of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, under the indefultigible leadership of Hon. Marcus Garvey, for the redemption of Africa, shall have been executed. The redemption of Africa, he said, is the only event that can annot for the atrocious crimes committed on the Negro, and he predicted that the day will come in the not distant future, when the Negro will occupy a seat at the League of Nations or some other tribunal of the world and demand that an indemnity be paid to the Negro for the humiliation, disgrace and atrocities that have been committed" upon him; and he foresaw that tribunal reaching the unanimous decision that England immediately and unconditionally surrender her African possessions; to the Universal Negro improvement Association as indemnity to the Negro race.
Victim of a Plot
The hero leader, Marcus Carvey, the speaker said, was thrown into prison because he dared proclaim the truth and because he manifestly practiced the actual truth at every available opportunity, and tonight he stands behind the barn of Atlanta prison, the innocent victim of disgraceful international plot.
The African Patriotic Spirit
During his association with the
activities of the Universal Negro Impro-
vement Association, Mr. Quaiteli
said, he will pre-eminently keep before
the members of the normalization, Africa
and things African; for he wished to
foster that great love for Africa. As
the American is willing to die for
America; as the Negroman is over
willing to die for his country; as the
German is willing to die for the father-
land, so also must the Negro live for
Africa, cherish the name of Africa in
theRepository of the heart, and pro-
vide Morgan Gougery as our leader,
our president, our king, and our sult,
and for our willing to any moment to
cherish Africa.
What We Can Achieve
Challenge. We promise that that we
fight it really and fight it to Nigro blood
hospital, surgery, pain.
the altar of greed that has brought about the monstrous achievement of building the mighty British Empire That being so, what he inquired, can we of our own free will accomplish if we shall only rally around the standard of the Red, the Black, and the Green, follow our leaders, and contribute generously to the organization? Can we not be able to accomplish the redemption of Africa as our greatest achievement?
Laying a Commercial Foundation If Africa is to be redeemed by the Negro, Mr. Quattell said, we must begin by laying a substantial commercial foundation. Commerce is the foundation upon which nations have been built, and when our leader Marvin Gauley called for ships and more ships he was perfectly correct, but ships without proper provision for their intenance are unsuccessful. He urged therefore that the members of the organization give their unstinted support to the steamship proposition launched by the organization, for it was the means whereby the Negro would become a factor in the commercial world and be recognized as such by the other nations of the world.
MRS. AMY JACQUES GARVEY
SPEAK$
Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey was the next speaker. She said she differed with the previous speaker when he hoped that some day the British people would be so overcome with retribution for all the atrocities they have committed against the Negro that they would voluntarily turn over to the Universal Negro Improvement Association the colonies which they now hold. That would be a most Christian and altruistic act, she said, but we all know that in this world of materialism—in the Struggle for superiority and the survival of the fittest, there is no Christian, moral or ethical purpose, holdin the actions of any nation. It is merely a question of bread and butter—every man for himself, and the Negro, therefore, must look out for himself, England existed, she said, on the raw products which she was able to get from the outside world, and it was the black subjects in the British possessions that were feeding the English people. They would starve and if they could not get raw material to manufacture, and the English people are not going to turn over to their African possessions so easily. Some terrible catastrophe would have to happen before they would do that. It was for the Negro, therefore, to look out for himself, and that is the reason why Marcus Garvey sounded the toosin six years ago throughout the world telling the darker people to look out for themselves or they will be exterminated from this earth. It is evident, to the average person that if the Negro, does not organize and keep organized, and place himself on a good economic foundation, he will starve to death and be eliminated altogether. That is a situation that every one should realize and provide against. It is not a question that concerns the American Negro or the West Indian Negro or the African Negro, but it concerns the Negro everywhere, and, therefore, the Negro must hold hands and hearts together and work toward one solution of the Negro problem.
A Changed World
Since the World War the world has undergone a change. Statesmen are arranging the world so as to take care of their own particular group, and it was for the Negro to organize himself to take care of his particular
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group. Outside of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, where are the statesmen of our race who are looking out for the future of the race? All of the men that have been criticizing and abusing Murcus Garvey—what are they doing to take care of the Negroes of the world in an economic, industrial or political way? They are doing absolutely nothing but making provisions to protect their own personal interests. The other races of the world have laid and are laying plans for their own protection and it is for the Negro race to have its own program and its own leaders to take care of its interests. Such a program the Universal Negro improvement Association has laid, and it behooves every Negro to shoulder his responsibility and join in this great universal movement that has for its object the protection of Negroes everywhere.
Mr. Garvey's Message
Continuing, Mrs. Garvey said she received on the previous day a telegram from Mr. Garvey conveying a message to Liberty Hall. It read as follows: "Congratulations and best wishes to Liberty Hall for the solendid work being done. I feel that I can depend upon them for the perpetuation of the cause." She also received a special delivery letter from him in which he said: "If I remain in prison long enough, when I come out I will give a new thought to the world." This statement, Mrs. Garvey said, struck her as being significant. Marus Garvey's enemies thought that by putting him behind the bars and branding him as a jail bird and a convict as he had been caricatured in some of the Negro newspapers, would make him feel disgusted with life and if they did not do away with him he would do away with himself. But it has happened differently. Marus Garvey is behind the bars. It is true, but he is studying; he says he read nightly until the lights go out and is in the library of the prison every day. He believes that his imprisonment was arranged by Providence so that he would have the opportunity to concentrate and make larger plans for the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and the Marus Garvey that comes out of prison will be more powerful and will be a man of deeper thought than the Marus Garvey so that went into prison.
Can't Cage the Spirit
Mrs. Garvey warned the members of the organization not to be downhearted. Let the enemies think they have put over anything on us because they have not done so far as Marcus Garvey is concerned. The only thing, said she, that would make Mr. Garvey Litter is the feeling that after preaching the gospel for six years he had not made any disciples. But it is fact that he has created disciples and the Spirit of Garveyism is rampant: "You may bat the tiger, but you don't bag his spirit." This tiger is not a mere animal; it is a spiritual being called the Universal Negro Improvement Association and it cannot be bagged.
She implored the members of the organization to carry on the work; to read good books pertaining to the race and gather all the knowledge they can, and, in conclusion, she made a special appeal to the women of the organization to support their men and give them encouragement in all they do to promote the interests of the organization.
HON. C. S. BOURNE SPEAKS
Hon. C. S. Bourne is the next speaker. Alluding to the efforts which had been exerted by the enemies to jeopardize the interests of the organization in so far as depriving it of its ownership of Liberty Hall, he was glad to inform the members that a satisfactory settlement had been made and there was no more danger of losing title to the Liberty Hall property. For this he was grateful for the splendid co-operation of the members of the New York Local and also the members' of the outside divisions. The enemies of the organization, he said had demonstrated their weakness in handing themselves together to fight the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Unfortunately 75 per cent. of the individuals who are fighting the organization are Negroes like ourselves, and it was pathetic to think that some Negroes were endeavoring to frustrate the plans of the organization when it is considered that. If the Universal Negro Improvement Association succeeds every Negro must succeed. He wanted to tell the enemies that they have failed absolutely in their purpose to destroy the organization, for today it is stronger than it was before. They thought that by taking away our leader, Marzus Garvey, they had succeeded, but we are giving them the lie. Marzus Garvey's physical body might be in prison in Atlanta, but his spirit stands on the platform of every one of the 367 Divisions throughout the world; from the prison he has given an impetus to the carrying on of the work.
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ATLANTA, Ga. March 16- An interesting feature of the inter-racial movement in the South has been the organization at inter-racial student groups in a number of college centers, by which white and colored students are brought together at regular intervals for the exchange of views and the promotion of understanding. The results have been gratifying in every case. Misapprehension have been cleared up, knowledge has taken the place of running and preconception, and confidence and good will have supplanted suspicion and prejudice. The following story shows how the plan works.
At an early meeting this year of the Atlanta group, made up of students from three white and three colored colleges, the question of higher education for Negroes was raised. One white student very frankly said that he did not believe in it, he thought it unnecessary and undesirable. He was asked to bring it at the succeeding meeting a paper in support of his view, while a colored student was asked to prepare a paper on the other side. With much interest the group
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At the next meeting of the committee the white student was called upon for his paper. He replied: "I haven't any. When I began to look into the subject I found I was wholly mistaken. My views are completely changed. I believe now that colored students should have the same sort of educational opportunities that other people have. Not only so, but I think we ought to do something about this matter. A great many people still think as I used to, just because they do not know. Let's go to work to get the facts over to them through the press and otherwise."
The March number of the Southern Workman, published by the Hamilton Institute Press, contains as leading article an address delivered by Rev. John Hopkins Denton, of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York, on Founder's Day, entitled "The Spirit of Armstrong." This address makes use of the remarkable person
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work done by Miss Georgia Washington in her thirty-two years of service in the "Black Belt" of Alabama. The School of Education at Hampton Institute is described in detail in an article by William Anthony Aery, its director; and a vivid account of Louisville's welfare work for colored people is given in John Marshall Ragland's article "The Negro in Louisville." Editorials on the Phillis Wheatley Campaign and the Tuskegee Conference also appear.
Let's Put It Over
. ____
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1955 been accomplished in that way. Perhaps it will have to be in that way that they must continue to be accomplished. Supreme Court
President-General Garvey's hopefulness, his disposition to look on the bright side and labor to make it possible where it does not appear, is as the breath of life to the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. They are convinced that they have a leader who has ideas and courage, and that inspires them to trust him and labor for the success of his ideas. In the last issue of The Negro World, President-General Garvey, in his front page article, among other helpful and encouraging things, said:
"It is true that twentieth century materialism has so scattered the interested races and nations that the realization of human ideals becomes remote, but we dare not sink or destroy holy principles because of the wantonness and soullessness of our age. Time cannot save itself; it is for us to save and reduce Time; hence, the work that lies before us is not so much to identify ourselves with the scattered purpose and greed of others as it is to create for ourselves a central ideal and make our lives conform to it in the singling out of a racial life that shall know no end.
"It is unfortunate that we should find ourselves at this time the only disorganized group. Others have had the advantage of organization for centuries, so what seems unnecessary to them from a racial standpoint becomes necessary to us who have had to labor all along under the disadvantage of being scattered without a racial aim or purpose.
"No race or people can well survive without an aim or purpose. We must know beforehand the progress of our existence. Our racial program of today is a united, emancipated and improved people. We need improvement in every line—socially, religiously, industrially, educationally and politically. We need the creation of a common standard among ourselves that will fit us for companionship and equitable competition with others."
We shall gain but little by calarging upon the viewpoint presented here by President-General Garvey; we shall gain much by a close study of what he says. We can accomplish nothing without a purpose, and when we know what we want and are united in the thought and effort to get it, we are more likely to get it than not. Stand firm. Be of one mind. Labor for the given purpose. That is the business of the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and it is Big Business.
THE TEST OF INDIVIDUAL WORTH
WE are all on earth for something which it is our business to find out before the first twenty years roll by. Maybe we didn't ask to come, but it is up to us to make the best of it while we are here. Many times folks get the "blues" and ask themselves this question: "Why must I endure all this trouble and how can I stand it?" Your troubles may be sad enough, but remember, you are not the first one on the record. You may have an unknown comrade who arrived in the world at the same time you did. His troubles may be ten times worse. The only sensible thing to do is to grin and bear it, as grinning does much more good than crying. Always laugh when you can: it is the cheaper medicine. Merriment is not well understood as being the sunny side of human existence.
There are folks who bring things to pass and are proud of their achievements. We cannot blame them. We all have a certain reserve of chest expansion. There are people who put on a few "lugs" because they have done something worth-while with their earnings. Just because we have not been judicious in the spending of our earnings why be jealous of those who have been?
We are prone to criticize when things do not go to suit us. It is easy to say, "I'm all right, the world's all wrong," but it is a hard proposition for us to straighten out our own affairs. If the other fellow goes you one better at anything give him a pat on the back that comes from your heart and wish him well; there is no charge. Some of us after arriving in this beautiful world have not found out definitely what we are here for, but that does not hinder us from encouraging the fellow who knows his mission and tries to live up to it.
EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS
EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS
Negro World
81 West 130th Street New York
Telephone Number 2177
A paper published every Saturday in the interest of the Negro Rare and the National Negro Improvement Association by the African Communities League.
R. THOMAS FORTUNE
MARCUS JARVEY
MARY MARTHA JARVEY
NORTON G. O. THOMAS
PEBOL V. REEVES
PROP. M. A. FIGUEROA
BUSTON R. MATHEWS
SUBSCRIPTION RATES TO THE NEGRO WORLD
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Entered as second class matter April 18, 1919, at the Post-office at New York, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879.
PRICES: Five cents in Greater New York; seven cents elsewhere in the U. S. A.; ten cents in foreign countries.
Advertising Rates at Office
VOL XVIII
NEW YORK, MARCH 29, 1925
No. 7
The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained in a Negro World advertisement.
LET'S PUT IT OVER
THE ASSOCIATION UNITEDLY FRONTS THE WORK TO BE DONE
THOSE who expected that "when the shepherd was taken the flock would be scattered" have been greviously disappointed. From all parts of the world we have received information that the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association not only stand firmly together to further the work of the Association, but a great many have expressed a willingness to serve the term of imprisonment of President-General Marcus Garvey, as his freedom would mean more helpfulness to the race than theirs. "Greater love lath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." President-General Garvey has done that for many, and it is unusual and gratifying to find that there are so many, who stand ready to do even so for him.
The members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association show a similar devotion to their organization as the followers of Mahatma Gandhi, the great East Indian leader, show to him and his organization, and a willingness to deny themselves and sacrifice their personal interests and freedom for him which has no parallel in history, as far as we know. When the supreme hour in the life of Jesus came only one man of the multitude and a few women stood by the Cross. A man who can inspire that kind of devotion is to be reckoned with, even though he were dead.
The united membership of the Universal Negro Improvement Association fronts the work to be done with brave hearts and abiding faith; and that is more satisfying to President-General Garvey than any other assurance that could be given to him. He wants, above all other things, that the Association shall live and labor for the accomplishment of the ideals which brought it into existence and which promise so much for the welfare of the race, not only in the future, but now. The members of the Association have shown that they share his aspirations and hopes in this respect, and it is good that it is so.
Let us stand firm and immovable and fight the harvest home. It means race salvation so to do.
PRESIDENT COOLIDGE ENDORSES GOVERNMENT BY PARTY
Young people should take more to the professions. When it comes that kind of work they are hard to find.— Tampa. Bulletin.
DURING the late Presidential campaign many Republicans bolted their party nominees and platform and went after "strange gods." Among these were Senator Robert M. LaOllette of Wisconsin and the radical members of the Senate and the House of Representatives. The leaders of the Republican party in the Congress determined to read these bolters out of the party and to deprive them of the many privileges they had enjoyed as Republicans. It was a drastic way of doing things, but if government by party is to continue to be the rule in our system of government it was the proper thing to do. The action not only included the bolters in Congress, but those of the rank and file throughout the country.
Felix von Luschan in his latest book writes: "The differences between races, especially those regarding intellectual and moral qualities, are by no means as great as the differences between single individuals belonging to the same race. There are no inferior races, but each race has its inferior individuals."—Seattle Enterprise.
There must be an increase in individual capability. Race business executives are depending less and less upon their own knowledge, and becoming learners father than leaders. They need to awaken, for the doom of the self-made man is foreshadowed. Business; following the course of law and medicine; is becoming a profession, with institutions of higher learning which will create professionally trained executives."—Washington Tribune.
Very naturally, President Coolidge endorsed the action of the leaders of the Republican party in Congress. As a good party man there was nothing else left for him to do.
We have a notion, however, that it is not the partisan who tricks to his party, right or wrong, who is the best citizen, but rather the man who can rise above party and vote independently for men and measures he deems best for the country. All the great reforms have had in this country have been brought about by the independent voter. Slavery was abolished in that way; so was the spoils system, with the substitution of the civil service system we now have for it.
The old saw about a newspaper should know everything going on in the community is bunk unless there is a disposition on the part of all interested parties to co-operate. Half the news gathered on any paper, daily or weekly, is the outcome of the desire for publicity on the part of the working few who really do things and tips from outliers—Indianapolis Freeman.
The Universal Negro Political Union of the Universal Negro Improvement Association stands for the principle of independent voting; that is, instead of being blindly partisan, its members are expected to weigh men and measures in any given community, state or the Nation, and to decide to support those that appear most favorable to them and their interests. It is only by adopting and adhering to such a course of action can we hope to get a larger measure of the benefits of citizenship than we now enjoy in the United States, the West Indies and in Africa.
There is a growing demand throughout the nation for better treatment of human kind. The South is not the only section that would profit or is profiling by these meetings. While some of us may think that matters should be more thoroughly discussed and more time given to important race problems in these communities, we must be encouraged to know that some effort is being made and the intricate problems are vital to us all are being clarified—Burnhamingham Reporter.
What on earth can the presence of respectable families of any race or group of people hurt in a community? Why can't our money and attention be used to help one to five who are poor? Why is it that we have to deport them with the wrong people? Why should we allow them to live in the same place as others? When will the treatment be made
metropolitan daily, has a peculiar place in the home. It becomes a part of the family, because its news stories concern the activities of the home town folks, and what deeper interest could be developed than among those, with whom we live and move. The community is the ante-chamber of the home, and the weekly newspaper the avenue that leads from one .ot the other. Our message is this: Give to your newspaper co-operation. Results will come back to you in a community asset—a wide-awake, forceful, influential newspaper, and a power in influence for good in your community. Denver Star.
There is nothing more distressing to a parent—even though he may be illiterate himself—than to be unable to give his child the advantages of an education. These conditions are alarming and should arouse the consciousness of the nation to overcome them. Illiteracy is the cause of vices and crime. The only thing that will successfully combat either and suppress lynching—burning at the stake—is by educating the masses—Bulletin- Appeal.
Mr. Garvey's Incarceration Wrong, Says Prof. Hart
WASHINGTON, D. G. — W. H. H.
Mart, founder of Howard Law School
and for 85 years, partner of criminal
law at that institution, declared
recently before the legal branch of the
University Negro Impersonation Association
that Marion Carvey had been wrongly inquestored, and, with proper legal procedure, could be归还 from prison within a fortnight.
He was introduced by Perry W.
Prichy as the principal in the firm
car one of its staff. The State of New
York which decreed that interstate
pursuers and not subject to State law
sweep car laws. He declared that Carvey
had been committed to prison on
the informed that he simply invigorated
court to one Danny in Brooklyn contained a felon, which led an immigration
collection for injunction.
(From the Florida Sentinel)
Every now and then we are given the occasion to cough up a reason or two in support of the opinion that the Negro's best friends are Southern white folks. The occasion this time comes from a Yankee who is down here in Florida spending the winter and who just the other night spoke to a congregation in a Negro church, and in speaking the Yankee let go a statement something like this: "You colored people need to exert more care in placing your dependence on those whom you believe to be your best friends."
Now, we may or may not know the impression the speaker intended to make; but we have an inkling that he was warning us against outing too much dependence on our good white neighbors here in the South. We're here and now to say that we can put all the dependence in the world on the people of Florida. In the first place, the white people themselves tell us here that they are our best friends. All the white papers say it editorially; all the white preachers say it from their pulpits and from our pulpits at the chance; all who employ Negroes say it; all who collect from Negroes for white insurance companies say it; all who captives from house to house among Negroes selling patent medicines or antiquated organs, or soap and perfume say it. White folks don't lie to Negroes. They don't have to. Whether they are right or wrong, in court or out of court, it's all the same as between white follow and black folios. They say they are our best friends. Who will dispute them? Reason number one.
The white folks think so much of us here in the South that they have agreed among themselves to do all of the work that we used to do, knowing that we worked too hard during slavery, and now we deserve enforced rest. The carpentry, masonry, blacksmithing, whitewashing, shoemaking, barbering, railroading, ditching; drinking liquor, gambling, guntoting, well—the white folks have dignified those jobs in the name of Union Labor so as to remove the stigma of equality with us, but they are doing the work. They love us so that they feel that anything more nutritious than air would be harmful as food for us. They want us to rest and sleep the rest of our days. What better friends do we need than those who, at the point of a vellum gun, will force us to retire from active service for our health's sake. It reason number two.
Our minds have been so taxed and our purges so drained paying spurious debts on land, on farm implements and fertilizer, on furniture, on clothing, on grocery bills, on taxes for this and taxes for that, and we have been so put to it to keep out of jail and off the chain-gang while at the same time we the devilish Klu Klux Klan to evade, the white people out of sympathy have decreed that the Negro's mind shall have a long vacation. We don't have to worry with books and pencils, blackboards and crayon. The white folks are such friends that they want to do all thinking forests, take all the schooling, all the manual training, all the agriculture, all the arts and all the sciences. And where else but the south, the white folks would make us wake up from our sleep and figure a little and do a little thinking. These good folks don't mean to disturb us now. They know what we have been through as nobody else knows and they are our best friends in seeing to it that we have a long peace of mind. Reason number three.
We shall not exercise the franchise.
That entails too much responsibility
on our tired, worn-out shoulders. No
one but a friend would think to relieve
us of that responsibility. Our
white friends do that down here in
Florida. Reason number four.
We are warm natured. A large,
clean, girly train coach would work a
hardship on us; so the white folly
down here hard us all in one-fourth
of a compartment car that we might
peek close in and keep warm and sleep
comfortably. These white follies
certainly look forward to our travel. They
are our friends indeed. Reason number
five.
And the southern white people are
their own nation and with their own
in their financial relation with the
individual Negro as with the group.
We can depend on getting a square
coal in silver matters. For instance.
Take all the money you pay in taxes
to the state and the county and the
city. Your schools are provided for
pupilage. We have good and good
and they learn in good manner in
these schools and more.
Which in the past few years has rung from shore to shore And you must live—yes, you shall live for years to come. That we may hear these more
As your sweet singing gained for you a noble place, So has it added laurels to your struggling race.
There Is Much in All Sorts Of Weather to Appreciate
The weather is the most talked of, most abused, most praised, most strangely deceitful, and yet the most constant and upward thing in our every-day lives. The weather furnishes a means of beginning a conversation, an excuse for not getting up mornings, a reason for travel, an alibi for poor business, a boon to the farmer, a benefit to the consumer, a difficulty for aviation, a job for government employees, and fortune for coal and ice dealers, an opportunity for circuses and chauauquas, a paradise for lovers, a cause for rheumatism, a subject for editorials, and another reason for radios, closed cars and fur coats.
"We don't have the winters we used to have," is a familiar expression. The fact remains that we do have the winters we used to have; and the summers, too. The apparent difference between now and then is psychological. When we were children the beautiful snow impressed us more and we waded deeper into it; the rain beat down harder because we were out in it more; the thunder clapped boulder because we understood it less and it terrified us more. Besides all this, the mind of youth takes deep impressions, mingles them with imagination — builds snow crystals in the joy of life which age receives as a crusty reality. But to facts.
An eminent authority says that there is pretty general agreement that within historic times progressive changes of climate have not occurred. In parts of the United States temperature and rainfall records have been kept for more than one hundred years. Taking New York City and New, Orleans as examples, he states that in a century of time at New York and in eighty-seven years at New Orleans, the yearly means have not varied more than five or six degrees, although it is shown that, rainfalls, show a much greater variation.
As in the story of the man who traveled extensively, but "always took his climate with him," and never, quite could find a suitable one, weather agreeableness is largely a matter of acclimation and mental attitude. Much as we like to dream of sunny isles and palm-bedecked avenues, the Almighty never intended that all of us should walk around in bathing suits, or spend all of our time frolicking after rabbits in snowshoes. So long as we are sober, industrious, happy, thrifty, co-operative and conscientious, we ought to take the weather for, better for worse, though the doing of this is a virtue mankind has been slow to adopt.
county and city boards, mayors and even an occasional governor, all drawing fat salaries from the public treasury which our taxes help provide. If these folks were not our friends would it be possible for us to enjoy this official recognition and these returns from our taxes? If the white people were not honest such a condition be possible? Reason number six.
We would not have the impression go abroad that the frequent lynchings; Florida in which Negroes are invariably the subject, are evidences of the white man's ill-will toward us. Far from it. We are lynched by our best friends. These white folks really love us to kill. And, we have no words with which to express our profound appreciation for their love and friendliness.
If these reasons do not satisfy those who have any doubts about the southern white people's dependence based upon their innate and traditional friendship for the good, loyal, submission, bat-in-hand darky, just let us know. We have not even begun to disclose the thousand and one reasons in substitution of the opinion that southern white folks are the Negro's best friend. We are purposefully with betting the best reason for the time when we will be drawn into a controversy by some smart plan who feels called on to question the soundness of our legislated such stuff. But brother, this argument is sound because it is based upon the logic of the settled south. We down here heart of our refinements our courts of justice, our brothers and our chiefly our government law and for the Constitution of the United States, and our institutional home and humanity.
Indeed such greatly improves the relationship between the white people and the blacks by these actions.
HEALTH TOPICS
BY DR. B. S. HERBEN
Of the New York Tuberculosis Association
Robbers
Gems, furs and money are not the most precious things which you and I can lose. Robbers are to be feared not only for their lightfingered propensities, but because in these days they seem to think nothing of taking life too.
Alexander the Great poured out his wrath upon Dionides the pirate—"vile brigand"—who had been captured and brought before him. Said the captive, "Because I have, but one ship I am, a 'brigand!' You, with a fleet, ravage the world, and are a 'conqueror.'"
The common cold is similar to Diroides, in itself that it does not threaten your life. On the other hand it is like Alexander with his huge fleet. It threatens your life in that it may bring up a whole host of troubles. Common colds may predipose to pneumonia, which you know, is very serious. Common colds, frequently present, may bring about infections which in the end produce heart troubles. Heart troubles are more and more serious to us as they are increasing, and are now the cause of more deaths than any other disease. If for no other reason than to prevent heart troubles, the common cold should be avoided. Kidney troubles, ear trouble, sinus trouble are some of the diseases which may follow the "insignificant cold." Insignificant indeed!
Frequent colds may so weaken a person and undermine the natural resistance which Nature makes within the individual that tuberculosis may put in its appearance. Colds do not "run into consumption," but they may have stirred up the sleeping germs of tuberculosis and may have given them a weak, unresisting body to work upon. Colds are like the plough in the field. They work the ground, and if the seeds of disease fall into that prepared soil, roots may take hold. This being the case, how can each of us prevent the unnecessary common colds?
The Race Must Have A Strong, Fearless Press
The Race Must Have A Strong, Fearless Press
From the Omaha Monitor
is becoming increasingly apparent that there never was a time in the history of our race in this country when an honest, sane, fearless and intelligent press was more urgently needed than today. As the race advances in intelligence, moraf character, wealth and self-respect, malignant and hostile forces oppose its progress and advance. These forces are not to be feared, but they are to be met and conquered. This can only be done by the moulding of a right public sentiment, and for this we need our own publications, which should be adequately supported and financed. The race-press is growing in power and influence and is continuing to grow, but it is regrettable that so many of our race are so short-sighted as not to appreciate the important work race newspapers are doing. They are meeting an imperative need.
We are not a pessimist, but an optimist of the first rank. At the same time, however, we are not ignorant of conditions as they are, and realize that they will be, better only as we use every ounce of energy given - us to make them better. Opposition makes one strong and that, we take it, is the Divine purpose back of the opposition which confronts our racial group today. Palpit and press have an imperative duty to perform in encouraging racial solidarity, setting good and self-respectful standards. We need to have embraced the constructive side of our racial life and thus the race grown in serving to do. It can be done and will be done more effectively as the race journal, magazine and newspaper are more adequately supported.
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HOW MR. MALLIET WAS CONVERTED TO GARVEYISM
Close Study of the Principles of the Association and the Membership and Mr. Garvey's Trial and Conviction Made a Convert of Him
To the Editor of the Nexro World:
As should be expected, writers and thinkers of diverse political, social and economic philosophies are rushing into print with their thoughts on Marcus Garvey, the Universal Negro Improvement Association, the Black Star Line, and everything that was ever or is now connected with what is known as the Garvey movement. Some of these, individuals are sane, intelligent, far-seeing; some are decidedly dishonest and insincere; others possess no rectitude of understanding whatever. Such differences of opinion on universally vital issues fill the pages of human history.
Of course, any man who has even a superficial acquaintance with past and contemporary events, especially with those events that are related to movements which have for their specific object the general welfare of any
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portion of humanity, ought to know that there will always be opposition; but it is the duty of all those associated with such movements to break down any prejudice and correct any misinformation that may exist, and thereby make convictions to their cause of those who oppose. It may not be possible to make converse of the reconciliable, but their attitude and propaganda can be shown to be either vindictive or ridiculous, which would disarm them.
Furthermore, it ought not to surprise or alarm any one if at times the opposition appears victorious, for this is the way of Nature. Out of the struggle for existence converse the survival of the fittest. And as no reasonable person can dare deny the ultimate triumph of right over might, justice over injustice, truth over error, there need be no apprehension concerning the future of the U. N. I. A. as the most potent factor working toward universal Negro liberation.
Many reasons, suggest that I state how and why I became directly interested in the work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and decided to speak out in its behalf. My change of attitude is the direct result of the trial, conviction and imprisonment of Mr. Garvey. Prior to his trial I entertained no positive opinions of his work; my attitude was that of a neutral, for I had not given any serious thought to the man and his philosophy, nor did it occur to me that great good might result from the movement. But like a thunderclap that shook the very foundations of the earth, the trial and imprisonment of Marcus Garvey aroused me from my indifference and urged me to stand for or against the movement. I therefore decided to critically examine the fundamental principles, methods and objects of the U. N. I. A. with a view to strict compliance with the outcome of a most rigorous rational analysis; I concluded beforehand that reason and not sentiment would be my guide.
I assumed, in thinking out the many problems presented to my mind by this organization, the attitude of the true philosopher, which is best expressed by John Griever Hibben in the following significant and remarkable manner: "The true philosopher," says Hibben, "is a brave spirit; dauntless to discover and, bold to declare, the truth at all hazards. He feels the inner constraint of his messages, and, as a prophet to his day and generation, he must needs, speak, though the whole world cry to him, 'Silence!' With singleness of purpose he would cheerfully sacrifice place, friends, church, country, for the sake of truth."
My next move was to visit Liberty Hall immediately after Garvey had been imprisoned and there see the reaction of the members of the association to the misfortune that had befallen their indomitable leader and themselves. The meeting I attended was held on Sunday night. "february 8. and, I was immediately impressed by the large attendance. I went to listen, observe, reflect.
the chairman. Mr. West, was very calm and performed his duties with much intelligence and dignity. The first speaker, Mr. Percival Burrows, was also calm. After Mr. Burrows came Bishop George A. McGuire, who, with his unmatched powers of sarcastic malaise, welcomed and thanked all "visitors" for being present, and who with his vivid imagination and proficiency, theological, philosophical and historical learning drew from all available sources analogies describing the love of the members of the J. N. I. A. for their leader and their loyalty to the cause which he so bravely championed.
I left the meeting satisfied with I I had seen and heard. It was very peaceful. Mr. Weston, Mr. Burrows and Bishop McGuire made it very plain to the audience that it was absolutely necessary for them, officers and members alike, to respect constituted authority; and they did not fail to remind those present that the Universal Negro Improvement Association is engaged in a grim intellectual, moral and spiritual battle.
I revisited Liberty Hall on Sunday night, February 15, a week later, and listened to a lengthy discourse by Mr. Sherill. He dealt chiefly with the international situation and its relation to Garvey's imprisonment. He gave an idea of what should be expected in the future, for the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association war one that aimed a death-blow to European influence in Africa. His was a masterful presentation of
the facts as they really are. Amy Jegrese-Garney was the next speaker, and she made a rather significant and necessary statement to the effect that the object of the U. N. L. A. was not race hate, and that they were too active engaged in the affairs of the race to pla revenge.
I must say here, that statements have been made in the past by those in authority that would make one believe that Mrs. Garvey's utterance on this particular point indicated a change of policy. But it may be that such statements were made while the speakers were over-enthussed and in a state of passion. And, after all, if Negroes did hate white people and plan revenge, exception could only be taken on purely ethical grounds, for who will deny, that Negroes have every reason to hate their oppressors and pray for "der tag"? But no one who really knows and understands black folk can truthfully say they are : engeful: Go where you will, a more loving, humane, loyal and just people will not be found; and this fact ought to be sufficient to convince all those who are alarmed that no hate is entertained nor any revenge planned by Negroes against any other race. Have not the Negroes forbearance and reliance upon the providence of Almighty God during their most trying times, under the yoke of slavery, attested to this truth, Negroes cannot hate; they do not know how.
While I sat in the audience I listened attentively to what was being said by those beside me, and I must say that no one expressed a word of dissatisfaction or despair; and the facial expressions of those I could see like a thermometer, registered optimism and hope. I also discussed the meaning, principles and methods of the U. N. L. A. with intelligent and illiterate members of the organization and they all expressed themselves as having a clear understanding of and being in accord with the essentials of the movement. The unity of thought existing in the ideals of the association and the firm resolve of its members to carry on to the bitter end are particularly marvelous and astounding.
As the thoughts of the gigantic lovers which resulted from the operations of the Black Star Line and the Negro Factories Corporation, the wicked work of the powerful opposition, the ridiculous and saint directed at the U. N. L. A. and its members, course through my mind. I wonder what is it that makes a people swear such fealty to this organization or movement. I wonder what is it that inspires a people not only to withstand huge financial losses like stories, but to make the launching of the S. S. Booker T. Washington a reality. I wonder what is it that made a people dig down into their pockets and supply $15,000 as ball for the man accused of defrauding them. I wonder what is the unrestrainable urge that compels a people to continue a death struggle, united like Prussian warriors, in suite of every conceivable obstacle that is put in the way of their forward march. There are questions that are indeed provocative, questions that provide food for thought, and it would not be an altogether useless undertaking if the irreconcilables who go painting around would essay to think them out, scientifically at least, and find the answers. Surely, the desire for purely material gain does not and could not exercise such compelling influence over the minds of any portion of humankind.
From my observations and reflections, I am forced to the conclusion that the so-called Garvey Movement is no fantastic dream of an egotist, for if this were the case, millions of others, many intelligent and reasonable, would have to be considered fantastic dreamers and egotists also; and as I have a clear conception of what Garveyism is and means, and as I know that its purpose and meaning fit in a rational and practical scheme of things, I must reject as absurd and malicious any propaganda which gives or tends to give to this movement a fantastic and an irrational character.
In line to conclude this discourse, I am satisfied that at the present time the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is one that an honest liberal thinker can support and, to my mind, every right-thinking man or woman of Negro blood owes it not only to himself or herself but to ponterity to rise in defense and support of the U. N. I. A., in this its time of need.
A. M. WENDELD MALLIET.
New York City.
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BRUTAL BRITISH CAPTAIN AND MATE HAD TO KNUCKLE
Continuation of Mr. Batson's Experiences as a West Indian Seaman in Africa — Called Natives "Swine and Cannibals" for Singing at Work
"Piston that bloody singing, you bloody carnibals, you pack of swine! Stop that bloody singing, or I'll come down there and kick the lives out of you!" "This was the voice of the third mate, a white boy about twenty years of age, on board one of the Elder Dempster cargo boats discharging cargo alongside the dock at Port Harcourt, nitty-mite miles up the bonny river Nigeria, West Africa. In the month of January, 1924. The men to whom he spoke were a number of natives working, as only the natives of Africa can be made to work, down in No. 2 hold. These men were "working like machines" and singing at the same time in their own tongue. I remember well, by the air which was just the same as if sung in the English tongue, the brynn "Jesus loves me, this I know, for the little tells me so."
This is true, and I believed, and still believe with these men, that Jesus does, but the third mate, a "Christian gentleman," evidently did not believe in what these men were singing and therefore became infuriated and bloodthirsty. I was in the saloon with my assistant getting the tables ready for dinner when I overheard these curses and threats coming from the lips of the third mate. My face became dull. My shoulders had reached almost up to my ears, and my heart was beating much faster than usual. "You bloody cannibals, you pack of swine," I repeated to myself. "And these men are black men, Africans in Africa, their own home, and I am a black man, a descendant of an African woman. Does the third mate know that he has addressed me also?" I asked myself.
Leaving the saloon I went out on deck and approached the third mate, and, calling him by name, I asked: "Do you think it is right and proper for you to be abusing these men, calling them swine and cannibals as you do?" "Now, look here. Eaton, I will hear nothing from you. Furthermore, I won't have you interfere with my duties as an officer of this ship," he declared. "You are going to listen to me, Mr. Third Mate," I insisted. "No, I won't, and besides I'll take you on the bridge for interfering with me while I am, performing my 'duties as an officer. Come on up,' he ordered. "Go on up; I'll be up there with you, don't be afraid." I assured him. Having appeared before the Captain on the bridge, the third mate charged that I interfered with him in the "execution of his duties."
"Why did you interfere, with the third mate, Batson?" asked the Canadian skipper.
"If curator, abusing, calling these men swine and cannibals and threatening their very lives are parts of the third mate's duties, then I must admit to having interfired with his duties, but it does not appear to me, Captain."
"But they are not civilized, Batson, and if he calls from swine and cannibals he does not refer to you. You are quite different from these men—you are like me," he offered.
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was representing them and they had all assembled on the main deck about 150 strong, watching the Captain, the third-mate and myself arguing the point. "If they are not yet civilized," I continued, that does not speak well for your people, who have been teaching, Christianizing and civilizing them for the past 500 years Captain."
"We have been watching you all along Batson. We know you were a 'propagandist', that's just what you are, a 'Bolshevik'. Your efforts are good, but we do not think you can do anything with them, not just now. Don't bother yourself they will be 'emancipated in time', he assured me; "let's forget all about it."
"Emancipated in time?" Why, Captain, I thought Queen Victoria had done that 90 years ago? However, you are right, Captain, they will be emancipated in time, and that is why I am now making this attempt to have them emancipated from the curses, abuses, and threats of the third-mate. In calling them swine and cannibals the third-mate has included me, since I am a black man and the son of a woman who was taken from this country to the Western world as a slave. I am not a propagandist not a Bolshevist, as you have accused me, but as a black man I feel exactly as you or any of your officers would feel if I or any other Negro on board should refer to you as being a pack of swine and cannibals. You would not be willing to tell me, but I do know exactly how you would feel, Captain."
"See, you have every one of those men excited, they are willing to do almost anything now."
"They will do, absolutely nothing, Captain," I assured him and waving my hand I advised them all to return to their work, with which they complied unhesitably to a man.
"He had no right to call these men swine and cannibals," shouted a native gentleman from below.
"What have you to do with this?" asked the Captain. Leave the ship at once of I'll have you arrested.
"I will do nothing of the sort," retorted the native gentleman. "I will see both you and the third-mate make medicines or another shipper take this ship out of Portharcourt."
It was the Captain's maiden trip to Vigiria, and the native gentleman in question unknown to both the Captain and myself was in full power to hold the ship up until all matters are entirely thrashed out. While at this gentleman's house on that evening I was surprised to have seen no fewer than twelve copies of the "Negro World" newspaper.
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LIVE NEWS OF THE WEEK
LIVE NEWS OF THE WEEK
Domestic
—Countoey P. Cullen, a young Negro who has won considerable fame as a poet, is one of eleven students of New York University who has been elected to the honorary scholarship fraternity of Tihi Leta Karpa in the university.
—The Ford Motor Company announces that construction will be started at once at the Ford airport of the largest dirigible mooring made in the world, to be constructed at a cost of $15,000, for the mooring of the Shenandoah and Los Angeles or any other craft of similar or even greater size.
— Forked cyclone, believed to have ridden in the Orkas, descended on Ampurpals and Cape Grideau, Missouri, and spreads death through Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama. Nearly a score of towns were virtually destroyed, 1,000 persons dead, 3,000 injured and thousands made homeless. It was the most disastrous cyclone that ever visited this country.
— Negro fraternal organizations are urging members of the Legislature of the State of New York to favor the bill introduced by Assemblyman Tope Billings, of the 21st New York District, to amend the honeymoon order law so that Negro societies will be accorded protection given similar white organizations by the State. Although incorporated, some doubt has always existed as to the legal status of these societies.
Foreign
- Platinum has been discovered in the Lydenburg district of South Africa, and this discovery suggests the possibility of a new and important source of this valuable metal.
- Reports confirmed at the Interior Department in Havana give a total of 68,750,000 pounds of sugar cane burned since March 17. Authorities are investigating, believing the fires to be of incendiary origin.
- Both Chinese and Christian funeral services were held for Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, late president of the South China government. The body will lie in state for twelve days.
- Negotiations for a commercial treaty between Germany and Belgium have been completed.
- American radio stations can be heard by subscribers to the southern German radio circuit. On a recent Sunday at midnight, a concert at Pittsburgh was transmitted by the Stuttgart (Germany) Station to us subscribers.
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GROSS CITY, Fla. March 18. An indemnity charging first degree murder was returned today by a Dixie County Grand Jury against Thomas H. Higginsbotham, D. A. Parker, E. W. Preset, W. G. McKenney, John H. Gins
burn, Chief Deputy Sheriff of the county, and Charlie Hirt, a Negro. They are charged with killing Lawn Barker, a Negro, on Oct. 19, 1944. The indictment charged that the defendants first beat, bruised and otherwise misrested Barker and then shot him to death. According to information available here, there is no connection between the death of Barker and the charge pending against Higginbotham growing out of the death of Martin Tahert, of North Dakota, in a Dixie County hunter camp about two years ago. Higginbotham was convicted of second degree murder and has been put liberty under bond awaiting a second trial.
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THE STRONG MUST RULE, AND THE WEAK WILL DIE, POLICY OF IMPERIALISTS
FOR the last six years Marcus Garvey, through his far-setting vision and knowledge of world affairs, has been sending warnings to every nook and corner of the globe where Negroes live, pointing out to them the grave dangers facing weak and unorganized groups in an age of world materialism and self-ness.
Some self-satisfied Negroes, who cannot see further than their noses, and are only interested in their immediate surroundings, laughed at him, others called him crazy. But when one follows closely the activities of world powers, and learns the policies motivating their actions, one is bound to admit, "of a truth he is right." H. H. Powers, a rather outspoken exponent of imperialism, gives us, as a weak race, much food for thought. In an article in the February issue of the Atlantic Monthly he says:
"Exploitation is the primary and legitimate aim of imperialism. The weak, the ignorant, and the slothful races cannot expect to remain undisturbed in their habitat. It is much that they are allowed to remain at all, a concession rather to the humanity of their better than to their own right. Interference, guidance and control are the indispensable conditions of this tolerance. We cannot leave them to their indoleft siesta if they hold in accidental and unconscious keeping the energies needed for advancing civilization."
This emphatic declaration speaks for itself. The writer goes on to show that weak and oppressed peoples all over the world are clamoring for self-determination, then he asks the question, "What would be the result of this much-invoked race-for-bearance, save give the child of the future a Hottentot for a father instead of a white man?" This is the crux of the whole situation. If white nations were to honestly and sympathetically help and train Negroes along the road to self-government, when they reached the highest possible perfection they would become the masters of the world. Their physical strength, prowess in battle, virility as a race, and adaptability to strange surroundings, would tend in a few years to produce a splendid type of black humanity, whose very self-sufficiency, would cause him to say, "I call no man master." Instead of the child of the future being a Hottentot, the man of the future would be a Negro.
The imperialistic writer closes his article with the arresting thought, "Will the world wait for child-peoples to grow to the measure of these requirements when it can displace them with better stock?" We add, the white race certainly is well protected by its racial thinkers and prophets, who warn their people continuously of the dangers ahead.
This policy of imperialism has been working out for years. Those who have vision see it, but some do not realize it until it is told them in plain blunt cruel words. The white man is determined to have all the world and its resources, if possible, for himself and his porterity. The yellow man has sensed this selfish purpose, and is marshalling all the physical, mental and scientific forces at his command and marching abreast of the white man to glory and to power. The yellow man's challenge to the white man is, "What is good for you, is also good for me, and I am going to take mine." The brown man within the last few years has opened his eyes to the fact that he, too, should organize his forces, at least to hold his native habitat and protect it for all times. Lastly comes the black man, late though he be, and says, "We are also in the fight for the survival of theittest. God Almighty made us a separate and distinct race, and apportioned to us the great continent of Africa with the command, 'occupy untitled' come."
Because of our failure to live up to the high purpose for which we were created, we have been scattered to the furthermost ends of the world, and kept divided through the subtle propaganda of those who fear our united strength. But Marcus Garvey came on the scene six years ago, with a message for his race. He showed them a picture of a world that had not enlarged its geographical boundaries, yet whose population was rapidly multiplying; that this immense mass of humanity was instinctively grouping itself racially, in preparation for the great "pushing off process"; that weak and unorganized groups were being robbed of the territories they occupied and were being gradually exterminated, so as to make room for the more powerful to expand. He pointed us to the vast continent of Africa, the richest in the world, that was being pillaged by bankrupt Europe to resuscitate its treasures, and to bolster up its valted superiority. Then he related to us the horrible story of the slave-trade, that had caused us to be brought from our native homes in Africa and distributed as cattle, in North, South and Central America, and the Islands of the Caribbean. He besought us as one race, as one people, although scattered, to link ourselves together in one grand organization, for the ultimate purpose of redeeming Africa from the hands of those who exploit and ravish her. Now the whole world of Negroes has heard the gospel of Garveyism, and is raising the cry everywhere, "We are coming, Mother Africa, 400,000,000 strong." Coming with the latest developments in science, industry and commerce to lead Africa to glory, and to make of her a world power to be reckoned with.
Africa shall be restored to her ancient glory along modern lines by black men, who realize that if we must live, we must be strong. Power is the keynote of this age. When all races shall have acquired that, and reached a common plane of world achievement, each will grasp the hand of the other and say, "BROTHER". Until then, the struggle continues.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
When preparing a chicken to roast, after it has been filled with the dressing, instead of sewing it up with a needle and thread, use a wire hairpin. Straighten the hairpin and use as one would a long needle in the incision, catching it in one side and then the other, until it is all closed up. After the chicken is baked the pin is very easily removed without tearing the chicken and no worrying about finding threads when the chicken is served, and no greasy needle or thread, to bother with.
To thread a needle when light is not good: When threading a sewing machine needle and one finds it difficult to see the eye of the needle, use a flashlight, having the light shine on the eye of the needle. It can be seen very plainly. People who have poor eyesight will find this a great help.
Sew loops of wide tape to the baby's stockings, then run a safety pin through the loop when pinning them to the diapers. You will find this a great stocking savior.
When you have don't knot the end of your thread, Start by making two diapers to the same piece. This will knot the end of the thread, but when you wish to pull out the basting there will be no knot to mark the stitch's appearance.
When you have a shirt take a quality pinch each one or less. This will make a hair hem that if you run a few collisions the zip will not around more than up to.
all, the great home-maker of the world and of all times, and though many women may take men's places and may find pleasure and profit in business, trades or in the professions, the greater number may be expected to stay in the homes and be the best-loved members of the family around whom all home activities move. Even in this, woman is showing her capacity for doing many things well and the one chief work of women better than any man could over hope to do it.
To Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey
From the Women of Philadelphia
Chapter No. 47
By LAURA R. SMITH
Marcus Garvey is our leader.
Mrs. Garvey his helpmate:
She is ever up and doing.
Standing by him, early and late.
And we know that her devotion
Helps him in his present state.
We do give her commendation.
For her port in building a nation.
And we pray that God will bless her—
health, strength and long life, grant
her.
Will Stand by Mrs. Garvey
To Mrs. Garvey:
We all respect hearing of your pro-
vacy. Study of your life. Garvey
powerful, esteemed by any seeding and
hearing should high. He is without
debt to make charitable and a humane
guarder. I am assured you will
sharper comprehension that you have many
well-known friends in this division who
not only comprehension using plan, but
also give likely for you to call upon
them from the world. We may identify
these my affection in any way possible.
Mr. MARTIN President,
Washington, N. W.
THE NIGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1989
HALF-MILLION DOLLAR
CHURCHES AND NO JOBS
Pastor Walker Thinks We
Need Factories as Well
as Churches and That
the Shur of the Jew Was
Heartless
To the Editor of the Women's Pake:
To the Editor of the Women's Page:
While sitting at my desk after breakfast the other morning I casually took up a copy of your significant paper, "The Negro Worlds" dated Saturday, November 29, 1924, and scanned the columns of the same. The column with "Half # Million Dollar Churches and No Jobs" since I am a clergyman, claimed my immediate attention.
As the article appeared in, the columns of the section, of this paper devoted to women, and I take it, writings from their pens, being of the opposite sex. I dare this intrusion. Being a man talking in an answer to a woman, I am, in my approach, deeply conscious of the truth that is so nightly implied in that convincing utterance, "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread."
I do not close my eyes, nor ignore, the sore, economic problems that rise in expanding mountainous proportions out of the industrial conditions that are extant. I am appreciatively and co-operatively engaged in endeavoring to free our women from all such stated embarrassments in which they find themselves thrust and enslaved by the force and power of the present day economic systems. I gladly acknowledged the racial commanderliy privileges within the race to open up adequate and monetary industrial avenues for all Negro employees; for, when our men—proportionately we have as many many men and, too, womanly women in our race as any race—get into their vocational employment with the rightful compensation, the need of our women to go out embarrassingly and unwoman themselves will be radically channeled, if not, in the main, discontinued.
The writer of the article, referee) to the employer of the deflected employee as a "Jew." I know ordinarily we speak of this brother of ours as such. He is a Hebrew. To address him with the hankle Jew, in the light of today’s glory, is as offensive to him as the word "Nigger" is to us when our lighter brother or brother of like complication so addresses us. Porta to Shylock, in Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice," said, "We do pray for mercy, and that same prayer doth teach us all to render the deeds of mercy."
The writer quoted the Hebrew in answering the sharp, salting unbridling of his former employee as follows: "Don't come here to make an argument with me. Why don't you go to Harlem and advise your colored men that instead of building half a million dollar churches to build factories and employ you colored women." Then the writer adds: "She (the deflected colored employee) felt the truthfulness of this statement."
There is no truth in the quoted statement, aside from this unstated, and unimpied truth that there ought to be factory buildings built for our industrial needs by interest and farsighted Negroes in our racial strategic centers, equally commensurate with our employment requirements as our modern church edifices are with our housing spiritual needs. With this understood, or injected truth, I heartily agree. But when this angry and indignant Hebrew says, "instead of building half a million dollar churches to build factories," it sharply differ from him.
The alluring history of the temple building of his own people gives me to know that this expression was not out of his religious heart. For what people, from Solomon's time, when that great, gorgeous and glorious temple of forty and three years in erecting, the masterpiece of all time, was built, can even rival our Hebrew brethren in pecuniary expenditure for buildings for religious worship? None. The history of his industrial achievements does not give any fact that his avenues for their livelihood—at the time of the creation of Solomon's Temple—were commensurate with this temple in the expenditure of money or the housing compass, but rather to the contrary.
Our half-million-dollar churches are of that amount, or any larger amount, in answer to an innate call of church sense, church judgment, church pride and church decency. A call, while through the centuries' silent march of plush-footed tread of feeting seconds was puffed and unheard by the calls to pleasure, good times, selfishness, church indulgence, non-appreciative value of money, invested in the same, and the satisfied siren song that any old makehift will do, has had 'the resuscitation' to carry the mentioned calls so unmistakably that it confounds the conception of some of us who have not heard the call with its bipolar sincerity, and others, not of us, who thought we were be insulted on the rank to that call, to see the modern religious flagged build, or perhaps, church edifices that rival or equal the more forward peoples in compulsive dignity, ample condition, imposing green and adjoining housing capacity and institution.
folk in the first Christian church; which is far better than being in the Amazon and Sapphire group; that "now" has "overlight" grown to a countless multitude.
One of the great curces of the Negro church, member today is his unwillingness to come up to the Scriptural standard of church financing—pay the one-tenth. As a rule, among the Negro laymen—I speak generally—the biggest church man is the best financial camouflager. At this the ex-Kaisler Wilhelm and his coterie of officers are novices compared with him. He does not tithe, as his aggregate giving are more than a tithe. While I good-naturedly acknowledge that, proportionately, the women (especially the noble group—stanch supporters, who earn their money by dignified, hard, honest labor) of the Negro churches, from my actual experience, give more than the men, they do not, an the assertion states, give all, and no same minister expects and knowingly accepts such.
One has said: "The white man, respectively, sees in a dollar a church, a schoolhouse, a home, business, and pleasure. The black man, respectfully sees in a dollar a good time, fine clothes, a home, business, a schoolhouse, and, lastly, a church." White I do not believe in this statement, literally I quote it for what it might be worth to our race.
May the time be at hand when the black man will do as stated in Matthew 933: "But see ye first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you." When he, as a rage does this, and uses the same good sense in his economic and industrial program, they and the superior and dominant race ghosts will be satisfactorily settled and permanently disspelled.
(Rev.) JAMES BLAINE WALKER Colorado Springs, Col.
London Palace Has New Puzzle in Short Skirts
Court officials are up against a dress problem for this year's courts at Buckingham Palace which will come various perturbation for weeks to come. Dresses for the first county season which were displayed today in the various dress parades in the shops which specialize in such costumes are almost knee length.
If Queen Victoria were on the threemuch things would not be tolerated at ceremonial functions, and it remains to be seen whether Queen Mary will permit such a radical departure from custom. Last year was the first time that obliterated and stigmatized precesses and debauleurs appeared in court, but courtesies and plummes made it possible to camouflage their heads, so that they did not reveal their short locks.
But there is no way of making a short, short look long despite a long train. In fact, the train only accentuates the beauty of the shift. Some of the more tender women of the aristocracy look favorably upon the short short court costumes, but they are anathema to most who are not slender.
In keeping with the Lord Chambers's previous dress regulations these abbreviated dresses are not very low necked. Whether this concession to tradition will relieve the urgency of the ankle problem is a matter of great doubt.
The Prince of Wales learnt he had had to do with modernizing his mother's viewpoint. For a long time jazz was not played at court functions nor were the latest steps permitted at ballo in Bodingham Palace until long after the Prince and his brothers became proficient in them and had been able to convince the Queen that they ought to have a fair show along with the old time waltz.
Until word goes forth from the Lord Chamberlain regarding the new court dresses many society women are deploying in placing their orders.
Is Your Child Thin and Weak?
In just a few days—quicker than you ever dreamed of—these wonderful flesh-making tablets, called McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets, are very weak, thin and undernourished little one.
After sickness and where rickets are suspected they are especially valuable. No need to give them any more nasty Cod Liver Oil—these tablets are made to take the place of that that causes sickness and they surely do it. They do put on flesh.
Ask any druggist for McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets—an easy to take as candy and not at all expensive. "Get McCoy's the original and genuine Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets."
—Adv.
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DAME FASHION
Old-Dame Fashion says so long as the figure is boyish, age does not enter in to what may be worn. Plain crocs, figured crocs, in contrasting to soft-coloredings, make a lovely after business hour or semi-dress frock.
Black shirt of some soft material with semi-lifting waist of tad or ashes of roses makes a lovely afternoon dress. The same can be used for evening if you have a very long tail with the two shades combined.
White draped, for instance, should have that lovely shade of brown monkey tail, the rabbit tail for which they are using so much, on the crescent.
Colors, flowers, beads, braids and everything but the kitchen stove may be used for trimming on dress or hat, but try and blend your colors with your compulsion, or we will see some terrible mixtures this season.
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Velcroers are going to be worn again this season, especially for practical use. You may have that embroidered or trimmed in fur or both.
Checks and stripes will be worn quite a lot for sewing, but if you are very short be sure your stripes are mall and your checks very faint.
Skirts have flares and show much fullness toward the front. A very short skirt with a flared front panel is very smart and is the latest in style.
A black satin gown may be made very striking embroidered in pale gold, with a wee panel of the embroidery over the right side just above the ankle.
Comforting Mrs. Garvey
it is with great sorrow that I am
writing this letter to you and I be-
cause I have been very ill.
There up is with flowers, you are
two in a table with I hope my few
simple words with colour you
Hope you, hope you, O trouble heart!
If doubt and fear take these
Then matriarch too. I will bear this job.
Not well to care or sorrow!
Be sure the clouds that frown today
Will be dark in smiles tomorrow.
I close with I leave you much more
concerned.
CECILIA AUGUST E.
Boca del Teto, R. P. Mexico 10
'STRANGE POWER!
1930
Grace Gray De Lolee "The Little White
Mary McMahon, the mother of Mary
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If business, domestic, love affair or
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the day.
Address your letter to:
Grace Gray de Long
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KANSAS CITY GIRL
WINS IN CONTEST
Evelyn Jones, center in Summer high school, North and Washington boulevard, Kansas side, won first place in the first elimination contest in the National Oratorical contest in competition at the school Friday. Her subject was "Jefferson and the Constitution."
Miss Jones will represent Summer high school in the next elimination contest to decide the winner of district 8, which will be held at Roseville High School the night of March 18. The winner on that night will compete April 2 at Ivanceau Temple in the Greater-Kansas City elimination.
Miss Jones is the daughter of Mrs. Alice Clark, 627 Parallel avenue. She is a popular student at Summer, having played the leading role in the seminary play staged recently at the school.
Wednesday might she win compet- against representatives from Rosedale High School, Argentine High School, Aiken School for Love, St. Agnes Academy, Rockhards College and Lathrop Trade School.
Other contestants who lost to Miss Jones were Isabel Thompson, James Davies, Marissa Tillman and Reba King.
Judges in the contest were Mrs. Idia B. Wood, teacher of English, North-east Junior High School, W. W. Howell, teacher of history, Lanceigh High School, D. E. Henderson, attorney, G. A. Green, secretary of the Fosse Y. M. C.A., and G. R. Buster, teacher of history, Sumner High School.
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3 Men to 1 Woman Rule at Dance
Men and women are equally divided at a dinner party. The men always pred-minate at dances—three men to one woman. It is this condition that has made the 'out-in' dance such a necessity, otherwise few of the men would get a chance during the evening; but it is always hard on the girls, who seldom have an opportunity to sit out a dance.
The younger girls all like this custom, but with a little more experience they become tired of it and prefer to sit out a dance with a man and have a little chat.
One of these young couples recently became so engrossed in talking about moonlight, roses, etc., while sitting in a window seat behind heavy curtains that they did not need the passing of time, and when rising to have just one more dance they discovered the ballroom dark and deserted. Everyone had gone. This real happening was later woken up into a short story by a prominent author.
Let's Put It Over
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THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS
SPECIAL NOTICE TO DIVISIONS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
At this time as a protection for the officers of Divisions and other positions against host, we are requesting that every division and other position maintain from any person or person alone or in the same time that Person Being an Field Worker lifts or removals to reach in division.
All remaining this rule will be subject to removal from Division or Division's office by virtue of the following:
W. W. L. BROWN
Ministry of Education, Department of Education
R. is truly said that no race can rise any higher than its women. The third Sunday of each month in the Boston Division, U. N. I. A. the entire program is being turned over to the ladies. Under the aid leadership of the lady president, Mrs. Ernest Headly, the women, especially the young girls, are demonstrating the wisdom of this plan. Sunday, March 15, was "Ladies Day," and with a crowded hall, the Girls' Union Club entertained the audience in a unique way. The mass meeting was called to order at 4 p.m. and was opened in its usual way with short service, conducted by the lady chaplain, Mrs. George Cooper. The lady president then took the chair and called upon Mr. Prendergast, secretary of the division, to read communications from the Parent Body. The program rendered by the Girls Union Club was as follows: Selection by the choir; history of the Girls' Club, by Miss C. Dazel; piano solo by Miss Lucile Burke, president of the club; solo by Mrs. Armstrong, accompanied by Miss Rayner; reading by Miss R. Westin; Marus Garvey, Liberator; piano solo by Mrs Johnson and Miss Gettino; reading by Miss E. Sanhouse, accompanied by Miss Fountley, on the piano; solo by Miss Gladis Steward, accompanied by Miss Brown, Miss Sanhouse and Miss Anderson; solo by Mrs. Charles Johnson, accompanied by Miss Calender; selection by the choir. The address of the evening was delivered by Miss L. Calender, whose subject was "Stan Fast." The young lady was very timely and impressive in her talk, and proved herself mistress of the situation. She was vigorously applauded by the audience. The lady president then made a few brief remarks on the work of the girls, and explained the reason for "Ladies' Day." A standing vote of thanks was extended to the young ladies for the splendid program. The meeting was brought to a close with the closing hymn, "Now the Day Is Over, and prayer by the lady chaplain, WM. H. MUNIRO. Reporter.
TELA, HONDURAS, C. A.
Although on February 15, no message concerning the inactivation of our inspired leader, Mr. Garvey, had reached this division, the trend of the addresses delivered at a meeting held on this date seemed to forecast coming events, "Spiritual" and consoling were the addresses of Dr. J. P. Bonilla, Mr. D. E. Allen, Mrs. M. Ingleton, Dr. D. E. Thorpe, and Mr. A. O. Walte, president of the division. As a result of this meeting, the minds of the members and friends were somewhat prepared for the news of our leader's imprisonment. As soon as the Negro World arrived confirming the rumors, an executive meeting of the officers of the division was called, and arrangements made for a great mass meeting on Wednesday, February 18, President Walter presided at this meeting and encouraging addresses were delivered by Messrs. George Goldbourne, D. E. Allen, Dr. Bonilla and Miss E. R. Bennett. Great sympathy was expressed for Mrs. Garvey, and the division pledged itself to greater effort 16 put over the organization during the absence of the leader.
D. ERASTUS THORPE. Reporter
YOUNG BLOOD
How I Keep Feeling Young and Vigorous at Near Sixty
"I am near 60 years, but I feel as young as I did at 38. I take a cupful of Bulgarian Tea once or twice a week. It keeps me healthy and strong and makes me feel young again," said H. Rk Von Sohlick, manufacturer of Bulgarian Herb Tea.
If you are tired, weak, nervous with no appetite, black the energy and vigor to perform your work—don't wait another day.
Go to your drugstore and ask for Bulgarian Herb. Tau in the red and yellow box. Hold in two sizes, 15c and $1.25. In case your drugstore cannot supply you with the genuine Bulgarian Herb Tau that will improve your blood, I will send you $1.25. Please pay for $1.25. Address me H. H. Von Biegelt, Dept. 5, Marvel Building, Philadelphia, Pa.
Note: If you will send 25c in envelopes, I will send it C. O. D. Just one year past $1.60.
BLUEFIELDS, NICARAGUA
At our business meeting on Tuesday, March 3, after the reading of the minutes, and prior to the transaction of business, the following resolution was unanimously carried: We, the undersigned officers of, and in behalf of the members of the No. 34 Division of the U. N. I. A. Association, Bluefields, Nicaragua, received with great regret and surprise, the news of the decision of the United States Court of Appeal, relative to the late [r]is] of our honorable President-General, the brutal manner in which he was handled and his ultimate incorporation in Atlanta Prison, despite which, our confidence in him, and our loyalty to the cause are still solid and unfinishing; and that we shall be loyal to the officers appointed to carry on in the absence of the President-general, and small dail in our power to cooperate in any levied plans in respect to his liberation from confinement.
General Secretary.
All the meetings of this division during the month of February were well attended, and increased somewhat. The most interesting event of the month was the special afternoon meeting on the 22d in aid of Day School Blind. The following officers were present: Messrs. H. O. Hodson, president; P. B. Cohner, first assistant secretary; G. L. Simpson, second vice president; C. E. Bury, general secretary, and Mrs. Laura Cush, lady president. The meeting was opened with the singing of the association ode-prayers of the 46th Psalm. After a few introductory remarks by Rev. W. Mones, who also acted as chairman, the program followed: "Catch the Sunshine" by the school children; recitation, "Greeting," by Miss Elma Jones; solo, by Miss E. Henry; recitation, "Forward Be Our Watchword," by Master R. Bury; duet, by Mrs. B. Walters and child; violin selection, by Mr. Phillips; recitation, "I Love This World So Beautiful," by Miss Eiffigena Hawkins; recitation, "Kindness and Love," by Miss Enid Jones; address, by Mr. G. L. Simpson; solo, by Mr. L. Coulson; collection and song, "Hear, the Five Cents, Dropping," by the children; recitation, "God Is in Heaven," by Miss Elma and Enid Jones; address, by Mr. Phillips; song, "Sowing the Seed," by the children; recitation, "Speak the Truth; recitation, "Little Heeds of Kindness," by Miss Isma Johnson and Miss Catherine Hawkins; solo, by Mr. L. Coulson; dialog, "What We Can Do," by Misses O. Jones, A. Hawkins and G. White; solo, by Mr. D. J. Bowen. In his closing remarks, the chairman thanked all present for their assistance and interest shown, and asked for continuance of same. The program ended by singing, and the benediction.
W. A. S. JONES.
FORT SMITH, ARKANSAS
Fort Smith Division held a great mass meeting on Sunday, March 8. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mr. W. S. Whitney. After the opening exercises the following program was rendered: The purpose of the meeting was carefully outlined by Deputy J. W. Ross; the first speaker was the Hon. S. H. Perzell, a visiting friend, who was introduced by Captain Samuel Ross. Mr. Perzell proved to be an able speaker and gave the organization much encouragement. The reading of the president-general's message followed Mr. Perzell's address. The message was inspiring and helpful. Deputy J. W. Ross offered a motion that a resolution be adopted to send a telegram to the Hon. Calvin Coolidge, asking executive elementy for Mr. Garvey. The motion was unanimously carried and the message sent. The program continued: Song by the audience, led by the lady president, Mrs. Maggie Ross; address, Hon. Henry James; address, Captain Samuel Ross; closing remark by the president, Mr. Whitney. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem.
NEUVA GERONA CUBA
We are pleased to report that the Honorable Brigadier-General Bachelor spent five days recently witting and lecturing to the Isle of Pines Division. General Bachelor arrived on the 26th day of February, and delivered an educational and inspirational lecture every day during his stay.
On Sunday, March 1, a great mass meeting was held and the following program resumed: Solo, Miss Miriam McKenzie; recitation, Miss Rosetta Sammons; solo, Simon McBean; recitation, J. Reynolds; address, General Bachelor in Spanish and English. The meeting was brought to a close with the Ethiopian Antiquity. E. A. DUNN, Reporter.
NOTICE TO WEST VIRGINIA DIVISIONS
The Hon. D. H. Kyle, of Clarkisburg, W. Va., has been appointed commissioner for the State of West Virginia. As such he has the oversight of the work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in West Virginia. He is empowered to visit divisions and chapters, take an active interest in their administration, see that divisional reports are sent regularly to the Parent Body and that all branches function 100 per cent. All presidents, other officers and members of divisions and chapter in the State of West Virginia are hereby instructed to extend to Mr. Kyle every courtesy as befits the chosen representation of this great organization.
Parent Body, New York.
YONKERS, NEW YORK
The Yonkers Division of the U. N. L. A. opened its services at the usual hour on March 10, by singing "From Greenland's Joy" Mountains," after which the Sard Psalm was repeated in unison. The meeting was then tuped over to the lady president, Mrs. Rebecca Hawkins. The occasion was "Women's Day" and the meeting was conducted entirely by women. No one was introduced and only voluntary speeches were given. Mrs. Sydney Taylor urged the women of the division to lend all possible aid to the men in putting over the program of the organization. Mrs. Elizabeth Boyd encouraged the holding of regular "Women's Day" meetings. Mrs. Hibla Gill spoke sympathetically but hopefully of the imprisonment of the president-general. Mrs. F. McNelly pledged her aid and co-operation in promoting the work. The courtesy of saying a few words was extended to some of the gentlemen present. Messes, Mr. Kenzie Boyd, D. W. Brown and Phamins gave helpful advice and encouragement to the membership. New members are being rapidly added to the roll of this division and many prominent residents of the community are helping to put over the program.
Election of President
The Yonkers Division hold an election on February 9th and elected Mr. William Taylor president. The division is making rapid progress and has added many prominent local residents to its membership roll. Many plans are being made to stimulate the growth of the organization. A membership drive will begin on April 6th and continue for thirty days. Yonkers is small but it is one hundred per cent for the U. N. I. A. and race progress. WILLIAM J. GILK. Reporter.
SIBULL BOCAS DEL TORO
The hearts of the members of Sibul Division are in sackcloth and ashes because of the imprisonment of the Honorable Marcus Garvey. But we remember that all leaders have to endure persecution. We cannot forget Paul, who was beaten with rods, stoned and imprisoned. At this critical moment, we are appealing to the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world to stand by our leader and to deliver him from the hands of the enemies of freedom and liberty. As we realize that Christ was crucified for falling humanity and for the doctrines He preached, but that did not present religion from spreading throughout the world. So it is with the Universal Negro Improvement Association at this time. Appeals for contributions to the Defense Fund are receiving generous rebuse.
BOCAS DEL TORA, C. A.
Bocas Division held a meeting of prayer, in Liberty Hall on Monday, February 22, in behalf of our leader, the Hon. Marcel Garvey. The meeting was called to order by the president, Rev. R. N. Whittaker and opened with the singing of the opening and ode and the repetition of the 23d Psalm. The chaplain, Mr. Charles Dottin, led involuntary prayer and was followed by Mrs. S. E. Gordon, Miss Emily Richard, Mrs. McCleary and the Rev. R. N. Whittaker. After Scripture reading by the lady vice-president, the president delivered an address which gave much courage and inspiration to the members. At the close of his address an appeal for the defense fund was made and met with a generous response. The meeting closed with prayer and the benediction.
GUANTANAMO, CUBA
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On Sunday, March 1, our general mass meeting was called to order at 7:50 p.m. by F. B. Van Roman, president, and opened with the singing "From Greenland's Key Mountains" followed with the procssiona, hymn "Shine on Eternal Light," after which the 23d Psalm was repeated by the congregation, followed by the hymn "God Bless Our President"; the general prayer was said by the acting chaplain, then the slinging of "God of the Right of the Battle's Fight"; the serene lesson was taken from St. John's Gospel, 11th chapter; hymn No. 166 from the Ritual, "Thy Hand, O God, Has Guided" was sung. The Literary program was us follows: Address by the president, F. B. Van Roman; sobe Mrs. Rachel Russell, address, R. A. Williams, second vice-president; address, Mrs. Rachel Russell; son, Mrs. Ethel Brown; address R. A. Charles, captain of legions; address H. Steven; song, Mrs. Mary Meade; address J. Webster, executive secretary; the singing of the Ethiopian National Autumn brought the meeting to a close at 10:30 p.m.
On Sunday, March 8, at 7:53 p.m. the above named division held a grand musical concert in Liberty Hall; it was opened with the singing of the ode, "From Greenland's le Mountains," with an address by the chairman, F. B. Van Roman. The program was as follows: Dialog, Master Enge; Francis and Clinton Ramsay; solo, Mrs. M. Fletcher; recitation, Master Morris Perkins; song, Mrs. M. Mary Meade; dialog, by children; Ethiopian Anthem, followed by a song, Miss Georgiaiana, Henry; recitation, Miss Edna Ramsay; anthem, choral; address, J. Meade; solo, Mrs. M. Bennett; address, Rev. J. Sibbly; solo, Mrs. Ethel Rubain; solo, Mrs. M. Bennett; recitation, William Mathing; anthem, choral, "I am Dreaming Tonight"; recitation, Master Rubert Francis; duet, Miss Georgiaiana, Henry and Alice, Steven; anthem, choral; dialog, Mrs. Ethel Brown; song, Mrs. M. Fletcher; recitation, Miss Claris Hillhouse; address, J. Webster; recitation, Claudia Hillhouse. The chairman thanked those who helped to put the meeting over. The meeting was brought to a close with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem at 10:50 p.m.
G. H. TYRRELL,
Reporter
REMEDIOS, CUBA
On Sunday, March 8, we had a fine meeting in Liberty Hall. The hall was crowded and all showed much enthusiasm.
There were present five visitors who helped to make the meeting a success: Capt. V. L. James, Miss I. L. Brown, Prof. A. Bolten, Mr. H. Raymond and Mrs. A. Gilchrist. A present was sent from the Carnajad Division, which was received with much appreciation. While we cannot overlook the enthusiastic and masterly manner in which the other speakers delivered their messages, Miss Brown deserves much credit for the attitude shown in the delivery of her address. Her's was brief but filled with inspiration. The program was as follows: Singing of the opening ode, "From Greeland's Ice Mountain," followed by prayer. The 23rd Psalm was followed by the singing of "God of the Right Our Battles Fight." Next was the introduction of the visitors, followed by a hymn. Opening address by chairman; solo by Mrs. M. Murray; speech by Capt. James; solo by Miss Brown; presentation of gift; solo by Miss Brown; offerings, address by Miss Brown; address by Prof. Bolten; solo by Prof. Bolten; closing address by the chairman. The chairman expressed thanks for the kind services rendered, to our division and brought the meeting to a close with the singing of the U. M. I. A. anthem.
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND
This division held a large mass meeting on "Garvey Day," March 14. Many local speakers served on the program, and with their flow of oratory, awakened the consciousness of lagging members to the realization of their duty. Our noble leader and the organization of which they are part. The opening Ode from Greenland's key Mountain was sung, followed by the recitation of the 23d Psalm. The president, Hon. William Watson, in a masterly manner, outlined the nature of the meeting. The first message from Atlanta sent out by our imprisoned leader was read; "God Bless, Our President" was sung; Rey, McCoy, the first speaker, gave a complete review of the work done by the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Mr. Garvey's lawyer's letter in answer to the criticism of the press was read by Mrs. Hatchett, who commented on some. A telegram to be sent to President Coolidge received a unanimous vote. Rey, Osborn, the next speaker, in a few well-chosen words, encouraged the members to go forward. "O Africa Awaken" was sung; Rey, Dr. Clessan, of Abysinham, spoke.
The last speaker was Rev. Johns, who urged the women of the organization to foster the work of the association and give whole-hearted support at all times. The meeting closed with the singing of the "Star Spargled Banner" and the "Ethiopian Anthem." H. E. FLANNIGAN, Reporter.
CINCINNATI. OHIO
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On Friday and Saturday, March 13 and 14, the Cincinnati Division was honored with the presence of Sir William, Sherrell, second assistant president-general of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Long before the opening of the meeting a good crowd of members and well-wishers had gathered. The meeting was opened on both occasions at 8 p.m. After the usual preliminaries, the opening ode was sung, followed by the reading of the 23rd Psalm and the singing of "God Bless Our President." The chairman, Mr. Trip, vice president of the Cincinnati Division, made a few interesting remarks. The chairman then called upon the executive secretary to outline the purpose of the meeting, Mr. Wesley M. Holder, secretary to Mr. Sherrell, was the next speaker, Mr. Holder appealed for added support in carrying on the work during the imprisonment of our leader. His appeal was met with a generous response. The last speaker was Sir William Sherrell who made an impassioned appeal to the members for their sustained loyalty and active co-operation in carrying on the work, Mr. Sherrell explained in detail the humiliations which Mr. Garvey endured before his imprisonment and the efforts which are now being made for his liberation. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Ethiopian Anthem.
RONALD GILKES. Reporter.
N. ABERDEEN, NOVA SCOTIA
Sunday, March 8, was a red-letter day for the New Aberdeen Division. The principal business of the meeting was the adoption and the sending to Honorable Calvin Coolidge, President of the United States, an appeal in behalf of our leader, the Honorable Marcus Garvey. We had in our midst on this occasion, several distinguished visitors, among whom were the Honorable Mayor, of Glace Bay, Daniel W. Morrison, and the Right Reverend James Crewe, of St. Mary's Recory. These two gentlemen endorsed everything that had been done in behalf of Mr. Garvey, and also signed the telegram to the President of the United States. The program of the afternoon was interesting, the main features being the addresses of the honored guests. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem of Ethiopia.
JOBABO, CUBA
This division held a very successful mass meeting on Sunday March 1). In Liberty Hall. The meeting was well attended by both members and friends. The program was as follows: Opening code, "From Greenland's Ice Mountains," followed by the President-George's hymn and the 32nd psalm; introductory remarks by John E. Campbell; first-president who presided; Mr. Campbell received much applause. Mr. Thomas Corbin, chairman of the Tradesee Board, gave an interesting talk which was well received; solo by Mrs. A. Saunders, formerly a member of the Rio Canto Division; address, Mr. E. S. Borar; solo, Mr. L. B. Sheepe. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem.
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MASSILLON, OHIO
Divalson No. 738, Magnolia, Ohio, held a successful mass meeting on Sunday, March 1. The meeting was called to order by Prekristen Isaac Hammerd, and opened with the singing of the opening ode, reading of the twenty-third psalm and the singing of "God Bless Our Presidents." After the reading of the ritual the following program was rendered, under the direction of the lady president, Mrs. Estelle Anderson.
Paper, by Miss Mary Zarler; solo, Mr. Thomas Auratry; solo, Mrs. Reese; address, outlining the purpose of the meeting by Mr. Edward Ivory; reading of Mr. Garvey's front page article by the secretary; resolution to send a telegram to President Coolidge, asking his executive element for Mr. Garvey; address, Hon. Edward Reynolds of the Cleveland, Ohio, division. "The meeting closed with the singing of the 'Star-Spangled Banner'," followed by the "Ethiopian National Anthem."
PINE CITY, ARK.
Pine City Division No. 5685 held a mass meeting March 1 at 3:30 p.m. A good-sized audience of members and friends of the movement attended. The meeting opened with the singing of "We Are Marching On," led by L. L. A. Gibson. The twenty-third psalm was read by President Jackson, and prayer was offered by Rev. C. Washington. The purpose of the meeting was outlined by the president. The lawyer's statement and Mr. Garvey's front page message was read by Rev. A. S. Brown. A stirring address was delivered by Rev. Goodlow, pastor of the A. M. E. Church. A telegram was written and sent to President Coolidge, asking executive, elencency for Mr. Garvey. A telegram was also sent to the Associated Press. Professor Mr. McNair spoke impressively on "Racial Unity." After a short address by Rev. T. G. Brown the meeting closed in the usual manner.
LAS MINAS, CUBA
The Las Mina Division held a great mass meeting on Sunday, March 1. The president, Mr. S. C. Alexander, presided. After the address of welcome by Mr. Alexander, the meeting was turned over to Mr. S. M. Stephenson of Nuevistas and the lady president. The following program was rendered: Address by the lady president, address, R. P. Rattray, secretary of the division; address, R. Hamam; address, J. Dias, chairman of the trustee board. The closing remarks were delivered by the president, who thanked all who had helped to make the program a success. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem. J. E. BLAME, Reporter.
EAST ST. LOUIS, ILLINOIS
Chapter 95 and Division 226 held a large joint mass meeting on Monday March 16. Captain Johnson of the Legions, Captain Harris of the Legions and Captain Shaw of the Motor Corps held exhibition drills which were excellent. The president of Division 226. Mr. Eddie Ferrell, made a splendid address. President P. B. Patrick of Chapter 95 gave a helpful talk. The final number on the program was an address by Mrs. Harris, lady president of Chapter 95. The meeting closed with prayer by the lady chaplain. MRS. CARRIE LANE. Reporter.
EAST ST. LOUIS, ILLINOIS
Division No. 226 held a successful mass meeting on Sunday, March 15, at Liberty Hall. The meeting opened with the usual ceremony with the president, Mr. B. M. Ferrell, in the chair. The following program was rendered: Address, Rev. James Yandoll, vice-president; brief remarks by Mrs. Harris; address by Mr. Patrick; remarks by Mrs. S. C. Johnson, chief Black Cross Nurse. The meeting closed with an address by Dr. Vanlow, which was followed by a successful appeal for new members.
ETHEL CLIFF, Reporter.
ENTERPRISE, W. VIRGINIA
Enterprise Division grieves with the organization over the imprisonment of our leader. But our members are determined to do even more to promote the program and support those who have been left to carry on. This division is planning a great mass meeting to be held in Gurglingburg on Monday, March 28. An interesting program will be rendered and a drive for new members launched. E. R. MURRAY, Reporter.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
SEAFTLE. WASHINGTON
Beattle Division No. 50 held a great mass meeting on Sunday afternoon, March 1, at Liberty Hall, 1238 Main street. Triumphs of members, friends and sympathizers came out to pay homage to our leader, the Honorable Marcus Garvey, as that day was set aside as Garvey's Day. Brilliant speakers thrilled the audience as they paid tribute after tribute to that fearless of all Negro leaders. The program was inspiring and instructive. The appeal from the parent body to all members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association the world over, to put away all differences and unite as one and stand behind the Honorable Marcus Garvey was read and approved. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem.
M. BUICH-RASS, Reporter.
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mismo en la raza blanca que en cualquier otra raza, lo mejor de la espe
cía esté en no imiter y si en la resolución de problemas de alta originalidad
ato nivel creatriz. No tratemos de ser lo mejor o lo peor de otras
razas; si tratemos ser lo mejor de la nuestra.
Dejemos a los fanáticos, a los ignorantes y endirodos que sigan con su decantada superioridad; mantengamos nosotros nuestra espina dorsal recta, sin dobleces humillantes que nos denigren. El mismo blanco-sentiria mas respeto por aquel individuo de nuestra raza que se levante, debido a sus propios esfuerzo, y mantenga incolume su dignidad de hombre, su entidad de ciudadano y el respeto de su raza. Asi la raza blanca do America y el mundo entero será infomado, que lo mejor de la raza negra no es la clase de inmendigos que viven a espinasas de las otras razas, supicando protección para el sostenimiento de su coteria; sino que esa misma raza blanca juzgará que dentro del todo de los negros hay un grupo honrado, que lucha y se respeta a si mismo, que no se denigra pidiendo suyda si protection para sostenener egosimiles individuales ó de grupos; pero que son elementos que laboray por la dignificación de una raza, que tiene derecho a un reconocimiento al igual que las danza, y que solo aspira a que se la juega justicia y se la considera tan llena de que, tan lunga de baja como ha demostrado que forman la horizontalidad química y viscosidad por la Nafudinia, por Dios ó la Providencia, quien en sus designos, no denomina diferencia ninguna en el clave o su encargo de la piel de tal o cual por humano.
Spanish Section
Confando plenamente en la sinceridad y bien probado patriotismo del periodico que usid dirige, y al cual consideramos con una autoridad indiscutible para traitar de cualquier asunto patriotico, o de intereses nacionales, por su limpio historical nunca desmentido, y que ha hecho honor de su lema: Diario Cubano para el pueblo Cubano', es por lo que no hemos dudado on dirigirnos a usted en los momentos tristes en que en esta ciudad de Santa Clara, un grupo de malvados movidos por sentimientos puramente egoistas, pretenden revivir entre cubanos antiguos rencores casi olvidados ya, de prejuicios raciales.
La organización de la raza en pro de su adelanto—Los que interceptan el progreso de una raza apurarán el acilbar del remordimiento—Las aspiraciones de nuestra organización—Hemos de mantener firmes en el sustento de nuestro ideal—El reajuste universal a cargo del poder divino y del poder humano—Ningún pueblo tiene que dar satisfacciones al esforzarse por su adelanto—Visión de una nueva era de prosperidad
La maravillosa-potencialidad de la organización se deja sentir actualmente en todas las ramas del esfuerzo humano. Ya sea en la industria, en la sociedad, en la política o en la guerra, es la fuerza de la organización lo que realmente cuenta; de aquí que no se pueda recomendar otro paso mejor para nuestra salvación racial. que el medio y manera de organizarnos entre nosotros mismos.
En Santa Clara no existen, ni han existido jamás, odios d'azras, cualquiera que haya permanecido en esta pacifica población, siquiera por breve tiempo, podrá haber comprobado la fraternal cordialidad en que constantemente viven todos los elementos que constituyen el nucleo de esta ciudad en todos sus componentes, pero he aqui que en estos momentos en que con mayor violencia se han desatado las ambiciones políticas, hombres llenos de maldad y desprovenidos de ningun escrupulo, pretenden realizar el logro de sus mal contenidas pasiones, lanzando sobre esta tranquila población la funesta chispa del racismo, de cuya odiosa obra esperan obtener un magnífico resultado.
Hemos sido pasto de los duchos y equilibristas políticos, así como también se nos ha usado como mina explotable en todos los movimientos de esta vida material en que subsistimos, por la condición infortunada de nuestra desorganización. Debido a tal condición nuestra, es que por centinares de años hemos sido presa facil de aquellos que busearon un medio beneficio; sometiéndonos a una esclavitud de recuerdos bochornosos y denigrantes. Si continuamos desorganizados, estaremos sometidos a una abyección eterna, perdiendo por lo tanto en estas grandes exigencias de la vida moderna, la ventaja de considerarnos realmente preparados para abordar los problemas que tengamos que resolver, dentro del siclo de civilización en que giran los otros grupos raciales, con la preparación conveniente para la lucha por la subsistencia.
Nuestra organización es un movimiento que tiene a una cooperación y unión racial ilimitada. Anhelamos traer a la humanidad un poco más cerca hacia nosotros lo que ha estado anteriormente, porque hemos realizado que en la tiraitez del Este con el Oeste y del Norte contra el Sur, no llegaremos a ningún provecho; solamente quedarán un sentimiento amargo de un estado cañico, de ruina, creado por nosotros mismos, por nuestra ceguera de alma y nuestra falta de cooperación; para la ayuda mutua y la salvación del todo racial a que pertenecemos.
Sabido es que en las últimas elecciones celebradas en esta provincia, obtuvo el triunfo el partido liberal, y como este está integrado por una inmensa mayoria de elementos de la raza de color, estos se mueven activamente haciaendo las consiguientes gestiones para obtener la parte proporcional que entienden debe correspondierles en los puestos públicos, y de aquí dimanan los acontecinientes que se suceden, pues los elementos dirigentes del partido liberal, que tienen la oblación de aceptar y reconocer los méritos de debe politicos, han creido fácil y expeditivo el procedimiento de lanzar sobre el elemento de la raza de color, la calumniosa especie de que pretenden obfender y obfender contra la raza blanca del pais, con la finalidad de colocarlos en una situación difícil y resventajosa, y saldar de una y para siempre tantos y tantos compromisos adquiridos con ofertas y promesas que nunca tuvieron la intención de cumplir.
Podemos inny bien imaginarnos nosotros mismos como un gran pueblo unido, coni un solo fin, creyendo en un mismo Dios y teniendo un destino conun. Ver cuatrocientos millones de nosotros unidos como un solo haz y firmes como un solo hombre, es pues el deseo de todos los que laboramos por llevar avante el gran objetivo de esta organización. Es una verdad que el materialismo del siglo XX ha relegado las naciones y razas-interesadas, de manera que la realización del ideal de unión pertenezca a lo remoto; pero no intentemos sepultar o destruir los sagrados principios porque así lo imponga las circunstancias, y lo exija una edad petulante, huérfana de conciencia, despoblada de alma, para llevar a cabo la unificación de los elementos afines, que compongan la madre común de tal o cual grupo racial.
El tiempo no se debe a si mismo; a nosotros corresponde el salvarlo y llevarlo a su menor expresión. La labor que sobre nosotros descansa, no es el hacer causa común e identifernos con el egismo y sentimiento de rapiña dominante en los otros elementos, sino el crearnos algo original, algo que sea nuestro, una idea que centralice nuestras aspiraciones, y conformar nuestra vida de manera que seamos únicos y tengamos un yo racial que no se destruya, y se extienda a una perpetuidad indisoluble. Es infortunado a la verdad el que nos encontremos aún fragmentados, siendo los únicos que vivimos sin poder someternos a una organización eficiente. Otros han tenido la gran ventaja de haberse organizado muchos siglo ha; así pues, lo que parece innecesario para ellos bajo un punto de vista 'racial', es para nosotros impermente necesario.
Por tanto, podemos asegurar sin faltar en lo más minimo a la verdad, que los verdaderos autores de esta farsa siñiestra son en primer término, los enoberbecidos hermanos Víssquez, secundados por muchos otros satélites que viven y medran a su sombra, y a los cuales todo el pueblo villaclara senila silenciosamente como responsable de esta obra funesta.
Ningún pueblo, ninguna raza podrá sobrevivir, a menos que tenga in menti un fin o un propósito determinado. Debemos conocer de antemano el progreso de nuestra existencia. Nuestro programa dacial hoy dia estriba en constituiños en un pueblo emancipado, unido y progresista. Necesitamos adelantar en toda la línea: social, religiosa, industrial, educativa y politicamente; necesitamos la creación de un nivel común entre nosotros, que nos ponga en condiciones de acompañar y de establecer una competencia equitativa con las otras razas.
Esto es lo que se hace necesario que algín periodico cubiano exponga ante la faz de Cuba, poniendo así en descubierto la hurda farga del racismo con sus maquinadores, y llevar de esta suerte la paz y tranquilidad necesaria a todos los hogares. cubanos, hoy grandemente alarmados por las graves noticias puestas en circulación.
El mundo no está en disposición de dividir los desposos del materialismo, sino que por el contrario, cada grupo busca por si solo en engranecerse a si mismo, a espensas de aquellos que han perdido o ignoran los intrigues de los acontecimientos humanos, en la dirección del instinto de la propia preservación. El ngrojo envuelvo por este ambiente, no tiene otra alterativa que seguir hacia adelante, y en el torbellino que presenta la atmósfera de los intereses raciales en que se resuelve, tiene que laborar, por la generación presente y guardar arrestos y energías para aquellas de la posteridad. En lo que al servicio de la raza concierne, la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra tiene trazado su programa, respecto a su implantación y promocion. Nosotros nos sentimos tan bien justificado en ello, que no tenemos ningun resumen apologético que hacer.
Confiamos en que usted procedera en este caso de acuerdo con los dictados de su conciencia, creemos cumplir con un deber al informarlo, y si esta carta merece el privilegio de ser publicada, veríamos colmados nuestros más yhementes anhelos.
Es una tontada el que creamos que el mundo pueda arreglarse por mera casualidad; es Dios y el hombre los que reajustan el universo. El Gran Omnipotente actúa indiferentemente y su plan y su proposito, pasan por el crisol de una acción humana. En su directo e inspirado profetismo El prometio que el dia de Etiopia habia de venir, no porque el mundo cambiase sus sentimientos prejudiciosos en favor de nosolros, sino por el abrazo fraternal, levantando hacia el Nuevas manos en sefal de reconocimiento de un derecho de equidad. Ello así mismo no implica una mera prueba física; sino que determina el esfuerzo universal e independente de rodearnos con la plena gloria, que como hombres y como humanidad no corresponde.
Con toda consideración y respeto.
Varios Villacarneños.
Ningun negro, ya sea americano, europeo o africano, será sinceramente respetado, hasta que la raza se emcipe a si misma como un todo, por medio de sus mismos adelitos, por medio de su mismo progreso, y desiccante el empase de prejudice universal con que se le mira en el presente. El negro tendrá que instalar su propio gobierno, su industria, su urte, su clencia, su literatura y su cultura para que el mundo se detenga a considerarla y a respetarla. Hasta entonces seremos los salidou de una raza superior, kinderporten de una civilización, siendo nada más que los superiores de una estado de queo, impuesto por el sistema social de sistemas disa.
El negro, especialmente el cubano que vive la vida mas azarosa, después de haber contribuido a la independencia de su país, no debe mirar con desprecio los actos que viene realizando la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, por cuyo motivo y en beneficio del negro en general guarda prision nuestro presidente el honorable Marcus Garvey, viciinia de la envidia, de la maldad y de la calumnia, como pago reservado a los grandes idealistas de las causas justas y de los derechos de una raza como la nuestra.
Nuestro, elemento aquí vive aislado y acosado, apesar de que hay aun quien se empena en pregonar la fraternidad del negro y del blanco en Cuba; nuestro elemento aquí esta incapacitado-para alardear de que goza de los-fueros del derecho, en un país que con gran abnegación conquistó en los campos de la guerra, para sér luego anulado en la paz.
Desaparecido el general Estenzo, quien hizo germinar en el ánimo del negro la ambición a inmiscuirse en los asuntos públicos de este país, haciéndole ver que sus derechos estaban vulnerados, este es aún presa de una despeocupación abominable. Mientras continúa aún prestando muy poca o ninguna atención al desarrollo de sus intereses económicos, por los cuales nuestra organización lucha en todas partes, la otra raza representada por el clero, selecciona el dia del natalicio del gran Marti, el apostol de la independencia, quien dijo: UNA REPUBLICA CON TODOS Y PARA TODOS, para colocar la primera piedra de un edificio en donde los negros no tendran acceso.
El negro cubano no debe pasar por desaperciobido estos acontecimientos, sino inspirarse en el ideal que sustenta la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, y protejarla con su cooperación para hacerla cada día más, prepotente. No debe decaear nuestro animo por el hecho de que nuestro honorable presidente se halla actualmente secluido en una prisión; ello es conceptuado como un timbre de gloria para la noble causa, que a costa de grandes esfuerzos y mavores sacrificios defiende. Demostremos pues al honorable Marcus Garvey que somos dignos de sus sacrificios, danlo a la organización que tan dignamente preside, todo el soporte y toda la confianza de que es meritoria.
Tal debe ser el dilema del negro en todas partes, especialmente aquila, en donde se da oido a las frases laudables de que somos objeto en periodos electorales, de parte del otro elemento. Tiempo ya de que laboremos en pro de nuestro propio beneficio, para que en no lejano dia oltengamos universalmente la representation que corresponde a una raza respecida, y que goza de un mejoramiento económico.
ELIGIO DILC.
Presidente del Capítulo 71.
Santiago de Cuba, marzo de 1925.
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Magazine Section
Harvard Expedition Head
Tells of Great Discovery
in Egypt Near the Pyramid
of Giza, 4,000 B. C.
—Valuable for Historical
Purposes
BOSTON, March 10.—The tomb
found at Giza by the Boston Museum-
Harvard expedition is not that of
either Senefeuera or Cheops, Dr. George
A. Relaser, head of the expedition, who
is now here, said today. Dr. Relaser,
who before leaving Egypt planned the
work that resulted in the uncovering
of the tomb, said he believed the
sarcophagus disclosed by the expedition
to be that of a member of the
royal family, probably a princess.
"According to my way of thinking, Cheops was buried in his pyramid and Senefcuur at Dahabur, fifteen miles south of the Pyramid of Cheops." Dr. Reisner said. "Their sonchaphten were never found but their tomb was cut out they had been phipluered. The fact that the tomb was cut by Cheops merely means that the person was a member of the King's entourage."
LONDON, March 19 (Associated Press). Egg biologists here agree that if the tomb, found by the Boston-Harvard expedition deep down in the rocks near the great pyramid at Giza proves to be that of the Pharaon, who immediately preceded the renowned builder Cheops, its importance may be greater than that of Tutankhamen, because there thousands of years older, and the contents may throw, light upon that remote period about which very little is known.
The Pharaoh Senefet, whose name is variously spelled by English Egyptologists, was the first King of the Fourth dynasty (about 4000 B.C.) white Tut-ankh-Amen reigned as late on the Eighteenth dynasty, the history of which is fairly familiar. Moreover, Tut-ankh-Amen was a relatively important King, while Senefet was regarded, as one of the founders of the Egyptian Empire, and a man of great enterprise and energy. Sir Walfs Budge, who lately retired from the post of keeper of Egyptian antiquities in the British Museum, told the Daily Express that if the tomb proved to be that of Senefet and had not been plundered it was almost certain to yield objects of philoxene value. The Catro dispatches yesterday telling of the discovery said, the sarcophagus had been unmilled intact, with much funeral furniture inside. Near the sarcophagus, which was a large one of marble, with gold decorated coloured and resting upon what seemed to be a plate, was the seal of Senefet.
Sur Wallis described Senefeu as being "genealogically a middy who came from nowhere". He probably came from northern Italy, the scientific added; certainly he was not an Egyptian; and none of the really great kings of Egypt was of Egyptian nationality. Senefeu one of the greatest of them, was the first sovereign who so far as known attempted to make a colonial empire for Egypt, as his expedition to Sinai and the Sidan show. Also he gained control of the Red Sea and but was to navigate the Mediterranean. There are records of part of this fleet taking solar wood from Lebanon to Egypt. Senefeu built the monument, commonly known as the Pyramid of Medium. His wife was Mett-Tefa, who when widowed, received homely protection from the succeeding pharaohs, cheops and chephren. Dr. Alan Gardiner, another noted Egyptologist, although greatly interested in the discovery, which he believes will prove vastly important, doubts whether the tomb penetrated is actually that of Senefeu.
That pharaoh, he says, built two pyramids, neither of which is at Giza, and his body was most likely in one of these, probably the Pyramid of Medum.
The British Egyptologists generally congratulate the Americans upon their enterprise and good fortune.
CAIRO, Egypt, March 19 (Associated Press)—Although it is generally hoped that the newly discovered tomb at Giza, unearthy by the Boston-Harvard expedition, contains the mummy of the Pharaoh Seneferu and records of his reign, there is considerable doubt as to this among the Egyptologists here. A number of them consider it unlikely that a king who built himself two pyramids—at Medum, and Dahshur—should finally have been so modest as to order his own interment ninety feet below the surface, thus obliterating the personality of the powerful and prosperous quler.
They therefore express the opinion that it is unwise to raise great hopes at present least the public be disappointed if the sarcophagus reveals only the mummy of a member of the king's family or even perhaps some retainer, such as serving man or barber. It is pointed out that observation of the interior of the tomb so far has been only slight, as only a relatively small opening has been pierced, and the light was none too good when the observations were made.
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WEEKLY SERMON
By G. EMONSI CARTER
Subjects: "Doing the Imposebill"
Text: Jer. XXXII, 87.
(Continued from last lecture)
It: "What God has done His children
can do, because He wills and they obey."
This statement is difficult to understand in the light of our past, theological teachings and our impressions of God made through our Christian teaching in colleges and churches.
We found it profitable and: ad-antiqueous to limit man, in his approach to God, and God-like powers here, while we knew the truth, but were unwilling to lot the followers know, I wonder if the broad expansive sea, with no land in night, doesn't influence me now to speak in this strain, or' is it the power of my Father than gives utterance through me? What gives that God one thing is certain, that God has given him all His children, but he has given unlimited power to all of them, and if they will like the Christ, His begotten Son, subscribe to his teachings and His will their will, He will reveal Himself fully to them, know that which to most men seems hard, has been done by Carvey, because he understood God. I know that he has relied upon God, and God'he been mercifully inclined toward him, because he has done some of the things God wanted him to do. I know that God will do for every man what he has done for the U. N. I. A. if he will stand the crucial test. Here comes the truth."
The test calls for heroic effort. The test calls for suffering. The test calls for sacrifice. The test calls for the giving up of all personal interests, and even death itself. Oh, most of us go just as far as we leave and fishes last, and then we turn back with the multiple.
The masses are clamoring and some of us must go all the way. The masses are saying, "Give us that larger freedom and real manhood rights, where as God's children, we may be heard and treated like Him." The masses are saying, "Give us this light and we will rise to the decision." The masses are saying, "Show us honest leadership and we will be true." They are saying, "Tice us men in whom we can believe and we will approach God through their teachings."
Here again is the truth. The masses do not think, and we are able to think, should be true to God and the people we lead, or try to lead. We will do because God did, and Christ said, "Together works than these we shall do."
What is the humour? Your faith, our faith, and that alone. For we are all children of God through faith in Christ Jesus. Let us then possess Africa. It is ours, a God is a God of all flesh and He has given the bounds of all nations. We are always in a strong land. Your home with God is a natural soul united.
RELIGIOUS AWAKENING
MANIFESTED IN JAPAN
RELIGIOUS AWAKENING
MANIFESTED IN JAPAN
Salvation Army Relief Work Is Credited With Creating a Spiritual Revival
From the New York Times
From the New York Times
Commander Eugene Booth of the Salvation Army has just received a cable dispatch from Japan sharing that, as a direct result of Salvation Army relief work during the earthquake there has been an unprecedented religious awakening; among people in and around Tokyo and Yokohama. Commander Booth has transmitted the message to Salvation Army officers throughout the United States.
The message, signed by Major Ernest Pugmire, financial secretary for the work in Japan, says:
"The poor people turn to Salvationists as their friends and crowd Army folks as never before. Needless to say, the Army is taking full advantage of the unparalleled opportunity to be of assistance to them, as will be shown by the fact that during the nine months immediately following the disaster an unparalleled number in such a short time. The people saw our relief work as a practical demonstration "of the gospel we had been teaching them."
The message makes it clear that the help given by American Salvationists and their friends has had a distinct effect upon the preservation of peace and good will between Japan and the United States.
Japan is one of the ten distinct missionary fields throughout the world in which Salvation Army work is maintained by an annual week of self-dental on the part of Salvationists in all parts of the country in the Eastern Hemisphere of the United States. Self-Dental Work occurs this year from March 29 to April 5. In Japan the work is carried on in 124 centers by 292 commissioned officers.
The work, established in 1895 in Japan, has manifested a steady progressiveness which, in recent years, has been extraordinary in many respects. The visit of the founder, General William Booth, in 1907, when there were only 20 centers of work and 150 officers and employees, brought the Army's aims and purposes especially before the nation and as a consequence of the better understanding thus developed, a wider opportunity for service was created. Considerable development in sociol service has been witnessed in recent years. Human for friendship women, retains for an imprisoner, hospitals for
Perhaps, too, then you will be called
To take a lower seat,
Because, while here on earth, you
crushed
The poor and innocent beneath your
fee.
It is consoling just to know
That day will surely be
When all will meet their just reward
And the innocent go free.
the crisis and a similarum for consumptives are among the outstanding services work and the institutions in which it has been carried out that so splendidly equipped the Salvation Army for emergency work during the period of distress following the earthquake.
The Imperial House, impressed by the practical results of the work, has manifested a genuine and practical sympathy and, during the earthquake period entrusted the Salvation Army with thousands of dollars worth of materials for distribution.
'LOST VIGOR RESTORED IN 24 HOURS'
"Glands Renewed in One Day" Is the Amazing Statement of a 76-Year-Old Veteran
For eight years, deadened glands and nerves, and an aching feeling need not be dragged any longer, he felt he could become a veteran. Now it is possible for him to feel empowered to become a veteran. He was fortunate to become a veteran to a day after, with Mandy Formula, in the treatment. This famous treatment is being renewed youth, and a strong win failed.
For an 8th year, he lost vest was restored and glands renewed in twenty-one days. Mr. Formula, his Ms. Today, I am 76, but I don't feel a day over. I haven't started taking the vest, but now I am enjoying a remarkable giant restoration" and an convinced my way. May this blessing continue. On the discover
This wonderful formula, prepared by one of the most talented musicians, is generally known as Madoo. In easily used at home and seems to work like magic in the classroom, it is a great tool. No matter how bad your condition, no matter what your age or occupation, no matter what your name, you can use the "wild spirit of youth" we are so confident Madoo Formula will deliver. The 250-lb bottle for only 11.50 on 14 days trial. If the seeddae are not satisfactory and you want to be pleased in every way, it costs you nothing.
Send no money—just your name and address.
Send to L. Larson, at the Baltimore, MD office.
The money will be mailed at one time, but you can
send it to simple directions. If at the end of 15
days you are not showing "wonderful im-
formation," you will be back and your money will be refunded without
out question. This offer is fully guaranteed,
and give this "remarkable formuile" a trial.
to help us feel home
THE PEOPLE'S FORUM
Some One Must Pay.
“For Race. Redgeaption
Fo the editor of the Negro: World:
“Au to the imarivonment of Mr. Gar-
TYeOeT IGEF Tk Ber nOW -wUftoring-an
cfnjuatlee. . The: members of thy U. X.
“[ Ay should never Teer dincourawed: We
munt remember-thal some of our people
must. die In urder ta suvo' the Negro
ymce. W6 don’t feel: that Garvey” Is
-worrying about anything other than
the future ‘of his race. We Kope, he
Sill woon be reteaved =~ *
.. SI, BURBRIDGE.
Ohugow, Ky.
Will Support Fhose Who
Are Now at the Helm.
To tho Edlter of dhe*Negte Wertd:
Allow, symice _in_yue_valuiible
paper to nay" word a resatd To the
Perseciition und imprisenment of, our
Tender" Hon. aajarcun Garvey. ‘Thank
God we huve Gre noble son Vf the rece,
tne who, has suffered sind wil after
for the Koud of hts "people. Ie has Jett
three capable men in charge, Hon. W.
L. Sherrill, Sir Clifford S. Bourne and
G. E. Carter, and we will strive to
Blve then nappert, no they Weed Tr
now more than ever, We pray for the
Gellverance of sii leader from the
Rauneata privorveetl want ing Got be
Sieh him inthis, hone of telah "and
may Heelys he With those. who are
snow at ihe helm,
FRAXER BERNARD.
Geltea’ Hibieuntuseivie
‘To the Editur of The Negru World:
(Allow me xpace In your valualite
cphper, to nis that my wife wid Taxrer
\with tiene who say. Let each mes:
bee of the orsaninition aive ui: dotlai
sto the Black Crom Navigation nd
Trading Compuhy to hely Inthe se-
Gemption’ of Afrieu aml tho complete
emancipation of tery Nexto” M¥
wife and I will gladly Give 4 dollar
‘ each. © 10S "LEWIS,
“Ambridge, Pa, .
Let Us Go to Victory and
Thus Please Our Leader
‘To,the Editor of The Necro World:
Lat us go on.to victory..Let uy tigtit
the good fixht. Lot un sboldly. rally
t6 the cause, so fhat our imprisoned
Teader may ever Ket thinks, that we
are loyal to hia work. and that no (|
"may'ariae in hin mind ty worry hin. |
‘Our only help for hint,now in to keep
him encouraged by holding up bish ts
red, bluck anit green.
_ MRS. ARELLA DUNN MoopI:
Contrat Vertlenter, Cuanaguey, Cats.
More Determined Than Ever
‘Ts Stand -by.Mr. Garvey
‘To.the' Editor of The. Negro World:
The Negroes with whom T have tillked
sluce Mr Garvey has. ben imprisoned
are more determined thant they. were
Defare. “And we wilt exer try tu ate
alot Bin cause, hecaune we Know teat
Tia: haw, twen 1 fosn) leaner.
‘We will never be dowsihexrted. We
wit ray to the eatne unt Atriea 1
redeemed. Now, ax Negroes, let us be
‘As ono with the same slim, ene Gosh
and one destiny.
os, Vo M. GoRDOX,
Chee de Avis cuta.
Sun Will: Shine if
We Keep the Faith
To the Editor of the Negro World:
The doors of prisons hive cloxed on
many innocent persons, Blick people
EAT WHAT YOU :
DRINK WHAT YOU
\ SLEEP WHEN YOU
If you ara troubled with constipation, biliousness, indigestion, gas belching,
liver trouble, stomach trouble, skin eruption and weak bowele, ORDER x
bottle of HOLY-BARK COMPOUND, # most wonderful spring tonic. at once,
and tkeo a doxe mornings only, and sou will be plearantly surprised to notice
how your food digesta better. Yon are not troubled with your stomach any.
more. All indigeation dintrexs after eating 1x Kohe. ‘Do not lot ‘neglect of
Eur stomach hecdme cheanie, vecause ‘the results AFe Aangerwx. : Act At:
ones, Send for a hottla,ot this Godsend medicine this minute, Matled:any~
where. Price $1.00. (Postage twenty centa extra). If you ure not natin~
fled with St return’ mame aikt we gtyeranteo the refund’ of your money. *
MONEY MUST BE SENT WITH-ALL ORDERS
‘ 113 West 143d Street =
* NEW YORK CITY as 8
Full Dirgetions How to Take, With Each Bottle
- Cc... 3 as < s “y
| Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower |
a: 2 Nature's Way “of Forcing the |
farm MEE. Hair to grow tong, soft and heathy, |
4 if gee A eombination of dried and “pow-—
. Tae 2 dered seed. Just clean your scalp and
_ # t Qiant the seed often’by rubbing the.
- (AIR -SKED GROWER gently in
| the ealp, Do thie tonight: watch |
Ee S “pe grow, ‘s @ mystery.
oo UE PRS a fnchoned, true and beet |
Rd Pl sir grower, Try. tt Ledies, let us
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5 ae _ Hair Seed is « powerful stimulant,
33a Pe ‘it excites ‘the oie 8 new: aad
2 FD booby action. dandraff and
ae he Heking of he usin aad st oars
er hin woes ie tos aoe
2 ay eh nee aa
ee ae
ts Fiore
ae ar fe ‘ io -
fae as eo an a Pea eee: si
ee ae cL Ane 8.
Ne ERE eee eet a
Fs po ey fie AI oe A ii Dehetre te lcegtetecirnd
Tey ee rae ee re ee | eee ee eee SategEser
pe eee ae aac Mit a aes roan eens Sd al
y od ros ’ ry ae i a
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ate “ep fa a os ee eee oo as " eee he =
eRe Ba St ea ge AOE Bes
a en ; PE Se Pepin ey ee
Man ahd Wife
“Give. $1 Each
should not be oblivious of tomorrow,
for there Is foy Iteelt in plucking free-
| dom trom (tie cilitches of the enemy, in
J anatching ‘success from ‘the, very ‘teeth
|of failure. Right fe right, ¢ven though
Ie be on a neaffoltor Behind prison
bura.“:TRere. will always bé fooln who
Foniy thliik of tremselver, but the wine
{man user hit iintom for the good of
his race.” Prion yalin mean. the dark-
ent hour Uefore ihe dawn, but the mun
will hing yxain and be ne gloriously:
Elght if Negroes will keep the faith
in-God-und their leader,
| MITTIE B. HOWARD.
Detroit. ith. .
She Will Do All She . .
Can to Help the Cause
To the Kaltor of Tho Negro Worla:
= Tam glad ‘to .knew that my, poople
[aretrsing “to—rericem—oire country
Africa, und 1 will dy wil In’ my power
to help. ..
MARTHA WHIGHT. ©
YFrathingham, “Mos. = |
Payment of Dues Great
Hele ta Grenmtvationl
“SO ADe HENGE Of the Segre: World:
Na arevtonineed” raore tee ever
ahat soln Ie right, and that injustice
celdahness, dered and prejudice are
the fruits of eylt hearts. | Whatever
may be the cau¥e for the imprison
ment of our leader, nothing will
dampen our detéimination to put the
program over, Shall we stap to pine
and cry? No, we wilh earry on, until
[tee bettie for Atsiente eeiempaion He
‘won. Shall the warfare be halted be-
.eauie. oll xeneeal. ia cuplured. 30. to!
weak?
ere
sanda, win hes menberd. aii above
SH. pay died. rexulnely, "Tay | your
iyontiy taxation and such other denn:
tions an are requisite and. nveorary,
Let It be a etrinng yoil wind pull alls
toxethers JOIN MATTHISWS.
Santures, porto'Itien =
OE as |
Standing by Mr. Garvey |
A Bees PGE Poaceae |
Tg is my. desire at thix time to let
my votce .be heard in the fight of the
survival of the ftttest. “Since the fa
coptlin Of Gurveyismn ia Relish Gulana
claim the honor to he the first mem-
ber enlisted under the banner of the
Red, Hhek and Green, to Aght, sf
needn be, for a free and redeemed
Africa, 7 ee
‘On the 17th uf August Sister Rob-
erts and myself, along with other en-
thuslastle frlends of the race, formed
a diUslon at the above residence, and
here in the near future (0 xend for our
charter. We aro prepared to stand
hack of the Hor, Marcus Garvey In ix
proxeam ‘ome and alread, ©
* JULIAN H. HILL,
Georgtown, Demerara.
No Time to Weep; ..
It's Time.to Work
‘To The Editor ef the Negro World: .
Tleare allow me space In your noble
paper tw may that even though Mir,
Garves 1s in prison at this tine, yet
we are with him to the end. Ag tsa
niost natural thing, “the mid news
sprewt a gloom over those of us who
Ive the UN. 1A, bait ve have no
tine to weep. Mr. Garvey Is only
making the series hat all worth
while leaders have made. There te
nothing at all strange abouts. Our
present task’ In to prenerve the or
guntzatton ‘at any cost. We wilt stand
by Garvoy until we reach our Real,
+ ADELAIDE a. GOFE,
‘Hchadk iuiclae sendusse. |
TW AWN WARE [A WAT To MAKE suspess| === ==
F mAAL Bi pot mene you" T
L | FOR OUR.BOYS AND GIRLS} <->. »
” i . 7) FUR VIO A your opportunity
VISIT 2 Wi: ——" See e.
: : Tee gs oe you
|| The - ‘Commercial © Doctor| is—notning. “1:
mks ie . - ¥ ree” doctor, take my |
let pane Whe Specializes in Dis-| Sorte 8"
° 7] eases of Negroes Gives disa—c. 3,
wath ACR Us the Benefit of His —_———
. See Opinion on
Presidents of New York and Ce ‘
Cincinnati Divisions Have | 7° ane Editor of ‘The Negro World:
. : @an.make our movement a -auc-
‘a Set Chat. sid Get] cess onty, tnroush co-operation. Vary ,
“a Ringing Message for the| 2", of vscould have boughs, the
: = * ker T. Washit alone, but 3:300
" Members From President-| of us dia. ‘Now let un parcel purselves [Sera "yn
5 Ma ‘tmat number in overs tate and [angetany, mene
.'General Garvey +] Sotnteg enter iamta eactlany’ aes Shea Sets
Sameaees putting 43 each month > amount tolamian #52, bul pee
Written forThe Negro World $210,000 yeuriy, tit keep over] Spunotiem, seachen ,
By) GEORGE A. WESTON two hundred of our. gists making $1,090 | wish wea" destre—cor
mt thin attantaz™ Meet nati th
Leortge-— Dy hers los pod. once br 4Whe
1 xot dressed and hurried up tho'atep
Lod out Tuto the xtation, 1 way Rein
Steet, rough xgpen xave as
inarked *Cotored Within: fvum, At
Mic he-Georele: ot New Vork. vt
sent x eleneain tn Me. Ware ,ateuny
| the time of my arrival Lwaited'a sige
[period to xee I anyone iconkt caine
[neat me. When tivbody arrived 1 peo
Heoesded togthe home of the treasurer of
[the adiunts Divieton. shone ndaenn
hast Reco glven,. Arriving st the. hime
of thee (renmurer aural awaitins an an
fnwver bo iy ring, Twin surprised to neé
A mesoonsier Wop arrive Us deliver th
movxnie from me which should have
Jen delivered Uwe niht Jetare, ‘Th
menwenxer explained tHat the bey ay
startéd fo deliver thir message he sibght
Inefoce haul heel el un ansteway ateatd
te.senee tacit“. —
After hireakgast, 1 went to the han
ot tife secretary vf the Athunts Division
“aad met Me. Ware. He inmedintely
wunted to Enow why 1 hit net wired
him. L explained that Chav bremght
the telegram sith mie, We eonverted
Sith Mx donee, thie wewretaes, fat i
Short white aiid then debarted tthe
Federal prin, Our hearin were hens
ax we tude atone in the Fear or “cule
Gerd aertion UC the Bare
In due time we arcived at the pent-
frntiars. whic peoved to Ie une af
the most Imposing buildings in Athenta,
Ae We, husned ty ans thouzlts went
back to the scone In front of the pest
oilice on February 6, when lange
vind guthered to see the champion of
true hiherty. Uansteatfed to tw Deputy
U.S. Marshals ‘and being faken to the
Tombs 10 awalt the our when he
would he sent to this very plwce. T
cigs in mY mlant'n exe, in: followwern
waving a Roodebye, with tours in thelr
ryen: Our hentia were Heavy #6 8 aP=
proached the prixon. ;
The outer guard asked, “Where.are
yu xolnk7?. Whom do you wish to
weer We replied, “The Houprable
Mureus Gurvey.” “Aré: you “his at-
igneyar" "No: hin employees: one
fron’ New York and one fro™M Cincin-
nati.” "You care here on buisiiens,
hen" “Fens “AM right, ge atscad.”
We tuned South to the taht and
aPpionched the massive aipiieture up
fe serantte steps. Another quard met
HE the tus and qbened a heavy fron
Lage, Coon belie asked our inition
Ne oid him that yee wished to Kee
Mitreun Garvey. We piewsed, Ente, the}
bby anf left. same, money, for Me.
farvey with the clerk there. Atte fee
civing A vecelm, we were toll -to sit
here and walt. |
We walted ful salted? Many people!
cho wane throiggh the 1obhy after wel
id were shown through the secon
sate, ant. ati we, walteds Oniee the
eer mak "Sony man a le hard |
e find.” After an hour had pitawed, an
dMicer came and anid, “Come, now.” We |
nlekedd up aur papers Hervowsly whe
hurried with the oer past the turn=
fev Mt the sacond gate. Along the
orridor ‘we went unit fnto'n reception
oom, Our ehier wt hist! He reve and
sreeted um with the sanfe fing. in his
‘olce. “Stelle, Ware, how ts Cinvin=
AT" Hello, Weston, how is Liberty
tall
is yes flashed ay he talked with ux
bont-the eiganization, We. soon, bee
ame light héarted.sgain. Our’ glooml-
ex departed, as this man to whom
nitions look fof tight and Teadershin
topd befgre ux feurless and wiihont
emorne, “Anil ie is eo unselfvh.. He
Srgot iy etivironment. Hin only
NoUEhe Wax for the people: to know
rthey were carrying om
The thought came tome that truly
@ Is, proving that, “Stone wails do
ot prison minke, nor iron tiara.
age. Thi man i as free an the air.
{e nad, “f have no regrets. The poni-
entiary was uot mde for tie. I have
othing to be penitent for. My con-
clence {x clear.” And he sokingly
ded, “I am getting Ynine while T am
gunk My enemien will get thelr when
ney are oid, which will make it harder
pr_tvem_to_bear... If l_were. going.
¢ Hanged tonight, it would -be the
ame with me an if T were: enjozing
Ne compenionship of my. dear ones,
ust. a0 Tong an-1 am belng Imprisoned
r hanged for the freedom .of my peo-
“My one cohcern.” he cald, “in, will
1 people allow thelr, enemies to turn |.
pom. trom the goal of wa. Attlee te-
eomed. My life 6nd my all is laid
pon the altar, of the ‘advancement of |
race. You may hang me, so long as ||
pe Tope with watch it fe. done binda|
nivereal “Negrodom thte ons great ‘
aeqacees <ean i
_ SEs .
A-WAT TO MAKE BUSDESS
Who Specializes: in Dis-
eases of ‘Negroes Gives
Us ‘the Benefit of . His.
Opinion ye” Fag
To-the Editor of The Negro World:
We an.make our movement a us:
ceva ‘only, through co-operation. Very
‘tow (of unscould have bough, the
Booker T. Washington: alone, but 3:800
of ux did. “Now lot us parcel purselves
out in that number in every state and
jeountry.. to build “factories; 3.600
putting $5 each month ‘amount to
$210,000 yeuriy, that v. keep over
two hundred ‘of our. gist maicing $1,090
annually. and somé to ‘spars. If we
‘eafnot Ket 3,500 persoim te sink $5
4nouthlyprububly we might get_7,000
to xInk $2.50, and “so. on accord'ng to.
“their poeke:s. n
You: esinnot expect our tailors ant
dresamakérs to compete Wid the fel-
low, ucrosk the street stngle-handed
whone forefathers were In business
when our ancestorn:were, In bondage.
dg. cnch town of any alae you will fing
‘ite Rood drewamaker, shoe and hat
miker, and Uio xume te true of the
tutlor. They ‘ure juxt making a living.
They cannot ufford to pay for the
khid of heip they need to run thelr
business, tather than--be bothered
WIth n Toot traxh they will uxe thelr
wiver If they are married or no one
at all, Now there Ix our cline. Let
us xay to them, "We will furnish tHe
money to pay- the help; get you. to
supervixe the biisiness-and give you 4
perventage-onull sales...Your salary,
is guaranteed, We do rot expect to’
mike « dime for the next five years.
We wunt to xee sonie of your educated
Rts ani toy le aemething “ele Be
qiden manual work. Wo know that all
J¢ you do not belleve in the movement.
but you have nomething ta make It a
cucdeny tid We Want you to train
others, When we have gained-the con:
lence of the public ax t2 our busl=
news mbllity we can well xtock, form
compantes, operate large commercial
enterprises, open a mubstantial buat
pews that will In (urn pay a handsome
Biviitend, There ure a quarter of af
pilfion dollaes xpent annually . BY
solored people for clothes and the
olorad buxiness men “get very little
yf cl umn."
We neei! trained business men and],
cho are xolng to train them? Took at
he professional men of our sryup.
hey have been trained and they are
aking Kod, If we ean unite under
his pian, those who come Into our
community to put our busines men
ut Of business will watch thelr stepa.|_
Sunipoxe we could combine in thin way’,
nd estublinh factories tn all thor larger ||
ties In this coontry, Central and|
South America, {t would give those||
ho come out of college every year 3}
ifforent view of comniencement day
xercines, 7 ,
Thoxe Who have:attended the varlous
uidnens schools of the country wil
emember .necing the principal enter
he class room from-time to time way |)
ng he hs x-norltion for-a young lady |
3 stenographer in ono of the largext |
ommercin} houses tn the efty, and he]?
“It say he hax several other positions, |3
te will continue, In faet, every stu-|2
ent In" this college will be placed ae-|7
ording to’ his or her abiijty when he] 4
Vrovide for Yourselt! Protect Xeur
Provide for Nred Ones ent er
Over 16,000, Killed My Auto Axcidents
Nearly? |
More than “130.908 Injured! Over ton
inition “automobiteacusaing Fn Se
Gited sinter renga
Greco, emabliey wehdent «paler.
Sif000 for Tone "or Hite, “Paya siRee
Neck for’ totally “aleabling Warten.
Fitca Gonet and cebhegt ta the dariodiee
Gon of the ‘New Nock State ‘thearonce
Department.
"ECONOM Accident Insurance
AUTHORIZED AGENT
“nit, eit IML. XY.
| Phone Meadburat 3:76 or Clreln’ 10325
: THE NEW i
DISCOVERY |
STUBBORN BLOOD
DISEASES?
Riera tigers oto ie
ys
ee °
aaa >.
WS PN ee
Ee eee aoe oe
i ees Dae
= ou ae
ie ts eee ee
as EES
a t ae
shalt Rave Snlatied the coures:“-It dove
Rot sear 'your-When ail of the smoke
et unxiety has passed'away you wait
‘your opportunity ‘to eatek, xe whis
offies alone, (hen he, wil tell you whet
‘he has for you and you know. what that
tewothing, Loan the easneeren!
doctor, take my treatment .and I will
eure you ‘of tits acute er chronic
disease —C. B., .
Se etd
es
ONDER of the.
th CENTURY.
ezat CES tanti
tra pete acne gree he
paca mtcte esate alee
Hala rae
mish wad" deslre—coniuen bed ‘Heuita, wore
racers areuntee noche enna: ERS eRe
actin Cathet eas iste ogame es
earn! method br ihe SSrite Paty ay Bay
Oe DONTE OM AYIIVGI- ACT ROW" ATA
MARVELOUS!
WONDERFUL!
This “God- Send. Owtfit te ~ Beene
Bity Sessler creck the oer
‘ Best Money Can Buy
1 General Lodestene” for Lack 10.
Fr pentose ahd sore en
4 Br Beran ie be Berner on
wore Ske
C Greece nanaits Wael tee ie:
agzzaee mantts Foat for Pro: ag
Ties ot sack aahaae ates
ierpeel tet pevtmecee Week
1 Tin of Our “Happy Heme" Incense
Te Lote MeeP ter senses ta
1 Scat Woada tnitice Bveees. Ee
mci on eenae st ane:
| EET date. eS 3.00
cr sey foe aoe aesems-evie,
Mot Hage Cee pees
Ae you are ak me etn gute
en Gees,
Astro-Phrenological Studio
210 West 62nd. Stregt,.N. Y. 5.
Gran, Ste: ohe the Copauerte Rants, Che:
HERG aM ead coi Be
Tietels Sonne este’ Ses omtntorn “até
Hei / iy ohees, Maat tar tech
tne itow. tn tet’ What ‘You Want, foe
Peecttemn dupes, URE Sorta Tak, siete
Weceh halt” ta. dt eetis ote
Heri ,cmidice seta. Primm Saecanes
Hise Peat Gor! retramtes Soe2 the Tete:
UseSoector tok: GEES cs crea eae
Oth Bree Wich ane order Yar 63.06 wines
ty’ xonite Thwitl wend free my da” Toute
Besos dang Tee natcoe a Uae
Melt anh Rene Al ietucteed oe
runes ohlnne Co Rates AS ara
Tela beceges” By Weotees bet “SH
SE RE
EES cen ot
So Es
big Sanaa ome.
Ry “aor ag ates
% F pelta sis Seam ge
Y@O\ Skies
(Gta): ccs
Rey) E a3 SrS
NOR Seale
Ah oe
AERHESSAPOLUCK Chitee Soomcerty
BOW AND WHERE TO FIND THEN
| A GBCRET yon chonlé Rnew.” Tk moy mens
Stews SF: PuRE pares oe So
a” }OOSEL CA. ge COME BLOG, CHADS, (LL
Seas
Cea SESS see
\ See? See a
See see ae. Reiss yeatescarel
BRuMa eG eee CT yy,
.. ‘HEALTH WAY,
Talis HO-RO-CO TONIC
A ae ponies Ie
«pak aey ccs
obeimsies! pamrcue
SAMUEL FRANCIS
‘SS East 13rd 5, Mew York City
‘SPE, Fortune Tetling
RRM Globe! oy Rcaeed
eve Sees
(zs ieee. os
SS SE ite
FuTSs FRE
H2zpahdcy, meee tue Talog mets
Sear ae raeg ar eteeat Uae
Bes SE ite as
LUCKY GLssa—eep wo .sOurY
pete scam ae an tes Oe oes
SST ators Te ar pe ar ts
S : te a S <r
: Tach re Rm, th See
Poke Gre’
Pee Sv cecal SOT
re ——__—<— ,. : ad
a Learn':iProm Netives:tha..Secrete of a .New
ol Restorative Superior |to Gland Treatments _ :
oe . Amigzing. Power.of Mysterious Bark a
‘A few Invigorater, which. scientists re-) eat Ime @ay or two and soon the Girculs?
gard av thy quickest and mort aaquing, ever | lon improves, the appettte becomed better:
Uncovered: nas betn found by travelers ta {the merven ere toned up and the cetera of
East Africa, ‘Ther acUve. Inacediont tam | youthful vigor ia-qulckly apparent:
Strack from the/hare of a:juagle tree,” Ue] CARY Feeder of “wnla Atage may test the
Glgcovers. resulted {rad observation of the | mew discovery withowt risk. “The laboratory
Gntiven: ye, long had known the: secret ot | producing OLANOTEUM iw vo cénddent of
ite remarkable power. Simply ‘by chewing] <he power of the product: that’ they offer
tne mysterious beri they ere able fo ward | large 44 supply forveniy 8% and gearantes
oft premature. age, and maintain Snueual | to refund the money it the remedg falls (o
phyateat avis : =| give results In a werk. Send no matey, bt
‘The extract hes been used by “Kurépean| just your name -and address to the “-EN-
puynictane with rent auceghs, even in the [DOCRINE LABORATORY, Depty X, Bt.
Cisent nnd ‘tnont obstinate. cerca. It te now | Louln, Ao. ‘and: a full’ $4 treatment of
Svnllatie ta thie country in conventent:tabe| GLANGLEUM will be -maiied under plain
(evs, celled GLANOLEUM, which may anally | wrappen On Gellvery, pay. the postman
ha used. by anyone nthe privacy of the| only. $2 and postage. Foreign countelea
iuines, ‘The tablets also contgin other in-| must acioss $2.50 with order. If mot de-
Vixorating chemente of proved merit, Thil| Ushted! with the ranulte atthe end ef O5C
comounl ia ald. to produce even more ta-| weeks notify the inboratory anq-yaue money |
Cnbie’ resulte. than, the uch, digcuased | will Le rafuoded in full, No one need hesl-
“glen operations, In moet caaes boneAta | tate {0 accept Ale Ural offer, ae It te fully
see Guineatete Sindiaad abeainn aus aoones | Punraneiere.
Edet Effiong :
ot
Nigeria, WestAfrica
Uren to aungunce that fin iy head of the
Rigteie Remedy “Cone tunich’ in Cemiotered
IRAN" gentmoue GC ileal; Now Pork
Subjomed aré the reiniedies which are a.
Teena artiar’nammnaigec nen ee 8
Siaerh "Uinimend =" Beatty “reliever
Nigcria “Nomach Bitiers—YOF” atoinach
rutin Bee
xigsrin “Ribtaibntte: Remedsm—Unnarpans-
"Gia" coer vheaunatam woe wed Jot |
Nigtrin “Boay Fanie—Nidiure'a. remedy.
SUirhig tide. Rene at waste cane
eer et ee am unetat tn |
Tattchin gna checks inciplent Fey,
ning 60. Pee Blues
Nigctie”cdea” Remedy and Holldiog
Nigerhe Neree Remedy. $2.00.
MELE BWendetite' Seti Setaiain mem
‘Siytecar
SeoietFermedien novel and eMenciour.
Ee ae Pe ce Since
——— rhe gern Mere tnconee——_
-at_peerions arama wach perinenten” ie,
vate With “delleattty Eweed trngeance
TnWVinceasinen the Jey of diving, rice:
‘hail Wks $008 Taree, 85.00.
“Adidrens “AIL Comimunieatione to
NIGERIA REMEDY ‘CO.
(aint Katlene)
432 Mt,"Nlehelan Ave.
SOM, YORK CHTY
Deiekere ass,
er» )
(os ies
toe men ness
Saat fe ete
SEND NO MONEY
aa
; emusnemes
._SENTS—Weue for tree aamples. «Set
RESIS EME, haat nin ie
Tine Suerte wectine ae’ et
_btaeers Sen, en, Meas
iy eae ne ge a
at Seater
SERGI EN Gs oe Get
Sei! aie es fy Sar Ue ee
BS Sed ate ae ne eke
yh aed Roan ad reer, See
ae Sais etteaaiatane. WEP Meath
s\¥enue, Kannas Clix, Mo. . *
5 WANTED :
SOF GE Wasee OA eI
IE GE AST a mone Ene
Soe eat ag tee eaaeerreat wie
macs erin Tees, base en
ee §
aia, NEN, WOMEN. BoTa CINE TT om
ia EN, one Gee Grgrh te
alee. tant ouagees cen ae
ee en kane eae
Eisentre, cgerydaateamen to diapeen of
Hak Speuetnsts Maser ceeds:
Sere cree oaee, ae
Cane TS Wok EM, Puls
Many. Making $50 a Week
Mamie Smith's personal fine (Le
Biinay for the eace apting ke
. ae Ree,
Our Great Free Qffer Helps You Sei!
* ~ Write TYSON 4 CO.
Box L, Paris, Tann.
a aa
lente SRN aoe
AGenteatitar 7 tae iownay Us
Reciaurante ‘Cancbrosia “Drag Borex
as, ae
Oy Merton wp ‘tannee. aad
Pare. Coat te
sig tstlenet) Derk madcinen, Por ai
Iie BEE PN Oke SE
<ORDRE TODAY *~ i
“proin Nopetmanite Man coy, J. A. Roger.
shoei caret Mee oe dah Bees
iia aiaiad eee Coa ae
33.45, Lemon Pub Gos 2293" Seventa Aves,
Lore On
F cies oh Seas iaaavem SOR Ga
Sierras, Si ecteccese aie eae oot
ae Cee EC EE
Sienaveoe attr etki ota apralion for
SeiteestuSts Paige Meenas Oe
iy :
"Fer tbe. “Ses” Charms affect
fertanes Oo Reew
A aR pee wd
ieee oe oe
R miernerte Ber ewile. Baiivites Re,
ayon peer ed
Joa. rhet Pash, soreemn hopeless, Pee
Sen ae eee
xxood. sek ¥
a ee
eo re Sager
4 a P oe
ot Se
whe. Sys
Pe a aaa
ve on) Te 8
Polen th See ae
at a :
[ppt Re a ae |
aN SES Fe re Oe et mane
ion proves. the ppeite wacom beter
Reena ake yeep prego
Sah ee sey Speco
preheat ee
new discerery without risk. “The laboratory
rectus Slashes er tocaat
| rea, or etc ttt Sony oes
Ser eens a cae toa
WS Be ft hey Wise omnop
Soni teat onde
Seats ee hts ae
Shadi “bomeecte bene. te
cr angen Tai Coin
Senate at Mi ol mata eae ple
Crack Sat "par ait Sots
SED oct Sautee Raat” Sees
rin Sate eS ae ata a
see one Cota 2, aha oa
See ae by an Sak ee
rite tldaes infant Sea nes,
ive cepras Gol aati ne
nee
7 (ALE HELP WANTRO————~—
unre meer warren ———
om a
Soeiie ok Rene eee
RRC GP aun CaP ne
eae re
CARERS Utne pee, ts
Eiearae Gcsiet fected Sie
ELLA Bet Te Toes?
apolis, Jad, ee a
‘FIMEMEN. bratemen, ' omen sleeping
Fy
Sirihe atime ener
rermcigg Sigs: iestmaoe ae:
Gere edt. RE
crronen penesneas cue ae
suena per tg eat ec at:
Se end teers paaeed wes
Stata aise sir eae
Sepals dace achged te sim
Sehsonsbie fie coaee ceealge, eee
eae ste tthe Ree ce
ea, meee AR ATS” |
SAFILL STAD. INVESTIONTION
» VAUGHN 7
20) ees tow ees
STU ANE, 2668 —Betwoon 127th and etn
Hint Aig emai Varntoned. emt unter
Rinhea nttcme eautieal mebetbor on
Ranonante:
ROOMS wiih “privileges, “ Tinasonahle, ity
Fenech eae nomne ean
Sikes 8 Mica NES Oe
3. AST 116th St. 6 roeme, hat water, hath,
Acenm, electricity. “Newly painted. 462,
BIST eee Sten, So g-f aos. aeoct3s,
ieoaet nate StS
RUET oom, ulate for tee: eiecisie
GRE rishi "Maraineshde Sisk, BesH
Sitigelaees
FURMSHED ROOMS—Steam. meat, elgctzie
Tene nett due lares srsame aden 8.58
SER Spoiy betragn Sa Boh 668 ean av:
m—Enriatian arhe, Terpeciebie, cSuuie
pnbonc center, Rests, “seeectan caaiie
TESTER REMSSNER ROOM, AUT, CON:
SISTER CESMEENUE Roe Mindar i2Sm,
Mieinesereas et" “6
ROSH turpiied x equple with m coupin
BORN SRI Son SB
i
SIGE comfortable ,r99m, single or couuie.
RiSCoosemtonege ” 26 tint Ate uct Hist
ara REN ocaingnae tes
TMhanaies” 2A Rae Sat
FURNISHED apartment for sale: 6 roune:
PSP pnoereresns Sor eet Se
Hrcm Gorathieg room, 109 We Aaa Se A
BEAN eeenings ation 6 PM
FURNISIED rooms fo lt from 1 un
PU nite Xbe ef!
Tangy UNrunNisnen tacn gegen Ae
TAUGH Games teem en oesuRehen. 3058
Ben vee Ant ae Garner ast Ste
oe ee
Sealy Coraiebed. room, winnie or Foynie aii
Ranceniencen, sZ056 ath "Ate. (near 13200)
Siorninenise' eaten"
NEAT FURNISHED -ROOMS—Steam heat,”
DES Mane Slane “Be Waa
RURNIGWED ROOMS — Mlectrcley. wea
eee ROaN Eas private eosin gs
ISH GBF ode Satire HARRIS Se WE
eate Serer
2 Wont 1934 ewe Foome electro Hae
Sacet Be ctinie
TARGE, front, room for Euaness only,
WAR Bas ieee :
STRIGTE private room to lee ATW. Te
Brews Chablen
NRATEY FURYIGHED ROONS — fren
Fdnwcalence’ pent, electricity coldehns,
bain toomng steady not waters euenteesng
Teese: gee censontbiag Guitvavetings
Sad sil"aiy Sunday 348 Se. Semen Vises,
Bibokira! :
room apartment unfarniahed: private;
BUG peices aietiie ent! eam, haat!
mgriite Decbie, praterea. Ne, sbiection
Gildren. "Site Tu Avecs Cor. 13ith Bt, top.
Soe —
‘UIGIE clase. furnished apartment for male.
Reaterntalaphome Went cnesbs syn Tees
senabien ei "osgathe, Tegmmnras” Set
Behalag te. "Aber 6h “Phoas iforaingaas
bein ecatsor ponte
$¥O ROORTSA rarS woeay —
eat alot € Brkcr 308 Woot Lard
gure ot 3.
THREE AOOM | SPARTRENT—Nantty fur
RRsat, pet ameses cin gay Une.
BALL, $41" ITER treat, one MERE frome,
YURNISUBD: ROOMS—Baltabie, for two or
secreepscravie creas trea Hen Te *
Bradherst @s18: wee
TWO ADJOINING ROOMS — Furnished oF
rMepremnanees hatte, Ceeniogwatars sist
sisal roost MARY 1100 Maliame ‘aves’
SSieobone tent Herter :
LEt—Private room: electric Webt “Cali
Te! ROPCR Ns Tederese aroun. eve:
tra! phere Datasets ve ae 3
LBT—Two private roeme front: bed and -
Thgee Geom’ fpeoreseisp pees pera! -
itshes wee SET W. Titel, Be Ape Te |
TOIT Nel tyktet oom HOW.
Nowe see ee BF
LET—Nent furnished room ;
Nhoes, con reir eet pea :
Apety Lees 30 Malone 5
“ae ay ne ee
mae ates a case
serie Soho, ES nes
: *
ne = A
=a a |
5 tet arta Reg
ee =
e Pier ore: ei
dieses 7g
Regt ee
fee yee se
BRE ssi iT eae
SESS =
SR Be Pe