The Negro World

Saturday, April 25, 1925

New York, New York

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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 HIRED NEGRO EDITORS, TO SELL THEIR NEWSPAPERS, PUBLISH FALSE "NEWS" ABOUT MARCUS GARVEY VOL. XVIII. No. 11 HIRED NEGRO EDIT PUBLISH FALS The Hon. Marcus Garvey sends greetings to the Negroes of the world and congratulates them upon the splendid manner in which they have conducted themselves at a time when the eyes of the world are leveled at them. He desires his fellow men to know that he is very much aware of the despicable methods that are being employed by the enemy, within the ranks of the Negro, to have his name blasted and his future activities hampered. The Afro-American, a Negro weekly, published in Baltimore, for instance, in its issue of April 18 reproduces what it shamelessly declares is a statement by Marcus Garvey, to the effect that he confidently expects to be deported, but (lhere Marcus Garvey is being quoted!) "I can work under the Union Jack; now that the movement is organized. Men are not gagged anywhere that flag floats." This is a vicious attempt to deceive the Negro race into believing that Marcus Garvey is a turncoat and is willing to smother his oft-asserted conviction that the Union Jack of Great Britain is one of the symbols of Negro oppression, degradation and exploitation. The Afro-American, or any other newspaper, lies-wherever it publishes any statement as made by me to any of its representatives or to anyone within the confines of Atlanta prison. This the Negroes of the world, and of America in particular, must know, and, knowing it, refrain from buying a newspaper merely because it has "Marcus Garvey on the front page." This trick is as old as the hills and is merely a scheme on the part of the misguided "intellectuals" of the race to get the countless members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to buy their papers, thereby swelling their coffers. The Seattle Enterprise of Washington, another Negro newspaper, last week wantonly dished up a "news" item from the Afro-American and had the effrontery to state that Marcus Garvey in a letter had penned those statements, which were a comment on and criticism of conditions as existing between black and white in Atlanta penitentiary. Steps are being taken, and they will be prosecuted to the limit, to make the Seattle Enterprise retract its wicked and malicious statements. But the Negroes of the world are invited to note that for the first time in history the imprisonment of a man has not satisfied his enemies and detractors. Even in jail, Marcus Garvey is being persecuted and maligned. ORS, TO SELL THEI SE "NEWS" ABOUT BROADCAST INTERVIEWS AND STATEMENTS THAT WERE BORN ONLY IN THEIR IMAGINATION Silly Article on Inter-racial Relations in Atlanta Penitentiary Which Appeared in Baltimore "Afro-American," Is Dished Up by the Seattle "Enterprise" as a Letter From Marcus Garvey Marcus Garvey Warns Negroes Against Being Fooled and Hoodwinked by These Traitors of the Race Negroes must ask themselves this question: "What is it his hired persecutors fear?" The following article, concluded from last week, is submitted for the earnest attention of Negroes the world over: THE DREAM OF A NEGRO EMPIRE It is only a question of a few more years when Africa will be completely colonized by Negroes, as Europe is by the white race What we want is an independent African nationality, and if America is to help the Negro peoples of the world establish such a nationality, then we welcome the assistance. It is hoped that when the time comes for American and West Indian Negroes to settle in Africa they will realize their responsibility and their duty. It will not be to go to Africa for the purpose of exercising an overlordship over the natives, but it shall be the purpose of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to have established in Africa that brotherly co-operation which will make the interests of the African native and the American and West Indian Negro one and the same. That is to say, we shall enter into a common partnership to build up Africa in the interests of our race. ONENESS OF INTERESTS Everybody knows that there is absolutely no difference between the native African and the American and West Indian Negroes, in that we are descendants from one common family stock. It is only a matter of accident that we have been divided and kept apart for over three hundred years, but it is felt that when the time has come for us to get back together we shall do so in the spirit of brotherly love, and any Negro who expects that he will be assisted here, there or anywhere by the Universal Negro Improvement Association to exercise a haughty superiority over the fellows of his own race makes a tremendous mistake. Such men had better PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U. S. A. TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES R NEWSPAPERS, T MARCUS GARVEY remain where they are and not attempt to become in any way interested in the higher development of Africa. The Negro has had enough of the vaunted practice of race superiority as inflicted upon him by others, therefore he is not prepared to tolerate a similar assumption on the part of his own people. In America and the West Indies we have Negroes who believe themselves so much above their fellows as to cause them to think that any readjustment in the affairs of the race should be placed in their hands for them to exercise a kind of an autocratic and despotic control as others have done to us for centuries. Again I say, it would be advisable for such Negroes to take their hands and minds off the now popular idea of colonizing Africa in the interest of the Negro race, because their being identified with this new program will not in any way help us because of the existing feeling among Negroes everywhere not to tolerate the infliction of race or class superiority upon them, as is the desire of the selfappointed and self-created leadership that we have been having for the last fifty years. BASIS OF AN AFRICAN ARISTOCRACY The masses of Negroes in America, the West Indies, South and Central America are in sympathetic accord with the aspirations of the native Africans. We desire to help them build up Africa as a Negro Empire, where every black man, whether he was born in Africa or in the Western world, will have the opportunity to develop on his own lines under the protection of the most favorable democratic institutions. It will be useless, as before stated, for bombastic Negroes to leave America and the West Indies to go to Africa, thinking that they will have privileged positions to inflict upon the race that bastard aristocracy that they have tried to maintain in this Western world at the expense of the masses. Africa shall develop an aristocracy of its own, but it shall be based upon service and loyalty to race. Let all Negroes work toward that end. I feel that it is only a question of a few more years before our program will be accepted, not only by the few statesmen of the world, as the only solution to the great race problem. There is no other way to avoid the threatening war of the races, that is bound to engulf all mankind, which has been prophesied by the world's greatest thinkers; there is no better method than by apportioning every race to its own habitat: The time has really come for the Asiatics to govern themselves in Asia, as the Europeans are in Europe and the Western world, so also is it wise for the Africans to govern themselves at home, and thereby bring peace and satisfaction to the entire human family. BETROIT OFFICIAL VISITS ATLANTA -- ~~ MEETS THE PRESIDENT-ENERAL 4, On the 30th day of April, 1928, 9] entered thé Michigan Central Railroad coach bougd for Atlanta, Gi, 10 visit the: Hon, Marcus Garvey, there’ con- fined:within the cold, xray, dninp walls of.the Federal Penitentiary. AT tray- ele towards’ the Maron and Ixon's Ving and an Y wan ushered Into. the —sin-eran ent —T naw fone ite nen vequpying an entire coach made ot ateg with all Interior conptorin fot traveling: then I saw over fifty Negroes crowded [fly one-third of an old ‘di- Inphdated wooden conch, the other two- thirds of thin; conch helng uscd, as amoker and baggage enr. Tsay women and-ehildren nuffocatins, ‘an It were. tn this Jlin crow eat, ‘Thien An f twiked wutwenrd and sai’ ivitinin’ iv all ite nptendar, rite the beautiful bua sky Gencending, an it were, on the hilton cL naw Negroes Ulting jhe soll, saw"them wtanding waving at te train as tt Passed by: xnw them as they traveled “nlong-'intheir -ix-carts, I sali that with all of those Mementd combindd the Xegeaen ¥ iN! not be thwarted tn thelr work for Afried redemption. L arrived in Atlanta ‘At 1.0 a. ay Aprit 12: Not knowing -avyone | went to the ¥. M..C. A. There I male in- quiry an to the visiin to the Federal prigon. No one wan able to give me thecdesired Infarmatina, but tho exe ecufive ‘ncerainss, mecing my anxiety, telaplioned the inquiry, and was in- formed that no visitn woul! be allowed until Monday morning. i next ine ‘qulged aa to the whereabouts of the Adanta, Division of the UN. 1 A. He. Informed mo that they tielt their mestinga. in the nuditorium of the ang thatthe treagarer of the Division, Mev Logan, wan Iviug In the Y. White talking to this gentlomayy 1 becnne worried at not belng able to ace our Fender, and heforo T kaew 11 was in kn telephony buoth culling the Federal prison agaln to And qut-whether Le nome moann 1 could get them tw xay T could neo him, J2ut my requert wan again turned down, <1 then deckled that I must ‘walt until Monday tern- ing. It reemed. tome ‘that Monday morning would ever cone: * During my waiting Mr. Logan cure ried me around to xéa verlous mem= bers:nd oficern of the Atiantn Di- Vision, who made Yt Very pleanant for me. On Sunday afternoon [ addressed one of the most enthusiastic gatherings: in the auditorium, 1 thunk th officers and members for the royal and how pitablo Yentinesit they an generously gave me while in their ety. | T arrived ut the Federal Monten ney at 8.10 fh, in, Monday, Ax Lens trred-thr main: entomimn f wan. stone | Uloned as to Whe Fo wanted ty 560 and | F nnawernt Marcum Garves, Me que | Cloned any: relattonshitys and T answered. Mo then sable tia ateudt but yt] entered the door of Aho peison another iinrd mae the mmo ingulry. J gave rin the answers required inl aden a Rhor cunversatiaye wWhilely Fee wet here rare to mietidton, he ‘requested tne to down, Meanwille he went tute ane nther, oMivs, aud “‘fter m few aninutes pe ewkenied tie tee fedfow tithe det Got permission te sen the Hen, Mavens farses, after being Jufermed an to the f puinbey of Visite allowed him, ast se mn, hut way made to understand Unt |, oy Mian aa a apectat-one, beeatne of rortuin thhnge ¢1 gave thix kentleman ng appreciation, after whieh Twas told whe Rented, During any sitting 1 ob | gerved closely the piison ant was annzed to xen the cleantiness af the Nace aml ttn inhabitants... “Within a few minuter 1 was uxhered nta the reception roam, where 1 he= \eld the true Nexrw leader wile the Line, .obb xmile, the xayie maznette | ‘orkovnilty, Ute name Garvey with-out- tretched Hania to graey mine. The |. ret question he asked wor, “How 1s etroft? Inthe spirit of the U.N. 1] yet alive? T informed him: that | | eyond the ahadow of 3 doubt the aptrit | { the U.N. J. A. prevatia in Detroit. | could then 0° ‘the look of content nent-and ‘ontteldetion- In hit: tnce. ‘SMOOTH HAIR - IN 5 MINUTES Veauiviua, Vay hair seems to be grow. redhat aan Tes cnarm— es : stoma ie cet Mee hearer ba ict tte tea Se Mahe are . tm the army I réet @ Colored prings ee seaeelononey bares cat BS aiy cus nae e “ant be Femaie as. eatliel co (a Sess eaetee 3 rose 2 a tea eee ae EN Cri, 7 as Sal Fear Sages = PP A ware en Ke x era's By o3 ie A ag E eer eae Le TE ate ead . 7 Psat ic 3. During our conversation all Mr. Gue: vey'é talk wan about une UN. LA “For myséie Tam not worried.” hi suid “my only concern in ‘the organt xatlon, for If my people shalt’ allow ie to dle, all thet T hava done and Je. bored for will have been in vain.’ Tel the members tolcarry on the food work for Africk will be Fedgemed.” ae -t—met—tirer ete iret thin, faa Jn tum ‘a Negro who Would diesfor his We shld, -"l have Toit my dit unto them—mny wie. T have left her pep- nites, ‘Zell them to care for her, for all at T have fain thet. N. 1 A.” { xaf unto you, Marcus Garvey. your labors hail not be In vain. The seed that you have sown hae horne frult and ‘yout Meal will tm realized, Ar wa wore about to ba senaeated T mown his hand, He turned way from me, not even lnoklug buck, with Head ercet Jan if he was golng inte hig own prince. Ao continudd hig way down Hrooniple- way, ‘but 1, amazed AL Une courage of the man, was compelled t6 stand ‘and Jet Wt hin ax Loe disappeared from my aight, and,then fsaid, “Truly thie man in the man who SAL emancipate hts rice.” 2 then went over to the derk ant deposited xGihve names for the te- loved and Indomnltable leader of the Negro race, the Hon, Mareun Garvey. Immigcation Restrictions : Aaainst. Japanese and Others } MAMPTON, Va. April—Lionel B&B. Keaser, of St. Ceolx, Virgin Inlandn who recently won uhe frat prize Inthe “aanme Essay Contest” at, Memptor Institute; where he is a second-year #tudent In the Teachers’ College, with hin essay on “apancne, Immigeation Inta the United States." aald: + “Considering the quest(on-of-Japan- Loca exclusion fenm the United States, ann mowt free from ,pasions, and making nllowancen for the. sincertty of the course, acknowledging that damerien’ han every eine An a. nave Fela nation to aay who aball of #hall hot ‘come, within ita benters, can we Not, nevertheless, ask, 19 It the bert holley, Maen It work fir the creation, preservation, and the promulgation of pence, a peace “wherein men, aha Team te tolerate othes men, to appre: lato each other's ideals, In fine, one In Which, the peoples of the world, nhall iigconte united, working foF the” com- mon benent of mankind? Asnurediy i doce nate Z onto make inmikcation lave In which the palley of reatrietion ie applied. t0 fone group of hationn, and that of éx- Ginaion Ge angled tov anilten sel cventomily Wout ta didaatrous results at Svery dunt pulley of mankind does, Tt Greaica fi the miinin of the Hronles. of tive world the bea that tie elash of tha Tiecamertina ate in tiaiiialn'S ihe race? Mather. the aucation Shout be: Je tint game enon? "Netnely haa the slghrest evideite ef the multiple Arig In of imp Hy sow blood teat. or. the inafiig test the human spectea Iva unit, heltinr deen anybody Khaw that race Charneteristien ate Tixed or HY racen are, inetuetilie wuperbor ar Inter Fives oc "There i neing, alter Few tor Civeak, Init thinkinge tanker i 90, ‘America nad. every mation fyyse Tones that ‘the real selective forces in com- ied movietien ave economie, oF moral, be wrycholoaial. er vellucatlonal, But net ethnics "Ht tw just ak true today as in the ttaya at Ml that intercourse af one peeplo wlth another In eagentiel for feouren Any Inn, nicusuren, ov nets tending to thwart the natoral desire tor Intercourae, is therefore, neces: rarily dotrimental to.the material and spiritual development of the world, to the realization of the highest atage of civilization. ‘For whatever history may be In tho future, “witl not he the result primarify of an Anglo-Saxon heritage, but will be the product ot the Interse= tion of these most recent elements’ in the population of the United States. ‘Practice Home-Making ~~ . At the Hampton Institute SESS Se NORTE (Ve OLR ORND |.” APractice Home hui been given’ te Haapten Instliute by. Mex. -Menry A. trons, of Rochoster,: New York, and wean bultt, by the trade-school students “ia gs ine Firetree 9 the its Tooml=Heing-room, diningroom, kit- chen, utifity room, four hedroome, and bathroom—waa'a claineroom prosect in home managethent.. Arranging for six iris in the home for ‘six Weeks, six sroups a year, makes .tt possible far ‘36 -gtris to Hve in it In one school year. ‘The duties of ‘the home armrotated, ‘each girl serving for a week in a given capacity. For instance, a giel fa man- ager for one week: the next week abe Ja-Texponilble ‘for, the “preparation and oorving ost ‘the following week having a different responsibilty, : The home is rua on a budget, that fr food Feosiving special comatderation.. Mar- hbting and the bavtog of small oquiy- mont are inctuded tor the gttly’ ek- perience, sind every: oft ts: mmge to dttmtnate: betitutions| Iie | + ‘| FG elregelgieemyd Lal ayam sé obitien to her. werk ta the _-te nef fe J3 c=, ‘ae a Seonertel a ne, Gand erent St See Se cocgatg ln te ners jeceiaee neater Siig egal 6 amin Det Sor ee Soren eee s Seas "#0, *_STHE:NEGROQ WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL ‘25,1936 - | A : ‘Hold On and Work Steadfastly for the Realization of Ideals "+ That. Are Distinctively Ours, Is His Commarid From ~~ “the Atlanta Penitentiary . 2° se “The salvation of the race lies tn the determination to hold fait-t6.those jdeals that are distinctly ours, and there should be no relaxation in the effort to climb the ladder of independent racial: achievement and success. a heey & . The discouragement against, independent racial effort may be great, ‘but to yield to them-would mean complete failyré for this and other generations of our. people. - Destiny drives us-on. Therefore, it is my .puipose,to fight the good fight and be: queath to. my posterity:a heritage dearly purchased and valiantly won. -” se It Is Born in the.Home with . the Child” and Grows in the Nation with the Man —If He Has No Nation, He Dreams of and Labors for One, Written for The Negro World - : . By LEONARD BRYAN *Mttdat pleasures and palacer ‘Though we may roam, * BA It ever no humble ‘There's no place Ike homa. How sften do we make ure of the forexoing expression, while many of us han Negroes, renily’do nat think beyon¢ the mere anylng of the words. ‘There 4a x pertod In each individual's ite, when away from’ homie, that he feels he should he at home:-and prob: Ablg. with a sigh, he remarks: “foam goltix home.” No doiubt much a one remembers’ hin parental advicr, the family chats, a wifo'n or husband's cr- reasex, the plays of the children or the heglectof the olf apot which wae pur- chased by his hard-earned nennien o1 Dequeathed by A-KUOd-old pAreht.” Yen, tin true: when our rolls are filled with a longing to be home, we, though not neding a possibility st the moment, Ren- erally reach homaatter sacrificing even thingn that are dear to un > * ‘Apart from our homer, the places where we live or own an individuals, there fx also anational:home. the place sehere a government {x run for {ha pro- tectlon of the Ivey and propertien of itn eltizens or aubsects, Wherever ‘we go we hear someone speaking of heme. Samatimes It's an Fnglihman, an Amertean, a’ French: man, a Gernian, « Japanese, & China man, ete. and sometimen it's a Negro. Surely, the Tnglshman ,speake of Engtmd as his homeland, the Arheriean at the United Staten of America, the Frenchman of France, the German of Gormany, the Jafarene of Japan, the Chinaman, nf China, Rut where does the Negro call hin homeland? He no doubt apeake of the United Staton of Ameritn, of France, of the Went Indies, of a Latin-Amerieat republic or any. nther Inland of the neas, as his home-, land. . Surely, “we all apeak of our home- lands, Bur while other peoplen mean- ingly speak of the Iands which give them protection wherever they live, we am Negroes in most cases meaninglensly atylo the placer where we happoned anly to be horn our homelands, regard jena of thea fact that they afford us little or no protection, whether -we live in them or. away ffom them. No man ‘dares deny that England t9- the home of the Englishman, for ho 1s. entitled, to all privileges common to. Englishmen: and equally true i St of] rhe American, tie Frenchman, the Tap-| nese, the Chinaman. All the units of these reanective roti look alike, and hey partake at the anme tadlo without ny color prejudice. When,the Negro @ found-amoing-any of these groups he a. trenjed with contempt, for he In an’ unwelcomed stranger among his fatr- aceé neighboracand they certainty wish nim to know he In. an “undesirable.” Which 1% ‘then thy homeland, oh! Serro man? The United States of America, ax the Uncle, Sam_ Negro RET TNS WER TATE, ANUS BO= + (Continued on page 5) ine Fae) -— SPit N Say ‘“Bayer” ~Insist Pain... Lymbago-: Seid cnetainj eg" cae A a REACTION-TO_COOD___ FRIDAY BY AN AGNOSTIC The Missionary as a Path- finder for the Trader and .Conqueror — Largely a “Matter of Education as to the Bias of ‘the Person Concerned. 7 Written for. The Negro World By ERNEST EGERTON MAIR... SRE ne Rw el ena even A geligioun article, Tt ts merely A statement of how an agnostic reacts to the term “Good Friday.” The day In rather gloomy; but It 1 early yet and may turn out fine, One Christian xald to me, “Tee never xeen A Good Friday that wasn't gloomy.’ Another aald, “I shouldn't be doing tt but I've’ almply got to have nome washing done today." Still, other tw went down the block discussing the Jewish observance of the two days immediately preceding Good Friday, To one rerular church at- tendant I "remarked, “If the founder of Christianity were here tolay they would kill Him all over gain, but tits time. Christian would do the Killing.” She thought tt a pity but admitted ft Ikely. ‘All of which ts apparently nupor: fcial ‘and unimportant, yex Intensely vital. If wa could xet hehind the con: acloun éxprensions and trace” tha nub-conxcious action’ and reaction leading up to them, doubtlean wo would stand aghast, Every one of thon, “Temarkn- have heen. 19 part, fashioned by hereditary influence. In- Aced, nil’ thoughts are either molded or modited by heredity. Take mys self, for instance, Hy dine af Inquiry and much reading T have arrived. at the wtewpoint of the .agnontic. Hut honesty compel ma to adult that the Uscarded hoilefe UII have a pull on ma. Something within rerponda «0 tha solemn mummoery of clnech ritual the long-drawn-out, moaning of the erzan pipes, ae Bul, Fam writing of Geod Fetday. Hven ta an agnoatic thera’ te some- think of human appeal in what the day ntands for. Hera was a man that Med-oae all Tefornicem mieE Wepre pared to die, in defense of ht perlite ciples, Leaving out the claim to Alvinity, thera ts enoush of the Rrent heartednese of the man shining down the years lwonkh pelestly buncomho and mistirected zeal to perpattiate his memory. ‘One needs only to lock about him and ofiserva the Intolerance exhibited foward new Mens even in this era of vet unparalleled freedom, to appre- cinta that the man of Nazareth munt have bid to contend with, ‘Tako-ns un exnmple tho attitude of ine white world toward ux aaa group. The very pedis shwxt persistent In thelr prench- ments of Christianity are the ones that oppress us miost. I often wonder what in his inmost heart the mistion- ury thinks of himself who goes amouK “savages” preaching the “gos- pel.” Knowing the while that he te identified with and furthering the in- tereatn of the snollers of humanity and the thievex’ In high places. And these thourends. of “God's chosen that predicate brotherly love in church today and return home to ® men} prepared by an overworked and underpaid Negro cook—what do they do to arrive At thelr complacency in the face of = life whose practice is the opporite of all they tench? It. given ona (as the French ray) furlously fo think. Yes, Godd Fri- day has its lesson. for nll of, un, Sate Hiettti asi athe Ti The mordl ‘for us-ef the advanced school ‘of Negro thought, whatever Dur teligioun opinions are, that. no really worthy cause { aver lost by opposition. The founder of our movement ts suffering in lester Gegree jome of .the Injustices suffered by Jemus.” Before hie work is done he may yet pay the extreme price of his physical existence, ‘but if reformers san be done to. death reformé can’t, Ind ther@s the.rub. ° \ : s What we need more than anyihing lee:ie thy confldence of ultimats seo? tee. Nor néed we think BueR éue- as a thing of tha dim and: distant ture. In the present wpectiod ettes t world politics anything. te Hable: tol Given, thes, any one of several very) webable ehaine of essurvences, our]. ream would be within greapéas react: t we are drguntoes to take sévantage) < @ taverabip' rarw' et (ue tite. | “Theat te my Wheres to Gee EZ a ay. I-ofter W to ine, renee « 1 oer thr wthat it ts os r Sew many-ef the GORTOR Wegrel | Mr. Balson Missed the Li- berian Delegation, Which Drew an Enormous Con- course at a Public Meet- ing—A. N. A. A. C. P. Agent Got & Hot Recep- tion for Abusing Mr. Garvey BES GREET AAT, TRANS Py: ‘Thoas who have enjoyed the pleas ure of having been on board a mip hi the harhor of: Bridgetown Barbadon B. W. 1. have nothing te envy other who Tave dig the same pleasure In th harbor of Free Town, Sterva Legne Webt Afrien.” Aside from the absence of the reat fun that tx afforded ‘h; the activities of native coln diver and ffy-fish. attempting: to aeparat themselves from the water, condition fon heard of Incoming and..owRotny vowels In Slerea Leonie are exactly thi samo Amaug.the boxtmen, stevedores crow, paseengera and: visitors ax te Barhastes, - Te owas qhout 1002, m. when “om ship? dropped anchor In the hurbor of our return from up emast. About 10 row boats were strugsling desperate! amaiint an equally determined. falling tide to'reach thelr goal. ‘ In ‘a few minutes they were al alongside the Rood xhip, Some of th men ian wemen hoagded att grested thetr relatives sud friends with sing: frolt gosta and real cwlimiration, while cuthers contented themielves with re- maining fy hole wits, yelling and appealing to thelr friends and. yas: sengers for thelr patronage: The sven ery in the harbor of Siete Leone ot thin particular day was simply wen- derful, there bel to lost then alxteen mercantile marine ships, a.td the Beit. ish grand geet of dreadnoughts, al anchored xt respectatiinatistanee from each other In tke harbor, § was teans Ing oVer the fall abservtag snd ankle myself the questios, “What have I owt in Atnerien “Hello, Mr. Hxtnon,” suid a voles, and, Immediately felt hand renting on my right.showtdor from belliid, “Hello, Sergeant! How have you been during tho pant nine weeks? 1 ine quired? It had taken ux all of this timo to-have Rune from Sieréa Leone to Calabar, Nigeria, and back to Sierra Leone, “Oh, fine: Maw have you been? “Well” T exclaimed, “Lam gind you have Kept ivoll In our hot imate up the cows. That policemai angured me, ndding, “You have got heFe Just i Unie te he. late. , You have Just misted It. Too bad you did not get in two days ago." “Why What was tiie trouble, Sergeant?” 1 asked, for I am always éxpecting to xee thie tn, Africa. "No trouble:” you have just missed the dolegation trom the U, N. IA. and A.C. L. in New York. |Site Robert L.” Poston, Lady Henrietta Vin- ton Davin and Attorney J. Milton Van Low yere hogy. They had been to Li- eria tb {ket concéasiony’ for the U.S, I. A.-tu atart construction work there. They left here two days ago for Eu- rope.” “Walt, Sergeant! do “you Yeally-snean to tell me that Sir Robert and Lady Davis were in Africa two days ago?” "Why, yew, man. I thought Sierra Leone way 9; Bienen: hot Freee not big enough to hold the peaple who came from all over the country to 6s. and hear them. It is too bad we haven't a dozen more women lke Lady Davie She in'a:wonderful woman. “You are atill In time to see an ims poster we hive here, though this man carne from América ang made the ped- ple belleve he-was representing the U. NI. A, and The Negro World, A big mase reeling was called at Memorial Hall yesterday. "The peopie packed the rouse to-its vapacity to hear him, but natead of fepresenting the U.N. I. 4. a The Negro, World:, hy ridiculed Mdecup Garvey: in. the worn: wag. The people .bévame ‘suspicious and. walred ut of. the. pall in large sumbers, ge hey gould wet believe that a man whe, vee repreventing the.U. N. 1. A. could: ave: rifteuiel Mareee Garvey.” a:4| ne Meare Wort ia, Sat was. <Tas Fowd. guivered cutsiée of Memorial] all, Sg8.t¢ we had not given ‘him pre cotton, 1 bellove they Would bave Ma- shed bias. We, was efveriioed to ageah i, Wat cn seceaitt of thts be: wan jod 00 leave an-eeen'ae poot':.!: =~ 0 Mrete Sf ag: Gatton 9 bis taste. : Minne an inden Oe’ ne. wae wo te bo : Se ~ Assertion, of Self-Determination -of British’*Common- . swealth of Nations Crippling- the Central Authority ~- and Threatening. English Monopoly in, Raw Ma- . > terials of Manufacture . = ey * ag a & rom the New York World GORGEOUS Du AR +] “Geneens Apri! 4--threo Brits o- .[minions- within twenty-four, hours ; have taken a dintinet.atep toward fur- i 3 thering thelr independence-of England Olt : as far as foreign affairs and relations Sd oo \pwithin the League of Nationa are con- : corned. : ‘ BY NA T | \ ES ruNew Zealand yesterday officially re- a 2 nur" | quested the League to send at com- nev Uona-bn-the futiire Girect ithe. ‘African Horsemen Menac-| Premier at Wollingion instend of ing with Lances Dash Di Srl om Laton, Go ~ rectly at British Heir,| prummona, secre:nry of the Longue. Then Swerve “Away|% rena ait documenta only to Ottava Gracefully and to Dr. W. A. Riddell, Special “ a geo, From the New York World KANO, Nigeria, April 18 (Axyoci- ated “Vress).—The Prince of Wales who hax seen many gorkeous paKc- |iente in strange corners of the earth, Loday witnesned one of the most stirring and colorful apectactes of his career at the Durbar, of reception for native Prinecs, held here in hie, honor. To the uncensing throb of tom- toma and the welrd strains of native orchestras, more than 20,000 African troops, contumed In brilliant colors and with fanjastic trappings: maneou- vred with amazing. skill before the Prince's reviewing’ sland for."neveral hours...” : ‘A vast crowd of native spectators, giving every evidence of wild ‘excite- nient, cheered constantly aa the drums rolled and the multitude of horsemen dashed magnificently acrona the great fleld, : Brtoro the Durbar vegan, at 8 ovelock this morning, evéry jungle road for many miles’ wos’ solidly pakked with atrugeling thes of humanity en- digavoring to résch tha acéne. Most ‘of them had framped allenight, many pi traveled for meveral aya. and Aumbers Bied from the heat and jufgie pelle, ‘The Emies {rom all urrounding native districts: appeared In new cons tumes, the most ocstly and. colorful to be obtained. ‘The leader of them all waa the Emir of Kano, who rules [more than 3,000,000 people. The Princo wan particularly theliie Yas troops of cavalry, atriking!s ‘enparisonéd, many carrying ancient swords that ‘date to the period of the Crusades, dashed directx toward his stand with extended Inneen, xweep= Ing uway in waves when alimost upon him, in a remargable display’ of horse- manehip. ~ é ‘Some of the horsemen wore ancient multe of chain mall. Some hodies of n01- diers, wearing brilliant all-red informa, carfled golden trumptn five foot Teme. wore plumed helmets and were armed with hows, Thére were units of cuvalry with feathered headbanda aiid carrying enormous silk flaga. A camel corps, wlth fiders vividly droxsed and waving nwordn an they pussed the prince, f6l- lowed the horsemen. ‘The scene wan almost dizzying an the variegated columns whirled by; inter- persed wlth yelling “devil dancers” and necompanted by frenzied outburain af cheering and the constant roar of the drums, “Atter the .apactacte the emira were received by the prifiee. They approached His dnix in dignified attitudes and then cnelt respectfully, xome throwing them- selven at.full lenktb upon the ground. Then they’ squatted fn a sagl-circlo rally’ Atty’ yards awed'\to Rear the prince's address, \ However, through (he oMcial inter preter the prince interpored:: “Bring hem tn from there, ‘They canylot hear.” He motioned: to the emirs,. who ad- vanced and equated at the foot of bis stand, : i “Now, that's better,” said the prince, and delivered hin address. ~ Despite the long irain journey and nis exertions at tenn{s, Wales attended . dafice after dinner last evennig, ha préparations for the event are] ntorenting. Six weeks ago the site, two niles outside Kano, was ordinary bush, with & small fish pond In n valley de- ow. Stirred’ with enthusiagm over he prince's‘ forthcoming visit, the in- vabitants cleared the whole-ares, laid ric ghts and drained the pond, rak- ng it into an artistic fower garden. Meavy rains turned the garden into warp, Dut“by strenuous exertions {t vas-Feconverted Into an attractive little ake, which last nlghi, under the black African staritt aky ané the near-by-ary tfcial “lighting, presented a pleasing ietwre. ( * z Kano's: white poputation ts only 310, tut OY were present at the damce;vis- jore having comp from all parts of the orthera--proviwiew. "Nineteen of the’ wenty-fve. women present hed trav, | fed great’ Zistances to. weiceme the |' ‘Wales, whe wore a dtnner-siehél re- uved every pareve prysunt ane. danced | wwry Genet aerial aos ee ie Sle IN oe eS pee cage ee ee From the New York World Geneva, April 4—Threo British Yo- minions- within twenty-four, hours have taken @ dintinct.atep toward f0r- theving thele independence-of England as far as foreign affairs and relations thin the League of Nationa ate con- cornea. - : J UNew Zealand yesterday officially re- quested the League to send at com- Yona Inthe futire-Givect i tbe Premier at Wejlington insterd of to thé Colonial Ofice:in London. Can- ade similarly instructed Sir Evie Drummon@, Becre:ary of the Lensur. {6 wend all documents only to Ottawa and to Dr. W. A. Riddell; Special Envoy at Geneva: : ‘The. “third incident was. Ireland's jaicning the opium convention Jast fight, The signing of the tresty it~ [seit wan unimportant. Inasmuch ‘Dublin's represaniative had repeat- edly declared the dueumen: not worth signing. _. : The actio= wan taken primarily te make a fnit accompll of the situation revealed exclusively by <The. World that England had admitted officially for the first time through the oplum treaty that the dominions are entitled to ADPEAT to the League against Great Britain should disagreements arise over ttn administration. Previously’ Beltain ‘always had in- sorted @ chuse in conventions, “to which both the dominions and Fyix- Jand were parties which excluded Ainter ae” dlspiiten, New Zealand's action. ike Can- adn's, was taken entirely indopend- ently of Englund, the request coming direct to-Drummond. : The requests caured ‘a mild nensn- ‘tion, Lengua officiais recalling Col. FE, M. House's historic remark at Ver- sullen that “admission of the domin- Jonn With a single vote to’the Lenaun did not #0 much" mean alx voter for Britain an the beginning of the dis- integration of the Empire.” ‘New Zealand alwaya had been re- kurded a4 completely.undar.the.thumb of the Britinh Colonial Omice, inan-, wueh as ker vote usually proved a rubber stamp, India and South Africa are the only remaining dominiongs whore ggrelan affaira are.conducted by the Colonial’ OMce. South -Africe “tn expected monientarily to follow the others. OMcinin also arm predicting that within x fortnight British Foreign Secretary Chamberlain will ‘teamrta Britain's contention that the Empire MAtUR an far as dominions’ rights are concerned Ix unchansed, despite the recent dovelopments to the con- wary. : Hix purpone, It in heliaved..will be te stem what Ix openly: vharacierized here as “decentralization.” “MRS. DE MENA IMPROVING By: cable ndvicen received: from Ar. ©. 1, Bryant, High Commissioner for the, Republic of Panama, wo are pleased to niute that Men, De Mena, traveling necretary of Hon. G. E. Car- ter, fe improving raplaly. Mra. De Mena had. to ha eft dm Colon on ac- count: Gf ler, {jiness. Bho in a very energetic worker, and we do hope sho wil soon bn restored fo completo health. . = The Ameriéan public pays one mil- Non dollars a duy for candy and sven hundred thousand dotiara a day: for ico cream 1 package free with each 50c order. Lodeatone, b0c;” magnetic wand, "se; things kept secret from. foundagon vot the world, Ter private lessons fe me. diums, 7éc; East Indian xpirit healing, Seer the secret of Hindu visualisation: Soe; ‘the reader. of mouin, “Shes the Drleathood “ot India, 690; the’ drugiens Toad to perfect health, $2; Manta Yora, a: <e Phveleinn im: the been ASO Tive Neat grass, 1 package iree with each Te order} Manteattre, words 0 Dower, $2; ta -maaler key" book. 47 Siguet’and ‘seal symbol ring Yor indies and gents. 14 karat gold, only $20; Iueky neva stick bin for zien, a8; one faclage sourwere m Adam an4 Eve root free with pr 32 order; lucky seven ring for ladies;.$7; Sealy’ ssver Ting” for sen, $9; tntve eres treasure book, $4: bat areating Jedies and gents, S60; perfume, oa, Star face ern. $4 eee ait the: ten, Gia, the auont Ertend book, $3.25; secrets book. $50: teaser Key: w garetts sige prt. §i0;, the oS sine gover: we ‘Sad tants i= site: eae eokd oe ny a a Ee Norma 4 res Lemos amy, te ste ee rh ea ee seat ac! et Saas mente aie SS e 7k ree! a u im eae a Was Boe. Py eae Te Rao cA t 3 : at . __., |THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1925 = - Pec ie fe A PO Sk sw o- LIBERTY HALL JUBILANT OVER NEWS THAT - wr us : : pe : 7 jut oe ~ * «_., lsierdub of"people whe wore /nne piss [youn Suh ble New ampliion ama Wax: _ . mae ‘ : Ee CHANCELLOR BOURNE. ANNOUNCES. RE- jBared to spy on ‘engh other. The|ened.aspiration will find a place where ee a 4 . y z : ; * world knew that, we ar defectives | hi ' 7 oy isi nh ¢ : x “* a oe est 2S - gi Sut CEIPT OF CABLE ADVICES: TO THE| ani sssoswnstes when Marcin Garvey wants’ Bnet my second reason tor fh a : i m: ‘ : me ~ " 2 gx | camé on tho scene and gave us a ra . . er : ‘i: > oy ” EFFECT THAT S. S. BOOKER T. WASH-|<reston, a nev iden ant n new hope-|pesvement Associaton et ue cre: i nee & INGTON IS CLEARED OF COLON LIBEL} © ites who contribute fore follow and support its program, "—: | | i i 2 . : for some day victory will sit enthroned : AND IS NOW IN KINGSTON, JAMAICA, Mon’ who mako such contributions |on our determined efforts and we will bs 3 a 4 - BE! " . . COALING FOR VOYAGE. TO NEW YORK | tose wicto uses ate occupied in'aee| dont, | (Appiausep uns! free bs Z : ¢ : a ese Z vising, pew combinhtions of ideux and ( $ ge x e F eee ; | methoas that Prove to, be of the wt- MR. ALONES 8: RETTIEORGS ~nhge NTIS gee SMEOHATINN, SELATICS cea rm a 7 : © ngs vig im Biggie: Sie y 1. most value.to their fellow-men, sach ’ ss NS CR GOUT. IE you ‘arn! sutterite “with DE. MON. W.SAKBON, - : Hon, Alonzo D. Pettiford, in Stirring Tailk; Bids| men veione'to me ciass of mon ot see | si% -atouzo. D, Pettitora,) attorney [ff Som FORMS wORE Naty werent ie cilia! aati p Coat nt 'wonterte opine segiaer ae they fs Members Gease Talking .of the Past.and! ior Some cnvgnr uit st [obama soote ws flown: Soul Biles aaane Secemaes ne eh Ve coe iad Sian ne ea ae at eae er eee i Lane i pare possi- | Exéellency. the Hon. Marcus Garvey, . SYSONE MHECOATIA . ot SiGe ‘une te, your fele Tsnctose 300 (two ~~ Bend Every ~Effort Toward—Realizimg—the iii umion tu ar an | pesaentcbraeal “atthe “noe hore cab eran ne V etitin pe 2, eit te soeeae age P. f the U. N. LA x thats they. Wee dbine ee fun Negro Improvement Association, Your Tau ARG ASae We iw cory wirasent. Toatetly, nat pats | tReet ten oneree tothe Amerie aneiane me ragram of the U. N.-I. A. populues. Bellet, © Thess. eeormeen | Excellency the Hon. Wittinm Sherrill | seNixe DOU AEATe AUTOS. OE Soe enn ‘SATE HOW MANY TREATMENTS YOU WANT SAYS MARCUS GARVEY; WORLD STATES- ’ MAN AND LEADER, IS SUFFERING TO- . DAY BECAUSE..HE STANDS 'UNCOM- PROMISINGLY FOR.AFRICAN REDEMP- TION—IF ALL: EXECUTIVES OF COR- PORATIONS WERE ‘TREATED. LIKE MARCUS GARVEY, THEN THE HEADS OF BIG BUSINESS WOULD ALL BE IN - JAIL LIBERTY HALL. Sunday Night: April 19.—The spacious hall was packed ‘to the doors with members of the association, friends and ‘visitors, on the ocedsion of the weekly mass meeting. Sir Wil- liam Le Van Sherrill, Assistant President-General; Sir Clifford $. Boorne, Chaneclley; Hon, Percival S. Burrowes, Assistant Secretary General \uurney Monze 1, Pettiford, ex-President of the Detroit Division; Hon. 1. Johasen, President of Detroit Division, and sev- cial proniinenut citizens were on the platiorm.’ Mr. Goa, Weston, Vive-President of the New York Local, who hae just recovered froni @ bricf.but severe illness, occupied the chair. News of the $8. Booker ‘T. Washington was expected by the vast audience, and they were not disappointed | Mr. Bourne, who is treas- urer-of the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Co., announced that the edmpany had been advised by cable that the ship was clear of libel and had sailed from Colon, Panama, for New York via Kings- ton, Jamaica, arriving at the last named port on Saturday, April 17. ‘There it would cual and procged to New York. os ‘The chief speaker of the evening wis Sir Alonzo D. Pettiford, ex-president of the Detroit ‘Division of’ the U. N. I. A. who, in a happy speech, encouraged the membership to continuc in their splen- did loyalty’ to the organization in order: that the program of the U. N. LOA. may be put over, and the sacrifice of the Hon, Mavens Garvey may not be in vain! Hoa. Percival S. Burrowes and Rew, W. McD. Holder alsu spuke. A Sweet Breath Ss, all times! | ‘Peon dl ns Ree . Ze f° Ae my //! ze ; i= , o7/ ~e [susmast THAR mouth and sweetens the breath. 4 tl So" easy to carry the little” ” fi i packet-in your pocket! So » important to have when the a mouth needs cleansing and «eS i Olas at dalins eal ~ | l= quietdy diaappeat= tacts are = ORS te more FE igey ethics. Sees Mergers refréched,the stomach relieved | dewiets recom a: a) ’ 7 : y bs e: githe Ae Hes ae ag ee a ~ fa PA Of re eens | iA i See Seger Seer Mr. W. McD. Holder's Addrese Mr. Holder said: Tes With profound pleasure 1 arise to addeess You this evening. by deters fener te the eerste Pshall sak on the sulyest "Musee Garver vet the Universal Negro dinprsvemeat Asses cist Pte werk never pan gen Attention ta the kath of the UL ON TOA, for ey fett ctor Nearies wets A deferte gout. Paiy Believed vinet &@ group of people who were not pre- |-Pared to spy on ‘ench other. The world knew that, wo are not defectives and unfertunates when Marcis Garvey cama on the xeeno and gavel us a new creation, a new {dex, and a new hopé. + Men Wha Contribute Mon” who make such contributions are- relatively fow in. numbers, . Men whose whole livex are occupied in de- vising, gew combinations of Ideux and methods that prove to, be of the wt- most value,tu their fellow-men, sach men belong to the class of mon of ge- tilus and talent, Muny wad ihe optn- Mons expressed regarding the posst- bility’ of the Association, but_after_an analysis of these opinionn we found that- they were fothing more than Populur’ bellefs, ~ Theso. supposed opinions were not products of critical Ahinking, wnd—in ehnracter tey-Wwere essentially Irrational. On. the other band | puble opinion. can’ exist. only where men are free to express their real minds ‘yithout fer of restraint. They must not stund In fege, of losing their soclal pokition-or employment, oF Property If they speak diel nilnds, How thany such leaders have . we among the Negro Race today? Marcus Garvey Only - Apart from Mareus Garey there is no other. God fy making men made His Dubots, 1s Kelly Miller, itis John- son, Ills Pickens, but he was aot at= istled until He made one great enough, one fearless endugh to tell’ his honest opinions, That ts the man we follaw at is time—a man of the loftiest ideals— A man who Isa perfect model of intes- rity, an@ whose mind fs like a placed lake reflecting truths lke ‘starz, 1t Is fram his great oce:in of thought we the little rivulets and Ines receive our rain and dew. Mix Inspiration will Hee 1 US us Tong as We have imaxination. They have tmprivoned him, believtn that by ao doing they Will destroy his. succes. Rut Uttle de they -knew that he has only now touched upon the fizst rung of the kelder to Whose squmilest height he was destined to élimb, mak- Ine eich sep in his upward career ine creasingly Mustrieus, Marcus Garvey did not come tor plensure, he dij net come to have o good tlie, he came to serve hid people. The men whe attached Mareus Garvey Tid x0 not heevuse they really the= Heved he was chasing rainbows, put because’ they: felt hia success would mask them, eauld outshine them In thelr Uttle corners of leadership. An, Garvey's &un has just started to shine. Milton wrote Ws “Paradise Lust." but Marcus Garvey is just on the point of writing Ma “Paradise Maun. The pres grant of the’ Universal Nesra Tmproves, ment Assowkatign Is something 1 he. Hove ti—believe tn fer twa reasyeis: Parstiy! heeaase Wt ix a covtinty that | mm Amerie and the world fer that | mutter, theresconiee a tine sien the popubition will werease ficates shan the Mens ef subsistence, and ot a heres. Sy there must he a pth oe sete | HEINE fe take care ef the surple pepe tien: Malthus in enneaf bts great Works Says when such avtime cams here ts compelled to be war, famine | wrsdisense, Me suggests asa remedy | Drth control” even ag the werkt tes lag iv dlecussing in. pteyoasian ts | hat time “birth eantral We must remember mat Malthus fsa white man and that he spoke from the angle bf a white man. Garvey fs a blacig man and from the ante of Mark mah, ho docs not advocate hteth control pacause he believes there shat bo unbounded expansion of the Negro pave, but he says Negroes shorld buikl a mighty xevernment on the conte nent of Afvica so that when the great Inevitable comes there will by a place where the surplus Negrn pepulition could flee for refuze atl where Ne- graes could live and diveli In safety. Another thing that impresses mie very much fs the mamier in which philanthropists in America: contribute, large amounts to the upkeep of Negro schools and for the furtherance of Negro educafion. Short-sighted Ne- groes look upon thls as something Wonderful. They are very jubllant over it, but leaders with vision see that there will come a time when Neagro--hoys—and-girk-ernduated: from nome of the “best schools in the coun: try will not “bo dutisfled with post- ons, ‘such Qs porters and elevator runners, they Will aspire to, positions for which they are educationally quall- fled—théy Will aspire to postions of state, but an we know: thosé’ positions WHE Hever bo RICO MMA. WRC WRC we do then? Build a mighty govern-, ment somewhere’®o that the Nezro -MADE $800 IN CASH IN: Se THREE: HOURS ioe Putting on Good Luck Ring Marylinne Weber, femous star, says, “1 made $800 in three hours after | put on Chinese Good Luck Ring.” Others have said it brings suc- cess, happi- mecs and geod luck in Fove Thiel ‘ amasine Chi: x nem Geod Lusk ‘Ring is. 2s made in: gensine “eee fas the myetorius Peuetecees Uae wishes one ef these. Se or oS ee .W fer .man or i, aerd the. Sees ere rn meth Vou hee Reve] ape cers, ed of . ‘San oso nome A tase. rings on hend, so egroesz awece no: capable of deing everything on thelr own initiative, They lopked ujion Negroes ax untor- Uinates whe required the kindly help ef others.” Piirther, they were under the opinion that every action a6 Ne- Brees Will Le told because, a¥during slavery, Nexracs syed on ereh other. Bur what a rude ansakenms took place o Gow yours age when the werkd coveke aod found that they were treating with Thinking Black g youth with his new ambition and awak- ened. aspiration will find a place where tie can rise to whatever jomition he wants. Thats my. second reason for believing in the Universal Negro Im: |prévernent Association. Let us there- fore follow and. support its program, for some day victory will sit enthroned ‘on our determined efforts: and we wil Jenjos the pleasure of national free- donf. : (Applause) MR. ALONZO!D. PETTIFORD'S , | ADDRESS Mn -Alouzo- D, Pettiford, attorney ef Detrolt, spoke as follows:” Your ExGellency. the Hon. Marcus Garvey. | President-General_of the Universal Negro Improvement Axsociation, Your Excellency the Hon. William Sherrill Second Assistant Prestdent-General of ine _Nalveraat Negro Improvement Assoclatfon, Honorable Officers of the High Executive Council, Fellow Mem- Uers, Friends and Fellow Citizens: It Ix a. great pleasure to greet you. to- night.’ T have greeted the Prestdent- General first because he ts still here. ‘Peay xen he ts here th spirit in your faces and” by your actions. Then t ‘rested your Assistant President-Gon- gral next beeause he is carrying ots the orders of one of the most remark: able chatacters In the history: sf the world, % Perhaps we did. net “amderstand thoroughly when there came across this country, and not only this coun- try but In the West Indian Islands, iq South and Central America, in Ast and In Afrled, the clirlon call” ty Negroes to arivevand to understand that the time had come wen this Ikreat race whieh we represent must Nn Itself, that the tine had Come for Ethopin to stretch forth her, hands Unty God. T sey wee did noe ‘under stand then, but we of the Universal Negco: Impvorgment Asreckitten after Hiistentag ‘tor (WAC master mind of the ages, that maater stitesman of “the ert, His Excelloney the Hon. Marcus Garvey, for flve years, wo buve seme to mnderstand thet he fe the meuthpiece of God, telling Nexroos everywhere (1 rixe up in the might and majesty of a great race and avxevt themselves hee fore It is feo late, CApphiusey, Garvey a Statesman, Some of the narrow-minded peaple wwf ahiy, country have eritietzed anv have tirned away from tim because he happened not to have been bern fn thls countes, “The same thing was dene to Christ in dudaea sind tit Jerusvlem. Yet his pronounepments heenme the Pronouncements of tie, Pueceoding work, Se it is with Mis UEeelleney the Moon. Maneus Garver He ty tem bag Te ny Oi omatey, dnd Pwont yeu te get that point. He a taicanyy ost the wark® and stumls for the Fedemption of Negroes everynhere, Tsay thy xe That West Ietian, Amertean, Central Amerwean and whatant mae Ghpwseacnseport qin te put their herds sureties and unies snd omateh on as one man feu the pee} domption of Africa atthe time | Some people prate o lot about Mare hus Garvey's canvletfos. New 1, be. Heve T knew something ‘sbaut daw and semething about pusitess, amd 1 siy te you that if Mery man that held high: Mee i a earperation Nas taken un, for What the Hon, Maresis Garey wis, tikens up for, eyery big exeentive in| Hix chumtry would be behind the bars. | he thing that every big exerufive does! When his corporation's funds are jet: | ting law ts te bald them up by geting | more money, and ‘that 1s god business. | That 1s what thie Preattent €eneesl| did. Liat they used that.as a pretext. | And yon krow pretestsvare.usnd whew: | ever they want to embartasi tas erect | rare of ours, Iti ‘tang we commenced [LEX TWA We UNgerstond. Garvey Is in| Atkenta beewuse he stands for the ce- Jemaption of the thik rave, U.N. L.A. Program The program ef thin orzantacetion is y big one, and I say there sits in Atlan= in a man who Is Suffering for the ruce. He has struggled and hos suffered be- fore, Hut we are tulking too much shout what bas been and not realizing what ‘is to bo dane. But there de- volves upon you and me, now that a glant of the race.has given almost his Ife fur Ue make of this-graat.race. of ours, It devolves upon us now to see chat sucritice was not made in vain. it Is-for us to take serlousiy this great program ot the Universal Negro Im- provement. Aswociation. Marcus Garvey enw a grand and mighty..race..riten up) with, alt the, SaHdeaF Of the PISE-A FACE ST EMATS, pullding up mighty emblems of w great Avilization, He saw a race, not as it exists today, bawed down under op hh ct 5 nae Oa a Rae taasi tg program ot the Universal Negro tm- Provement Asvociation. “Marcus Garvey uw a grand and mighty..race..rigen up with, the “geuadear OF the pUsion Face ST Eats, Dullding up mighty emblems of w groxt civilization, He saw a race, not as it exists today, bowed down under op- pression and slavery.,but a race of mighty men who gave to the World its greatest civilization and left marvelous emblems and #ymbols of its ‘etvsltzation slong the banks of the Nile that still baffle the xclence of the world today. ‘And I want to say to you friends and fellow members of the Universal Negro Improvement Agsoctation you’ cannot better dedicate. sourselves than to a Ufe of unseifsh sérvice following in the footsteps of His Excellency, the Hon. Martys Garvey, in she-upbuilding- of this race” to Its anetent “glory. (Ap- plause.) Hn ad The ‘speaker enged with 's glowing tribute to the members of phe Univer- ea). Negro Improvement, Association throughout,.the world for ‘the manner fm which, they. were-comporting them- selves tn gira, chbir hour of trial,” 2 ee. Hon. Porsival Gurrewee’ Address - Men.. Percival Burrowes,. Avetetent wenfetacy, Cones! apote as follows: Tom 7a with you and I belbeve by BOW you reslise that Iam jnéecd in eernéet. I feel that tonight I ehoulc. give wey to others whe way have mat- Ifyou wre SICK with RHEUMATISM, SCIATICA, LUM- ee ee ea ee —plear rege eK me RMENATINN setTie Lem, Pee Se a BACKACILE, ATIFE MUSCLES, SORE TiWiy, CAINE CT TO. Hor 42, Husiliten Grange Stailon, NEW TORK CITE. RE Ro HONE ote wk Mune AML Gt | Sin: ane ane wonderful dupatne Sogicing:_ algo the, free BBE WoT sat ORM: GANTT DIGERT yeur food yreneely— 0+ peak, Oe in chs shoclal pelee of He ply (Gna, tremtemente JOXZONE SHELM TIAN MEUICINE TL GRPErets, Stn Ge Wiehe Phe Jostens: mesicige te ADeuble Bireagth) AMEMcera! ne aneneystetumdea if Tam noe ancloned, Sa TRE ASHE Tee ewry pana Toate nat pany of Sepp erie oy ct ean etic Ae aa stapn iood becomes purer: no more KORE, BP euhterace taearemapen = e : Belling BorNens no inees REACHES, UU MIBACO, SECRL: PLEASE STATE. HOW MANY TREATMENTS YOU WANT THAN foe MMEUMATIC PAINS gone Take step aves a SEOM Be erAve? Nama vee cba seea eee eedannceeeeeeee | Don't wait until it “ie too fate! Why sumer any fonger? WA nereneantesevessetes sere ene’ Haro 'in sode'spnurtuntty toogec went amici Teak sent wat 7 7 SOu'eet worge! “Encloae 1 cents tlie, werlte VOUI NAME O° agarose ssseseeeceerecsssssesecesseenenencensnesestaseed Ea RDBMESS Gring coupon add wall Coupon rahe Rowe js Aer dtiem? wee ropa. 3 fe 1 oy wee : : . iy, Sb HAIG. easene sesdesobanseesasdebongacnsvassaessese ce, 99 &, ( 6g ene A 5 an The Aristocrat | g \ . ‘ N fo, to et oe on me z = MENA UUSNY | CO WE oss mo: \ Bieri y es BENDOW The smooth, straight glossiness a R and delightful fragrance.of your : “hair ~aftér an” application “ol ps ais Pluko Hair Dressing imparts fe * such a sense of Juxury that peo- 1. j - ple who can afford the best al- i ways use Pluko, the “Aristocrat” . of Hair Dressings, Y es ( Miss Beulah Benbow, one of the * most successful of our group in - . _ the theatrical world, says: “I || ‘ .- always use Pluko because I find - aoe it is the best Preparation for the. . < hair‘that money can buy.” . Scale gee AC i Sa y nea i oc a . . mk y A Poin Te fers of mere hnpertianes to dwell apen. Think that you feu with me iat even IC 1 wanted to ge back, Fou not If L were going to apeak on i subfeet Le wound speak on the abling uy of the Universit Mossy Haprevemnent As: soetition and ken it ted buthisrs te foundation of whieh bar tea dug, It does mot tare shill s mevivnies te dig a foundation, Laberere can do thst after the archite st Las given fs phtts ‘The: Hon, ‘Maren Garves: i the archi tect of the Universal Neer. Tanyraves ment Asserkttion: we are the laber= ers. amt at i forhus te tamsh ase mechanical SALT su that the supers sifueture ean ze up % SOI report of an aeeetanetsont ay i Burean ef Sime, dw aL 1 Saya potits amt that the hemi ayer prety aly hast bee expiened fev eed ten extde kas sites inen frat besan, bse fires an eonted we shettertad phar AMatent Htercates indicate thot it wes fe frequent erie af dene by aveudens pavediles a puanentinten? ated TAAL A Wes semerines ciapbayed ay ae means of tr ture, 7 : Bit tay one thiee deat chess Tash nendinte eammengrysiggite e, Wive thousand now. Siete, RRP Loe rooms, fHinates Gl the apenas of dally comfort may ree! our ter tte. Valen, eituetes fume ote dont tre: lente Tastee. Gadel Ghae onery ghar ett eoidiy vapers whotesab. ‘Phe auton Auden that choke ete atrentr ed elurter Sar necidse ane tite ey fe de Uitese whic fcr ing annus ce pein at Merten teste be dew nt atc Cater et the sae Ieee. hetea amial qrettes an the “aie a Tene eitiesee ty eater sie tat ee CHG: Gi BI, HE MELE! ERR HO preset camgened quant. Mt York hes Geen a geno ates tumiot ey Series’ ean water oo Meith bee Sent dite det etennain tee be ate, Lavestig Coots made fy Dee Yaneeti Menbersiar ef Yale ted den te report that foi eeath de Ah Vesa thet perseny quran thrend a want je pXpored te net more thay foe jars of SUN DON DIN ede LO TIM poet y eal ate Do. Women Do Too Many - Things at the Same Time? PoeNew Umit Che suffrage ductile Biss Thee won, this as femmimi'svakiward “age, hag Hluabeth Rruer, welllos a femink t. besaune yoni at try nig te j straddie (wo hersex and ride tiem both Pt dt Mietorions, tinish, One ef these Pix nie Jul: the others ber Inve lite |The wennase whe avtenipe couple oe qulitiment im Metle aspeetseef hes Me Sis a Feuniniet? Mase Beer oases the April Unge es Sisgavine | cin mieleoveorines to dey tte fulis steed fobs it onee she suemtineet eae | Sho waa reathy atte toate vententeld ae seme oMefishizoned metter women 1 Inver tebe: waa thes were wike, stand at toes ge Rasen wih they had fol “takes bee without convention they pits tow neurrarge, Wthey ave mazrted Lihey feel thes might Mares esnmptistied Nynape Un the wild waste he ei of ie Crectpnnsable waveations, RAL sweat Svanstng diester et pemet, What then, is the mates watt get The mutter is that we are atom Sue uf peifeeamsdogenes thi a Fittahes eberveliina tn life atte nt gist past tndzygebaatts reach Une atwbesatd ate. We aber tot tnister panty. Wee ate ats meri, RELY | We get tn verre Fudys way.) We are, ether too sad or te bums. We fee, whether we pe tise Heer tet, parl erative woman's mesemient of fewtay ea anovement ehh has passed ats adolestenee, Passed the unthinking burreis et ts Bot Mwerk amd mew. techiies ti Atte. atta Venbeak apes uue ete at eT wesiaent oe chinese Have treed Snes ets the ite at tte Moone PW dein wate ete el hands at dering ste kermae, at hernia tabi We wettest banat foe pgspenrestatit Statiere dito We led alt ela sat Sate pete te py the Mee a gent Pye GMC ANSE aN puat finthe atearsee fear fete AOD ce theze te tae ne aber Her wet fencer thas testy tke nunate Thew wet especies ie al efteess Supotetaentes ¥ experemen's ean ced seat Tee Dh stuters aa other off Gal te Esau at Manes egpniaiens strlen Teiecaeh contend this dtc te Mes’ thonsand aid one Jobs which wo do, at they are hardly ever-Jobs that: teach us mare about ifs, that make ts move brave, that bring us Into ans eaptact with) the raw sources of sanity. we aevitalize ourselves in the Shame ef a higher freetum! Wo are Ppoerer human beings, often, for ‘all | -\Wweman'e transition and adaptation fe her task fn heartbreaking, MIs jHivnen nds. : eshe lotiis for a home, a husband and chitdven, She,tongs to give her= self completeiy to her chosen work, (She as a hitman berg and hes the rrheht; miave, it is her duty to soctety te devetog, Derself an all her capact> "ues, ‘Tan alten she cannot havg poth fee‘Ieve ite amt ner career." She shiiiot trom chensins her career and [gets on athe. There are enough Monsen wine cite lonely throngh Ine egraybte elvoumstanees, > Buc if abe take: en she bulden ef a sensitive and ene relation te her inner forces, she ants! ge where thes lead—alone. Every wenn who bas been of valine to the work! hax luut to find her way" for berestf and estublich her own jealtles ‘There are no signposts for* hes, Sie must put them up for, other wonten, (As ste dues Une she makes at einge We the cmduct of women, and often ehanse ter the better, “It ts a vigimte from aecepted acqulesgences * auel sunietimes slaveries, which are iwary with the praises of men, Into « ciear and a controlled freedom, thet pays for what he gete, . Feminism te no answer to life, It Is no arser te the stragsle of dount seul Geith that we must go through tu hud, fer eset of us, an individual an+ woe Betminsiam san attitude, ef Seutack a peeitive aritnds of going Met un retreat fs there an anawer fer the wel cones which troubles febcent woman today, but in an ad- Maree soretane the pwtek'of lure on bret shemiiers, pact feminism, past Fes cecteeone . ated out inte the spe valiets cae pitts and) moun- Lek sb phe human peaatbtye? Noe ds ie desea for the cote Coie penttat ne reading mare Proseser owen arines amd other pee Uuntieady tee © kee : Webel car amides wie! ave emo PhD OD oe Dane ten, aad thie seen) wn then aber te, T. THOMAS FORTUNE - - - - - - - Editor MARCUS GARVEY - - - - - - - Managing Editor MARY JACQUES-GARVEY - - - - - - - Associate Editor NICHOLAS GARVEY - - - - - - - Associate Editor FEROL V. REEVES - - - - - - - Associate Editor PROP. M. A. FIGUEROA - - - - - Spanish Editor EUSTON R. MATHEWS - - - - - Business Manager 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 OUR LABOR TROUBLES ARE WORLD-EMBRACING AND PERPLEXING THE economic troubles of mankind have multiplied tenfold since the World War. The struggle to feed the stomach and clothe the back has become so serious as to threaten the peace of the world. There is plenty to eat and wear but there is no money in circulation to pay for it. Our economic system works in the interest of those who control industry and the labor supply, and who are thus able to monopolize and control the money supply of the world. If it does not pay the Money Kings to employ the necessary capital to give work to those who must have it, because too much production reduces profits, then those who depend upon their labor have no apparent relief. They must starve slowly and die. Millions are doing that in China and India and other parts of Asia, and in many parts of Africa, especially where the British have appropriated to themselves the lands and the labor of the natives. Some idea of the conditions of life and labor in Africa can be gathered from an article we are republishing from the Free Town Workers' Herald, the official organ of the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union of Africa and the mouthpiece of the African Worker under the heading, "Be free men and women in South Africa." They are going about it in a way to get what they want. We shall get a measure of it everywhere if we go about it with the like spirit. The British West Indies have lost a large part of their working people, who could not make a living at home and have sought it broad. Strange to say, the British authorities have not encouraged these poor people to go where they can make a living and have denied them the protection they are entitled to when injured, in their rights of life and property. American capitalists have secured control of the sugar industry in at least two of the principal provinces of Cuba there many West Indians have gone, and the Cuban government appears to have placed the police authority in their hands, if the many reports we get from Cuba are true, and we think they are. Labor and wage conditions in the Southern States of the United States have greatly improved in recent years, but it has been due to the restriction of foreign immigrant labor and constant demand for Negro labor in the industries of the North and West; the migrant movement having demoralized and hopelessly crippled much of the farm industry of the Mississippi River States and other States of the South, and the end is not yet. Uncultivated land will soon eat up its owners. It must have workers to pay taxes and yield an income. When the planters have workers and do not treat them fairly and justly, they can blame themselves only if the workers go away where conditions are better. The workers have done that, and they are not only making good as ordinary workers but are being given chance in the skilled work. This will become more so. If white workers were not suffering as much from unemployment and the high cost of living as Negroes in the United States, the West dies. Great Britain and Africa; the distress signal might be hung out. As matters stand it is up to us to fight as the white laboring men fight everywhere for our share of the common ration. And who saves nothing of what he makes and has nothing but his door to sell will have troubles aplenty always of his own. Own something. Sell something as well as buy something. The man and woman who own a little farm or a little store become their own masters, and if they stick to it long enough, and keep their businesses abreast of the demands of their neighbors, they will, in time, have a big farm or a big store. Most white farmers and store keep start small. The main thing is they start and stick to it. The numbers of the Universal Negro Improvement Association can record to be leaders of farming, merchandising, financiering and all that, in every community where they have a local. It is up to them to lead the procession. CAN THE EAST INDIANS BREAK THE DOUBLE TYRANNY? THE people of India deserve the sympathy of well-thinking people everywhere. They have been struggling for their independence and for self-determination in their affairs ever since the British hitched their rule upon them by the sharp practices of Lord Clive and Warren Hastings. They have been unsuccessful because they are victims of two distinct tyrannies—that of Great Britain and that of their native chiefs, called Maharajahs. Most of these chiefs are independent rulers of their little principalities, but are responsible, after a fashion, to their British rulers. Of course the British have to exact enormous taxes to run the government and pay the soldiers it must employ to hold the people in subjection. These British officials receive exaggerated salaries and perquisites, mostly grade, which the poor sitters are taxed to pay. The native rulers of India appear to be an incompetent and disreputable lot of dignitaries. They are under the thumb of the British Governments, and many of them are in its pay. A large number of them are dislodged in the British schools and spend much time in this and other national living in Europe, while their pupils at home are mostly still the past several months at least three of these foreign masters. Indians have been raised up in scandals in Europe including millions of pounds sterling, which the sharpists injected as hush money. Most of their troubles and fabulous squandering of money comes from their disposition to mess it up with white European women of easy virtue. The latest scandal is the arrival in England of the fabulously wealthy Maharajah of Judhpur. He brought with him four wives whom no Englishman may look upon, and thirty servants. He also brought his private polo team and seventy polo ponies, and he has eight limousine motor cars. He has secured a palatial residence in the fashionable Wimbledon district of London, and the whites have been straining their necks in vain to catch a glimpse of his "invisible wives." He has challenged the crack polo teams of England and would like to visit the United States, but fears his plurality of wives would keep him out. He has the correct idea about that. Mahatma Gandhi has set his face against the overlordship of Great Britain and the incompetency and prodigality of the Indian princes, and he has made some progress towards reform. He has aroused the poor natives in a marvelous way, and the seed he has planted will bear fruit. His work and that of Marcus Garvey in arousing the Negroes of the world to their social, civil and economic values, and to more self-determination in ordering these, is very much alike and just as necessary. The disturbed condition of affairs in India has determined the London authorities to summon the Earl of Reading, Viceroy of India, a very unusual proceeding during a viceroy's tenure, to the Home Office in London, to consider the condition of affairs in India. Can the East Indians break through the double tyranny which rules and keeps them down? We are of the opinion that they will have indifferent success until they get rid of their corrupt, incompetent and extravagant native rulers of Indian states. PREPARING FOR THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF LIFE WHEN we are new in the employ of a person or firm we are shown the duties to be performed. It takes time to adjust ourselves to conditions, but we soon get in the motion and "swing along." The boss must know his business thoroughly, or it would be impossible for him to instruct us how to go about ours. Many successful business men first started as office boys. They inhaled something besides the dust from their clothes. We notice that folks who seek information usually do it with a smile. Generally these same folks are always willing to do whatever is requested of them. The person with the smile and the willingness to do is mostly successful. We should ask ourselves if we have prepared to take the boss's place when the opportunity comes. Some of us do not know that being the boss is not the easiest thing in the world, even if it does look that way. The manager of any concern will be able to give you more than a definition of the word responsibility. Planning a project is far more brain-fagging than carrying it out. This is proven by the fact that the planners are in a minority, while the doers are in a majority. Only capable persons are put in responsible positions. The boss must use diplomacy in handling the patrons and employees. He must know who the efficient person is to put in his place when he absents himself. Of course, there is the type of boss who will not let his chair be vacant long enough to allow the efficient employee to get permanently seated. In the case of women in domestic service, there is little probability of the maid becoming the mistress, except in her own domicile. Unless a woman understands dietetics enough to plan a well-balanced meal, knows what to do when the only roast for dinner burns, what to say when the phone rings for business or social calls, and how to straighten out the many household kinks—will she be a good mistress of the home. The long and short of the thing is, we must know all about our jobs and perform them well before we can boss jobs of our own. THE REAL GOVERNOR OF TEXAS IS A WOMAN SOME of the opponents of Woman Suffrage never expect to quit fighting it. Since they were unable to prevent American women from obtaining it, they allow no opportunity to pass to discredit their political performances. We are of the opinion that it is this class of individuals which is stirring up the "Tempest in a Teapot" by asking, "Who is the governor of Texas?" Judging from the volume of editorial comment appearing in the leading dailies, the country is inclined to take this question seriously. Is there real necessity of discussing it at all? Even if "Pa" Ferguson is the real governor of Texas, we fail to see all of the discussion in the world is going to remedy the situation, which is simply an amusing result of universal suffrage. How under the sun is anybody going to prevent a woman from requesting and accepting the advice of her husband? Why waste time talking about it? It is easy to see that the raising of this discussion is the work of clever anti-suffrage propagandists. They dare to insinuate that a woman who is intelligent and capable enough to carry to a successful conclusion a campaign for Governor of a State the size of Texas is unable to make her own executive decisions. The absurdity of such a suggestion is so obvious that no neutral-minded individual ought to be affected by it. The election of "Ma" Ferguson appears to have been a sort of "vindication" of her husband, the former governor. Viewing the matter from this angle, it must appear that the majority of the voters of Texas have no objection to the present governor receiving a bit of advice from the former governor. There is nothing to prevent an individual from receiving and accepting advice from anybody in the world. Why discuss "muzzling" a husband to prevent him from talking to his wife? EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS Our thoughts of other men, whether those thoughts be good or evil, has nothing to do with what the men really are. The conduct of men, and that alone, determines their worth—Tampa Bulletin. Let's lift ourselves above the dead level of plodding, and once in a while sail away on the clouds of bright fancy. Let's leave dull care behind and unfold with the flowers even through duret turns us drab again—Kansas City Call. Let's quit bidding ourselves into believing that we have developed a race pride and a consciousness that make us stand together. Rather, let us look into our own consciousness, not the other follows and give our best aid in striving from our mienes, gallouses and devils that are stunting the growth of all of us. Instead of crushing wise, let's get wise—New Ben. (Omaha, Neb.) Since the advent of Mr. Volunteer has, the reformers have practically run out of jobs. Theatre symphony of the group have caught the spirit spirit and shows are getting better and better. Having uplifted the stage and about to had themselves with empty handles, we now respectfully call their attention to a certain class of phonograph record business. Uplifting there should provide a fertile field.—Indianapolis Freeman. Because of the failure of one or two banks in a section, no excuse for boycoting all bank is offered and if one insurance company strikes the rockies the protection which the laws of our states offer the policy-holders is sufficient to prevent any loss, and there need be no fear on the part of those who have the thought of fatromising any one of those doing business.—East T n.....see News. Inequalities of life age inherent in human nature and will exist in spite of the most highly paternalistic government. The Socialistic idea that all that is necessary is to pass more laws and take wealth from those who have and give to those who have not will never create the stigma of human equality.—Bulletin-Appal. With the opening of spring and the consequent, fuller operation of the industries, larger opportunities will be afforded just people for employment. It is an economic loss to the community to deprive skilled workmen from being employed at their trades—Buffalo American. For, as a matter of fact, there is no What would we do without the daily papers? The latest and to me very interesting is the case of Maria Hirst, who for thirteen years was a nun, then decided that it wasn't the life for her, so she was released and now she is announcing her engagement to a prominent Baltimore banker. For thirteen years she saw no men other than Pope Plus X, who heard her take her vows of poverty, chastity and obedience; a priest or two, and the parents of a few of her pupils. Suddenly she felt that she was not cut out to be a nun, that she had been an outdoor girl, and the convent did not agree with her health. She is now busy with automobile jaunts, luncheons, tennis, golf and bridge parties. Maybe some religious fanatic would say "the world is going mad." Not that, she just changed her mind, which is the characteristic of all women. This good lady was thirteen years realizing she was in the wrong place, and as soon as she discovered her mis- take she got out of it. Was that not she beat thing to do? If we all had the 'till power to move when we discovered ourselves in the wrong place, there would be less friction in the course of affairs. In our public school system there is now what is called the Vocational Guidance Department, where students are advised as to what vocation is best for them. The teacher and student become confidantes. Every mother wants her son to be a great man; the greatest are generally supposed to be lawyers, doctors or ministers. Now if mothers could urge their daughters to be lawyers, doctors (I won't say ministers, as I think the woman can best preach the Gospel in the home), they would not only acquire position, but would in time acquire wealth. Men would much rather, call in a woman physician for his wife or daughter, consequently a woman physician would be kept busy. I know have a friend in Howard University studying medicine. Her father is a very successful physician. I trust she will also be successful in her undertaking. As for law, I think one should have proper counsel before investing money, interest in any proposition. Of course, we know and are sorry that so much of the divorce business goes on in the courts, but it will go on until men and women find where they belong. An artistic housekeeper, when arranging furniture, places and replaces before she is quite satisfied with the appearance. As soon as she appreciates the harmony, she calls it a finished job. Some mothers study their children in their play, and in some way find a clue to their special likes and dislikes. Few children like housework, it isn't that they detest it, but because they think some time will be taken from their play hour. If you will notice on a rainy day children seldom object to work. The girls delight in sewing, and the boys in tinkering with some woodwork or mechanical device. The rainy days are the ones to talk to them and end out what they would like to do. My subject is not on children, but we must start with them, the question of how to decide life's work must be nursed during childhood. It has not an easy matter for one to get properly placed. If we choose something and find that it is not for us, the best thing to do is to change, an the former was did. One might say you should know your own mind, but the human mind changes with conditions. The sad thing about changing our minds is that it always affects somebody's plan. But don't think your plans will always lay just as you place them. I guess the world would cease to revolve if some one didn't do the extraordinary thing, the thing that makes people wonder why. If we could just consider it none of our troubles, and remember the saying to, "Never trouble trouble, till trouble troubles you," we would not only be happy, but happier when we have found our place in life. Georgians Continue Anti-Lynching Fight Sixty members of the Georgia Committee on Interracial Co-operation were present at the recent annual meeting in Atlanta, both races being well represented. Department of an effective anti-lynching law, provision of a State institution for delinquent colored girls, survey of housing conditions, and the securing for colored people of more adequate educational advantages, better conditions of travel and justice in the courts, were among the immediate objectives set by the committee. such thing as social equality within races; there are degrees of advancement that places one individual above or below the social realm of another. This is true in all races; it is true with nations; it is true in families. It cannot be a part of interracial duty. A man may not be the social equal of another man and yet it does not in any sense limit his duty or service to the man-beneath or above him—Birmingham Esperter. Nothing from nothing, nothing remains. But once we believe we are something, we as a group, will thrive and become a great Doctor for good in this country—Echo, (Red Bank, N. J.). The many men of our race are strolling around while some other poor men are hearing their burdens—Pregnitive Mammars. Smallpox Again? "She paid the penalty," exclaimed the Medical News! A young woman employed by the telephone company of a city not so far away, refused to be vaccinated when, the order went forth that the premises should be the protective treatment. All the rest of the operators had it done. She resigned. What happened? In ten days she developed smallpox and died. Picture to yourself what might have been prevented if she had complied with a request which involved practically no danger to herself. The chances are, of course, that she was "coming down" with smallpox when she left the company, but even so the vaccination undoubtedly would have leashed the severity of her illness and spared her life. Imagine how the other people on the staff or that organization must have felt to know that they had saved themselves, from danger of contracting smallpox from her, or from others in that city. What a reward for keeping the request of the officers and the warning of the health authorities. What a startling and ad example to those who knew and loved and perhaps depended upon that young woman. What are you and I doing about this matter? I have spoken before of the need for vaccination against this disease which was almost banished from our midst and which has been increasing throughout the United States for the last few years. Have you given heed to these words? Have you respected the advice of our Health Commissioner? Have you taken seriously the warnings of the Health Department? Or are you still waiting for "a more convenient season" before you safeguard yourself and those in your family? If so how long are you going to wait? Until tomorrow or until — Even though there is not an immediate danger of an epidemic of smallpox in this particular city, "one never knows, does one" when we may be saving ourselves from an invisible foe. Alfred Howe Dies After Long Service at Hampton HAMPTON, Va., April—Acting for the Hampton Institute workers and student body, the Administrative Board recently recorded in its official minutes the serious loss which had come to the entire school through the passing of Albert Howe, eldest son of Eugene and Mary Tolman Howe. Mr. Howe was born on December 14, 1838, in Dochester, Mass. From the founding of Hampton Institute, Mr. Howe gave efficient and unselfish service and, above all, set an example of Christian goodwill. Albert Howe, in death 88 in life, drew all men to him by the bonds of faith, hope and love. The appreciation of Mr. Howe's service to the citizens of the lower peninsula of Virginia, both white and colored, brought together, in Memorial Church, where a simple and impressive service was recently held, members of the city government and civic organizations, white and colored citizens from the local churches, nurses from the Dixie Hospital, students of Hampton Institute and the Whistler School, military officers and soldiers, and many Hampton Institute graduates and former students. Mr. Alowe served as a right arm in the best sense to Gen. Samuel Armstrong, who founded Hampton Institute in 1859, and Dr. Hollis B. Frisell, who served from 1858 to 1912 as the second principal. Mr. Alowe helped these educational pioneers in having the foundations of Hampton Institute. Albert Alowe possessed gladness of soul which expressed itself in good deeds. He built his life into the physical and educational life at Hampton. He took the Dixie Hospital and Hampton Training School for Nurses under his protection and made these institutions grow in usefulness. He through his example as a Christian and a persistent though quiet, worker, made men. For Mr. Howe's life and service the members of the Administrative Board recently gave hearty thanks "to God and expressed to Dr. H. D. Howe and his family, through their official resolution, their sympathy in the passing of Hampton's faithful servant." Progress of Education Among Native Africans Today (From the Southern Woodman) The purpose of the mission is to be the union of the church and the school, the co-operation of missions and government, the union of education and religion. Now the promise of the new day is this: That the governments of Africa are taking a new interest in the education of the people. Hitherto the work of education has been ninety-five per cent. in the hands of missions, but now the government is coming in with its organization and its money and its standards of education, and the relations between missions and government are of the very best and happiest kind. In London, at the Colonial Office, there is a central committee responsible for education in Africa, and on that committee are members of all the missionary societies and members of the Colonial Office. In the various British colonies in Africa there are similar committees composed of missionaries and government officials on the spot. This union of church and school is well exemplified by two new institutions that are about to begin work in Africa. One is at Achimota in the Gold Coast, West Africa. The principal is a missionary who has been brought home from missionary work in Goya. That is going to be a missionary school. It So Many Laws the Police Cannot Enforce Them—Some 15,000 New Statutes Every Year, Still Increasing With No Relief in Sight FROM THE NEW YORK WORLD The national manta for lawmaking, us described in a book by Arthur Train, an outstanding authority on legal problems: During a recent five-year period there were passed over 62,000 laws. State and Federal, to interpret which required 65,000 decisions of courts of last resort, filling 630 volumes; our legislative harvest is upward of 15,000 statutes per annum. Today the greatest obstacle to legal reform is the objection of the American people for making laws, which in the 153 years that have elapsed since the adoption of the Federal Constitution have exceeded in number and bulk the total of all laws enacted for the government of mankind since the time of Adam to the inauguration of Washington. The meach of this "obsession of the American people has alrerned most of us from time to time, mainly as a matter of common sense, for we dislike to see innocent acts made crimes overnight merely by a majority vote of legislative bodies. But now comes Prof. Fred E. Haynes of the State University of Iowa. In an article in the current independent, and points out serious practical consequences. They are as follows: 1. The tendency, through inevitably lax enforcement, for small groups to take favorite laws into their own hands, with resultant Ku-Kluckery and so called "popular justice." 2. Statute-bred crime. Not only do our laws create new categories of crime but foster actual crime, acts specifically antithetical. After inauguration of Prohibition, for example, arrests for drunkenness dropped somewhat, although they increased later; but arrests for other and more serious offenses jumped to an alarming degree. 3. Superhuman police difficulties. With so many laws on the books the police cannot possibly enforce them all, and are hence drawn from their natural function of preventing crime to a turtle hunting down of violations of so many laws that nobody can possibly remember them all. If this correlation of cause and effect is sound, as it seems to be, it is obvious that we move in a serious circle. Ordinary measures will not help us. The very thing which prompts us to pass laws—i.e., crime—is the very thing that our laws produce. We crusade against crime with more laws, and our more laws breed more crime. Exhorting Legislatures to call a mechanism on laws avails nothing. The fallout is Evening Sun for several years had waged an energetic crusade against lawmaking, and the results to date, even in Maryland, are practically nil. What, then, can we do? One plan, which will at the same time conserve our right to pass laws and yet protect us from the deadly effects of accumulation, presents itself. This is to pass laws for a limited period. Laws, without number deal with trivialities and are the result of sudden and evanescent emotion, rather than careful investigation and reasoned thought. Laws like the fight-tight law and the various blue laws last beyond the time when they could be initially passed. Such instances are too numerous to argue that. It is as easy to unmake a statute as to make it. That isn't done. Legislators feel that it is their business to make laws, not to unmake them. A sweep of public feeling which can put a law on the books may soon spend itself as an initiatory force and yet not be succeeded by a contrary sweep, strong enough to secure repeal. Thus temporary majorities continue to govern long after they have ceased to be majorities; the dead hand of forgotten blocs, movements and lobbies reaches out from the past, curtails our liberties and often enough sends us to jail. Wouldn't a time limit, then, protect us? - The proposal finds precedent in colonial and post-Revolutionary times. Local police measures and fiscal measures were quite commonly of limited duration. If our forefathers were conscious that conditions change and that they should keep hands off the future, we may well call for equal modesty from our modern legislators. Indeed, even in modern times courts have recognized that changed conditions may make laws unconstitutional. Administrative orders fixing rates, such as the 80-cent gas-rate, have been held subject to this principle. When costs mount, then-arbitrary rates become confiscatory and hence unconstitutional; the 80-cent gas rate was constitutional once but it is constitutional no longer. . . . Why not give the plan a trial? Why should not legislatures, as a matter of course, add an expiration clause to all possible futures? A bottling works located in New York and owned by enterprising colored men puts out 5,000 cases of soft drinks monthly. is going to be permeated with the spirit of Christianity. It is to be the highest institute of learning in West Africa, and when it is built it will afford opportunity for professional study in law and medicine and agriculture and the sciences. BE FREE MEN AND WOMEN IN AFRICA IS NATIVE SLOGAN IN CONVENTION "BLOEJIFONTEIN.—"Tell the white man he has robbed you for the last 200 years—robbed you in the land of your fathers. Kick up such a row that the white man cannot sleep. "The white man tells you the native must develop 'along his own line.' What is that? I want you to live according to European standards. "Our Congress in Johannesburg Am April will ask the government to bring in a minimum wages bill for the whole of South Africa. If we can't get that we will tell government we will hold up the railway service and the entire industry. (Vociferous cheers.) We mean it. "My message to you in 1925 is: You must be free men and free women in the land of your fathers. Let that be your vision for the year. Get together everywhere and breathe, one word: I want to be a free man in South Africa. "Make such an agitation everywhere that Parliament House will tremble." These are points taken at random from a strongly worded speech made by Mr. Clements Kadalle, general secretary of the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union of South Africa, before a mass meeting of natives in Waiatook location. The meeting, which was held in the open air and was very enthusiastic throughout, lasted about two hours and was attended by some 1,500 to 2,000 natives, men and women. The sentiments of Mr. Kadalle, who was hailed as the apostle of the labor movement in the whole of Africa, struck responsive chrqda in the hearts of his hearers, and were repeatedly echoed to the sky. He was constantly cheered on by the cry: "Speak, boy; speak!" At the close of the meeting a lengthy resolution was unanimously passed requesting the Union Government to "tribalise the pass system altogether, so that natives could sell their labor in the open market in a free country." The first speaker was Mr. Mancoe who welcomed Mr. Clements Kadalle as a man known in the pulpit, press and platform as the apostle of the labor movement in the whole of Africa. The work he did could be compared to that of minister, European or native. While the latter called their souls to eternal life the former asked them to make their own paradise here on earth. (Applause.) Mr. Adam, chairman of the Salt River branch of the I. C. U., thereupon applied for recruits for their movement. At present, he said, it was an insignificant little plant, but it was destined to become the mightiest tree in Africa, which would spread its branches over all non-Europeans in the continent. They must make up their minds to look after their own interests. But today they were only a tool in the hand of the European, and they knew that a tool did not work itself. The movement, he said, would teach the black man the value of organization. They should remember that the Lord helped those who helped themselves. They should organize. Mr. Clements Wadalle said he was touched by the sight of so great a crowd. It reminded him that in June last he, a British subject, was denied the right of addressing a meeting in Durham, an essentially English city. The English press said the Nationalists would make slaves of the natives. But today he was allowed to speak in Broomfontein, an essentially Dutch town. The Part Government had brought a new spirit into the country. In the Cape the natives were now all Nationalists and had no time for British ideals and traditions. The talk about British ideals was pure hypocrisy. After touching on the question of Native labor in the mines the speaker advised the natives to kick up such a row everywhere that the whites would not be able to sleep. He was glad to say that Professor Thiele was keeping up the agitation in Cape Town. But the Natives should not blame the Europeans but themselves for their backwardness. They only cried to heaven in church. They were wasting their time in praying. They should get a move on and make such an agitation that Parliament House would tremble. The message he left with the Cape Town natives was the message he brought, them for the year 1925. "You must be free men and free women in the land of your fathers." (Loud cheers.) That vision Doesn't your mother know that Cod Liver Oil will put pounds of good healthy flesh on your bones in just a few weeks? Tell her every druggist has it in sugar-coated tablet form now so that you won't have to take the nasty, oily oil that is apt to upset the stomach. Tell her that McCoy's Cod Liver Compound Oil Tablets are check-tall of vitamins and are the greatest flesh producers and health builders she can find. One night, their kid, aged 9, gained 19 pounds and was able to good druggies for McCoy's Cod Liver Compound Oil Tablets—50 tablets 60 ounces—plastic to take as candy. "Get McCoya, the original and gen- etical Liver Oil Compound Sub- titute." they must ever keep before them and visualize it in their dreams. They had not agitated before, but in 1925 they should get together everywhere and breathe the one sentiment. "I must be a free man or woman in South Africa." They should tell the white man that he had robbed them for the past 200 years in the land of their fathers. They should tell the white man they wished to live side by side with him in South Africa. Did they know where they were living today? They were living right in hell in that location. "Laughter." They should not laugh; it was a serious matter. Their children were waking naked in the land of their fathers. Their womenfolk should be dressed like European women. What was the use of preaching to the native of a heaving hereafter when the white man was living in a paradise of parity. Passing on to the question of wages the speaker was glad, that the Bloomfontein natives had asked the Town Council for a living wage. No human being could live decently on 25 a day. The European had come of his own accord to civilize the natives, and could not now deny them the privileges of civilization. They were now told they should develop along the lines own lines. If they were strongly organized, employers of labor and the railways would negotiate with them about wages and conditions of employment. In April they would have a congress in Johannesburg. That congress would ask the Government to pug through a Minimum Wages Bill for the whole of South Africa. If they could not get such a bill from the Government, they should tell the government they would hold up the railway service and the entire mining industry. (Cloud cheers!) They meant it. They were no longer babies and pleading would not help them. If they were properly organized the whites would no longer look upon themselves as angels and gods. So he appealed to them to join up. Who would join now? Would they all join? (Cloud cheers?) They should remember that they were to day lying foundations for the future of their children. The Europeans had been starved by the census figures. These figures showed that the natives were not so foolish as the whites to control their birthrate. The natives bred faster than the Whites, and would have Blacks in Parliament in 50 years' time. The progress of the Black worker could not be stopped. In England a wage-carner, Ramsay Macdonald, had become Prime Minister. A Black man could likewise become Prime Minister of South Africa. There was nothing impossible for a man if he wanted to do a thing. Touching on the position of native women in the Transvaal, Mr. Kadde-saail, a white Christian Government was humiliating native women by compelling them to carry passes. It was a shame and a disgrace. A strong hand was being used against a weak people. But it was not the Paxt Government that was doing it, but the permanent officials. He knew General Hertzog. They had had enough shootings in South Africa. The country wanted peace. General Hertzog was a peaceable man. He was a fine fellow, and a better man than Simuus, a soldier who always wanted trouble. The speaker said he was, and the Dutch had the majority in the Pact Government, for the English were hypocrites. He would not trust an Englishman in hell. (Laughter and cheers.) In conclusion Mr. Kadalia urged his hearers to keep awake the spirit of freedom and to dream of it always. Were they ready for a new paradise? (Applause.) Of that he was sure. Those officials, he said, were trying to bring the Pact Government into disrepute with the natives. He agreed with the suggestion of Mr. Tielman Roos. The service should be packed with Pact supporters, who would carry out the policy of the Pact Government. On the motion of Mr. T. W. Keale 'Mote, a resolution was unanimously passed confirming a previous resolution passed by the Economic Council of the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union in reference to the enforcement of passes on native women in the Transvaal, on the ground that in the present age of world-wide democracy and civilization such a measure was unjust, aberrant, provocative and a humiliation of the most law-abiding inhabitants of South Africa. The resolution further declares that such a measure would prod: discontent which must result in chaos, and "whereas every sensible native pitched high hopes on the Pact Government that durges its regime an era of peace and prosperity, would reign over South Africa, this meeting therefore respectfully calls upon the Union Government to withdraw the proposed measure thus to insure to South Africa abiding peace; and further, the meeting being aware that the pase system is a capitalistic institution to control and supply cheap native labor, requests the Union Government to abolish the pase system altogether, so that the natives could sail their labor in an open market in a free country.—The Friend. Colored mail carriers number 3,600, of whom 34 are female. THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1925 BUSINESS MEN AND WOMEN Do you realize the amount of money you can save by placing your adv, copy with a well-organized paper? The Negro World is the only Negro paper that represents an organ- gist. The Negro World is the mouthpiece for over 3,000,000 well-organized Negroes in America. Apart from those in foreign lands. With a Local Readers List of 15,000 Does this interest you have you something you would like to sell them? I Bet You Have That is if you are progressive. Now if you are interested in the point of view of the group you call or write in for our inductive rates and be an applicant those that pay. My job is to help you get into this group. Please come all the way from south to tell us this. Awailing to interest you The Effort to Overcome Poverty as Old as the Ages The sociologists of every civilized country are beating their energies toward the abolishing of poverty, or at least its mitigation. The day is past when people feel that to be poor is noble, that only the poor are righteous, and that the rich, are always wicked. We believe now that man can be better man and better citizens if they possess at least a few of the good things of this world. Too long has the poor and honest colored man looked with suspicion upon his equally honest but more prosperous brother. The well-do-man, by heathen or white, has not always, as many think, grown so by dihonesty and smoked beer. It is often merely a case of knowing how to save instead of spending. The time has come when the more influential college men, those who are in business or the professions, all those who do not feel the sting of poverty must labor to lift the rags from the slouch of poverty. Abbot poverty breeds wrime. It breeds disease. It breeds inferiority by denying the children the right to be well born and well taken care of and well educated. It is extremely difficult to attempt to abolish poverty from the life of the Neuro. Education is one remedy. This is the play of the educated man. Education gives a man an addition to a means of earning a living—a foretale of adaptability, which enables him to look ahead, to plan and to adapt himself to reverses when they come. Training in some branch of skill labor is another cure for poverty. Many times a man has two patrons open before him; one a job at unskilled labor, paying perhaps what seems to him affluence, the other at some branch of skilled labor, paying at the start but a more pitiful. In nine cases out of ten he will choose the job that pays the most, and ten years later he may still be 'working for the same wages.' But the one man who chooses the job at skilled labor in ten years' time will have doubled and trebled his wages and still be on the increase. The opening of new and varied fields of labor for colored men and women and the recognition of colored men in labor unions is a work that will take time, cooperation and work. But it must be done if the Negro is to maintain any decent standard of living. Building Many Churches And Factories Program To the Editor of the Women's Page: How long. O Lord, how long will the preachers of our race remain in darkness. How heartless it is for the Devil Walker to think or even write that the Jew was wrong. The honest Jew was to his heart's core. We would to God that men and women of other races would tell this race of ours that we have enough churches or too many churches, and nothing with which to support them. King Solomon said there is a time for everything. A time to love and a time to hate. It was time for him to build that wonderful temple. It is time now for the 400 million Negroes of the world to think like the Hon. Marcus Garvey, talk like the Hon. Marcus Garvey, and to preach like the Hon. Marcus Garvey. We find it in His Holy Word that "I will draw My sheep from you." How many preachers are today having their members, to pray for our great leader, who is, in prison that we might live in free men and women. How many preachers will be brave enough to tell their members that Garvey is suffering because he bred a nation, he launched a ship and raised a flag? Let Negro everywhere follow our leader. WILLINA P. HUDSON. Hamilton, Ohio. The difference between talent and genius is that talent gets paid off every Saturday night. GREB HOWLS AT WILLS TOPFING CARD FOR THE ITALIAN HOSPITAL FUND We read in the Daily Mirror last Friday that Harry Greb howls at the idea of Willis getting the main attraction on the Hospital Fund card, which is to be staged June 19 at the Polo Grounds, and in part quotes Greb as saying: "How does he (Wills) get that way? Does he not know I am a champion and that Walker is a champion?" Now, that is just where we cannot see how the Greb-Walker bout should be the main attraction. Who wants to see two champions fighting each other? Why does not Greb take on Tiger Flowers and why does not Walker take on Kid Alberta? If they really wanted to give the public a run for its money they would do this. We do not want to see another such bout as the McTigue-Walker go, held in Newark some time ago. Quoting from the papers the day following that fight, they said there was nothing but a friendly conversation all during the entire Ion Funds. The Boxing Commission should make these champs stay in their divisions. Why give this bout the stamp of approval, anyway? There are lots of good boys that are willing to meet both Trieb and, Walker, so why do they not give them a chance? Why do promoters book such bouts? They are not attraction, by any means. In the end the public are the suckers and have been for quite some time. But they are walking up now, so it does not pay to take any chances on a box like this. A fellow trying to wear two coats is a joke. For your consideration here are the games of our colored fighters who, if booked with any four white boys, would make the greatest show on earth, and as mixed bouts have always gone strong with the fans they should be featured. They are Harry With, heavyweight; Bob Lawson, light-heavyweight champion; Theer Flowers, middleweight; and Kid Alberts, wolverweight. Now if you want to have the townfolk talking for a century; if you want to write the biggest chapter in the history of poke fighting in the Empire State; if you want to be known as the most outstanding characters among promoters, give us a credit; much as we have suggested. Do not let Harry Greb spot a good show. He is not in Will's class as a fighter, as Wills far surpasses him, and if Greb is allowed to have his way your card is shot to places. Watch for any attempt that may be made to force your show under, as you know this fellow and that fellow are out clamoring for the biggest show this summer. Let her go, boy! Ring in a card like the one we have shipped you, and make them stand up and take notice. Bob Lawson Wins From Mike Conrov Everybody was pleased with the card at the Commonwealth S. C. last Saturday evening. There was plenty of action in every contest, and lots of surprises, especially in the heat between Willie Makel of Washington and Johnny Pfleed, who is known by all fans as being a very tight customer, but the colored boy from Washington showed the crowd that he know more about the game than did his opponent, and in every round gave him a good boost. Makel won easily. In the first ten round feature honore Robertson, a clever piece of material, he beat out Al Marieso in the second game. This was a fast bally-write it lasted. Robertson could have pitched his man in the first round had he kept up his rushing game, for in this session he came out of his corner so sure of himself that he took Marieso clean off his feet. After a few seconds of fighting one could see that it was only a matter of time before Homer would drop him for the cry of ten, and sure enough, it happened in the second. Then come Walks Miller, new flash from Frisco, known as Frisco McCabe, although McCabe was not himself Saturday night, as we learned he was suffering from a bad cold which he contracted during his training. He put up a wonderful fight against Vincent Forgone, a hard fitting Italian. McCabe sent him back, more than once with his terrific left, and whenever he connected with his powerful right on Forgione's law, he would shake his head as if he had just come up out of the water. Frisco won on points. By this time everybody was ready, for the final shot, which was to feature Fighting Bob Lawson, light heavyweight champion in the contest race against Mike Conroy, the fighting Irishman. Now Conroy, before he entered the ring Saturday night, was noted to be a good man, having had so many knockouts to his eyelid, and he being a slight favorite over Lawson it proved that he must have been a first rater. Bob handled him like he would a baby and showed him up so bad that the gang denounced him (Conroy), called him a big bum, a piece of cheese, and everything they could sling at him. But whenever Conroy would put over one in Bob you could hear his kind, the same ones that a few minutes before had given him the razz, telling him to sock 'em in, sock 'em in; Mike, but poor Mike could not do very much as Lawson outclassed him by a mile and some more. Conroy had reach, height, weight and more years of experience to his advantage, but could not corral them. Although Bob gave him a good beating, at the end of the tenth round, some of the fans said that Mike should get the decision. Some crust. But the judges and the third man in the ring thought different, and gave the fight to the man who had won it by a wide margin. Next Saturday night will bring to. BLOOD PURIFIER is your STOMACH run-down, weak, tired? is your BLOOD pain, "poisoned" this watery? is your BONE-MARROW drying up? Is your body starving, and are you suffering with Are you losing WEIGHT? Are you always TRIED out and KNOCKED out? Do you walk around without any COUER-AGE, AMBITION? Do you wait until you are gone. Improve your opportunity! Come out. Time dies! Order the us the colored sensation from Cuba. Black Bill, who will meet Anthony Takis, in the semi-final. Al Simmons meets Eldjie Kid Wagner, in the main attraction. Some card. What say you, boys? The other two bouts are good ones also. CHICAGO LITERARY CLUB HOLDS MEETING The Young People's Literary and Dramatic Society of the U. N. L. A. Division 25, Chicago, hold an interesting meeting Friday night, April 10, 1925, at the Chicago Liberty Hall, 4902 State street. The meeting was opened promptly at 8:30 by singing "From Greenland's ley Mountains." After the prayer and psalm, "God Bless Our President" was sung, Mr. Garsey's ail was read and discussed by the various members. While the collection was being taken Miss Mattie Harrell rendered a charging piano solo. There were a number of lecturers who spoke on various subjects. Among these speakers were J. L. Logan and James Harrell, who spoke on "The Department Conference"; Frank Ferrell, "Confucianism"; George McVray, "The American Ngojo"; Robert Gardner, "General History"; Isaac Walker, "The Practicability of Astronomical Science"; T. J. Hume, "Theology"; Robert Blackman, "A Nigh Man's Policy"; Andrew, "Reformation"; Carrie Herrell, "Hyglene"; Lymath Mathis, "Knockers of the Organization". The closing remarks were guided by J. L. Logan. The Young People's Club was organized December 2, 1924, taking in all Negroes between the ages of fourteen and thirty years. The main object is to finance the treasury of the Chicago division and to promote the spirit of racial pride among the young people of Chicago. Meetings are held every Friday night at 1002 State street. Campaign to Advertise Negro Business Boot Negro Business Booming TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Aba., April 11.—"Boy Something from a Negro Merchant," is the gleaner for National Negro Trade Week, which will be observed May 4-11 as announced in a booklet distributed today from Tuskegee Institute, the headquarters for the National Negro Business League. Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute and president of the National Negro Business League, says, "This campaign is not organized in auto- system to other merchants, but it is planned for the purpose of advertising the existence of Negro business enter- prise and to encourage the Negro merchants to cooperate in local trade shooting campaigns." In previous years similar campaigns have been conducted by Negro men in Atlanta, St. Louis, San Antonio and other places, and report show that they have not only increased the turn-over of stock of these colored enterprises, but have been the means of bringing the Negro menents in helpful contact, with the white business men of their communities. The campaign conducted in St. Louis last year made possible the employment of more than one hundred additional colored men and women in Negro stores and business organizations, and showed an average of thirty per cent. increase in their gross business. Local Negro Business Leagues in various parts of the country are taking an active interest in the campaign, and it is expected that when the National Negro League meets for the annual session in Tulsa, OkL., Aug. 19, 20 and 21, that the reports will show even more progress than has been previously reported. The booklet as distributed from Tuskegee Institute contains valuable information for business enterprises. BEAUTIFUL FREETOWN HAS NOTHING ON BRIDGETOWN (Continued from Page 2) pulled out something. "Here you are. I have gotten rid of all but this one, which I have kept for you. It is the latest." It was a copy of The Negro World. "Thanke, Sergeant, although the voyage was not a very pleasant one for me, personally. I am sure that the rest of it will not be so unpleasant, with this newspaper you have given me in my possession." "What time will you be going 'ashore,' he inquired? I am going immediately, Sergeant." "All right, as soon as you are ready come and let me know." Having satisfied myself that my assistant was capable enough to carry on without me, I notified the chief. 6 Hamilton Grange Stations, New York City Please send me C.O.D. the Blood Red Medicine Tonic when you receive the package. I will give him the special price of $2 only. (Two packages for $1.85; give one to your friend.) I enclose 20 cents (2 dimes) in cover of shipping. PLEASE STATE HOW MANY TREATMENTS YOU WANT Name Address Town Do not neglect to enclose 20 cents for each order. People from Cuba or South America send money with order. PUTTING WHEELS UNDER YOUR SALES SERVICE You should start today by putting pop and punch in your stationery and advertising media. Letterheads, Circulars, Folders, Bitheads, Envelopes, Labels, Filling Cards, Dance and Concert Programs, Posters, Decorations, Tailors, Shoemakers, Tweezers, Bussels, Clubs, Churches, any line of business or social occasions that need the printer for success should consult THE UNIVERSAL PUBLISHING HOUSE. Your printed matte is the greatest method of advertising and surest medium of success. Price List and submit your PROBLEMS, we are here to help you and can do it to your advantage in ECONOMY OF PRICE and QUALITY OF WORKMANSHIP. WEIRD MYSTO OUTFIT The ORIGINAL edited MYSTO national King series of vignettes, costumes, accessories, and Harriet Beecher Johnson memorabilia to immerse in the world of Gone Gold, Gold Gold, and with Larry Bryan Bender and the other starring ZLTO. The starring MYSTO Wonder album includes a collection of classic songs and all questions LOVE! BEST! SUMMER! MARRIAGE? CHILDREN? LOVE? LIFE? LAND? FREE 4 DREAM BOOK-ALSO Free plan to make money. Pay on arrival $797, plus postage. Contact Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Cincinnati, 212 696, with order as required to get all requirements. MYSTO CO., 18 Church Street, Baskin Bldg, 214, New York City steward and the searkent and myself were on our way ashore. After paying a visit to the home of my friend, the president of the Sierra Leone Division of the U. N. L. A., in George street, from whom I obtained my freedom on a promise that I would return before reboarding my ship, we went to Memorial Hall so that I might have a view of it. "I see you have the statue of a black man here." I said, pointing across the road. "Oh, yes!" That is the statue of the late Edward Wilhelm Clyde, of the West Indies, he assured me, exclaiming hastily "There he is, there he is the U. N. L. A. and A. C. I poster." There were two men in a slowly-moving automobile, one I did not know. The other I know well on Seventh avenue, New York city. CRAVING FOR HOMELAND IS NIGH UNIVERSAL CRAVING FOR HOMELAND IS NIGH UNIVERSAL (Continued from Page 2) called Negro British think's France is the so-called Negro, Fiducian thinks? A Latin-American republic is the so-called Latin-American Negro thinks? Oh, no, no, brother. It's absurd to think that any of these places is the homeland. Is it not true that the members who compose a household have residence more or less, to each other? In the home thy brother sorrows there not because of thy color. The shores the pleasures of the home with thee. His is sympathetic when their art unwell he thinks of thy boys and then of his lot of thy sorrows also, and then does not forget him in his days of rename. The mastery of the home is divided with thee. When things go wrong their art at liberty to speak freely, and art at liberty to accept the mastery. What dost thou mean, then, oh, man of color and brother of mine, when thou gayest thou art in thy home land, being in the United States of America, in the West Indies, in France, in the Latin-American republic or in any other country where the white man possesses the mastery, where, because A woman is holding a large roll of fabric. NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED You don't need experience or training. Every home in your town in a live proposal. All you have to do is wife a CLEO- BAG and tabl- ing. of thy color thou art segregated and lynched, forced to economic starvation, deprived of the franchise and the door to the higher political aspirations barred against thou? Why, then, oh, Negro man, art thou contented to be in these lands, calling them thy homelands, seeing how thou art treated? But, sayest thou, "As Negroes we have fought in the wars which brought independence to these countries, and before the laws we are citizens an sultant to the other man." Shame, oh slime on thoe, oh brother of mine! If thou forlighte the wars of indo-pendulum at an under man didn't thou, night, in nearly all cases, and the other fellow, in his estimation, simply look on thoe as his find. Be wise, then, oh, Negro man! Seel, thee a homeland so up that the rights may be protected and the interests sought. The Universal Negro Improvement Association points to' them to a homeland, Africa, our heritage, the land of our ancestors. Let them up from the lethargy, oh, meet of color. Follow the order of the Red, the Black and the Green. Come with us. Reject the service of rage hates and traitors, ambulances and harmonies, and as such as the night police, the day we shall have a free and rebelled Africa, the homeland for Negroes, where we will be able to compete with our neighbors in the va- rious sciences, during any one t immunities. Dear brother, let's march on, fear hag no fear for, for deliverance points on our sale. Our watchword, "Preparedness" an ambulance, "A homeland, or we per LEONARD BRYAN. Angela, Ortega, Cuba. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT On to 9:15am, afternoon, April 26 1:24 P.M. sharp. Then, Hubert Julian will be presented with a donation by The American Safety Razor Co., of New York, toward the purchase of his new phone which he will use on his trans-Athletic flight. The city's other prominent officials of the city will be present. The place will be Liberty Hall, 120 W. 138th St., New York City. Day Please enter your proof and get your proof to the next day. A copy is written in the book and had Would you like to make an extra one or two months in your spare time? Would you like to gather a lump sum of $40 or $50 in a couple of weeks? Would you like to have her chances? Mail the coupon and I will tell you all about this money making proposition. I will show you how you can make $15 a day or more in this proposition. I will show you how you can get the way to quick profits in profits. Mail the coupon now. C. E. Comer, THE COMER MFG. CO. Dept. 135X, DAYTON, OH. C. E. Conner, THE CORNER MFG. CO. Dept. 133-N. Dayton, Ohio Please send me at once full deal of your men's clothing proposal with a 10-cent price. His a day price. This does not obligate me in any name. Address FOR YOUR SALES SERVICE and punch in your stationery and ad- duals, Envelopes, Labels, Filling Cards, Racks, Hooks, etc. Vicepers, Attachers, Clubs, Churches, that need the pointer for success PUBLISHING HOUSE method of advertising and surest me your PROBLEMS, we are here to help ECONOMY OF PRICE and QUALITY PUBLISHING HOUSE WHERE WAS THE BIRTHPLACE OF ~ = MANKIND STILL-A VEXED QUESTION 659 LENOX AVENUE, cor. 143rd St. PHONE AUDUBON 1618 . : Branch 130 East Fordham Road : | awe Before Yu Wr Before. You <= lati ~ «Buy - 4 } ; Pons | Buy i nm victroins «= tinge) H Records — i i f | * Pianos Rite PME. Player Rolls | | i lj layer Pianos . © ps “YB Sheet Music +] ae sce I dee La AA Banjos * : Films na Ukes % Violins i 7 . ee : y NO 7 2. “RADIO — RADIO Visit our store first. Compare prices.and our terms, which are the ‘lowest in the city. Our newly established Radio Department is the talk of Harlem. We install. your Radio the.day you bity it. “Our service is incomparable. . EW AND LATEST ge IE LATEST“ PEAYER © RECORDS .. : | . -- ROLLS ALWAYS. EVERY DAY Q = ON HAND | DEVELOPING AND PRINTING Lowest . : 24 HOUR SERVICE Terms on ee ee ing Pianos and Players feats —— 5 ‘2 oy 7 ae : gw & » ar | iS ‘Ze é ao > ee. ; eran Sf a4 : ey a | an oe | By “ oar Pa poe ire) \ i Tee “ps0: °°" -gremms OPEN AVERY DAY UNTIL 11 P/M ;- -~' 2 BYPROF. ALBERT ERNEST JENKS Sin cthe (Dearhesd ‘independent po -Lunden. Mebruary.. 0, ffrlea, the “durie continent” bids tair tosthrow a grest light on one of the _ ma@at important scientiNie questions be: “fore the worlionmnely, the plaice of man's origin, Southeastern Aste his lung lied He ardent bakers sox the veradte of thé humait race."" The fa mous Asiatic expeditions of Awdews have great faith in bning able ty show tha Narthern Asin, fn the area of the presen! deserts 6f Mongulit,, Win the alte where not only siguntie Ver tehrute animals. originated, tut mran hunseif, “Western Burepe, with ite prehisterie types ‘of men, such as the Pittewr man of Sussex, Hastind. and the kerr ef specimens found of Newwlerttorl men, mainly on the Continent, has been the srime favorite for he past gene eration. Now, hawever, the continest of Afrlea stepn forward with most sti. Beative claims, compelling attention. By wirelexs our steamer got the nee Friday, ‘February 6 that-a fossil s'nit “which represents swinething m.tsay between @ man's and a gyegt aye” had just been-reparted from Canetew 1 | ag. having been found at Taune-,| Bechuanaland, ‘South Afriea, " Canve- aqucnetgiwe wecen eager far trtete i Janding aj Southampton the afternoen of Saturday, but could learn nothing | more until Sunday in Londen, wher the Times had ie whorl article by Sty Arthur H. Keith, whe had. been fur- ninbed a copy of the manuscript of Pr. Raymond Dart, whe had bronsht the remarkallo flud to light, Nature: of February .7 had pubiished Dr. “Dart's manuscript in full, but it way inp nible to buy u eens at any of the dozen bowkstalls Sunday when V semen: for that aetentitie perinitica) Fortunately 1 hid reque tet acon ferent Sir Arthur Hf. Keith, anat~ omint Bf the Rogal Collegetot Surgeons in London, and® the greatest “Eritish Physical anthropologist. before Inaving, America. I saw bins Mondi'y morning. February 9." i . According to the very capable anat- omist, lar. Raymond Dart, of Johannes: burg, and Dr. Keith, the newly discov ered. forxil represents a-super-nthre- pold ape—in other words, an ape supe- dor to the existing apes of the world, Including the gritty and chimpanzee of Afrien. About these two and thelr (artling intelligence much hex recently been written. “John Daniel.” the elever gorila whotdied last year in Amertea of n broken heart, dne te separation rom his tearker and betaved friend, Miss Cupninehais, we alt remember: while vaudevile-performing clumypat: zee are known to all seheel ehitdren. This new foes apt thie De. Dar Jtentanvely names “Austialopahe a Africanus” (or southern ape 6! VRteten, Peasessed, it would seem, an Jimteligene greater and more hema [tian even the educated detn Dame! FAnut though the “Misoitse haste’ by st Hiolesing as fur a® Afi «ES comedy rie, [ set there can he ty gestion that the [broken. spage tin the chain las been ‘greatit shortenpd by the tru eporh- faunkls | teosily coming ti Meme ce South ppedfetcn az abe tues dear eis HGR" mise in Nécthery Kindest there eas furtunately reseued, quite by ase eutent in W421, that met yw like hae Iwan fogsi) se fat Knewete tren Afri, the “Hane yhoitestepsis”. bow kite in Pe that mest matilike ape se for dise wuverad pusuhecd. dundcatucthe gs MXfraamus, wan resent BGh mere dee Tiherategy fren! a Mitts ctf at Taneats etd ont neice than BA gules fn yah emtieasterty alivection (em the gite fat the etter tail. o Geen: apieady the Aohenm spue an thesebvan i mich shen wed, DuelegiesMs atow. acvurd ni tee tie baa cenuateasiste wie t rapa le eC Spealargs the broken space im the eheiih Is shortened greathy. Flame rhoitesiensix, whose front and lit peatile ave repredneed herenith In extremely elpar photographs, wis | fein tn Ist aang many fossil Bones, of animals at a igyel ef 96 feet below the surrounding plain. A small cone feat bi with an open fesure fom riéae the top to the battom saul sith a tunnel-the’ horizenttl grotto meets ing this fissure at right angle on the civured Teel owas being mined away bie Fete Tike HAT Develo ment Company, Lid., when a workman | found the remarkable hans skull, Near at hand were alu: recavered, atter the skull was handed ever te the numger, a complete tibia er shin bene, a sacrum or Jower part of the spinal column, the tao emis of va broken ferur er thigh bene sand part] of «. lower Juw—but a siigbter jaw han belunged.te the reravered skull. The bones, Ryman and antimal, in that extensive cavhe or natuitl pocket, were co, completely mernsted with silleate of zine that they Were” being “mined” ind went Into the staelter, Mawever, broken antinal banes whieh had been used for fod by saan ‘and crude im- pleme tix ef stone and bane were re- covered In small quantity after the skull was found, What priceless hu- niin records have heen destroyed tn he mining operations aw one Will ever Knew, Rut “spit mitk’ is already: s+, THE NEGRO-WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1925. 7 | more ike thore of men than-thoso of = ae aper, The lower Jaw, much of which wey i”. NOTICE + | [atno'was feetunately recovered, tw aur-]] ° - ,'- TO All private’ and’ personal | | Prisingly manilke—though thers are THIS IS TO comminications intended for ‘also spe-like characteristics, an its my wife, AMY Hon.-Marcus Garvey should chinlegsness, The:skull. was alno carried * be sant to more upright above the neck and|'| the Marcus Ga Oi a , | | shoulders, rather than in the forward etary 133. West 129th Street. “| |Sna grcoring position‘cnaracteriatre of || She is Secretary New York City. the aitthropold anes. “|_| | Std protection. Care Mrs. "Amy . Jacques || thie ponition of potter’ balance, tor |] All remigtanc Garvey. . the head In made certain by the more . spilled, and the world ts thankful for those parts of the Mhodesian man res, ued and given to wcionee, gy The Sriginals Wo now in the Lrinist Museum in South +Kensington; Lon: Gon.’ T there meastied the ekn!l Keb raary 1. At etme 1 WHHL be noted thal the fice is amassfre with practically ty ferehert In fact tn this regard [2 28 tie meet specie wg alt human [kealls new knuwa, Also 1848 the most Mueediie an fs mative face, The free [rats broader than It is high as mests- juted a the hetsht shown best an the | vote view. Ube notlyes at once itlso [tae lange seckers for the eyes, which, is Reese uwerns, RHEE “tom bengaclh their apectike exemestve brow sides, in no other skit are the vides se pitted aver their entire trent” surgace pitted for the attachment af strons fiaseles. "The nasal opening ts char aetenistic of ani tepleal man yg apes Folay, bein: eatvemely bead— Tocliim a eather peerninent nose fey the living “possessor, The depth ef the nes below, the fusal opening no alee great and ap Beeches that bO the gerltu—rauer than the pesiierde aman. The lyweF saw, hel found, wars undoubtedly qadeeteatly chinless as in the other ‘early viele Hes of moadsmt and the azes. The louima it the skill f probabty pemnewhat loo than L200 cubis centie ineters, but fe clewrty, human and. ony Hively wntwinte and above the peaeattl cone jan walusmie of amy. age: ape, The ects were all pegsent at the Hime the an ated. Miewsh ane was lest apparently at the Gime the skull was feseigd. ‘They are deetin ily Im Man leetle— het apeshhe. The qoute between the Uwu vows of teeth is alse entirely human. ‘The teoth are: inter esting also aa that all eauept the two central incirors er fen teeth, ated the feft third moka or tuck toute have’ cavities, No other early humsn teeth show Hits disease called Mearies"— cupposed heretatare tw iltsye been a moien inventiun developed Lagely 9 Uittiive, ReERIRA Gd Geka: Aho eéne| lemporary dentir: necessary and rich, 1s well, . Thus inthe most ctirsery way thet skull of the W421 apestke? man of Mfrlea fS breught before us. Phe 12h Afriean fxs abe ie dies! Unetis, shummanota in ebaraeteriaties, | eather than apestine, ‘re skutl, batt in eraniam and in fue, ts Rarmensons | wing fuint aint suri ar docigacente | Min, “The exe suckers or arlite are prncticaliy “ronnd--or hnmanotd, ine tend of ane-Itke, The nasal bones or fnuse: forming the brides of the nose ure high up on the face as in man, rather than Taw down as in the an- hrepeld apes, The -teoh are alsw| Re, ge OT fe ge eee — Phone.” Tth AVE. Morningside FAYETTE AT _ 18tt * THEATRE 182d ST. ~ Mat. Daily—THIS WEEK—Mat. Daily ; FIRST ALL-STAR COLORED Vaudeville Bill OF THE SEASON’ ; GEO. WILLIAMS aiid BESSIE BROWN — EXCLUSIVE COLUMBIA RECORD STARS Carter and Clark <>] ‘Thomas and Riedly World and Towel > | ‘dant and Perkins Dinks.and McGinty _ [=| __Brown and Stuffings : BUTLER’S JAZZ BAND SUMMER’ Mat.: 15c, 25¢, 35¢ . SUMMER PRICES Night: 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c- PRICES MATINEE EVERY DAY, 2:30 ~ - nao MEEDNIGH F ... SHOW. FRIDAY. 2205: “EVERY MEMBER OF THE U.N. L A ; . Should have a Picture of |. HON. MARCUS GARVEY gugteetors |. You ean, sscmie‘emenew Bee _ ry Peatagtthi ane pant of teaver: “Address MRS. MARCUS GARVEY Box 22, Station L; New York City” | more like those of men than-those of aper, The lower Jaw, much of which alno was foctunately recovered, is sur- }priaingly maniike—though theré are ‘also “apa-iike characteristics, an ite chinlegsnesa, The skull. was also carried more upright above the neck and shdulders, rather than in the forward fand grooping position”characteriatic of the aftthropold anes. 1 This position of better balance. for the heal fn made certain by the more central placement of the foramen Siizium, or the large epepns in the ‘under sirface, of skulls whieh marks tife Knot Where the heud sits on the wAnal column. «Pits “better -hatanced Carriage of the’ hejd compels the be- Hef that this us6-found African ape Walked In, a mére erest positron_than. do the goritigs and chimpanzees whitch, though they dé net ‘rm on atl fours.” pet Balance themselves while traveling on the ground by steadying their tate tering stepx by, touching the efth now and then with thatr Knuekles, Hews fo in spite, ef those bitherta undis- covere: omanhke characterises: of apes, Australupathecus Africanus wax not A mas, peither was he the "Miss- Ing Link"=-which fs ach missing. This thet Ie nee ced bevel ane qusble bee’ aise mien is known about Pe ETE” of this new aye. + in “Ment Grimncety the hordenins of inne Into rac, IW tie extensive lite Gif where the skull was tomsds had Med about three-fouiths of Tre brain cavity of the skull ‘Tris cast of tye] Cosett ape'R Tray Was ree ered hn cet, Ho was the fawkes of tue beatin rast whheh fest eacied attenteat te, the prohability that bene éuzments of the Skull cout perdaps be reseed Dr, Ketth presenta dicta sawing from the bwaity cast ef tien pew fet that Ne pawsessnr Wns AN. ape ced net a nan, For tie sake ef betes placing nis fossil mae pe less piasety tn tts proper plare between vat apes and oC Iiy tigueas frum the Tunes, Ten lon, Ferny 31th. i mnast, of vinrse, be Horie in tnsnd Ue. therens nero Is no evidence tat wits normal nen Lygser brains mean greater intel izenee” than smaller brains, at Is. tevertheless tue, thet there bs an ave rage (or better, a means sze for the jliiian Wrath, did tliake leavers liver init ty the sake of the normal haman wain, ‘The largest brain of any living yee far smaties tran det ef any ermal wat—meiert, anit, pean | tive, fossil,or Whatenet. Brain Size in Cubic Centimetere Mankind fiom..c.ee .. 80 ta Laem Hinkind, average af nvid- Horn, ADOUE.ceeeeee seen Laat PHAN LeOM eee eeeeees FO to HzO) hiuyansess from... 88 to 490) According ty De. Keith the brain eas | atts effthe néw ape, when mature, wuld net have been greater than tbat f the mature gertiia, ‘The spevimen f ceuveced is of a yeu ated Rote ma- fi ured individual, ‘There are aise eon- ers in the human brain where the faes iy, is lecated which eontrals speech the Aran cast recovered shows that |. he ape Ald. not possess articulate | peor Hitt man-kind, any more than | m the living apes, However. st does < |" . TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN - J THIS IS TO CERTIFY. that I have zppointed and requested my wife, AMY JACQUES-GARVEY, to receive donations.to the Marcus Garvey Freedom and Protection Fund,-of which she is Secretary-Treasurer, and to disburse same for my health and protection." - . vo ie . : All remigtances to this fund are to be sent to : . _ Mrs. Amy, Jacques-Garvey 133. West 129th Street New York City. ‘ us (Signed) .MARCUS GARVEY. The Tombs, New Fork, Feb. 7, 1925. pshows that; unliky any. of the lvipg apes, It did possess the eye-contro for stereoscople vision quite axin man, and alxo the-much greater use of Its hagds thaji living apes possexs, Thus it was mastering # man-like co-ordina- tion of the hand and eye—a. ch¥rac: terisuie which hax been so Important a factor in the development of attmiilat- ing, memorable, and accurate know!- edge among mankind, . Those parts of the news South Afri- van Conail ape 35 ir. recorded proclaim shat sholr ponseasor had certain cranial and tached physical characters and also Sortan mepial tralta clearly placing it In a positton superior to any other ape, Uving of fossil. If ts thus not only a xenuine super-ape, but It Is thé only super-ape known today, Still, aince It eked acileulute speech, ft was not a nian. or even the “Missing Link." but at was climbing, in certain particulars, inigiter than auy other ape known, away fromethat pline whereon all the exist- true apes have survived In out-of-the- way places of the tropica® in. Africa and in Malsysit. _ a COMING EVENTS | {One of the most outstanding features forthe coming season will be the fourth dima rectal” by Ethel! Oughton Chirke on Tuesday, Muy 12, at the New Star Cusiny, 197th atreet and Park ave- nue, New York. Mme. Clarke is one of Now York's fealing sopranos,.once con neeted with the St, Mark's chelr, and has mule several appearances at"Car- neg.e Hall, She wus clvaeg member of the Netter Music Leakun of New Jer- sey Miie, Chike is well kiown among the merahers of the d'niversal Negro Improvement Assecistien, having made several appearances. at Liberty Mall, New York, Mr. Joseph Kruger, a ‘well- Anown pianist, will assist her. She hax aise engaged the services of the An- drades Ntlantic Orchestra; which is known for Its splendid music. Beyond question this affair will be a sensation, asTast yoar.many were turned away. Everybody who is anyhody was therg ayd wil be there this Ume. Water noxt weet’s insite for-advertisement. It would be Interesting to learn how many of the 20,290 colored retail deal- ern. belong to sime progressive as- sociation, xome organization which has real concern for the building up of their barinera, $500 Reward If I Fail to Grow Hair ; Hair Root. Hair Grower “ Ia a ectentific vegetable compound, of, hair root and Aino Oll. toget with : sreral ikon, powilre eros, Sheee * o Koo Beir orawar ore. atieany Ee ae a i] grow mustache an@ epetrows my Uke magic. It must Act be put where ] Ree aeaig, aamast tat Bema shen ie 4 ‘\ er ee ie ae ees é real $n5, Growen fer gente with ‘nore ay , + Beige Tata Hat Root Hal Grows vey Sot Suiree athe Gots ies ‘mabnene? now-my Ratt te, 29 inches ies ‘was 4 inches when ¥ started). .I A Shine Hag ponte at ese gat Af Rate % to 3 inches « month by axing ma iy ed { erent taisee Sete BD Ses Sr ad Ee We SPECIAL PRICES Seruede. ee Bi TO DRUGGISTS Si ASérese all mall an@ money orders to: se AND AGENTS: mer oyal Chemical t Company wa ee ‘2 JAMAICA, NEW YORK 4 t ‘(Mention this paper) | ° IF YOU .WANT. TO BE LUCKY, HAPPY AND WELL . T E i ij Your Secrets to the Right Man. Happy fs, in Friendship, Business and Domestic wi Affairs. High John, the Conqueror, - t » ‘Adam and Eve,ajl kinds af Roote and “CALL, or If Out of Town, WRITE ~. Any customer not satisfied with goods ordered can have money returned if claim is made within 16 days fom date of delivery. | pee ae ORR RDIT s e I will credit you. It mattera not where you live. Enclose 10 cents to cever cont of thie notice and postage. a a : DOWNING HERB C0, °2:." ) 4 . - + 99 DOWNING ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. eal YOUNG MAN Srsrcry q FES | OPPORTUNITY Paes Lansner AND oupeet Scrocs, WARCEM * 2168. Madiccs Avqnes, between 136th and 136th Streets , Phone HARLEM 9716 | * NEW YORK ‘CITY Ss win ( oe se nen ae ae MISSTATEMENTS =—s CONCERNING OWEN’ AND - RANDOLPH CORRECTED The Negro World Expresses Regret for Publcation Affecting These Gentle- men’s Character and In- aa gag ee sneer ca In its istue of November 6th, 1920, the Negro World published an. article entiled “Wins Sult Against Colored Sovialis Candidates—Frawl and Mit management Claims Had Been’ Alits- ef Agniunt Than.” Sald artieja con tained & repert of an action im the “Menicipal Court brought by Victor R. Daley against Tit eolsroI—maganin’ ‘Tho Messenger, of which Chandler Owen and AWPhilip Randolph are the editors, Sux! aftivle, statéd that Mr. Daley hud broweht sult te recover a porhion ef sakiry eiumedte be due-hhn und that the’ defense was bastd upon the alleged unsatisfactory service ren- dered by Mr. Daley during his connec- ton with ‘The Muysenger. Sutd ar- tice stated agsu-'that Owen and Ran- dolch were cehatdates on tie Socialist Neket ard that the 2st Assembly Dis- triet rane of the Socialist Par.y. Somposed Largely of colored citizens, wont Ke far asite repudlite Owen and Randolph and fied a compiaint against them, with ue Central Commities of the: Sociatia’ Party on the ground of fraud, memanogencat ind mixaypro- priatien ef camphign funds, Said are Hele wan stated that the League for Mutual Ae. gn organization of avery fine group of white hberals, headed by Roger Bakdwar. began an investigation af the uffalrand voted to expel Owen from the Executive Commiitice of whieh he was a member, Satd .artidfe also stated that xeveral of tho Tabor urganizations. which had contributed fo the support of Owen and Randotpe also repudiaied them and served notice on then to that effet. Said article was nierely a reproduc- tion from ancther New York Negro week!y, The statements contained therein The Negro World helleved were true? The Negro World did not make an fhvestyeertion, however, to agcertalt where or not they were true, bilt It! VAUDEVILLE THE - ATTRACTION AT. “LAFAYETTE NOW After. thé run of musical revues whieh weve been appearing at the La- fayette Theatre since (te fall openitiz. ‘Mr. Shapiro, the riunaging director of the Seventh Ayenue play-house In line "of diversion, in offering to hin patrons ivhigh-class all-star colored vaudeville pill for this week. e : The weekly musical Comedy shows which were given by tho Frank Mont- gomery-¥. Rosamond Johnson” players forthe pinst xix weeks had plenty of talont. with.elaborate costumes, spten- idly staged. ete. but the same: facet, uppearing in the different revues did Fut seem to appeal to the patronage. whfr. did not give the support to which ‘the different productions were entitled. - b In view of this fact the: managentent han adopted a vaudeville Polley for the next two.weeks with Iho hope of pleas: ing its prirans. Next week George Williams and Bes- sie Brown, Columbla Record stars, will -heiid the BHT, Other artista: Carter and Chink: —World-and—~owel. Binks -and- MeGinty, Thomas and edly, Gant and Forking, Brown and StuMne and But ler's Juzz Rand round ont the program Matinees will be given daily, with popular prices prevailing. “The usual Friday midnight show” will also ve Riven. An enterprising coldred bukJness man in Galveston 1s engaged. of a large scale, In the manufacture of kereen “Suors and windows, has since learned that raid atatemon'+ with regard to charges having been preferred by the fist Assembly Dis- trict Branch of tho. Sorat Parts axainst Owen and Randolph and with regurd to the alleged exgutsivon of Owen from the Executive Committer of the League for Mutual Aid and with regard to tho allegéd repudiation 0: Mr. Owen and Mr. Randolph by severa' labor. organizations were not based upon fact and were not true. “The Negro World regrets that said to Mr. Gwen and Mr. Randolph The Negro World js glad to publish thie Sener @ SHOT-LONG BARREL m7 . QO King of Revetvers: -F ~y ines Reis Gh pea free Ries a See as OUR WOMEN and WHAT THEY THINK -tciteaby Mrs. Amy Jacques Serr Me ee eee VW evidenced every day in the attitude of nations and dis- : organized peoples. It is in preparation for the great conflict when the world-will be as & fighting arena and races will be pitted against each other in the conflict of the survival of the fittest. * _ Europe is trying. to get her war-beaten unitsypgether in-harmony “and peace, Knowing'that in ‘unity lies strength. Gerniany. says: “I _am, disarmed and helpless, why fear me?” Fiance avers, “I am rujned from the burden of armament, let us lave peace.” England asserts, “The great British Empire has been reduced to a Common- wealth of Nations, which is now precariously ‘held together.” Spain states, “the Moors‘are chasing us out of Africa.” Italy admits this, “The. Abyssinians tanght-us, that black armies can whip white armies.” Now, all these nations are trying» to adjust, their ditfer- ences because America warns them that [apanese sciei#¥tS are well gquipped, and are working night and day onthe plans and require- ments of their statesmen; sehile the smillions of Chinese will forget their differences and join their neighbors at the call, of race. Mah- "hata Gantdhi, far seeing statesman and patriot, has roused all India and appeals t> his countrymen to forget their religious and caste prejudice ‘and join hands for self-desermination for brown men, Marcus Garvey, the inspired leader of black men, caused the white statesmen of the World te tremble wheg he said, "00,000,000 Negroes will redeem Airiva or die in the attempt.” The wandering Jew is «mow rebuilding Palestine as his homeland, and’ the ,séattered and ‘oppressed -Africnnabroad-is: returning home: to-redeom. Africa. for his noble race. : ee The following is an interesting bit of news, and supports our attitude at this time: . “MEXICO CITY.—More than 200 Mexicans who are fighting for Spain agains the Riif tribesmen in Morocco are to.be deprived. ci their Mexican citizehship, it wasreported here.” “ Blood .will tell, and although sume of us have one drop er two drops of, Negrs blood in our veins, or whether our veins are charged with it, our sympathy and interest are identical. We will struggle on bravely until eur race eujoys the admiration and respeet vf others. WHAT. ARE WE LIVING FOR? OW often has ene asked one-elt these questions, “What am H Lliving for? 1s my family tcing heneited because J live: Is my race helped hecause of my existence? Will history record my name as having lived at this time, or-am I fiving, onls asa negligible quantity in the great scheme of human’ affairs?” ‘These inward questions, if cuusciously answered, will eause one to aim te higher and nobler achievements, 3s no one ean afford te live on _ Fast reputation in these things that tend to help others: Every human being is born for a purpose. The \Imighty Creator, in the arrangement of this earth, made a place fy cach and every one ‘of us; therefore, it is the duty of every endive eh attaining -the igre of wisdom, to ask hinisel! oerseli the question, “Am T in my right place according to the Divine arrangement of things?” The _mext great duty of man is to find the purpose for which he was created. . “ ‘woman may he born jnlo this world for the purpose of mother- ing and training the President of a nation; another may be born to zie the wife of a great statcsman, whose single word devides the destinies uf, millions of people: yet. these women may be born in Nery Iumble stations of life, but, having seized every opportunity that presented itself, and,dene the most trivial and menial jabs con- scientiously and well, they fitted themselves ir the big purpose of aheir lives. 0S : : Shirkirg duties and ignoring eopperuimities shunt us right off the track of the big purpose, and when we come to the end of our life's journey and ask eurselves the question, “Have | fullilled my pur- pose in Hie?" That wee, small voice within us will whisper. “No, pal, you leit the track years ago.” It is the little particles that form the mighty whole: likewise it is the little things in life well done that lead to, the goal. * ~ One gets very little happiness out of life iti living for oneseli. ‘The greatest joy.in life is the joy of living for others. The sight ot happiness makes one happy,-and the knowledge of having: con- tributed to another's happiness makes one profoundly happy. It.is said that man’s duty is to man, meaning that each individual wes a duty to his-fellow mvan. that gach one of us should contribute sumething towards the weil being of fhitanity. Jt is well, therefore, at the end of each day. jutt beiare we reire to rest, that we ack ourselves these questions, “Hase I made,'my contribution to humanity?"."Have I done my duty to my fellow aan?” This personal daily reprimand will help us to keep nexr our purpose and make our lives worth the living. « Christ died that we should live and-enjoy life moze abundantly. We should so live that mankind can enjoy life there abundantly. In this we fulfill our purpose in life and paxjake of the joys of living. ‘The poet Builey clothed his thoughts in beautiful language when he wrote: . ~ . “We live in deeds, not years; in thoughts,.not breaths; -In feelfigs, uot in figures.on.a.dial : We should count time by heart throbs. He most lives ae ** Who thinks, most, icels the-noblest, acts the best.” : French Women Fight to Retain License to Fly French x} ‘ion authorities have barred women from the pitots™ corps. Aeppite traditional gallantry of French- DOMESTIC ECONOMY - =HAIR REMEDY SYSTEM Barbers’, Hair Dressers’ Supplies FREE SAMPLES TO ALL ‘2B West 115th Street + New York-City ; i i 4 A - — Fl We Want 1,000 Agents H * To Gell Hebt'e Famers ‘ “HAIR GROWER’ Bh — seve ervwer 1H grow Mat te Om | ¢ Bar emote denen 80 bin far rit nf + er Heat Pertanian Waste to. : 3 Dera Hebb’s Menutastering Co. men toward the fair sex, “The French Federation, pf Aeronautics has even re- quested that Mile. Adrienge Bolland, France's only professional "ace. aur- Fetider her license. file, Bolland who hus Mghting, blood in her vein, says ‘she will not surrender, her licenre, ‘Mince ft is-pald for until July 25, but, instead, that éhe will invoke the law to maintain her rights under that Hcanse and to secure tha- reimbursement of 40,000 trance she paid for. ‘Mil, Bolland, who was Mensed to, 1920, holds the woman's record for 1,200 bourf fight. is case We Want 1,000 Agents * To Gell Hebi'e ‘Famous 1 . HAIR GROWER meets eevee H Gevw Mate to One | = = Seraamie Sr 00 ecnia tae eras That gover ge made rang the pit oetan a ti Fig eluate ah toed Geter an inh te ais nee ane waaeg. tan Kain goauee Oe woes wr wae Eves Dering water aid sumper To munuter, Makes ements Hin quae wl the Seerovargs. Give ankle to netene LADNER. Gab Ineo ares, Reema ste a ee tetie ded menek SAUL oda Ce ee ee a eee Eather. fresh er canned corn ar dee Retowe Baked tts TD Gu ein tabtespunne tmitter, fo tevspeen sat 3 ees. Ppt rath Chop foe caricand aid ot te tie eres ted mix Meaten topethes a8 tar ques Tard: AAd the meted batter and fat Pour ints a buttered baking deb, set ina shstiow pin af wate und bake ia inaderyia woes gaia the custard ts An execiieht noon-duy dish. Eight or 10 stices of bacon, 1 enton, 2 table. spoons Gout, 2 cups canned tomstoes, fa teaspoun pepper. Broil bacon ina hot frring pan. Kenerve 2 tablespoons of the fa", Str flour in the fat, Add tomatoes and minced ontcn, stirring constant mt cen mr TRIO aN xinooth. Seayon with pepper. Arrange hacon oh a hot platter arid pour over wauce. Serve bet. Spine Fea ake uncut ine ea Bere Md atone iePTs: Sane sein gee eesti itm Sind oN Se ded ee altiae Tae Sent se Sorat’ ite race et, ae Boi lor tasa Pea Radin, Bio Horey: Dept, 336. Prat i es ne eee She ae Orewer, Boe: Hair Dre Galve. suse em Ore ip, Se eaeh eer a Rapin s Mia ae ag S = _jaietea ere! iin en closer pt cery erate oven tae ee Fae eee Freeman, tet ‘10206 BL: Madame Pir Boeri Bias see oe HE es ela ate ar ee Bil iting? Seer: Revo: Sulton Rat eta See EADAME RHODA x ee OE 2, oot & bas Sic | scices "Sreage ons eertmcneniines penne ear CRUSADE AGAINST SLUMS pee — 3. Bondon, April 15. Dogin with siums,"ttie death hole o: ehildhood:" ot Throvshout thevlensth anu breadti ‘of Britain this battle éry ia ageing forth from the mouths vf hish ‘chur! dignitaries.and Welfare workers. --War..on behalf of alzmiaza’s thes. rands of tity tois bys been declares 1 earnest and the erusuiters ‘ave spar- ing nobody's feelinza in the heme truths they tell. Fuel ts. been added te these fire by A remarkithle aeries pf, hich -agetely scandals recently appenris in the In# courts, in which em: os sume of pony have yan hs ha changed hands Mong m-th be- allezed_tmmogalits int ep tortion ainid sumptuous surroundings Re was alegaan fact, the darie, slum }crusading ‘spirit hich ostensibly ani- mated’ the recent eitremists’ attat in the House of Commons, ont further expenditure of site funda for tours Of the Prince of, Wales. aoe *Pelted pendies and pampered Pex- tnese atecconsidered more werth con: [Mderniien than wSitdven in olay sbuma declared Canon Little, svar of Rlack- Pool, in. a_sbecch at this fasatenatie rensics vesort. Mrs. George Cadbury, wife af the famous cocos manufacteser, atso hie yoined the 0% : Denouncing the Way meney is being Spent on other things than iimuses, in & apecch before the National Free Churéh Councit Conference at Leeds, Mrs. Cadbury dramaticaity concluded: “What about the $2.960,000,000 of ou: drink WET What atiout the national expenditure on arniamer:.? “We ought t send forth a tammat call vy the whole of the Rngiton ane nouneing that the «hurch ef Christ sannot ary, longer tolerate tiie x3 fu! nm cendiiohs 19 all ovit! biz eittes Neon Inge of Mt. Pauls Cattedra, iunnsen as Latidan'a “stony dean.” bins vontrbined «Mt to the eampatan fires Works be deploring Rrliate’s mptiied of fitiing up the slums with under ctalte chittren. “We are not breeding tram our beet Sterns, but rther from our worst,’ the dean asserted. “Tou eaqnet. te crease papulatinn merely bys having large families. Every unwanted bale drives anather baby out of the worit or prévents {coming inte tt” A lttte amare bembarAmen’ att around, and ft Is Whely Premier Stan: Ise Baldnie’s Government wilt find tt- telf In dectteate hat water winless something bie Is done to satiety the Widespread and acuta demand for at. levigtion of the housing wagriag= aad alae, csadialogs, rf DID YOU KNOW THAT- TAeunt parsdin wilt he found w oat. tetaerare furnttire oF floor pe.ieh ad ety toch eenaalea an hes at oer pared polish, | To not put the down camtortahies where thes wll be miiersot. Weng themen olf sheets and lay then, 447 a the cloret shetf. Do not piuce ant envy articles on top af them. Ce kiver all stainn can fe removed We appising hiqind ammonia, ‘The fatvie Soult Then by tinted in tepid water and Washed with strong ann aude i> the waual manner. To saye time and tahor ene tesse- xite hae put casters on her kitohen also ao-aite cam regdiy roll’ te tm the stove, the sink, the Pantry of wihtiev er hie wants to ure it. When brothgs meat over a coat five sprite salt over the cons nnd there Bill be no blaze tearm the dripning fat To remove xreise spotn from the pages of a hook anrakie with fnelv powdered pipe clay, thed lay a piece of finaue paper aver the pipa clay and press Sith a warm ron, Rub eff with india rubber. Decorate potato salad with cetery Ups, pimento, chives, wafer slices of Sherine. capers, rings of hurd boiled cage and walnut meats. ‘When sroning prea sith the way’ of (he nap and wot acrore It. Use a very well-padded surface under the ailk. Bowhnots of rhinestoves or riine- stone and pearl combinations are the Intest. thing shown gt the Jewelry eotntert-—-Eevaller—ty pas are. scarn_o7 simple hats, even being wora on felts One sees a plain felt turned Into a7 evoning lat by the mere aynendaxe of a rhinestone ornament. Larger dowknots with pendants of pe«rla are sworn on the left shoulder of the dinner or ‘dance frcok, replacing the cornaze of flowers. Occasionally they are worn at the center beck of the, round- [ing of V-haped neckline of the dance frock, Much. sounger girls prefer to wWiar,a fetich of rhinestones. Almost ‘every ‘animal in tie asimel kingdom an be purchased in prices that are very reesonable. There are tnrties, elephants, mules, lizards, crocodiles, Goes, cats, cameln ote. ‘The panel has seturned in a new and eellar and tight sleeves ars among the fewest features, too. ‘The het remains small except a few large modets for afterncon with ail ax- tremely emart freeck, |. > RES TOURSELF cee eee A eee e Sori eee ace Boil abetese os J gimuat trance | , os Goat 105-0 tae . Rew York. Y. - Fannie Hurt, eminent novelist, says that the burineae and professional woman requires and desires areal home even tore than sthe home woman, who fa constantlgothere. Mix Hurst ta—a, firm hettever tn tho attractiveness of seamitgly unim- portant things, And in joining the American Woman's ~ Association she ntressed most emphatically the neces- sity’ of the chguiz and dolly atmesptierey in the aurrourdings of ‘the business woman ‘in her teiture hours.” The Atencan Woman's Amociatton ty in the miidet of its t4.%00,900 campargir for the sate of stocks to bynid their new clubhouse on West 23rd xtree:, where 1.609, of itz members will Hive, and Miss Hurst urees the mest fom’ nine type of fyratenings for the bede The legend, that the weman ef of- GENE tosen hee femininity 3 dead, bai fig, Maawe" watt ates Hurst wien EUs Litoin, nih a tian oo STEN petttont un a Bee biog oe SHI im hee, bPleeani dian ‘adc feeakifnet table, weet ttn ets. ot shame” Sweel Wee i her e:vnen- Mies Hurst believer that Subiouses ia We Le een ta tee Nene make tive and a success of auch elite, / “The asserintion™nils the most fim. portant sacl need. terearyd by. the "Amietiwnt Women's Asseecnetien asa that Geet ang need, it @Peutd sine. eh ee a ea es Try These Tested Recipes ) 1 pi, | Crushed Pineapple Ice PO SeAM Doan ont att te en nee AQ Res heen ethed asd deamed land cnok aver hat water until tensiee Add So tabtesjimens sania, ta te yep! Satan ups sseismet nee apnde and fehl dust hetere netvonis, told tN pint cream bewten vite, Pile hightts in mierhes shates. Prune Jelly Corn Custard Bacon and Tomatoes ‘How to Make Others Love You ‘WORLD OVER satan cocka rn's.a $3 Value $1 Ser eh ere See nS ante Breas oe HS we a oe 3 ‘ eg svete Tite Blass rh 2H SE te (“aanise ee MARR cIMetrE LIVER SPOTS, “BUMUS.” TAN, TRECKLES, DAME ANSIE We z RuorcHEs: 1 jou want €0 CLEAN end HAIGMTEN: ov the Huustuoe Greoge Beatie, NEW BORK CITT. t SRST! getantous'ra aeaeviee sour eompiesiont |” eave son ow geupseaaty née Benattr, Om ‘or ROME so SR Seed go OST NE TITS ah i rice ni aneran eats . SOCIETY FACE BEAUTIFIER [iene ee ct Shute ante Beasties SS oll ptrengt | SMGCEASE'STATE NOW MANY THEALHENTS YOU WANT . ants rasy to aprey. can ir ying cocp cxean, |. 1 _unhtantytite htt Decomnen cleatetsc be face amb cemnmieniod 3° Name ssesescserssegeeseseeseceesssenteecnsananseeguense Eeconiea”avorifovishg A= the hin "beging to tvighien. UR‘ ws ‘ af SEE ANE te havwy weer the remarkable chanas, Nataly 200F UF ~ gaaress oo sesssesqsegrecnsenceosacseongesnecnsucanoeeses WndRd: fer a eicanter ain tocar Toke eid waren, ! 2 wetted ant anewien Suegectaerds FILL oe CUUFON Ed Be idle uses MAL Yr Fopay! : g RO ee SNe en nn en nn EE TET DAILY DOZEN - . |THe "Religious Complex of| * INTERESTING BRIEFS V, A <a... Y | ot. Eres Aire Live, work, play, rest, jaterp in tl. Reeathe deans. Your Hlumes Whe ar % - Sr Samtight Let qe tiet” of sungiane nes Eiaagrnin bn yh Aub bay tevause thdie deeds ate ev SAVE <tiside aud outanke. brik iéety, Bathe often, Wart syn Matis tortor wantin, PL Bese Maa sewn dels es ewebt Fineats and eye; mere nil. whele Zsultin, evoen Nexetabtes atl trexh feast tat groin, chow, hora SUSE Matis ie aigestive byntens totas duspwne if ats aie, Iverge tegular by proper tows aid exercise, net “phye- 5. Txerelnes-If cy wore “wotdomrn AM AgShG; iC tet, épedtd as auch Lime eu Tiere tp pesgtl's, Induur workers-— dud hone Gethe wtis AMtentwnt Sit stand aid sal eet. Bxererse 06th ele sea eS CUM ERLE ssouiteet teemere:sm- Fpertant Hee dew yeu deck, Yet you cain de Pools Wet Dress. ewhtorta lily for weather and wutlZ that's alt Se Canine, cial ther tig Wate that "hare": muah eTts Neste MET gonad preduen ay eM eMll od “fecer ist il atid cestament Soe tor i 2 etf Pectorndpon (tie tee bey eur sn stores Seu eee fone oe aug pie patient, Vrs ahd, ss ll rl taste Sa shank Lec othia, © Hewace “eer abet tees timent 7 Ta, Your Medial Dostor=-"Checle tp rodbewen, if gen sen"s toed Fist, Ti. Ven Bectal bacter=-Cleoit yas inerniag. Phetive ie? ew" and sevice, Do yur port and Viale bie Aentist glee ae (wore a goa HE Taner Canal Tates He Clean, be Ccaretul, be Cheertazccand sia uy for nt iatipe seal BUD uayqeesteteace: © Miverg well beats "Get eat! Europe's \ Eifort to, Secure Peace Tees boar Mae tematic itl eres an Pasties tect fas talbeQet pe Burge font oe net dee uananter oh peaet feo ter aves Page begs atte ttle pe bers fonbe Ae tote ter a feane Deeds Pree feootintial pester Haeae intel dete ne bet gens Vianie Ung fend Pet crit cand Bend tite toe at Hines fice cig dy ps be inv ted” apess ferme aye het tomed, ‘The second pie feset ts tng a rectiaest eitenanten bere Heeet Ureee, Hontind atl Belew Peeiant hosur die feat Ryathe te te toe hive cae, showing Uvend? hee cdl wut ge feel ty meh wbror bess EY Wer ana eternal detetonmnent elyeee Fetvonee im the Ne Yo Aneto World Materialism Mesicins was poantoun te the Couns ci ot tue heusne of Netions wien i met an Rome, Rue hie message her bees suinnied up in tie someninat omieeis sentence, Theta ca van tal Peave we ust talk coal, wen and out” REBEL OMEMOR. . ux. i se. CT Pe die air ek ae siesta can help. pow" ecegeor th sit mete aati eae “peoran eet wed ey Grace Gray. de Long MIAMI, FLORIDA ©; FFERING- Sick? Weak? Nervous? Irritable? Female ** trouble? Don't be discouraged. You con get back your health, . Sit down and write to ua rote. In conte a : dence. Your letter will be opened, read and ae % answered by a woman, because only st wo- 4, man really understands the sufferings of @ woman, You need not send_a penny, Just ask for the FREE 10-Day Treatment of Read What Users Say Mrs. Summers Opaline Remedy. Ti Moow (net sar meres lp ued fe | Bore Easy to Uset Ra ere waie eee Test itioryourslt:in yourawn home: privately Pac fr overs otate than nz er entices Laoag ene rie Nepoalone et iets trea’ Far more’ than 28 years, hundcede of women Ewen BE ecard wre he ere Bite tepynned Waueceeyal even for the longest. far tag hr mene fen pres Fo fw Sabana" ou are beni see oat heehee ne ga Rottnande otponr piers Rave heen youcap cont ured wit, Secharat sete Pope Op rea aa orerh haat: Lee icy erect el SRR ae RE atte eR hapten aera tas Den't Delay Happiness Another Day! . Write at Once for the FREE Treatment te * THE SUMMERS MEDICAL CO,, Women's Dept South Bond, ind. (Mrs, Summers’ Remedion AveSelé st'Leediog Drew Stores) - oh: Oz: a PROVEN WAY | ¥ TO STOP FALLING __ HAIR and DANDRUFF + SMM Dendrult, falling hair, itching scalp A Wiad Wend baldness are enemies to ecalp A |. health-and-the, growthof E H lustrous hair. Scientists admit R Se they are “germ” discases and to | UA /BeSenplcure them the germ must surely Ho Sey Pe destroyed net ee elee umm . : There's no longer reason germ life, that they attack * for haying poor, unhealthy only discased tissues, tend scalps and dull lifeless to keep the scaip free from hair. It hee been proven dandruff and itch, alley ] “that MADAM. C. J. WALK- - falling heir, enrich the ER'S WONDERFUL ‘HAIR ecelp, stimufste growth PREPARATIONS are di- and make for long lustrous fectly opposed to harmful hair, | ust, MADAM C.J. WALKERS a 2. IgE ss New. Oui UL HAIR Sere . I | PREPARATIONS_“WG f “Wort Rew”: OA ie ” Thies’ and Mane. C.J. Wallng'e RAN NH : ‘Okta Proporetions fer cele bY Las Aarne Drag mersant'be men ES a h 3 "Wao Madans Cel Walker Nfy Ca. SP e094. - "— kclanape siaee The ‘Religious Complex of the Negro Race Resolutions adopied by the Autiew h Raptiat Aspociation, a, sedulity 6! colvred diving by Chicago: Whereus, Some of Gur ia cousins Finen tase their psyehsiegy Hersied hand thank by aking anewas thet they Hare etter Uraat thee Negen. sind Wheres, 1 ix nt the Nexse’s choirs to be thus dasenmtinated aagainat, dlvid- ing aiid bringing woctal vengeance upon oui great Nation, nutwithstuand- ing it 1 Belin done: nnd > 2 Whetean, ‘The tage haon’'t weatth Aud otfier negeana: ven 10 fhgh? {ts bat- tes. laut have evils Tike atts tdy efse: therefore bet ° Resulved, That we ery nies Ge ui of the depth of our sve, sem nn fereant prayers. Put tt squarely un Gert, ftnet He wer my keep ithe Ms J word and aminsiy nigis sblssgen the Oty of racial hatred, diseruminavien ais ope Fiessen, ‘The tne fn tly: Fanened that this Kind ef neusense’ runt be wiped out of existence, “Ged woud frown upon us and “dlodain Us me Children ef Ms Handiwerk, if we fell to resent such ‘iaets mnantt.; ated. pert sistency ey unto Ham tar dest eranee froin nual prepesterain wail: be tt uyrther : | Reaglved, That the Negre flrow an never before, Gverwheli the thirene nt our Good with genital wagers, Hoek in every psnigte in Hewven, Ut ot A Moet in Sheslunety tat: wt Suir prazers, that Cie Nugelics can't caress nev inigiess until Ged Inky dawn wih an aye wf justive ay brea in plever und cist unite a everinsting abolishment {hie mnalignapt yard pres Rratem, vet Thnatiy ye east sme wits Teme shertties thar has «rer been anade tn defenre wt tmin alts Smicrlbin Star eor ., INTERESTING BRIEFS The Problem That Faces : England . AML Brinishers know that the parts of thet dutta that are: nat predomt= tants Antorsnanm are held prea Kounly. ‘The problem which now facee Knskind is ne Ipnger how to associate Egy it or India more closely with her= self, but how to let them go withont saduatice to all concerned... The best dine ne ph to do with the Filipinos Hin 19.88 thet for the independence we shave no antemuly promined ‘them, We donot expect that they should ever feet iuemacives, trie Americans, eerequal vith us in avers, regret, We find It iigrsl enough to (ise hetaregencous ele~ rents awoourtamidss; to amalgamate Linge Macks of duetant and completely lahen popabstiens ax neither! our hope, Sr nit Beneeo aioe Wuemra ae Serlbner's Magarin. Be aes Where Is Your Aeroplane, Mr. Blackman?: _ An eagie does not werry about the number ef caterpillars er field mice en the round below him. A flying nation, with the nghtyfiers and Sying much. eed met worry about the umtnher ef Gernian, Pollsh or Russian wether babies bern into the worl. Mert numbers ‘become lees and lesa wmporuont, and that's fortunate for Surepe atel «Ameria, facing xreat Meedine srounit.—arthur Brishane, moN OY. American. ‘The Afro-Amerigan Business As- seotation of Newark, Xd, has opened a Tastery for the manufacture of elolbing 4 men, women ané children. THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS HALWAY DIVISION is pleased to announce the death of his beloved president, Reverend Peter Hollans Reverdell Hellmans died suddenly on Thursday, April 9. He was a hard worker and a faithful and loyal member of the organization. His death was entirely unexpected. He will be greatly missed by the members by whom he was greatly loved. MRS. WILLIE STEWART Reporter. On Sunday, April 5, Garev day was celebrated in this division. Our music meeting was called to order by the president at 11:00 p.m. The opening ode was sung and prayer offered. The opening hymn was from the ritual was sung and the Scripture lessons read and commented on. Professor A. B. Bolton was introduced by the president as the principal speaker for the afternoon. Mr. Bolton was cordially received the gave a lengthy address outlining the life of the president and the importance of conclusion, the urged the members to necklace, in the noble work. Mrs. E. Denton; sang "Wonderful Saylour"; Mr. W. Wilks followed with a recitation. Mr. W. Hamilton gave a shout and inspiring address. Mrs. B. Levens sang a solo in African. Mr. W. Wilks and Hughle. sang a duet. Missra A. Again we are calling your attention to the fact that the next Ganey Day, will be Sunday, May 3, as per instruction in previous issue of The Negro World. Roole, L. McDougal and Dr. Roole sang sublute-the-collection song after the performance in the museum and the Hamilton each song in gong. The professor thanked this audience for its kindness. His pride some "announcement" and the meeting terminated, with the singing of the Rohman muthum. CAMAGUEY, CUBA The regular mass-meeting held by the Florida Division on Sunday, March 27, was an annual success. The meeting opened with the devotional and zon service conducted by the chaplain; after which the following very interesting program was rendered: Revelation by Benjamin Thomas, "God is my Lord," and the first vice-president, Mr. A. Blake; sobs by Mr. Benjamin J. White, address; Mr. S. Muensu, subject; "Courage," address in Spanish and English by Mr. ohfh McIntyre; reclamation; the New Negro, by Mr. Slims; address by the chaplain; address in Spanish by Mr. Ahera Loussan; anthem by Mr. Slims; address in the Singin; of the Eblonian Kithnani S. Cr. SHINQL.MR. Reporter. The New Orleans Dylipson is pleased to report that, it is 'meeting with philanomic success under the leadership of the Honorable S. W. Hoberson, Mr. Robertson accepted the presidency of the membership began to increase soon after his coming... Five hundred and sixty new members have been added to the缸 within the last three months. More than sixty Mr. Robertson can work in the sufficient work he is doing for the philanomic mission in this part of 'the country.' The Atlanta Division of the U. N. I. A. held its regular mass meeting at the Y-M. M. A. Sunday. March 11. The meeting was called to order at the usual hour, 5 p. m. with Mr. J. R. Anderson, president, presiding from Greenland's Ice Mountain. We read the alma and objects of the U. N. I. A. were guilded by the president. The front page of the Negro World was read, by Mrs. Minnie Brown, and strongly applauded. We were delightfully entertained by a very distinguished gentleman in the person of Mr. J. R. Craigen, the executive secretary of the Dartol Division, who was most Saturday at the Y-M. M. A. and executed to the Council of Agents and president, and from there to the U. N. I. A. Cafe, operated by Mr. G. W. Pearlaitine and Mrs. Louise Beall. At the mass meeting he was introduced by the president. He was the prince SPECIAL NOTICE TO DIVISIONS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD At this time as a protection for the officers of divisions and as a guarantee against fraud, we are requesting that every division demand credentials from any person or person claiming to be sent from the Parent Body as Field Workers before they be permitted to speak in divisions. Any officer violating this rule will be subject to removal from office, if notice is filed in Secretary-General's office by seven financial members of his division. Parent Body, U. N. I. A. Pet: WM. L/ SHERRILL. Chairman Committee of Management. CLIPFORD S. BOURNE Headquarters, Feb. 24, 1925. signal appearance of that afternoon. In the midst of this extensive creation he inscribe the people of Atlanta, Georgia by the U.S. N.A.A. and foster the liberal organization which is being together the 406,000,600 Negroes of the world for the purpose of establishing a government for the black man in our motherland, Africa. He stressed the fact that whiteness is for the good of God, and white people is pressing in light of God. He inscribed that the man in jail hebeloves that he can be with unhindered confidence in God will be done. His words were true, interesting and instructive and brought fresh zeal to one division, Rev. W. J. Thomas gave an insisting address and planted first support to the division. There was a notice attendance. LA-PLACE, LA. "The meeting on Sunday, March 31 was a great success." The president, G. W. Dickson, presided. The address of "welcome was delivered by Ms. A. White." Reverend James Warren, pastor of the Morning Star Baptist Church of Montz, Louisiana, responded. Addresses were delivered by Professor E. Challonne, Reverend L. G. Spear and Mr. James Angus. Music was furnished by the local band. L. W. PETER, Reporter. PORT LIMON, COSTA RICA GUANTANAMO, CUBA The 'Guantanamo Dylson' held a general mass meeting on March 23. The vice president, Mr. A. Delhany presided. After an inspiring song and prayer service, the following literary and musical program was bended: Opening remarks by Mr. A. Delhany; remarks by Mr. P.-B. Van Roman, acting chapelist, solo. Mrs. A. Delhany, acting chapelist, solo. Mrs. D. Delhany, Mrs. M. Leigh, address; Mrs. L. Leigh, solo. Mrs. E. Bliss Roblin; remarks, J. Websley; executive secretary, remarks, Messrs. Brown, Stevens, Mathias and Ramayy, solos by Messias, Marla Gahrel, Ada Rickett, Ms. Bennett. The meeting closed with the singing of the Ethiopian anthem on Sunday, April 1. the division celebrated Garvey Day. The chief speakers on this occasion were: Honorable Robert B. Williams, first and second vice-presidents of the division. The following musical and literary program was rendered. Duet, the Miss Bennett and Steven; recitation, Master R. Francis; recitation, Master S. Francis; quarrelte, Messrs. Bennett, Knight D. and Williams; recitation, Master Mathias; recitation, Miss Franci; solo, Mrs. M. Leigh; recitation, Master Morris Parkins; selection by the singing of the National Anthem. G. W. TRELL Reporter. YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO A large and enthusiastic audience attended the Easter excereses of the Youngstown division. The program was in charge of the field, and the opposing team served and sang service, after which the following-program was rendered: Address by the vice-president, Mr. T. H. Gibson; solo; Mr. Woodridge; remarks by Leicester W. Barnes; solo; Octavia Myler; selection by the choir. The meeting closed with the shinging of the National Anthem Sunday, April 6. "Garvey Day" program was wended under the auspices of the U.S. L. L. The meeting opened with prayer and song service and a few remarks by the vice-president. The following soildef program was enclosed by his solo. Miss Kline King address: Mr. John Coppie. remarks by Attorney. This meeting closed with a selection by the choir and the National Anthem. BELLE VIEW, PA. Sunday, March 1, was a very tiring will-ever longer in the minds of the officers, members and friends of Belle View Chapter. A solemn service was held, in behalf of the Honorable Marcus Gaynor, our imprisoned leader. The meeting opened with speeches from the officers, few encouraging words appropriate to the occasion from the Chapman. The principal address was delivered by the president who emphasized the great necessity for sticking to the work of the organization at this very critical moment. The president, the World were read and received heartily applause. Brief talks were given by Mr. E. A. Campbell, first vice-president of the division; Mr. J. N. Robinson, the secretary; and Mr. J. B. Campbell.—Mrs. M. M. Marshall rendered an address to the officers, the made of the prayer offered in behalf of Mr. Gaynor by Mrs. R. M. Chouch, one of our loyal members. The meeting closed with the singing of the original hymn. PRITCHARD, ALABAMA We, the members of, the Pritchard Division, feel that it would be an injustice to the "organizational" and to a loyal and enthusiastic worker. If we fail to make known our regret at accepting the resignation of M.F. G. W. Wright, the former president of this division: Mr. Wright was forced-to-cede to Pittsburgh. We feel sure that, Mr. Wright will press himself a useful and progressive member to the Pittsburg Division. Mr. J. THOMAS. Acting Press. W. J. S. EDWARDS. Secy. BLUEFIELDS, NICARAGUA At all our meetings during the month of March special prayers were offered on behalf of the General, General Addresses were given concerning his imprisonment; in spite of which all are determined to hold together. The chapter and division united and held a special meeting on March 15 when the number of persons was drawn up to President Goodliffe asking Mr. Garvey's release. A letter of condolence was dispatched later to Mrs. Garvey. On March 11 the ladies of this division held a "Pleasant Afternoon" at 3:30 p.m. The Lady, President, Mrs. Laurea Cash, occupied the chair, and Mrs. Geo. Nigus acted as Chaplain;副代表 addresses were delivered by the Lady President, Mrs. Angus, the Lady Geo. Smith, and others, the theme of the day was and the usefulness, and influence of women in relation with men. Mrs. Smith named some women of olden times who rendered good services as helpmen to their husbands and otherwise. Songs and songs were rendered by other ladies. Messas W.E. Jolie, Loulou C. Loulou assisted on the program, the former by reading an interesting piece from the Negro World, and the latter by seeing children to see their parents' education. Our-President, Mr. H. O. Hodgeen, made short comments, in regard to the ladies' place, among the men, after which the Chipman, Reverend, W. S. Moore, mentioned some of the thanks to the ladies for such a function and "asked for more" "Ladies" "Afternoons." This meeting, closed with the singing of "hymn and the benediction by the chapman. This division in "common with the rest, deeply deplores the conspiracy of the enemies of the organization and the confinement of the President. Goelf, but entertains a steadfast, hope-filled audience. Providence. He holds a smiling face." W. A. E. JONES, Reporter. February 13 will long be remembered by those present and participated in the laying of the correlations of our Liberty Hall. For three quarters, police was posted in the surrounding districts and town of this grand day, and the occasion was certainly a credit to all who helped to make it a success. The ceremony was acquired by the town, Knight, who presided, a fine serenity opportunity for the occasion. Special mention must be made of the interest evinced by the Puerto Rican division, whose president, Mr. Haynes, and cloak part and made the occasion musicful by big success. The cornerstone was laid by Mr. S. A. Bornard, former president of the division, while the chairman was filled. Thack, and Green, Mrs. C. A. Drummond, who acted as master of cерепины and upon all eyes, were centered as president of this division, shranked. Mr. Bornard, for his uniform willingness, and prayed for his continued help until, the building shall have been completed. Mr. Haynes, the next speaker, spoke at length on the Neesley for Co-operation of Officers, Members and Friends to Put the Job Over, followed by the hymn, Listen to the Voice of the Gargoyle, Mr. W. A. Christians, the last speaker, and only a limited time, but booked, the audience swellbound for half an hour, hailing the work of the work, He received the praise. The servant, with the assistance with the singing of the Elijah-authent. From a passionate pointview the job of completing Liberty Hall might appear felous, but with the aid of Dr. C. A. Drummond, our president; who was presented with a gold cross by Mr. Walter Henry in token of the good work done, for Negro unplift, we take courage and believe that success will crown our efforts. GUTHRIE, OKLA. While sitting, and thinking of our dear President General, who will spend this beautiful Easter day, in prison, I came to meet this day should have a special significance for the Ngaroe race especially the G-CL. "G-CL" who have brought the prison through the teachings of the Honorable Marcuss Garvey. We need not marvel at the imprisonment of our great leader for teaching us to come together and establish a government in our motherland. Let us strive for a better and closed unity. Let us strive for a better and closed unity. Let us pray to the Great Creator, as we are about to receive and commemorate the Easter season to bestow upon us the blessings of race, love, unity and cooperation so that millions of us may be endowed with greater grace for the task that is being undertaken from this day, live or die, survive or perish, to stand by Honorable Marcuss Garvey and those whom he has chosen to carry on the work. "Go dear, President, we are with you. To Mr. KIRK we say, do not be discouraged, for we are with you in your-many trials." From the Gubble Division No. 146 2. T. FINLEY, President NORFOLK, VIRGINIA The mass meeting held by the Norfolk division on Sunday, April 12, was very successful. The meeting opened with prayer and song service conducted by the chaplain, Mr. N. Thomas. The opening address was delivered by the president, who explained the aims and objects of the organization. Several members spoke in an encouraging manner of their determination to carry on the work of the organization, eating猪肉, taking the roles and Work of Marc Garvey, was read by Mrs. Lilee Johnson. Communications were read by the general secretary, Messrs. Ballard and Roxas rendered a beautiful violin and piano solo. The meeting closed with the singing of the national anthem. A. R. RICHARDS. SECURE THIS BOOK BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE You can learn the truth about Marcus Garvey's Views by reading THE PHILOSOPHY AND OPINIONS OF MARCUS GARVEY EDITED BY AMY JACQUES GARVEY Only 500 copies of first edition left BUY NOW Send Order to AMY JACQUES GARVEY Box 22, Station L, New York City Price: Paper cover, $1.25 Cloth cover, $1.75 BUFFALO, N. Y. Pastor, Chapter of the Universal Negro Improvement Association met in Temple Hill, 376 W. street in wavies, meeting and praying for the Easter Sunday 12 o'clock, the African League. Land having been in training four months, making its first public appearance under the leadership of Professor H. R. Hawks: "The first speaker of the evening was Dr. Rakim, president of the chapter, who explained the reason for the favor given to the group, we were favored with, a selection, from the band." The next speaker was the first vice-president, Mr. Sheffield Dennis, who was in charge of the program. He also conducted the invelling of the charter, which was performed by a selection by the hand of the speaking Rev. Father, Dennett—Dean of the Christian institute, who delivered the principal address. The meeting closed by singing the national anthem and benediction, by the Chaplin, Rev. J. H. Hawks. MUS. NATHANIEL ENGLISH "We are glad to announce the birth of a son, born the 4th day of March, Mrs. Joseph Lynch, Joseph Lynch, member of Dlv. 50, Sunday, April 5, was christened, Sunday, April 5, Garvey Day, by Pastor Rev. Thomas Simons." 'TIS TRUE! YOU HAVE CORNS BUNIONS, OR CAN USES ON YOUR FEET? IF SO, AND YOU WANT TO BE HUMAN, USE GETS 'EM SURE Corn and Bunion Plasters SEND 50 CENTS IN MONEY AND SUPERF: NO MORE. WE WILL MARK ANY WHERE THIS TREATMENT, including packages for 50¢. Duty center, Money, order must accompany all packages. When ordering, write name and address. Your treatment is ready for you now. Your treatment will be free of fees. Have feet of package to have. Write to the GETS 'EM SURE CORNS CO. DEP. G. 188 West 136th Street New York City E. WILLIAMS, Dear. and we will send you by return mail. and we will send you by return mail. full instructions how to apply it. AGENTS WANTED Your firm will supply a private package, your profit or other expenses. make big returns on your investment. NOTICE The U.N. I. A. Band of Ger- town Division Has Been Reorganized C. A. Lee, Bandmaster J. Hicks, Secretary R. Mcgriff, Asst. Bandmast- ter and Treasurer We, the U. N. I. A. Band in Ger- gistan, are again on the road to memoriam of the juniors, to mem- oriam of the juniors, to memoriam very much pleased to have, Mr. C. A. Lee, bandmaster of our land, Mr. C. A. Lee, bandmaster of our land, the shipment year of the U. N. I. A. Band the shipment year of the U. N. I. A. Band need of music do not fall to lot, to lot know as we are going to be only so glad to foil you, with such need of music well-frained bandmast. J. HICKS, Secretary No. 1 Tul. Coll. Germantown, Pa. SECURE THIS BO TOO You can learn the truth ab by rea THE PHILOSOPH On Sunday, April 5, it very interesting mass meeting was held in our Library Hall, for men and new members it possible to attend the celebration of Garvey Day. The chair was occupied by Mr. P. A. Sinclair, president. The addresses were very interesting in which coining words contributed to the funds absorbed their earnestness and faith in the principles of the U. N. I. A. The program was as follows: Hymn from rite; Of it in Danger; introduction, verses from rite; opening ode; prayer. Scripture reading; two minutes silent prayer; by congregation; hymn No. 78 from rite; address by Mr. H. L. Keys; address by Mr. Wm. Rodway; address by Mr. A. Neugent; closing address by Mr. T. A. Sinclair. The speaker explained the meaning of Garvey Day, and all members and well wishers left enthused and satisfied. Mr. Neugent indo special mention of needed words. Neugent reading Company member during the heavens that if each member would contribute even 50 cents the association would be strong in its commercial venture. He contributed $1, and expressed the hope that each member of the association would do the same. A Mohammedan Scientist who recently arrived from Cairo, Egypt, Specialist in Decolism of Africa and Japanese Physiology, Nepali and Psychic Science, Crystal Solenite Reading, Adopt Business Counselling, Psychic Reading, Mental Health Counseling, Also Oriental Luck Encourages In principal matters, he has been successful in selling it is impossible to him, Call or write: ADDRESS The Asia & Africa Remedy Company Dept. B, 142 West 12th St. N. Y. C. Tel. Morningside 8108 ELEGANT WATCH Guaranteed This watch is made of high quality materials and is designed to be durable and reliable. It is water-resistant and has a sturdy metal case. The watch is designed to be worn on the wrist and is easy to carry. It is also designed to be worn on the back of the neck. It is a watch that is designed to be worn on the wrist and is easy to carry. It is also designed to be worn on the back of the neck. OK BEFORE IT IS LATE About Marcus Garvey's Views reading “THE. NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, -APRIL 25, 1928 Spanish Section | SECCION-EN.RSPAROL -: por La Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la «Raza Negra oa ia? 154-56 Oeste, Calle-135, 7 Ciudad de: Nueva York, N.Y... ° EROS. te. A. PIAUEROA, Béter e racion de Tys hethos histéricos, ocu- rridos’ en tiempos pretéritos, con Ia Yidarde nuestros antepasados ; ellos Hevaron una vida lena de maiserias, de amarguras y de humillacién sen lesa epoca la vida del hombre negro cra semejante.a la de un ave de cé ral..." privade per completo del derecho de <indadanos libres; gra- cias al supremo esfuereo de aque- ios grandes herdes, que ayudados por la mano de Ix provideucia, liber- taron a esas pobres victimas del mar- Hcirie: pero am continuar:os si¢ndo FSehAVOS -VohTATIOS 5 se hrace—tece- sitio emprenderna kibor que cong trarreste esa, Seti sommes v6 existe sobre nuesira pobre raza, Pongimonos de pie y acerquémo- nos a la saeco: Jevantemos la bandera del prBgreso bajo cuyo pen- don debeinos agruparnos todos los Ahijos del infortunio. Yi hemos dado la voz de alerta y ¢s preciso no dejar decacr esa labor tan gtandiosa y benéfica’ que: un-dia-sera: nuestracre- deneién, Esa labor de verdadero progreso. cuyos méritos.no Kemos podido co- nocer todavia,” élla envuelve el ba- Iuarte de nuestras aspiraciones con lo cual podremos asegurar un por- venir’ para la vida futura, | El mundo marcha con paso apre- ‘surado hacia Ia cima de la-viviliza- cidn y nosotros dormimos hajo. la niebla oscura de} pasado, Sigamos adelante, no desmayemos ; pongimo- nos al frente de ese enemigo formi- dable, tenplemos nuestras energigs y avancemos:con paso firme hasta conga In victoria. Es preciso que en Siuiestra’ vida, veamos claborado ‘an nuevo programa, con el cual ob- tendri algiin heneficio el pueblo pro- leterio; ese pueblo victima del bu- rocratismo, ¢uien ‘con sano pérfida lo esquila hasta quedar en carne viva ese pueblo que’ vive sujeto al oleaje de In marca humana, cuyas las lo agrojan como chamarazca role las playas estériles : Somos nosotros los hijos del mar- tirio, las que vivimos gimiendo bajo el peso destructor de ta miseria, 2Por qué esperamos como mansos corderos una redenci’m a la cual no hemos eontribuide? Cada.uno tiene que buscar el beneficio para su pro- pio hien: constrnyamos una base silida para nuestros sucesores, no sea’que éstos al despertar manana se encuentren .cnvuclios en xe am biente atrofiada ensque hemos veje- tado desde nuestras nijiez. Nacimos en el- bosque y descollamns entre Jos abrojos de la miseria. Decia un escritor, hace poco tiem= po comentande Ia organizacion dela Raza Negra: “; Qué sera lo que pre- tenden los negros?.que ya no habian fiecho blancos! iguakindonos en de- recho civil y politico, que lo que deseabamos ‘seria que nos bicieran hlancos y los blancos se volvieran negros.” No sefores; no descamos ni lo mio ni Io otro, estamos con- iorme con lo que el Creador sios ha legado, sdlo deseamos cl mejora: miento_y beneficio para nuestra colectividad. | Al tratar de censuraftios con ar iimentos de esa naturaleza, se vom- prueba que es un desplante muy con- trario a ,la_civilizacién humana, :Estara prohibido a los negros bus- car el beneficio para su propio bien? sestara condenado el hombre negro a vivir sometido a Ia desgracia y al servilismo? osotros también somos seres racionales, tenenios necesida- des que lenar como los demas seres, estamos dotados del mismp entendi- miento, facultad y volimtad:; solo el odio a Ja Raza Negra: puede hacer pensar a un cerebro obsesionado de sa manera—y creer que los, riégros debemos -conformarnos. .con..cual- juier mendrugo que coma a perros nos tiran, y contemporizarnos: con ese semiderecho que dicen nos hint concedido. ya podemos comprender cttal.es_ Ja tuena-intencion_que hay. para con. nosotros. .., solo desean enernos bajo la zucla del zapato immundo. de aquellos que no tienen patrimoniovy que viven errantes co- mo la espuma en ef mar; que sdlo son gérmenes temerarios de Ja $o- ciedad, por doquiera que. pasan.de- jan tristes. recuerdos. Todo hombre como racional esti en el deber de buscar la sociabilidad. Todo ser viviente esta'en la obliga- -ién de-buscar la perfeccidn; si los ee Teg, Coie. eta escort 4 labor de-nutstra organizacién acrecienta: el: sentimiento de. Africa. para los’ Africanos—Los’ criticos admiten actualmente la yeracidad de. esta teoria—E! ‘objetivo .- de una.-patria redimida sera realizado por nuestra cooperacién mutua—Opiniones sobre nuestra coloniza- cién :Afrigana—El programa de la organizacién es eminentemente’ practico alte eminentemente practico . ee Por espacio de varios ‘afios la Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, desde su iniciacién, ha venido advocando Ja causa de Africa para los africanos; es decir; que los pueblos negros del universo concentren su -imaginacién, y se esfuerzen en la constitycién de su propia nacién’ en aquel ‘continentc. Cuando- ella ‘inicié su propaganda hacia este’ flm, varios de los tal Ilamados intelectuales de ta raza, quienes pat_mas_de-aedio. siglo han’ vivido regaladamente a espensas del ignorante, califi- caron a sus directores de locos’ demagogos, .manifestando qué nuestro elemento en el hemisferio occidental no estaba interesado ni podia vivir en Africa por Jo cAlido de su -clima. “ Toda clase de opiniones en contra de -la colonizacién de Africa por nuestro elemento, hanysido expuéstas por estos intelectuales. Algunos han ido muy Icjos al mani- festar~que cl negro sc*encuentra satisfecho con vivir al Jado Sel blanco, en paiscs fundados’y establecidos por este ultima, sicndo- por - consiguicnte innecesario ef que persigamos nuestra propig nacionalidad .independiente. Los cuentos de hadas de “‘fiebre africana, clima africano, “mosquitos africanos y salvaies africanos” han sido repetidos por estos interceptores del progreso, con el maligno propésito de atemorizar nuestro clemento en. cl continente americano y cn Jas~antillas, destruyendo el sentimiento de interes en e] nucvo programa de la constitucién de nuestro propio imperio'en nucstra madre patria. . Ya que han pasado varios aiios ¥ en su transcurso nuestra--organizacién ha circunvalada.el globo con su opinion, adhiriendose a Ia-causa de'la colonizacién africana con nuestro clemento del nuevd-continente. Poco tiempo ha’@l senador MacCullum’de la legislatura del estado de Mississippi, introdujo una resolucién con el “objeto de pedir al Congreso y al Presidente el uso’de su influencia. para adquirir,de parte de las naciones aliadas, suficiente terri- storioeen Africa como liquidacis® de la deuda que produjo Ja tiltima guerra, cuyo territorio deberia ser usado para el establecimiento de una -nacién independiente para los negros americanos. = * . En esa misma época el senador France del estado de Maryland, hizo. idénticas manifestaciones en el Senado en Washington, Durante su discurso dijo que’el pais habia contraido una deuda con Africa, la gual haber’ sido. ignorada por largo tiempo y.ella era debido a Ia contribu- cién a la labor misionaria, Ilevada a cabo por varios oS por aquellos nobles hombres y mujeres de la raza negra, enviados a aquel-vasto campo bajo log auspicios de ihstitu- ciones religiosas de este pais. Todo esto revela un gran cambio en la actitud de estos prominentes eriadistas cea respect» a la cuestién de los problemas. africanos, NY Ultimamente apareze Alemania sugiriendo ideas sobre ‘la misma cuestién, por médiacién’ del doctor Heinrich Schnec, ex-gobernador de Jas posesiones alemanas del Africa “oriental. - Este estadista aleman sugiere en una entrevista en Berlin y publicada cn esta ciudad, el que los Estados Uttidos de America se haga cargo-del poder de Inglaterra y de Francia en Africa, para la colonizaci6n por el elemento americano de la raza, lo cual indicaria ef derrotero para la. resolucién de los problemas .raciales -en America. Y con los planes delineados por los’ senadores, antes mencionados, Francia e Inglaterra se- verian' en posicién de ‘descartar sus obligaciones condos Estados Unidos, -y simultancamente.aligeraria .el-.gran_peso .de. fa indennizacién aemana, la cual destruye paultinamente su vida econdmica. . ee . 2 Con la exprésién dé-las ideas humanistas de estos -Srandes estadistas del: viejo continente, y las* demandas “de parte de Tmiemibros “der congreso- americano,-vemos clara> mente que la idea de’ una nacionalidad™ africana. para nuestra: raza, No es un sentimiento infundado de locos ‘demagoges, ‘sino un ‘ideal tan .factible como lo- es el establecimiento de cualquier otra nacionalidad. Esta in- formaci6n fidedigna ha de Ilévar a los pueblos: negros del | yiniverso, al convencimiento de que Ja labor honesta de ‘nuestra organiaécién no es una labor visionaria, sino que ‘por el contrario de ideas practicas, las que facilmente podesn ser Ilevadadas:a la realizacién, toda vez que nuestro -elemento-ponga de su-parte.. 0, S Pewee _. < ¥ ahora que la, labor de. esta ‘Organizacién empieza a recolectar -su- fruto, vemos que, algunos de. aquellos que dudaban las teorias-de nuestras pradicas, cinco.6 seis afios ‘aatras, ‘se“adhieren también 2 las demandas de Ie reabilite- cién.de Africa-en favor del negro. Publican magifiéstas ‘intentando:-aparecer. como: los ‘Gnicos originadores de!) x grarua pfricano, -Los que han seguido palmo a palmo Be nes de esta: organizacion en persecusién de Ia) yealizacién de’ $i: ideal, no. han de permifir. ser por. mas/ tempo. engafiados por estos opbrtunistas,: quienes siempre | ‘Una, justa y razonable peticion, para que se les aumentara su salario, sa- Jario tan exiguo que venian ganando ‘desde: hace stiucho tiempo-y que no les alcanza ni para Jlena¥ sinuiera en ‘parte las necesidades des-sus hoga: ‘Tes; entre nuestros obreros se cuen- tan'padres de familia que no tieijen patrimonio, no tienen hogares, por- que el poco salario que dévengan no les alcanza pata conseguir una -ali- mentacion regular, y menos puede Gjiedarles para’ proctirarse algiin pa- trimonio. Un obfero con _hambre es sentejante a una fraquina que tiene gastados' todos sus ejes principales? al obrero hay que favorecerlo y cui- dar de sti'vida y personia, con obre- ros.sanos y robustds tienen los em- presarios mejor rendimiento, Entre nosotros resulta lo contra- sio+#1-obrero-so-lo-rchaja-el salario p> He trata concuclyiad en el trabajo, Ain tener en cuenta que a ese le debe cl ensanclié de esa obra que a'todos nos beneficia, el pobre obrero con. sit brazo robusto y su piel ctirtide por Ia accidn del sol y las constintes Hu- vias que sobre sus hambros escam- pan: ha. construido.esa. via de co? municacién, por donde’ pgeden via- jar Comodamente los potdhtailos, lox cnemigos del gesvalide con ta fuerza de esos infortunados obreros se le da impulso a los grandes capitales. 2Queé seria del capital gin la ayuda dei obrero.? sucederia’ ta que_al obrero sin empresa, ambos son nege- sarios, porque sin elnino 6 Io otra no puede haber progresa en uma nite cién, En cambio esos dineros que deben‘servir.para protéjer al pachle proletario, son derréchados, tl vez, hasta por quienes ningun servicio haw prestado. -y que.sdlo viven del peculado yw’ del escamoteo mientras. tanto el obrero és victima det ham- bre. de Ia desnadez en los campa- mientos de las empresas. Es la hora queridos camaradas en que debe Maniear la bandera def pro- letario por t6dos los imbitos de esta repiiblica: sigamas adelante hasta coronar la vietoria., JULIO, LASSO V., Dagua, febrero de 1925, Exportacién de maiz, ’ en 4 Santo Domingo - | - El gobierno de la Reptiblica Do- minicana, este dando preferente atenciin a la exportacion de maiz producidé Sh su territorio, conside- |rada ahora como una de las princi- | pales fiientes de-riqueza del pais. -La Cimara de Comercio y Agricultura del Cibao, empiendio ana activi campaiia_ con el reicrido objeto, sienilo contimiada después con el nuiyor cele por ef departamento de agricultura de dicha repitbliea, y ¢¢- Jocindola en ef mimero de oy paises exportadores de mi, Durante muchos adios dicha re- publi antillana, e-easamente pro- ducia el maiz necesarie pava el con= sumo maicional: toy ayricultores po- hia st atencion en otga clase de cul- tives ¢ el gobierno no se octipé seria~ mente de encauzstr a log agricultores en este sentido, y sin. investigar # ‘podia existir posibilidad de Mevar a ‘cabo la exportacin delamnaiz. Segin lo que se nos informa, ahora el gobierno dominicano, pone epecial cuidado en evitar que el maiz. asi como los denvis productos que se cultivar en su territorio y que se dedican a la exportacion, salgan del pais en condiciones deticientes, Con fecha 2t-de octubre de 1924, se did a conocer Ia ley ntimero 43. creando un cuerpo de inspectores de frutos, dedicado exclusivamente en Ia Vigilancia’ de los mismios, y re- cientemente con fecha 2. de‘enero del aiio.en.curso. se expidid el decreto 91, que prohihte la exportacién de frutos, cuyo estado pueda provocar la fermentacion, enmohecimiento, putrefaccion 6 destruccién por cual- quier insecto daitino... Debido a esto sc exige una perfecta fumigacion,. sin cuyo requisito no se permite la salida de ningun producto, que como, el maiz esti sujetéa tales daiios. ~_Segiindes informaviones: oficiales, en las regiones produetoras, los ex-. portadores se estin proveyendo de maquinas encargadas de la limpieza, para entregar el grano en’ perfectas condiciones. Jas disposiciones dic- tadas por el gobierno dominicano en este sentido, han- sido debidamente interpretadas: por los exportadores, quienes convencidos de la eficacia de estos procedifffientos, ‘ofrecen este producto en “condiciones ininejora- bles."por' entender que esto redunda en-provecho del pais y. de'ellos mis- Cuba'y Puerto Rico, hari sido los primeros mercados del maiz domini- “ano, comprando grandes cantidades por su baena calidad y por sti precio razonable. La Repéblica’ Domini- ane experts desde sus poertos exe! efio I unas 3.496 tonelsdas de maiz; en 1924 se elevd ta’ exporta-| idm a 8.893 toneiadas, ya demanda. pba que dentyo de witos cuamtos afios | igurerh diche repiblica entre: tos vaiees mas inportetes ca Ia expors aciien del 5 7 eo age oy + the brave iittle sailing vessel. A dady | «Th, ses” Known win Suny eonatnuse wee boca tone | ee best O «i i wife of Lara Larson. After fourteen |, to Ancients Rediecy : Teen | wadks the ahilp caat anchor In.the:por:.wrhe Let Oamee," Dy Abmned | g ot New “York, where the captain ant |ignelngBay, to be pubtianed 3 the mate were-proniptiy arrested for| Cantar 6 : having tore wassengera than the Jaw] Century” Company April 31. i, s 5 * Allowed, Iricheding Uie “rarely beautl-| 1018, iMustrated with Aovert pi fut” sloop baby, the Restaurationen |of:m beauty ‘and quality v0 big! : i his wens pardenmerste nan! Rute: publishers are tempted te ne Benoticent até whieh hat -wulded | oe ay sly. the sinatl Goat across the seam still had | (HAE Tey ertee peere....-The one — ee + Hus @tatiny in charge.” For unknown |'©. ds Alnety-fio of these, an The Norwegiaris_Will-! Jreasons the offenders, were released | way In which’ they convey the fi Gia ; were eens ‘and were allowed "tw sell theit entito| gnte apace, the mystery, beaut at Festivities During no sna snc twoust 10% [nce pth desert In dee = Celebration of Their Cen-j tne immisrants took fund in Kenta [De Altogether: extraordinary, tury‘in America and Orlesns Comitien, on the ajaves of | Sere-taken by Ahmed Hassauel a ——— Lake Omario, about diiivIe miler | himseiG And although, wndou Krom the Ran Vark ‘Time; | fam the them tiew town af Rochesier-| ich of the elariiy wind detall m jof Norse immigration to the Culted Biates aw havig beeint TOW NeaeA AES: on October 12, 1825, when the sigan Reatauvationen, with Mtty-threr settlers from the homeland across the nea. land- of in, New York Harbor, ‘The Norse: amerian centenary In... Minneapott prext June wit voimnmemerate the aytival if the Tittle wesset, The main theive of cha ertedration hoyever, will be the buibllms af the [American Noithwess by Narwesion plonesrs. ‘That theme will be the s+ rt ot anidrewses nt the myst of rvext Gustorial pageaet. in whieh sgn [rersong. Gill take put It will inspire more than 3.006 xinvers and inasiclene Norway. Tr with be iasteated in scan. fret way by exhitncee trntetme Ute gar? Hesi heximnings wf the Norse plonens i America lo the phie now vecupled by ie denvondants ty Industry, in govern ment, Qe tretarts and cratia, | 1 Ss the prute of the Nerses Aanvrie any JS hionne to aided to the eangention af Tat» fern cities, Wut, dustead, fallewed te the uneeriata trail of the teapper ane the India te tho. farm tent af he seeks The centennial eo lebration. i eahttuts, fa pagennes and te geet eharoses it ie a tate bo thse Boe seeing Nerwesian who, tue te his nae) tive dnatingts, turned his fave twas hia peatvtos. 7 the Nese-Ae. cia Comeunit, Inge ik houred an a mew hited mn the ety whieh eo many Nene pimeeis found fair in the dase when marat [grass wased on ihe site’ of tte’ now famgns fee mi, Wein the eh dork marked by a luke selnw ps ter untegr worker's dy extra: time each aay in greatinine: (ae Aes monit ewusbintat Nopweelan ettizen® Tintters came fen rome f vermbese foe te Teak pnts oa, toe tease! sete have hrwtight newsnf the eenien: Bal A Norweian yewete an attics Wntated Vattige 4 Masta seantsopertatee fastened fen vata sel, teetette: WINE 2 wnbeetion af eaten wanted feat Loewe, af Manneuped afters a getee » $100 to the" kehont etibtien of Ostet the best numte of a vatican. Mest Ihe Rod Heer Valter, tet agetatane! paradise thit gettoe Mermesnte auatte the twa Dekeiae, soins Srvet fren fans « elites BNA tiremietite cer ee ans ate fee INR OFRANLzed, eMneniuR exo any nf ste Diisiing Cats, Whee sliiens, Ry Nav eee nen Ate teste! Ines alee bie Eocited unwn, Wren front? teatand, whieh ety as the first diseuteree af Anwetien an boat the backs, comes word tinet tie ansita | Hon ef the Minnesnta Stite Teshe, ture tt attend the NersesAner sem centenary Wall be aeopted by a de fe Ration, Ceaninerean) chats trom hen dreds of cities between Chsene att! the Micitie Geant have aftered came enbperatens Vast mieil terms tte ame af apether ebwins ota sen the music fetal, of anotuer Narwen ath eotlere teams enger ote contend fot honora si Ube sitter, meets, In recugmition of the nation-wide obsercunce of the ventenars, the Feu: | oral Gavernivieat hate" samolred Tey inaue of special stamps, to be printed in'tWo colors, a Zecent stamp hearin the picture of the aloop Hestaurationen and a S-cerit stamp decorated with viking ship.. With thet ringle excen- Tin of (iw FS stamp, no oer IRENE | has ever used a dle of two colors, axaking: the centennial atummp wistine lve, A. NorseeAmerican -coutannia! medal, the first ommemoratlce medial to. be used in the higtory of the mint. | has alao beeit Aviatized. by the Gov- ernment. Jt will be designed by Earl Frazer. . ‘The sloop Restaurationgn. frail Ute sailing Vesnel that-landed in New York @ century ago, will occupy & prominent piace in the pxgeant, “the speecties and the songs of tho celebra tion. “Tales of the -Reataurationen's crossing have been (old to lve gener ations of Norse-Amatican “children, and have lost nothing fn’ the retelling. According to an old account, the sloop cast Anchor at an English seacvast ViMege, where -certain of fs passen- gera exchanged a supply of the ship's rum witb the inhabitants of the place —tor.a consideration. Taversiontiog of jhe" trangaction bs local omclala paused the Restaurationen to pit to pon -in haste. ae | Then there {e-the famour incident of he’ ehak. No story of thé stoap but iwetle Jovingly on the eask Incident. just Of the Masetra’ Ielande 8 cask | jovered with bernacies ‘wae: reitued reat'The.oen, by Ro: lese @ parson. than are Larson, commander of the expe- ties. . The cask was Cound to congein s rere old wine, which, eccording tv it~ meses, wee: “moet highly ee- wemed” by all oa beard. a eee ee nee Ome amr aneae Seen: girl, “rarely benutiful,” was born to the wife of Lars Larson. After fourteen weeks the ahip cast anchor In.the:por:. of New ‘Yotk, where the captain ant the mate were-proilipily arrested for having thore passenxera than the JAW: allowed, Iricluding: tie “rarely beautl {ul sloop -baby, the Restaurationen had twenty pystengers.too many! Rut the Dencticent tate which hast -nulited the snail boat across the xem still had its d€stiny in charge.” For unknown [reasons the offoniters were released ‘and were allowed “to sell theif cxrko! and vetnels witch brought to the ttle colony the muniticent Rum of $490 j‘The immigrants tovk Jand In Kendall unt’ Orleans Comitien, on the aljyres. of Take Owarlo, about thiviv-tive milee from the then jew town nf Ruchesier. An {0 the womenhat baechonatbet Nayor-ef he Moo teReMml, my other tana Krauy in (he United States Hondas ean so. well afford suck a xhele- ten ih ta Closed.” Net Tine TT dent of the cash of winte Is regarded Ae neandalote bs the | Nerwegian- Amérlean, te Hs, en the, eatraey, Amused, whinaralty tolerant wf it. He Lpoinrd out that “things were different In these dae? tn thts ‘eonnes ton tt fe cryeatied that one «thet than Heel gE Nin seemldn gntiote, aieh, An Litew Giaitracn, of Mannesin, aricted, jriisemtabtindune "Oe Wifferenes ein nea I these finys and” (hese, [isn aeoue! nf ater Seewneinny | Annertecnty histone aL tant suatsew see Fineombiete wittenst mention nf pies Hires Kleme Peorsen teat wiser | Hae tae tet Nowwestany weekends tot ie, Unie stats at Go the fas fantiua of the barly emtonias. fron the Miidin Atlanite: Sites sw the Western [ieatring lene evra, se wall HiStesge Postorhon ant Pers Hesthiam Mayercsstiel sewn oss fom dat gute | Fie thiee yfare later the sanitex af iia tatsnane WIA. alton! geaecle” Wl HIST1 Kee vistted she United States wath Honan Olsiartide. Mer ininel tw Note Fess SINE Witle suncle alow sta tale af braid, iuoteaaited acces that the [este of ye est reve eae be spre : After: sanants ohe aalyek osatide! pheiat in New York spre, itere, FWwout revted’ aut, aint tetinned tel shin. sipditon + at Oiler Connie with! Male af the brow t rethog potries ef! iti, We Saag nt tan Soe wert af the Nea Yeoh eset Bit Heda Sn’: Wea ava aa Nowrswengn | fmeonce. nt gemanatecn hw tes ae tel teed oy ottig eStobtle Werte | Rieter Teersen with agan peant ‘ite American Cententry, Tare barron aed Hix sturdy countrymen WHE Wve Beale Catanel Hane ae, wamnn ander wf thie Fifteenth Wiscansta Hesmert of Vets unteora, a Chil War reetinent mage uy Aimed enttiely af Norswesinns, wlth nem more casey nie Wattle the tag Aba Berm eo nam sti the Bed, Wii Md Hine of Atertey sand oie thes oo hee the Hed White avd ae of Ning Barone Nebo Ane rseate That the Sripiive' da aed the thers, the be Ante Berman nnd Wermnee Pt News etna paneer alae wil tte pet | AC RNeae Festi bent geome die ow tint | slin_Svewsqnmna! tase xe. ities sleauvesdi fet the sstetsnenspe will emboetts "the {Phe ceitemar ye RE amen ae Sate | ven lib En ae Beagee Mua % Hothe thiete mm Neewerre | Aimcae Sitteweit ‘Ties watt te | eoeseentiny at tos steve tudtad a4 St Mat with ae Meewerade Cavers | ee, “elignate server sn dune 3 wits fale cen Mee pects et an great muri | forrsoat nin Newari ehueusee | fen Cirntes Macnee sspadienaeantin’ Nerweanee cdibber ah: soneartcen snap! Mleties wf the Winbond fue wet evans | ‘shoe In the singinne af Meats, Ammere | fhe nroat eludes tee be heart an mpene | tie eeeltal ata Ete *Aeastomie ethan ot Rapid Growth of Playgrounds « For Negroes Most Healthy Neatheghting play in 179 public rece. pinen centers and playgrounds magi~ armies tar tere” exe MRI eee RTA TS Ing_te the "ear Tank of the Plays Krodnd ant Recreation Assortition of Amneries, jut feauted. More and more cities are realizing tye their Neato citizens can Ret no recreation except the eameunive aid often’ Fearadiig commercialized -kind, states tha as. sociation, and s0 they ave: providine Negro nalghborhoads pinyeleaders aud Larthities” for wholesome goad times, LSS Be soespta ymca Di Por Ringerengtete firen nnpbeved 323 su: Ing 1924, reports from SS citlen Indicates. Five of these pliyzroupin were opened lust year Tor the firgt time, Tworty-two cities tated the average number of, colored chi! aren who dally Fajoved dhese grounds, And‘tite potal ix 14,228, Nine cities re. ported thd total valuation of thele Playgrounds for colored children fo be $142,008, a *. 7 | Social evenings, athleties, musiv and dramation were xmong the activities furnished for Necro. citizens, both krown-upa and children: by 4® indoor recreation centers In.27 cltlas, ahyn the Year Rook The total value of these centers. in five citien’ wan reported at $97,000, a8 =i g aoe) | pala Se “The Lost Oases” Known ° ~~ to Ancients Rediscaverec -“Phe Loet.Oagee,” by ARmed, Bas- ianelngBey, to be published by the Céntury: Company April 17, 18, we are” told, Mustrated with desert picturts’ of'm beauty ‘and quallty so Jbigh that the publishers are tempted te claim that ‘they have no. peere,.‘There ‘are tobe Ainety-fwo of theae, and the. way in which’they convey the tillinli:. Ale space, the mystery, beauty and loneliness pf the desert Is declaree to ho altogether extraordinary, ‘They Were-taken by Ahmed Hassaneln Bey Iimscif: And although. undoubtedly much of the clariiy and detatt may be attributed to the strong, altogether unshinpeded, desert Uight, there remaths, to him credit for a distinct achleye- serecrhe—-He-hadwith-bim_s motion plc ture camera, and undoubtedly motion picnuves of hin denert expedition sill be shown, here romeday which should” tne comparable, not, to he aure, tn dee matic action, but in atrangeness aind beauty, with that enochymaking ple- ture, "Grasac! which in at prenent ex: citing hare ettzene to rhapsody. . Hassancit Rey, tote expinineds-te het peoperty Me, Tssaanein almply bee valise he isan Exyrtian of high @e- ares, Mis father ts & devout mtustent, ef the truditions) learning, Mteratuce aut retislun of Mohammedana: butt Masianoin Rey, Rfe etfest gon, was xent to Rurope for Mtteen years tor his education, and i. an Oxford grad uate and a Feliow of the Royal Geo- gesthival Soclety, Tt may. perhape be rfatiod, that there weie Brlet news Mispiehes someg time: in February stating mat Abed” Maasanein’ Rev wuld not fake the appaintmeny he’ had received ta be fiat Secretary of the Key ptian Legation in Lanfon:. owing to the fact that Ring Fuad of Egynt had nomivated him hia own. Secont Chananertain oes The Lost Onnes" ig we are told, Medicated ty Kia Fuad, who encour- aged pit aided the explorer tn this Intea0 Mot expediting which remuit- 4, as tha tle Indleates, In the ree Utwovery of fe “last oxnes that hart heen hnown in anctent daye, the exact iwation of twa others which had beet crreneacely placed on maps, and nue merous acientite observations of value (9 earingraphern, geographers, ethnola- cits, The prenent Rank, however, t9,7 We unsferetand, altagether nan-technts - vat nod intended for the intelligen: conn. a2 tender, | Health Talks in Harlem | Nineceeshshestth tailiy, redetfad “his doncesjanprstaistee 2508 ernsns in Mette greens ence chabtig:ah8 month ee Miah sender the antenews: op ctin Hogi? Sweahers! ‘Nervien af the Hare lnm “Funenenians Commuter ‘of the New Yer Tabereutioste MSeacrat ten, Mis, Mateep Taye Keainn, eaneunne sécrecey, pinwanced today, Po peecn healin, Weetacen 156 (Bai lee G8 hn. Tae ker near CMICAE AR: GHOE (Aiko onobtiooLs Saou Rune cake are anhieeed fi DOES ERWA, Sutin Aetlend REN I ShebeageL ll Raneoggoey, aN ria Yel ae isShiene Ath Be: See Toot speegeset waft of the Hatem Hite De Basten Nederser. fe Bo HAE M. Nedge Tes Abonan dats snain hn 1, sen ene ae a EE (Ee ee eae tbe as Ba ihe er etnies TM REST Bare atric een Mee etfind ales Cmiase ack bag stata er rn oct te td Caen ae, Lasts 0 Bb Sterene Rhaestetneropndtst. A-Baby_In_Your..Home i. oS he eed! is 7 : fra nie ae Ae oF viS ls ee Se Raven Lae ere See eas ~ ENTER YOUR” : ‘ 2 susecrirrion . pon tae : “ NEano WORL® - Se * THE PEOPLE'S FORUM Industrial and Commercial Preparedness Is Necessary To the Editor of the Negro World: We have been talking so much in the past that the time has come for action, and that action must be along industrial lines as taught us by our fearless leader, Hon. Marcus Garvey, if we hope to accomplish anything worth while. No nation, no race can achieve success without first building up industrial industry and commerce. Industry is the bulwark of civilization. When we get to the place where we can employ ourselves by having factories and commercial enterprises of our own then we may say that we are truly advancing. I don't go so far as to say that we should run railroads or telegraph lines in this country, but we could do lot of things to better our economic condition. We could have shoe factories clothing factories, soap factories, factories to can fruits and vegetables. It is not impossible to do it. This country offers opportunity for any branch of industry, and it seems strange that the Negro here should pass it all up and been contented to remain with a mop and pad in his hand all the time. What the Negro needs is competition in industry. The Negro thrives politically, church and fraternal organizations (which is all well and good) sticks to them, builds them up with the money earned from the white race little thinking that if the white race refused to give us employment these organizations would collapse over night. When it comes to building up industry (of which these organizations are by-products) he is slow to do so. The white boy and girl on being graduated from high school have a path already paved for them to enter. Not so with the Negro boy of girl. Where shall they go? Where is the Negro industry and commerce? It is just as well not to educate our children if we don't prepare a way for them when they leave school. Negroes should wake up and get busy, organize, build up industrial enterprises, prepare a way for our children. What we are doing today may not reap us any immediate benefit, but our children and their children's children will be able to enjoy the fruits of our labor. GOLBORNE GRIMES Mr. Island's Proposition to Members of the U. N. I. A. Mr. E. L. Island, of Cloe de Avila, Cuba, in his article, "Kinston Gleaner and Its Steering Editor," in the issue of The Negro World of March 7, 1925, makes an appeal to the 11,000,000 members of the U. N. I. A, that each make a present to the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Company of one dollar, when in six months it could be imagined the number of trading steamships the U. N. I. A. and A. C. L. would have on the seas. He also requests someone to give an opinion upon this proposition. In accordance with this proposition of Mr. Island, six financial members attached to the New York Division, with twenty-three readers, of The Negro World here in Central Baharna, Province of Baharna, Republic of Santo Domingo, are so much in favor of this proposition that we are all ready. It is our opinion this is the easiest, quickest and most effective means for raising this amount, and A HEALTH RESTORER BE ABLE TO EAT WHAT YOU DRINK WHAT YOU WANT SLEEP WHEN YOU If you are troubled with constipation, biliosiness, indigestion, gas belching, liver trouble, stomach trouble, skin eruption and weak bowels, ORDER a diet that is low in fat and high in fiber and take a dose mornings only and you will be pleasantly surprised to notice how your food digests better. You are not troubled with your stomach any more. All indigestion distress after eating is gone. Do not let neglect of your stomach become chronic, because the results are dangerous. Act at your own risk. You can eat your food where. Price $1.00. (Hostage twenty cents extra). If you are not satisfied with it return same and we guarantee the refund of your money. Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower Nature's Way of Forcing the Hair to grow long, soft and healthy. A combination of dried and powdered seed. Just clean your scalp and plant the seed often by rubbing the HAIR. SEED. GROWER gently in the scalp. Do this tonight; watch your hair grow, it's a mystery. Price 35 cents. should be immediately adopted by the Committee of Management of the U. N. L. A. and A. C. L. No easier and quicker means of financing the R. C. N. and T. C. Rx time we get busy. Our women and Africa are calling men. RIORDAN R. G. BLACKETT. Agent of The Negro World. Central Barahona, Santo Domingo, March 20. Such Prayer Day Must Be Ordered by Management To the Editor of The Negro World: To the members and friends of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, I am asking that everyone will fast and pray one day on the 14th day of May. We know that Ether's request way that her people fast and pray that her people might be saved and I am asking that we fast and pray that the God might give us our leader back. And if prayer was good in the time of the World War, President Wilson asked the prayers of the people during the war. So much we prayed in the time of war, now is the time for every Negro man and woman to pray. Let us offer our prayers, our strength, our time, our money in getting our leader out of Atlanta. I am referring to Ether IV, 16. There is work for women to do. GLESTRUDE WILLIAMS, Gatsby, Inc. Age-Long Struggle of Right Against Wrong To the Editor of The Negro World: Spiritualism as the first religion that takes facts for its foundation roots its temper of doubt on immutable principles of philosophy, recognizes a mother as well as a father in God, and has demonstrably brought life and immortality to light. It is the first religion that has overcome depth and the horrors of the grave, has founded the gospel of freedom, equally to man and woman, young and old Lord and Sentin. It is the first religion that has satisfactorily explained the phenomena of matter and mind in and out of man. It is congenial to the true children of nature, while it liberates married from slavery to greed and gives the individual wholly to himself. It teaches that it is better for a man to think independently, even if he thinks wrongly than conformably to the tyranny of social selfishness, and the digism of ecclesiastical shams. Where the spirit of the Lord is "There is liberty" for the individual. While it is certain that individualism has its own felies and fanaticisms, while it leads to isolation in some; in others to pride and tyranny, while it may set up a temporary barrier to associative efforts for the progress of the multitude, these errors will correct themselves and the positive benefits of individualism will emerge clearer like the sun from behind the clouds. Opposition to every new phase in religious development is natural, and examples of folly, prejudice, hatred, condemnation and exegesision of pioneers need be multiplied. From an outward standpoint such opposition seems a cross too heavy to be borne. 'But truth shall counter at the last. For round and round we run. And ever the right comes uppermost And ever is justice offine." Viewed from the hormonal standpoint, Spiritualism is the last develop- An old-fashioned, true and honest heir grower. Try it. Ladies, let us send you a full six months treatment for $1.00. Hair Seed is a powerful stimulant, it excites the scalp to a new and healthy action. Kills dandruff and tetter the very first treatment stops the itching of the scalp, and at once the short temple hair begins to grow fine. This compound has the endorsement of the Medical Profession as being the best grower ever offered to the public. IT GREW HAIR on a head that had been held ten months. We can measure it. ment of the sublime relations between mankind and the next higher sphere of existence. It is the grandest religion ever bestowed upon mankind. Under such blessings every being, should aim to become intelligent, self-poised, intuitive, reasonable, chirritable, just, progressive in all directions. Growth is the central law of our being, and the object of all exertions, as it will be the result of all experience. Through growth we shall overcome evil with good and straighten the crooked ways of error and injustice. Such labors and efforts will and do receive the beneficies of angel intelligence even as good deeds attract admiration and cooperation from the generous and noble of every age and country. His life might have been cut short with the heavy task he undertook for his people: SAMUEL HARVEY, Bananera, Guatemala. A 100 Percenter Who Doesn't Care Who Knows It To the Editor of The Negro World: I am 100 per cent. Garveyte and I don't care if the world knows it. My leader is in trouble and I am, too. If possible, I would take his place. I am away south, where I haven't but a few to weep with me, but I stand firm for this movement. GEORGE DAVIS, Natchitoches, La. LIVE NEW For Secret wireless British stations success which brings sureble distance, phone calls between England will be from recent expo definitely that the wireless telephone Atlantic commercial hand. In the presence the Memorial Gate modore Oliver In the Battle of La. "May God bless our Moses whom he has sent to deliver us from our oppression. They can only imprison his image, he himself is free and erect; proceeding from exile to exile, and from conquest to conquest," it is possible to bind a man, but not to make captive the word of good and truth which is God. Speech is free and nothing can repress it. That living speech shall be the condemnation of the wicked and hurt; they are to destroy it, but it is they only who die, but the words of truth remain to judge their memory. Orphanes may have been rest by Encholteus, Socrates may have quaffed the poisoned cup, Jesus and His disciples have perished on the same tortures, John Dusen Djerome, of Prague, and innumerable others have been burned. St. Rutholomew and the massacres of September may have had in their their victims, Cossacks, Knouts, and Siberian deserts are still at the disposal of the Russian Emperor; but the spirit of Orphene, of Socrates, of Jesus and all the martyrs will live forever in the midst of their dead persecutors; will stand erect amidst falling institutions and collapsing empires. So then the Hoy, Marcus Harvey shall stand erect, even if his casing goes, he shall yet be with us, for when the wise in their discouragement step through the night of doubt, the spirit of Christ, is erect and vigilant. So let us fight the good fight with all our might, as Corixt is our strength and he will see us right. JAMES H. JOHN. Paraná, Canal Zone. Now Is the Accepted Time; Gry Loud and Spare Not To the Editor of The Negro World I appeal to our people to show their appreciation of their indomitable leader. Now is the time, not only the membership of the L. N. L. A., but the entire Negro race, to unfinishly put our shoulders to the wheel by supporting the cause, both financially and otherwise. Support it by deeds and not by words, then we will hit the enemy the last big blow. Let them see and know that we adore the Hon. Mar- cus Garvey, as our fearless leader, whether in prison or out of prison. We heartily and with one accord accept his leadership. Cry aloud, our peerless leader, spare not; lift up the voice like a trumpet and teach thy people consciousness. Blow ye the trumpet in Africa, sound an alarm on her billops, let all the mightings of the land rejoice, the day of emancipation conceive, for it is nigh at hand. CLEVELAND R. JOHNSON Pearl Largo, Nebraska. A Guatemalan Who Refuses to Be Discouraged In the editor of the Negro World, The etimes should know that by placing the President: General in prison they have only aroused the homestyle nest. The program of the N. N. L. A. is what the Negro's soul wants for. Just as a thirsty man bongs for cold water. To take away the chief of such a program can do nothing but cause indignation among the masses and urge them to seek revenge, which they have, the power to inflict in no other way than by making the organization a heavier burden for them. As seen as the burden goes heavier than they can carry they will naturally crook under its weight leaving the way clear for our onward march. How foolish to think that by putting Mr. Garvey in prison the U. N. L. A. would founder. The new Negro can only be fooled by himself. He is blind to all that is contrary to his own desires: He cannot help it. He was born with that solit. It was not forced upon him. He could find no outlet for his passion until Mr. Garvey gave out the clarion call. "I was like marine to the hungry souls; so there is no use trying to founder the African program. We regret the absence of our leader. Free HOROSCOPE Free Are You Happy and Contented? Is Your Home in Good Order? Have You Any Troubles? Are You Successful in Your Love and Business Affairs? Are You Slack? To write me, write me and I will send you a complete horoscope free. Will give you (mandatory) advice and will help you with your life. Will talk to you about what you will talk to you. Will talk to you what you are best suited for in life. Just send me the correct horoscope and I will help you complete all events (sales or estamps) to help pay for this course. His life might have been cut short with the heavy task he undertook for his people. SAMUEL HARVEY, Bananera, Guntemala. A 100 Percenter Who To the Editor of The Negro World: I am 100 per cent. Garveyite and I don't care if the world knows it. It's leader is in trouble and I am, too. If possible, I would take his place I am away south, where I haven't but a few to weep with me, but I stand firm for this movement. GEORGE DAVIS Natchitoches, La. Teachings of Mr. Garvey Cannot Be Rooted Out To the Editor of The Negro World: The teachings thirtepent to us by Marcus Garvey will never depart. We are determined to carry on the work and to check the exploitation of our race. We shall no longer be kept down, but shall establish an independent Negro nation in the land of our forefathers. Four hundred millions of us will unite to complete the good work started by Marcus Garvey. While we pray for the preservation of his life, we will give him every support until he has been restored to us. May our leader's spirit still inspire guide and make a great people and nation out of us. I believe that the President, Hon. Calvin Coolidge, is studying the situation, and if there is any Next in Mr. Garvey's trial and imprisonment, which would tend to bring disgrace upon the great American nation, of which he is the head, he will not uphold it, and show it by way of action. Ninety New Members and A New Liberty Hall To the Editor of The Negro World: Allow me space in your paper to state that the Chicago division is making wonderful strides in the great work of the U. N. L. A. Regardless of our leader's imprisonment, the spirit is higher than ever. Oug president, S. R. Wheat, was in Ribbins, III, the week of March 29, during a membership drive which netted 64 new members, also raising a once sum of money for the F. N. L. A. headquarters to be created there. CORNELIA F. BLAKEMIRE Chicago, IL. German Youths Deprive Theodoreus for Hiding Total abstinence and reminiscence of fravolous pastimes are demanded from the Nationalistic youth of Germany on behalf of Field Marshal von Hindenburg's presidential campaign fund by the grand master of the National Order of German Youths. "Every penny you can spare belongs to Von Hindenburg. Between now and April 26 I forbid the use of tobacco and alcohol and the indulgence in unnecessary pastimes" is the command issued to the members of the order. They also are instructed to hustle votes for the field marshal. At one village in Africa the Prince of Wales was greeted by the local chief, who is a millionaire owner ofocoa lands. He should visit the "Gold Coast" at Idlewild, Mich. 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Marshwood Marshwood Herb Co., 2627 S Stude St. Chicago, IL. Let Good Luck Be With You and Your Family. British Disturbance. So Happy, Powerful, Prognostic. Drive, Drive, Drive, Drive, Drive, Drive in the leading symptoms of good Fortune. The pocket and rabbit foot fetishes (scent), the cheekbone and arm creams, and the signs with the characters that have symbolized prosperity and good fortune. LIVE NEWS OF WEEK Secret wireless experiments from British station have resulted in a success which brings within a measurable distance, the time when telephone calls between this country and England will be possible. Results from recent experiments prove very definitely that the day of the public wireless telephone and regular trans Atlantic commercial service is near at hand. In the presence of 10,000 persons the Memorial Gate in hoftorf of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, hero of the Battle of Lake Erie in 1813, was dedicated recently at Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, with naval, military and civic ceremonies. The golden key to the gate was handed by Captain H. H. Lackey of the United States cruiser Memphis to the Mayor of the city. The gate was presented by Americans resident in Trinidad. Italy is reducing its paper money by burning it up. Bounties of banknotes and big bills of the Italian currency have become the favorite pastime of Alberto de Stefani, Minister of Finance. It is estimated that, before the end of April nearly a billion, and a half a million will have gone up in flames. Romania is planning to return to old war measures of limiting the consumption of food. 'Wheat flour is so scarce that breadless days may be decreed again. There is a probability that the shortage will overcome by compelling bakers to mix cornmeal and rye flour with wheat flour. Naples is in religious excitement over the extraordinary manifestations of a young man, Elena Aglio. Elena is said to have sweat blood every Good Friday for several years, but this year she sweat blood every Friday in March as well as on April 10. Every Holy week, large numbers of pilgrims visit the nun, who lies emancaged in her cell. Several scientists, who have seen the nun say that she really does sweat blood. Paris has so many crazed and mentally different persons that there is no room left in the asylums and public homes to house them, despite the fact that capital disposed 7,590 beds for their special use. The reason for the present condition is said to be the inability of many to stand the strain of modern conditions of life in a big city. Domestic One hundred and fifty University of Michigan students are giving their blood transfusions to help pay their way through college. The student donors are subject to call night or day. Payment is made on the basis of $15 for 300 cubic centimeters or loss. A late statistical report issued by the Department of Agriculture states that the wasting of a single shoe a year by each person in the United States costs the country at least $250,000,000 annually at present prices. Three comets discovered in the last three weeks probably have never been seen before, according to Edwin B. Frost, director of the Yellows Observatory at Williams Bay, Wisconsin. The comets are not light enough to be seen by the naked eye. The Government filed suit in the United States District Court in Philadelphia this week to recover from $11,600,000 to $15,000,000 from the Bath- We will, send you FREE information that may mean your for- warding of locating under- ground or buried treasures. If you want this secret write us today. Address: 710-710-7100 Under Ground Treasures HOW AND WHERE TO FIND THEM A GREAT way to discover them. In any case a fashion to you. This particular for cheap. 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In most cases benefits are immediate. Results usually are apparent. Steel Corporation and several subsidiaries for alleged overpayments on war construction. At a recent luncheon of the Bond Club of New York, in the presence of many of America's greatest financiers, Franco-American friendship was pledged by a distinguished representative of each republic. For France spoke Emile Dacchner, Ambassador to the United States, America's spokesman was general John J. Pershing. Miss Luchele Atcherson of Ohio, the first woman in the American diplomatic service, has been made Third Secretary of the legislation at Erne, Switzerland, and will soon leave for her new post. She has had three years training in the State Department. Another oil investigation, which is expected to parallel in point of interest those of the Elk Hills and Teapot Dome naval reserve leases, is in prospect. It is an investigation by the Senate Committee on Public Lands of the holdings of the Midwest Refining Company in the Salt Creek fields of Worthing. JEWISH PASSENGERS SUBSCRIBE $500,000 TO BUILD A new city is to rise in Palestine homeland of the Jews. It is to be called Zebulun, after the sixth son of Jacob, and is to be built largely by Americans and with American money. More than $600,000 has already been raised for the project, it is learned. This sum was subscribed by passengers who sailed some weeks ago on the maiden trip of the American-Palestine Inner Presidio Arthur, recording to an announcement from the new steamship company. Under the leadership of Philip-Wittenberg of New York, the pilgrims enthusiastically raised the nucleus of a fund and pledged themselves to the vast work of building a city. Before calling these pilgrims prom- WHY BE UNLUCKY Many strange reports of good luck, are made by the unlucky Charm. Make change come your way! 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