The Negro World

Saturday, July 25, 1925

New York, New York

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LET'S PUT IT OVER The Indispensable Weekly The Voice of the Awakened Negro THE Negro World Reaching the Mass of Negroes The Best Advertising Medium A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race VOL. XVIII. No. 24 NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1925 PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U.S.A. TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES BANISH VAIN DESIRES OF BECOMING PRESIDENTS OF FRANCE AND AMERICA; AIM AT THE POSSIBLE IN AFRICA Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting: This week I propose to continue my talk to you on the necessity of getting a sane and settled outlook if we are to establish ourselves in the world and make an independent contribution to civilization. The Negro is not happy; but, to the contrary, is extremely miserable. He is miserable because the world is closing fast around him, and if he does not strike out now for his own preservation it is only a question of a few more decades when he will be completely outdone in a world of strenuous competition for a place among the fittest of God's creation. The Negro is dying out, and he is going to die faster and more rapidly in the next fifty years than he has in the past three hundred years. There is only one thing to save the Negro, and that is an immediate realization of his own responsibilities. Unfortunately, we are the most careless and indifferent people in the world! We are shiftless and irresponsible, and that is why we find ourselves the wards of an inherited materialism that has lost its soul and its conscience. Building on Sand You talk about the progress we have made in America and elsewhere among the people of our acquaintance. But what progress is it? A progress that can be snatched away from you in forty-eight hours, because it has been built upon sand. Can you blame the white man for thinking when red and yellow men are knocking at his door? Can you blame the tiger for being on the defensive when the lion approaches? And thus we find that generations ago, where the Negro was not given a thought as a world competitor, he is now regarded as an encumbrance in a civilization to which he has materially contributed little. Men do not build for others; they build for themselves. The age and our religion demand it. What are you going to expect—that white men are going to build up in America and elsewhere and hand it over to us? If we are expecting that, we are crazy, we have lost our reason. Misguided by the Unscrupulous The laws of self-preservation force every human group to look after itself and protect its own interest, hence so long as the American white man or any other white man, for that matter, realizes his responsibility, he is bound to struggle to protect that which is his and his own, and I feel that the Negro today who has been led by the unscrupulous of our race has IT IS FOOLISH TO BELIEVE A DESPISED NEGRO MINORITY WILL BE ALLOWED TO RULE A PROUD WHITE MAJORITY WOULD-BE NEGRO LEADERS WHO BE LIEVE OTHERWISE ARE DECEIVERS ALL MEN BUILD FOR THEMSELVES, AND THE NEGRO MUST MAKE UP HIS MIND TO BUILD FOR HIMSELF IN AFRICA U. N. I. A. WILL SPEAK THE TRUTH. COST WHAT IT MAY been grossly misguided in the direction of expecting too much. from the civilization of others. No camouflage and no promise of goodwill will solve the problem. What guarantee have we, what lease have we on the future that the man who treats us kindly today will perpetuate it through his son or his grandson tomorrow? Ability to Protect Self Races and peoples are only safeguarded when they are strong enough to protect themselves, and that is why we appeal to the four hundred million Negroes of the world to come together for self-protection and self-preservation. We do not want what belongs to the great white race or the yellow race. We want only those things that belong to the black race. Africa is ours. To win Africa we will give up America; we will give up our claim in all other parts of the world; but we must have Africa. We will give up the vain desire of having a seat in the White House of America, of having a seat in the House of Lords in England, of being President of France for the chance and opportunity of filling these positions in a country of our own. That is how the Universal Negro Improvement Association differs from other organizations. Other organizations, especially in America, are fighting for a political equality which they will never get, and never win, in the face of a majority opposition. We win so much today and lose so much tomorrow. We will lose our political strength in the North in another few years, as we lost it in the South during reconstruction. We fill one position today, but lose two tomorrow, and so we drift on and on until we have been completely obliterated from Western civilization. Changes Among Negroes You may ask me what good has the Universal Negro Improvement Association done, what it has accomplished within the last six years? We will point to you the great changes that have taken place in Africa, the West Indies and America. In the West Indies black men have been elevated to high positions by the British Government so as to offset and counteract the sweeping influence of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Several of the colonies have been given larger constitutional rights. In Africa the entire West Coast has been benefited. Self-government has been given to several of the African colonies, and native Africans have been elevated to higher positions, so as to offset the sweeping spirit of the Universal Negro Improvement Association throughout the Continent of Africa. In America several of our men have been given prominent positions; Negro commissions have been appointed to attend to affairs of state; Negro Consuls have also been appointed. Things that happened in America within the last six years to advance the political status, the social and industrial status of the Negro were never experienced before. All that is traceable to the Universal Negro Improvement Association within the last six years. Negro Thought Better Of Today In the great game of politics you do not see the immediate results at your door, but those who are observant will be able to trace the good that is being done from the many directions whence it comes. If you were to take a survey of the whole world today of Negroes you will find that we are more highly thought of in 1925 than we were in 1914. England, France and the European and Colonial powers regard the Universal Negro Improvement Association with a certain amount of suspicion because they believe that we are antagonistic. But we are not. We are not antagonistic to France, to England or Italy, nor any of the white powers in Europe. We are only demanding a square deal for our race. Let Us Be Fair As we deliberate in our local conventions on the many problems confronting us during the month of August, let us not lose control of ourselves; let us not forget that we are the mouthpiece of four hundred millions; let us not forget that it is our duty to so act as to help humanity everywhere, whether it be black or white. So, let no prejudice cause us to say or do anything against the interest of the white man or the yellow man; let us realize that the white man has the right to live, the yellow man has the right to live, and all that we desire to do is to impress them with the fact that we also have the right to live. The Cry from the Cane Fields My firm purpose, my one purpose in life, is to work for the salvation of my race: Because of the cries from the grave I hear the cry of 300 years, the cry of my great-grandparents in the cotton and cane fields; I see the hard taskmaster drawing his lash across their backs; I hear them cry out in mortal agony: "It pains; it pains; it pains!" I see them fall under the lash; I see them fall to the ground; I see them buried, and I hear the wailing souls from heaven and from the regions below. I hear the cry of my mother and father and of the millions of Negroes who have been brutalized: "Go on, Garvey! Go on! Go on!" And so, fellow men, because of that cry that comes from the grave I have given up all material desires; I have given up all temporal pleasures and have dedicated myself to the sacred principles of the U. N. I. A., the emancipation of the Negro race and a free and redeemed Africa. Liberty or Death! It may not come today; it may not come tomorrow; it may not come for five, ten, twenty or fifty years from now. But sooner or later it will come to those who desire liberty. With the rest of the members of the U. N. I. A., I repeat the historic words of Patrick Henry: "I care not what others may say, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death." And because we of the Universal Negro Improvement Association want the Negro to live that is why we are preparing him for nationhood in Africa so that he can stand firm in his creation that God Almighty has given us and enjoy its beauties and its benefits co-equal with the rest of God's people. i ce ge . ge ge oe Oy BPs A Bre at Za ee ee ao ne English Battalions. Must Get Out or Be-Swept Out; Says. Noted.General “GREAT CHINESE GENERAL SETTING [S's Cong ML SHERRILL IVD! sta, BRITISH NEWS OF RIFFS REVEALS FORTH COUNTRYS WRONGS VORS | .™=s-5" = BOURME EATHUSE) ‘ets SUTUATION MORE SERIO’S THN ~_ VENGEANCE ON WHITE-EXPLOMTER = s:cssss.rs:/ BELIZE MEMBERS jie Sesvassrc| FRANCE IS WILLING TO. ADMIT. ~~ : So veh [etay eta neopen ce in eecca _, [@ounett to the summer sesaton of the! * « Se a . asd nd her Fain, Nam Whe Hed rol Si Sake | ee mi Sa sn oO Abn ig te Etc “ sathvown,Out-—The Recent. Shooting in Shaaghai |*e5%c3 torsbrsorse seams erin, Déllver Rousing Kedressea to iderwer Lge’ Sanne fe omed tn ing Determined Effort to Bréak Through to Fex— Was Plain Mastazre—China Will Canotize as Sainte] "ors, tiee, Rens and Sat." Larue Audiences Sten Dewi enters bad tan rane | >. American Airmen Go to, Franes's Aid —Wily Brit: + Those Whose Blood Was-Shed a fovertowity bys lerge crowd of 80-1 owen diye Golisd Indepenaaiy. |InVEde s Slack mars countey at alt! “ish Show No Disposition to Help ; i ae gs * (Beem thie New York-American): oil | “SHANGHAI, -Jané,.1925—I hrave-been known throughout ,the Trorie-ee the Gheistion-gengral—T gee-thas during the last few dav I have ‘received:a:new title—now I am “Red.” * ., Pe “Texpect-from ‘now on-the British press will represent.me as China's “Req” general. But whether'I am known as the Christian general or the Red general, I.am_ ready to fight the English army under any “Iam tremendously serious about my Chrigtianity, and I-pur pwo questions to every recruit: “Do you smoke?"’and “are you a Christian?” ~ * My ‘men are: forbidden -to smoke. rink, gamble or logt, and they swear very little Sette - Yet, elgaretteless- as they are, my soldiers know how to fight: | Any ‘one of my soldiers who! loots loses bis head. __2Thou shalt not steal” te an army order, the violation ef which is pun- fabable by death: And inorder that ‘the world may know that, although J am & Christin, I am not 06 soft, let [SHAUL AFRICA BE REDEEMEDT | ‘me rquele you one. of (he oraere TT sued. to. my troops during one of ‘my Teoent campaigns: ‘“Bhoet the enemy at tong range until your ammunition is exhausted, then ‘use your bayenet until, it breaks: after that hammer him ever the head with the butt of your rifles when that splits, clinch with him.” * 7 In another five years there will spring up” throughout China other “Chriatian generals” as. J, an other Chinese armies as mine, who will rot Wear. gamble or loot, but who PROVED A: MIRACLE TOMB} Saye « Franth Achiote Centiemen: svete the callie st Yebreary 1 was Fon soeten ae aes: Sores at SEE Lefres cso ee eee, eretag oe Mane, Bote are "De the army} reed ta w French paper avons Chant Ox bot ree Toe teeck ee seers Fe te Pie aig magia saws Set eo ao fo ook RET Sa raens vaseline sone fears treat bo ee Sr + ee peweriste Saisioe. gs. ; aad Women’ Wanted! ef eee ta to deepen poeinied Io Teeea asheatiet in éemany os 5 "ona Blond end iron butider. Ye called “laa selentifie. concen- wetter ements with gland Screen ‘abavlclaty Tavmesvory ie ret the ohemi on a Sore ote + THE STARTLING EFFECT OF @LANT-Ox : ‘ ‘tiemuteteo - perma 8 enriches jhe biood toate hap seine 7: : ; Oe ES % G is pax wee as | R fd oS gok Dabs eae rere ON i tee, dew pha And I seriously advise the foreign ‘ern, be they English, French or Ameri can, not to beat up thelr coolles when ever they are inclined to do 50, an lo show a ‘lite more -courtesy t Chindmen. because such acts as wer practiced tw the former Czarist gov: ernment for centurlen created aiich ar evil feeling aniong the’ Russlans tha WHEN. THEIR DAY: OF RECKONING CAME, REAGON AXD MODERATION FLEW.TO.THE AIR, 2. “We Reap'What We'Sow It-fa true, we reap what we sow. Judging from the tone of the Eng: Meh language newspapers -of the Fa East,-the people of Shanghal, and ever The whole of China, ate Ti Yepetttor againat the English. Thin grotesaue accusation is representative of the English frame. of mind towards China For ‘yeiira China has been #0 wea) and the foreigners have been #0 ruth- lean that whenever the adventurous nations wanted-edmething that Chins possessed, under one,pretense or other, they imposed an unjust treaty on ou former monarchial government, and Inch by ineh, foot hy foot. they crept into China. ‘4 For years English imperialists, an¢ later other “commercial nations, re- warded Chine as: @-week nation with whom ‘they could 46 as they pleased Unfortunately for, Chins,’ they. . heve besa: Suiatified. in this asaumption.. Bit the time has come, and the re- cent Bhanghs} uphiaaval is the begin: ning of that period. when the for- eignerh in China: will have to Geil with un in a different manner. _ The English. the French and other ations in Shanghal are there by“irtue of a treaty forced -pon-the Chinese nation some seventy-five years ago. and the time has come when that treaty will have to be revined. England can begin.a just revision, and, should England take such @ course, other nations wonld follow. e But should England unwisely persist in maintaining her ill-gotten .conces~ sion on Chinese oil. I asnure the world that within ten years the Chinese na- tion will see to it that every foreigner iu swent off her shoren- I say ten (Continued on page 10) “Peter Siner” Goes on Pilgrimage to South In Search of Salvation for His People (From the Lendon Dally Norald) BIRTHRIGHT, by T. 8. Btribling. Col |, Une, 7s: 64. “whenever heat ofisad about the color problem, in the’ United States. 1 cannot xepress a feeling -off thankful: neon that England has-“escaped this tfouble. But if tt 414 occur in England we should be ‘forced by cur lack of epace to sdive :t ‘speedily. We could /Rot spare room, ad'they do in the Bouth ern States, to duplicate each white vil- lage with a dirtier, ugiior and more in- sanitary, bleck village. ot Peter Giner was batt dieck and helt ‘white, His blsek mother was a washi- erwonman.. but somehow he mmnaged to Fo to Marverd. Tews be Way-trecred Uke & buman betas. . Ho determined to go Deck-Gouth ahd devote. hajpel te the’ etucation’ pf Negroad, so-that they might -erise from their degraded * At. the outed? he wan chested in a lege! meter by & ouaning white lay- yer,’ and. Wet his prestige as an -otvu- ented ‘man. . More curious then that, the Negroes 434 fot wieh.to. be from thelr med. The white e- Serded thom on “voum"; they ascegt- of Wat velustion. . “The whole sheet ef the échumen- nied of Une Bigatti wf te Reeratin be- gun to untell Hatt titers’ Peers Fees; Gale apiterings O00 eed of ted visteneel the cade Benatkey cme Magis Peed range denel —~ myguorae ony suncile, cated dan. on ST er ; : = ae ie ee oe nee tes Se Saar, Ene omens ae cs Vaal pe wile Fi ea '\ Them to Have’ Passes ‘(From the Jenannesnure Times) ‘The sequel to the arrest,on Friday night, June 5, of five native women who had determined to dare the new ‘pass law for women and be out after 10:20 without nesses, took place in “F" Court, Johannesburg. yesterday a Charges of contravening .“Section 3 Ordinance 48 of 1902". as amended: te apply to native women:as well aé'na. tiv@raen) were brought against Martha Florence, Alida, Rosle and Sinah.; ‘The wel] of the court wan packed’ te overfiowiig by & large crowd of én- thuslustic supporters’ who had as- sembled to witness the proceedings ‘of the "Great Test Cabe"—as they named it The five women were looked upon as heroine. ‘Mrv3{cCarthy, ho appeared for the Gofense, aaked Tore remant_untt June 11, which wae granted. Tho, “tent, care” in the roault of @ number of ative nicatings, character- ized. dy, violent and: inflammatory epeccties. = os - Volunteers were called for to go. out ‘and court arrest. Cheers greeted: the five who stepped forward, arid a sum of “ball money" was quickly sub- seribeds ss : 1 2 Majority Reconciled ‘The majority of the native popula- tion on the:Rand, however, 1s already perfectly reconciled to the carrying of passes by native women. Amal! mi- nority.hug seized on the Ordinance as a peg on which to hang propaganda, and Communist literature and pamph- pis hava, been freely circulated.” ‘A severe blow at (his movement has been dealt by the tactful magner in which the poltce’are handling the situ: ation. No notice whatsoever Is taken ofthe meetings oF.of the subsequent Keep within the bounds of the law. Since the enforcement of the pues law for women, a total of only three arreste hag heen made in Johannesburg be-' Aides the five sent out for the “test es a Britain Gives Italy : : Part of African Loot Mutual Handshaking, Back- slapping, ‘ Saluting and Felicitation as Rich ‘Spoils ‘Change Hands ane . -KISMAYU, | Trans-Jualand, Eat iea.—The turning over to Italy by Great Britain of that part of the Kenya Colony of East Afriee.wngwen as: Trane- Jubalond took place witH the’ greatest solemfilty im the presence of British and Itallan troops.” British Commander Hope delivered an address in which he ante the tranbfer of the territory £0 [Tay war the consequence of the con- vention signed in London in July. ‘1824. Mr. Hope eal4 the occasion wan Manaiining the warm friendship exet- ing between Great, Britain and Italy which had heen strangthened. byscom- “mon hardships endured in the war with Goraang, The British, day war low: ered and the Italian fing hoisted in {ts Since amit the booming of exon and see hod he eine stantly to pilfer from‘ them, only rivited Heavier shackles && thetr limbs. But when he’ askéa the white om- ployers. to pay thelr ‘servants wage that would enable them to live without stealing, 6 was suspected: of forming & unton. and was’told thet the town was not healthy for him: and the Ne- grove 614 not ‘understand why he di¢ not go North, get @- Job. do well for himeelf. and lexve thom alone. “Birthright” is the first -of three novels which will tell of Peter. iner's Pilgrimage “to fine salvation for his ‘people. We leave him.at the end of the South, safling North with hie: eétoroan wife, whom he loves, though “nigter- town” has mado her 6 thief and 6 wan- Yon, Wit Tre-tet-sett-reapection-Ne- grees and understanding whttes:in Chi- ag? oo Oe SOS | TAOIST! - Ustess: you o00 the an nai at oe WM. SHERRILL: ANG: BOURNE ENTHUSE ~ BELIZE MEMBERS ‘Bir William Sherrill and Bir Cliftord Baurne, the distinguished visitors of the Parent Body of tho Universal Ne- sro Improvement Association, whe ‘Dav’ been entertaining large audionces known the high aims and objects-tor which the Association stands. ery pleasant evening was spent at ‘the Rex Theatre on: Sunday, last. "when @' public meeting under ‘the aug- pices of the, Assoclationcwas staged. Despite unpropitious weather « large numper attended "to .hgav-the distin Euished speakers:* ‘Au already atéted .the weather wat not as’ anticipated and: some delay was experienced, before’ a start was made. ‘This handicap, however, was overcome dy “the presence of “the Union Band under the direction, of Mr. Fred Clarke, ‘which rendered ‘some excellent concert tiems -betore and during the meeting. oMr. C. M. Staine, the local president SE the-Aseociation, after the prelimint= nary: Itema’were concltidéa, delivered short speech during’ which he paid high compiiment to Mr. J. S, Martiner for a poem which “he had composed and qadleated 1 the Association. “He also explained that the weather had ‘caused a change in the program ae time. would not permit the two apaak- ta to address.the meeting and it was therefore decided that only one of the gentlemen should’ speak. He then called upon Sir Willlam to address the'meet- ing. a ‘ "Sir William in rising tp address the meeting expreteed hin, reat pleasure In doing: 80. “He spoke of the great Work the Association had set oui to perform and showed the necessity for the cooperation of all-members of the race in order that the program might be accomplished and the status of the race Iniproved and placed on a betigr foundation that ‘will be sure to’ com- mand the rebpect of the world. He paid high tribute’ to Marcus: Garvey, the founder of thé Association, as the greatest man the race had yet seen, in Raving succeeded. in organizing mil- Hons. of Negroes in the short. span, of three years. He felt that men like Mar- cus Garvey wore especially prepared for the work they perfotmed and were hard tovfind as they come oncé in every Reneration. Garvey was regarded by the enemies of the Association as a dreamer. They regarded bim as a fanatic. But the greatest compliment yet pald Marcus Garvey was by those who called him a'dresmer. he said. In support of his remarks he directed the attention of his. hearare_to.the. pages of history and ‘showed what had been done by dreamers. He spoke of Xapo- leon. Joan of Are, Steventon, Newton and othera and’ said they were” also dreamers, and not unlike Marciis Gar- ery they all demonstrated the supe- for ability in thelr youth. In conclu- sion he expressed his assurance in the progrym of the Association and was ‘onfident nothing would be able to| stand before it. 7 The meeting was afterwards brought 0 & close and all dispersed in the best ft apirit. oe . At Liberty Hall “the same night at | o'clock; Sir Clifford @ourne was the pecker and he further interested nembers of the race in the alms and| bjects of the Asroclation. Bir Clifford | cuched on tome very importagt pointé uring his discourse watch mit have | wen helpful and awakening to his}: mz, 7% C - British “Dichards’ + Policy Toward India: Is “Do Nothus” Peer the tosredorr Batty —hhews) -— | A Statement in emetrer.to Birxenheed's speech Ou India tm Howse of Lorde oa Tune 9 16 teoned bo TU. Gorwamd, D. Chamen Lali snd Satyemurti.: elected. Swaretet Joule) members of the Tneien Legiste- ‘tures. i © w Lord Birttatbeesé epeedh. st ts 4o- claret. “swengtbens’, tho genuine Gwornjist progvem.” end Lord Bistein- ‘nang “ls ta our eptuton wronaty tot to ‘Sout “thet the extreuntet 2 tm eata ts at ot raat becs = mgesio as to werrant 0 cheng Gua the Distard pecttion.”* Fin epeevtr tt te: eats, “van Sox acre ode of eapee teen tet wotlerste ot avert coe a ciara 0 Sopot 8 not mean a et Bee oe $ ee eo ae cate ot ee ies oes ee Ft ieee ee Pe see fe ee ae, SS oem — pou Beem ga ~ Black Man’s Country? _ (Prem the London Daily News) Problems of thé! foreign: field ‘were 4igcssed by’ the Bishop of Salisbury in présenting 6 repels of the Missionary ‘Coune!l to the summer session of the Church Asserably, which .opeied at Westminister July ¢..~ There was, he said, the problem of Factal-contagt::at which the storm cen- Ar was Kegs. Behind it loomed the question. Where was ‘the principle off which British settlers bad the right to invade a Black marfs country at, all? He Thought the answer was quite sim- ble, but-they had got to face the ques Won-ss-Christians * + ‘The outlook in Fegard to non-Chris+ tian, countries with which we were be- ing brought into commercial competi tion was much Worse. They had to ask themscives ae Christians wiih Wha object, were, they doing ft. He thought there were very, g00d reasons that could be given, hut church people were not facing them as Christiank-or fo- cussing publlc opinion ypon them.. They wanted a cabinet-of specialists 10 study these questions In concert with experts, front the political and com- ercial standpelat. |. = German ‘Aviators a ‘To Fight for Riffs Against Americans .PARIS, July 18.—O1d war air rivalries may be reborn mbove the mountain o Mordéeo, accordirig to a report in clr- Zuintion here tonight. The report vays that former German aces. helirine of the organization of a new “Lafayette: ‘American Squadron” io Nght ‘for, the French against the Riffs 4n “Mordcco, are_organizing » German‘ xqundron_t¢ fight for Abd-EV-Krim. ‘According to the report it ts, sports: manlike rivalry and not hate ‘nor re- venge. which if actuating the Germans. who simply thrill at the Idea’ of’once again,meeting thelr old adversarier in fair, Gpen combat, 28 In days of yore. “Let ‘em come” was the response of the Lafayettera ‘here to the rutnor. “There's one German ace 1 hope will foin,* said Charles Kerwood. miedi- watively. “"T don't know his name, but he .shot_me,down once. I've always wanted to ‘try mj, hand with Bim again : The Hand of the Tyrant In British Hong Kong A “Gazette Extraordinary” author- izes any police officer to arrest and de- tain anyone. not” appearing to have regular employment, The Captain-Bupérintendent of Po- ice fe: also empowered to ofder any such, person to leave Hong Kong forth- with. : s Ariother ordinance prohibits tho ex: Sport of coal except by license. * ‘The Governor in Council has also promulgated a regulation empowering two magistrates to infilet punishments including imprisonment .for. a _pertod not exceeding ten years, and flosing. for offenses punishable under the Arms and Ammunition Ordinance.—Reuters; Motorist Saves Negro Hanged by Farmer WILMINGTON, Del, July 2%— Hanged to a tree-yesterday by Clay- ‘ton gf. Whittington,” s farmer living ordi ion Soden ot bere. the life of Benjamin Knots, “16-year-old Negro, was saved by @ passing matorist who noticed the youth and cut him down. Whittington: admitted hanging the Negro, identified, he said, as one who atterapted to aseault his four-year-old) daughter. ~_ * ‘The motorist: notified Wilmington police, who placed the Negro under ‘Arrest. “IVhittington was not arrested. Conditions . Improving In ‘the Philiovines - . ‘eral Leonard. Weed told the Phiti Legislaturé yesteréey that the govern. ‘meat should transfer to private enter: prive git raflrcede, mines and égrioal: “Anetber, outstanding feature: of ‘aamuai mopeage wes thd possibility 6! os coreg: orins “9 cask bast fe. thd increase = Foveaues’ t ‘Governor everal Wood sald | Fitpines are a generally Happy 41 contented people Uviig under improv. ing conitions. ; 2 7 —_——— ‘Jews in Palestine Double Since. 1820 8 _ SERUGALDM, Jaly'18 (Jewne Ts cratietieel sostion of the Puleotine ree ue toes Set see Sees Rows i semctne & er ey Se ae Rie LON... a8 ce or he area Boar Di ic DO i epi ——sas hare? eer sae De al eee ern Cag i ‘is ; pe BRITISH NEWS-OF_RIFFS. REVEALS ..: wee - * eae aoe SITUA “THAN SITUATION. MORE SERIOUS THA Worry Abd-el-Krim -1s causing the French Reflected in’ Sending of Marghal Petain-to-Front—Riffians Mak- ing Determined’ Effort to Break Through to Fes— |... American Airmen.Go to France's Aid—Wily Brit. _’ ih Show No Disposition to'Help 2... BARIS, Juty\16—Marshal Petain has been ordered to Morocea, The country: realizes the importance -of the decision of the Gov ernment to. send the man who commanded the whole’ French Army, athe Wortt—W¥'ar-to-confer—with-theResident-General Marshal Lyautey, of the military situation in Riff, where the tactics of Abd- aicKtin ave causiue:jiadh: worny for the French chiefs. at the front, “We Admire the Japanese Intensely, But This American Land Is for White Men” SRO STREET LS See eee trip to the, front; Marshal Petain wif fy from Toulouse to Rabat. , He took Ja train from Paris thix afternoon for the t&king-off point on the filght .to the. theatre of the ar. Gen, ‘Naulin. newly ‘appointed .com- mander-in-chiet of the army in Mo: rocco, will leave tomorrow.and, within Ja. few days, there will -be a grand councht of warin whieh Petain, Naulin, ‘Lyautey and the other principal .com- manding ‘officers will take’part In an sluborate new and vigorous.campaign. The ‘cabinet decited four days ago to send Petain,.as the breaking up of Parliament left it frée to devote all at- terition to Morocco. It Is expected ‘Murshal Petain will remain in the Rift a fortnight. >> ing prépared to enable some of the present combatanta to” get a fong- earned rest and also to put the high [SHALL AFRICA BE REDEEMED? | eee vecictameerine “uieie mae ti El-Krim a staggering blow likely’ tc bring -victory’and an early peace. “Meanwhile a flerce-battle ie in prog- rexnj the RiMans making desperate efforts to, break through to Fer on, tf Tala road. “Aba-El-Kelm's tactics con- sist in. hurassing all points at the same time, and the French are obliged to maintain unrelaxing vigiiance every- where and to hold flying columns tn readinese-sonstantly to rush from point to point on the shortest notice. : Compelied “to protect certain, posts. at all costs, because of the danger o neutral tribes joining Abd-El-Krini‘ forces. the French troops. for the rio- ment, are prevented from-making regyy big and concentrated movement et, dretin = merizan Flyers Off to “French Zone |, Tuesday . -PARIB.“Iuly 16 (A. P.).—The Latay- atte Esadrille veterans and otner war-trained Americans who bavo of- fered their services for the Morgccan campaign, expect to assemble at Toul- ouse Tuesday. from which place they wilt fy to Rabat,,Fronch Morocco. * Col. Charles Sweeney. who com- manded a regiment in the Eightleth Di- vision, A... F. in the Argonne, has been selected an commander. He rose from the ranks toa captaincy in the Foreign Legion in war time and served under several Centrai and South Amer- | (From Chicago Evening American) . The people of California and some other Btates declared that they did not want their lands owned by Asiatics. Their theory was “a white man's LAND for white PEOPLE.” ‘Laws wore pissed gccordingly. and subsequently United States tmmigra- tion laws exeluded all Asiatics trom immigrating. and.‘colenizivg in this country.. Students, travelers and others, of course, are welcéme, as be- eee. 4° . You’ would have thought Jepan ‘would not object to this simple, quite natutal_lam_eapaciallr_as_thay had alreety pasved laws forbidding Chinese to. wert in Japan, and Bed even o- polled from Japaneos: territory many = Girendy eettled there ‘Tho. Japenepy_tor_whom_Amaerieane have greet respect. felt: that. when we Gecttee igaiert Asistis tmmigretion an qwcoption steel be: mode tn thetr Sever. 7 . . = b Mew Jepse bee ppepad.s low under ‘which pe fervigner con own hed i Jopen, if thet, torsigner’s mation for- Wee Jeshare to owns nts Rewsm _ he anys to the Usted Bretes, “Sine Pepe Saw a owe Teteed Kiess cree = ee Siento ae RE PON 6555 Fi ~ fe chy Hn. aefines, ta 4 Pres po abi a: ORAS ees 7 ee Se 2 a fean Governments prior to the great, wun. ils family has given’at least one son to the service of France in. every. war since the time of Louis XIV. The group will be known under an« Oduer namé than’ Latfayetté, because of this, nominal enrollment a9 soldiers of the Shian of Morocco. instead of volunteers tortrance. “The firet group..<xill' comprise tort of twelve Anecianpat "word wee received today that thértnwill be re= inforcements.froni South America, thé old Latayette fiyer’..Jamen Bear, who haa been in Peru, cabling that be is” ‘hopeful of bringing some of the avian on pupils as soon as he can book passage to France. and others are'ex- pected from North America within « fortnight ‘Many Americans who served with the British: royal alr. forces an the Canxdian air force in the “European war-and who are now in or about Paris, are ‘being solicited by the pro= moters of the expedition to nerve, and fe, 18 expected that some of them, wild soln ur. : i FEZ, French Morocco, July 16— The French today detemiad two attacks by Abd-el-Krim’s Ri Mans. upon posts tlonst protecting Fes and Tass. ‘The unsuccessful. Riflans attacks- were made upon Ain Aicha, one of tha, most important French’ points in the Fez protections, and at Beb Morons, near Teza. : Tiie RiMan propaganda i espectally active.and appears to be meeting with success, notably among .the-‘Tyouls an@ Branen in the Taza region of which tribes further portions have gone over 6 AD4-e!-Krim. These defections are also beginning to have an effect uron the Tehlatas, a war-like tribe, whése abandonment would b¢ 2 serious complication for the French. : a . Intermittent Aghting continueg all along, tho line. Although'-of 2 minott chaxacter, it Ix oxtcemay wearing upon ° the troops, who.are suffering from the. heat and {rom the strain of constan® vigtlance. . A French bombing plane broke dows yesterday, forcing, a landing three miter in front of the French lines, near Taza." Another muchine went to the rescue, Dut {ts pilot. seeing the none | (Continugt on page 3) * Weradmit quite cheerfully ‘thet ta many ways we cannot compete with ‘Asiatics. They can work longer hours for lesx money, and live here at leis coat than our own people. * : Therefore we say.¢ "Your country FOR YOU, and our country FOR US. And the law against our owning your land fe NOT resented. You. should ac cept our law. In any case,you must.” CATARRH and HAY. FEVER STOPPED | TN_24_ HOURS “res Reoute Severe In One Dey, by use of W.R Pormuta roperte.: _._-___—.. - Fy -@tewfer - ‘snes —_— eat oe rae eee Se ne oe pees ae ree ¢ a ra E AMERICAN AVIATORS ARE MISTAKEN WHEN IN THE NAME OF LAFAYETTE THEY GO FORTH TO FIGHT THE RIFFS—THE DEBT TO AMERICA WAS PAID LONG AGO—TALK ABOUT THE "SACRED CAUSE OF CIVILIZATION" IS SO MUCH CANT LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, July 19.—The large number of followers whom the New York Local of the Universal Negro Improvement Association has gathered together turned out in full strength tonight and packed the hall. It is very significant that during these hot days when it is the desire of most people to avail themselves of Sunday's day of rest to get out of the city and visit the many distant and nearby places of recreation, the followers of the Universal Negro Improvement Association forego what pleasure there may be found in such trips in order that they may be on hand to attend the meetings and manifest by their presence and support that the organization is of paramount interest with them. This can hardly be said of any other organization, not even the churches where nowadays the diminution in the attendance is conspicuous hence eloquent testimony is furnished of the genius of Marcus Garvey in founding an organization that can maintain the following which the Universal Negro Improvement Association has maintained and is maintaining. The speakers tonight were Hon. G. A. Weston, chairman of the meeting; Hon. P. L. Burrows, Assistant Secretary-General, and Hon. Levi Lord, Auditor-General. Mr. Weston dwelt at length on the African situation created by the wonderful stand which the Riffians are making under the leadership of Abd-el-Krim for their autonomy against the French, and pointed out the possible results which the war may lead to in the way of bringing about the redemption of Africa which the Universal Negro Improvement Association has from its inception preached and predicted. His speech was followed with earnest attention and the audience was cheered and encouraged to find that there are glimpses ahead of the fulfillment of the program for a free and redeemed Africa. Hon. Mr. Burrows spoke briefly and pleaded with the members of the association for more and continued support, saying that at this particular time it was their duty by rallying to the cause of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to give encouragement to our brothers in Africa and demonstrate to them that the Negroes of the Western world are with them in their fight for freedom. Hon. Mr. Lord, who has become quite a favorite in Liberty Hall, gave an explanation of the financial affairs of the organization and made a plea for funds to successfully carry on the work, to which the audience made a generous response. Following is a report of Mr. Weston's speech: POPULARITY AMERICAN AVIATORS ARE NAME OF LAFAYETTE THE RIFFS—THE DEBEN LONG AGO—TALK ABOF CIVILIZATION" IS LIBERTY HALL, New York, a number of followers whom the Negro Improvement Association in full strength tonight and pack that during these hot days when avail themselves of Sunday's day visit the many distant and nearby of the Universal Negro Improvement pleasure may be found in be on hand to attend the meeting and support that the organization them. This can hardly be said of the churches where nowadays the conspicuous sense eloquent testi Marcus Garyey in founding an or following which the Universal Negro maintained and is maintaining. The speakers tonight were Home meeting: Hon. P. L. Burrows, Ass. Levi Lord, Auditor-General. Mr. African situation created by the are making under the leadership against the French, and pointed war may lead to in the way of Africa which the Universal Negro from its inception preached and with earnest attention and the auo to find that there are glimpses ahead for a free and redeemed Africa. Hon. Mr. Burrows spoke brief of the association for more and this particular time it was their d Universal Negro Improvement to our brothers in Africa and dem of the Western world are with the Hon. Mr. Lord, who has become gave an explanation of the finance made a plea for funds to success the audience made a generous res Following is a report of Mr. W Hon. G. A. Weston's Address Mr. Weston, vice-president of the New York local, said: If our President-general, were with us; we would be kept thoroughly, informed of the great conflict that is now being waged in North Africa. He is not here in the flesh, and I propose to call your attention to a phase of the situation in Morocco, a situation that threatens to involve the entire universe and to help forward the culmination of the program outlined by Marcus Garvey in 1913. Americans to Fight the Riffs We read that American flyers in France have gone to help the Frenchmen dislodge the Riffians. One of these gentlemen when asked by a French reporter about their mission to Morocco said: "We are going to serve the same ideal that enthused us in 1914 and to teach a lesson to Americans who are affected by German anti-French propaganda. We want to show the world that, we love to serve again under the Dr. Charles Lyles Million Dollar Midsummer Blood and System Treatment Lyle's Indian Head Kidney and Liver Medicine (The South's Greatest Tonic) In much from old fashioned folk art, artistry and practicality, the latest and most advanced medicine and treatment for kidney and liver and system treatment. ```markdown ``` folds of the French standard in the sacred cause of civilization." America's Debt to France Paid These Americans, who are members of the Foreign Legion, that squadron "in order of Lafayette," who gave his sword to assist the thirteen original colonies to shake off British domination, they struck at the Declaration of Independence when they made that statement, and if they think that they are going over to help France because they think America has a debt she owes France, they are making a mistake. That debt was paid long ago. And as an American citizen I am lifting-up my voice in protest against the action of these Americans in going to assist France to dislodge the Riffes from their own territory. I call upon those young, over-enthusiastic, so-called freedom-loving Americans to read again the prefatory statement in the Declaration of Independence and to interpret anew the spirit of '76. I refer them to words spoken only yesterday by Woodrow Wilson, the greatest of modern Americans, to those young men who were going over to France in 1917. Wilson's Advice to America Wilson said: "I am sometimes very much interested when I see gentlemen supposing that popularity is the way to success in America. The way to success in this great country with its fair judgments is to show that you are not afraid of anybody except God and His final verdict. If I did not believe that I would not believe in democracy; if I did not believe that I would not believe that people can govern themselves; if I did not believe that the moral judgment would be the last judgment, the final judgment in the minds of men as well as at the tribunal of God I could not believe in popular government. But I do believe these things, and, therefore, I earnestly believe in the democracy, not alone of America, but of every awakened people that wishes and intends to govern and control their own affairs. These are the manifestations of one of the greatest ideals of all time and the greatest American of modern times, man who gives great power to liberty and freedom according to the spirit of 76, and I am calling upon Americans at this time to see to it that they uphold the rights and principles of this great country." When America sought to free herself when America sought her independence it was to take against insurrection and when the Slave Nation was to liberate all modern countries all human beings would be freed on the side of humanity. LET US PREPARE to show our appreciation of our great teacher in a tangible way on his birthday AUGUST 17, 1898 Circulars will be mailed to divi- sions in a few days setting forth our plains. ciated by the Hon. Marcus Garvey to the end that black peoples may in time seek to bring abot the complete emancipation of Africans in all Africa even as the Riffs were valiantly doing today in North Africa. REASON DICTATES LEAVE AFRICA France Would Be Well Advised to Give Up African Colonies, Is View of Some, as Oppressed Awake In certain political circles in France, it is said, there is at present wide discussion regarding the advisability, of that nation's surrendering right now its wide-flung colonies. Those who favor this action point to clouds on the political horizon which, say they, must ultimately result in an inevitable deluge. They point out that the tide of national feeling among subject races, not only in the Orient but also below the equator, is becoming stronger day by day and they predict that this tide on some fair day in the not far-distant future cannot fall to break its bonds sweeping everything before it. And cautious-minded, they would yield before the danger comes. Anyone who believes that France in the face of this danger will take such action or anything approximating it, shows a rare ignorance of France. Too strong is her love of imperial power. Too strong, also, her lion-hearted courage in the face of overwhelming obstacles. France, it is safe to say, will spurn the suggestion, holding that discussion thereof can have only academic interest. That a fine practicality lies behind the proposal, however, is disclosed by the fact that those making it claim it would really be advantageous for France. It would be advantageous, they claim, to anticipate the nationalist movement by making the colonies independent, and "negotiating with them economic agreements beneficial to both sides." After all, the sponsors of the movement are only speaking frarily. Not Trying to Antagonize, But to Build of Ourselves (From the African World) We are not trying to antagonize the white man, but are trying to work out our own redemption, for we have come to realize that our destiny really lies in our own hands. Having come to this conclusion, the only logical reasoning can be that we must express our thoughts and our wishes in our own way and the only possible way to convey these ideals and place them before the people of our race is through a paper entirely controlled by ourselves. GET MORE PFP ```markdown ``` This Wonderful German Preparation will positively restore your Lost Nature and Vitality You will feel twenty years younger after taking this Bregwering Bremody. Highly recommended for all newborn recipients. Douglas is taking up the nerves and increasing the Physical Power. Phosphorus Nux and Damiana Compound 15% alcohol. Extra large bottle, 18" fluid ounces. Special price. $0.99 The Trial We Want You Rem. eddy. Yakur System Purifier. 2.00 Gummie Snake Oil. 1.69 Ra-Ma-Mi-Cough Syrup. 30 AS INTOLERANCE COMES NORTH Negro Resident of Staten Island, New York, Attacked by White Neighbors, Who. Cry, "Get Out" (From the N. Y. Times, July 20) District Attorney Albert C. Fach, of Richmond, announced yesterday that he had subpoenaed fifteen white neighbors of Samuel Brown. Negro, of 57 Fairview avenue. Castleton. Hill: West New Brighton, S. I. to appear before the Richmond County Grand Jurist this morning to tell what they know of efforts made in the last few days by white residents to intimidate the Negro and his family. Two attacks have been made on Brown's house recently, the last one between 3.30 and 4 o'clock last Friday morning. At that time a number of white men went to the home of the Negro, hurled stones through windows, unprotected trees and destroyed potted flowers. Negro friends of Brown, who is a letter carrier, went to his home following the first attack and took turns mounting guard against another visit. Brown complained on Friday to District Attorney, Fach, with the result that the District Attorney posted two detectives-to guard his house, and then decided to call the Grand Jury. Accuse Negro of Obstinacy White neighbors of Brown have admitted that they tried to induce him to move out of that neighborhood. Some of them said that Brown had aroused the resentment of the white residents by demanding an excessive price for his house, when white people offered to buy it. H. M. Robertson, of the Robertson Development Company, which developed Castleton Hill, further attributed, Brown's unwillingness to depart to obstinacy. He said: "My company sold the property to a Mrs. Evans a few years ago for $5,000. If we had had any idea she wanted to re-sell we would have willingly bought it back with a good profit to her. "I was elected chairman of a citizen's committee that went to see Brown. I reasoned with him in a peaceful way. I pointed out that he was the only colored man in a neighborhood which depended for its property values on its exclusiveness, and that in view of this we would pay him $5,500 for his property. Brown declined the offer." Brown paid $5,500 for the property in July, 1924, according to Mr. Robertson, and was very rude when he rejected another offer of $10,000 by the Citizens' Committee. Mr. Robertson said that Brown, in refusing the second offer asserted that he did not want to sell because he had bought the place for a permanent home and intended to settle down. According to Mr. Robertson, the Negro said he was as good as anybody else and that he wasn't going to be scared out. Mr. Robertson admitted that Brown's attitude had angered his white neighbors. But the real estate promoter asserted that "no one from our neighborhood was responsible for the assault on Friday morning." Brown's price on his house is now $12,000, according to Mr. Robertson, who expressed the belief that Brown's refusal to vacate was only another way of "holding out for an exorbitant price." Since his neighbors started negotiating, to buy Brown out of his house the Negro has received so many threatening letters, unsigned or signed only with a cross, that he has begun to describe them as "white hand" letters. Brown told the district attorney the contents of some of the letters. One of them, he said, warned that his wife, a teacher in Public School 16, would be "shot by an ex-service man" if they did not move. "She will not be shot in the house," further said the letter, according to Brown. "but in the street" while she is returning from work." Let Us Remember That our personal suffering is, but little compared with that which the Hon. Marcus Garvey is now cheerfully enduring for the race. RHEUMATISM HAVE YOU USED RHEUMATISM ORDERS, OR WERE SUPPLIED BY A RHEUMATISM ORDERER? If you have used RHEUMATISM ORDERS, it is not of the interest of our office. RHEUMATISM ORDERERS are giving us an opportunity to sell your food property. LOAD NO STORE. Get a wonderful JOHNSON RHEUMATISM ASSOCIATION Just take a dose. It is very pleasant. Instantly that pain subsides. It is so much better than any other medicine. ADDING SUPPLEMENTS so more CORTISOL TURBIDOG NETARY ALL the RHEUMATISM PAINT goes. Take a step away. Don't wait until it is too late! Why pay any longer? Here is your opportunity to get well quick! Don't mail mail receipts to AMAZON (dims) write YOUR NAME and ADDRESS on the coupon and mail coupon right now. AUT QUICK! DO IT TODAY. DR. J. W. BARNES. J. O. R. 01. Bismuth Group Station, NEW YORK CITY. Send on the provided express delivery form to the address on the right side of the page. Two days will give the special pass of the day two treatments. You can drive one to your family. Location: 201 CENTER ST. NEW YORK CITY. You must drive one to your family. Location: 201 CENTER ST. NEW YORK CITY. You must drive one to your family. Location: 201 CENTER ST. NEW YORK CITY. PLEASE STATE HOW MARY TREATMENTS YOU WANT Name: Address: City and State: Don't Experiment with Your Hair!! Pluko Hair Dressing is a successful preparation to make coarse short hair long, soft and beautiful. It has been used for ten years by leading men and women in all walks of life who wanted and saw the necessity of hauing—Beautiful hair, nicely perfumed, easy to dress and that would stay dressed—free from dandruff and continually itching scalp. Pluko HAIR DRESSING 25¢ and 50¢ You can have hair that looks just the same as the successful and leading men and women—The big sale of Pluko Hair Dressing makes possible the low price of 50¢ for the snow white Pluko in the big Black and White cans and 25¢ for the amber-colored in the big Green cans. All stores sell Pluko. Pluko WHITE HAIR DRESSING Makes The Hair Grand in Soft and Gleamy Hairyness. Dandruff, Malaria, Dust and Scab will not cause the hair become brittle or dries off FULLY GUARANTEED BLACK AND WHITE CANS GREEN CANS RIFFIANS IN NEW DRIVE FOR FEZ (Continued from page 2) commissioned officers of the first plane surrounded by Rifflans, gave them up for lost. The two, however, came into the French lines later, having fought their way through the enemy with their carbines and bombs. Their plane, which was the first to fall into enemy territory, was destroyed by shots from French field pieces. Advices through Spanish Morocco last night indicated that the pressure against the French near Taza was increasing daily and that the French military situation was "quite serious." Reference was made to the "cutting of the Fee-Aiglers railroad" near Taza, which would mean the interruption of the French communications between Algerians and the Moroccan protectorate. LONDON, July 15.—Foreign Secretary Austen Chamberlain outlined Great Britain's position in repaired to the Moroccan situation in replying to a question in the House of Commons today. The French and Spanish Governments, he explained, had proposed the cooperation of British naval forces in the surveillance of equiruband arms traffic in the territorial waters of Tangier. The extension of the territorial limits of the French and Spanish zones to six miles into the sea instead of three and the landing of conglents of troops by the three countries at Tangier for the protection of the city also was proposed. The British Government. Chamberlain declared, was ready to carry out the obligations of the Tanzanian convention and to appease in the suppression of contraband traffic in the territorial waters of the district, but preferred not to participate in any action outside these waters; nor could it acquiesce in the extension of territorial waters beyond the three mile limit. The British Government also opposed the proposal for the dispatch of troops to Tanzania because such action might possibly provoke an attack upon the town by the Rufus. Demands at Tangier Other proposals made by the French and Spanish Governments were that the representative in Tangier of the Sultan of Morocco should be instructed to hand over to the Spanish authorities any matters from the Spanish zone who might escape to the international zone, and furthermore that inhabitants of the international zone outside of Tangier should be disarmed. The British Government felt such action would be useless as a means of ending the revolt in Morocco, and might even cause additional trouble and unrest. Mr. Chamberlain stated, however, the other measures would be taken in an effort to prevent the Tangier zone from becoming a center of rebel intrigue. Nine Generals Refused* Moroccan Command It is reported that no fewer than nine French generals refused the post of directing the war in Morocco which General Naulin accepted. The consensus of opinion among the generals who refused was that it was no use accepting the command unless the French Government was prepared to send the necessary reinforcements in men and material. Among those who declined the post are General Weygand, formerly High Commissioner in Syria, and General Guillaumat, the Rhine Commander. Americans to Sign in Service of Sultan PARIS, July 15. - Premier Painele has accepted in principle the offer of American aviators who fought in the French Foreign Legion during the World War in service in the French Moroccan air force against Abd-al-Krim. The Americans will be allowed to contract for service of only two or three months, by which time the War Department thinks the Ruffian invasion will have been crushed. They will be signed in the service of the Sultan of Morocco, thus avoiding an entlishment of five years in the Foreign Legion. The War Department is arranging details with the Sultan. PARIS, July 15.—This evening's messages from Fez describe the situation on the northern front as being serious and it is considered that the Rift menace to Fez is something more than a myth. The Mussulman authorities declare that unless a smashing victory accrue to French arms very soon they will not be able to depend upon tribes who have hitherto shown themselves loyal. CAIRQ—A committee has been appointed to organize an international organization congress in Carup. It will function under the direction of the Minister of Public Works. Japanese Girls Taking To Office Work Rapidly Women and girls in Japan in increase ingly large numbers are turning to office work as a means of livelihood. According to recent reports 1,500,000 Japanese women and girls are engaged in clerical and stenographic work. Enrollment increases at the rate of 30 per cent annually in the Y. M. C. A. commercial classes in Tokio, and the association is unable to cope with all its obligations. At present there are 200 in English classes, 58 in commercial 835 in all departments regularly and 308 in short courses. a Te TOs FORTUNE. = do, py 0 o 0 ae os 1 TS as ee SEES iE E Pier We ee - PR | Seles cons Meath. lei: Fe | Rhee Mente. elesmeesece LS er “aoe ries omnis fe onal tee Set eoree eae ang ee ere rere Es ‘Advertising Rates at Oflcn 2 ' YO..zy, =. NEW YORK, JULY a8, 1085 . Net ‘The Magre World does not knowingly secopt questionable “pw frendyjemt afvertising. Reeders of the Mogre World are aaerneesity to invite our attention to say the s Mogre Whrid idvertisement. - 5 : = “LET'S PUT IT OVER ‘HE INTELLIGENCE AND ENTERPRISE THA1 “ghd tae trout page aiticle’ in The Negro World ‘of last week I President-Geaeral Marcie Garvey, after.enlarging upon the , - dafalligence and-enterprise of the white races in conquering " thn fences of Nature to their uses, penetrating the ‘uttermost ‘parts ‘pl the earth'and-braving dangers of the most destructive kinds in - pedeg to get snd to have that which they covet, among-other things, Thic opisti hee taken tiie. white man from placé to place and -—muade-of-hlet-the-master ofall sitiations, In his contact with no, ethos gooples, in his contact with other races he has‘adopted _ sieaguree and methods by which he rules, governs and controls them, so'2s to perpetuate his mastery, ae ee 7 ‘We must come everywhere ist contact with this great ideal. ‘It ie that ifea! that we have to fight; it is that ideal on the part of the white race that we have to overcéme. It therefore calls for not ignorance, nat primitiveness, but it calls for g: similar - feitelligence. It ie that intelligence that we as.a:miass lack at this time, The great kody of Negroes, four hundred million of ‘we, are reputed to represent the most! backward and ignorant reap of people in the weeid. Because of our gross mass ig: norance and beckwardoves not only the white race but all;the ‘other racenhave stalen'a-march, and this march has placed them * in the forefront in the organista of the great world in which we" live. It is for-the purpose of emaricipating the race out of this ‘Dackwardness that, the Universel .Negro Improvement Aseo- ciation came. ihto-existence.” . That is’ to: say, the. white racés,-by their intelligence and enter. prise, have conquered and rule the lands of the Red ‘Man of North, Ceiitral and South America, the Brown Man of Asia-and the Black Man of Africa. They have done more, They-have conquered’ and -rale.the mixed ‘multitudes ofthe Islinds of the Seas. Just now they are figuring upon the dismemberment of China and the division of hs larids and people among them, as those of” the other countrief have, been conquered and divided. It has required a singleness of purpose and the highest intelligence and courage to do all of this, and most of it has been done-in the past three hundred years. Thé Tnonquered people have begun to wake up and protest and to fight against the awful wrong of it all, but history teaches that it is easior to hold and defend the liberty you-have than to sores when. you have lost it.” 7 = ost ‘The white man.has conquered the world by his intelligence and enterprise. “He. has had:two rules by which he has worked his. way $0 domination, vir.t 4 ac L Know how to’do things for yourself and not depend del ‘others to do.them for you. tin . ‘2 Always have something to sell that somebody wants.to buy and hold.on to the customer when once he has been made one. The customer may be only an individual, or he may be a whole com- mumity or a nation of communities. The balance of trade is the ginge of national credit. - If a nation’ buys mofe than it sells it is compidered. be in a bad way. ~So it is with an individual; if he buys more than he selis-be will slways be-poor and often despised Becsgee he kes nothing anybody wants. The white races know this and gonquer by making the most of it. .° - __.If the. Nogro is going to:win in the battie 8 life he must bring to the task the sort of intelligence and enterprise the white races bring to it, and he must learn to do things for. himself eitdnot. depend wpop ethers to do them for him, and he must have always something to ‘enff, besides his'raw labor, which others want,to buy. Fer in- stance, every community of 200. Negroes shoyld biyy snd .cell smotg, themppived most things that they need; but, instead of this being true, it weil} be found thet im-most every‘such- cothmysigy ¢ white trader Sigg: mapepaty of the telling of. the necessary. things of Hie. He alee ie. writ Be Delide 2 fe ame sad odes in sn sxto- > Bs We systomere, live in howale apd fock it i going ond * Et jo Spot. Wi cto Jeg Eingreen sn Cape, Eevee: Yo. pole $o.the River Wile. The Negro will stwgy ee Ear Rema Teale xt Tho Atcioon Woild, ph fon Ee gcd aan golly nda certe a enn see fonererar the @ teréegh cag | a ie mare POTS SO Seven pecs Of ate miw) eee tao EPO S Gk as SO ae are Sieh sine ‘- i os a : ee Se 7 heave vecsived 8: communication from. Mr. James! E 5 Mashag of Providence, R..1.; whic’ dose tor give’ his ‘hoes WV saddraap, in whieh he directs our sttention to, some of the buses to which Megrees.ere subjected in the Southern States-of the ‘United States. He writer as if he worp ¢-white aun: That leadp us to ‘Sey: thet eme-half the world ip 'sei4’ ast to low how. the ether half lives, and-not ‘to.care, haviag traubles:o¥ ‘their own.: “There -is rane in chet stving. ‘Tt is a fair statement of the case’ that bal ot ‘Americas people do wot know just empetly ia how’ far the Negro titisens of ‘the Southern States -are-reled by class legislation of ‘the mept offensive character and by mobocratic public. opinion with. sugh ‘cless--legisistion to justify them, and that they.do not }masch care, gs’ they tiave troubles of theif own: Their feelings and intertsts are not effected, it it-pot: their personal, or community or [State 4Meir, and they do not comcern themselves about it. | * ‘That sapect of the matter is rsesonable enough, on the theory that the American people are very. laggely @ provincial people. ‘ We call it sectionstism. “It amounts: td the same thing: - The people are concemed about conditions in, their-immediate‘community and State and do rot concer theinseWes ‘about conditions in other sections unless they ‘becomé of such ‘a character’ as'to affect the interests of the: people of all of the sections:of the country. And, too, a great raany White people have adopted the: Nordic “pririciple that. the. ‘Negro has his job and it is up to him to work.out his own salvation, jas the er and ‘the Italian andsother ‘hypenates of the.citizenship have too it. It is a-challenge\X¢ the manhood of the Negro people, land he must meet and conquer-it or Be conquered by it. The history ‘ofthe past fifty years teaches that much, as far as he {s concerned; the history.of the past two thousand years, quite, teaches that much. as far ae the Jew in Europe and America is concerned. Mr. Mackay ites_as follows: . 2 s “Deat Sir: TREW Sknow i ig any way _+ in which- asi Americab.of education and good reputation tan “assist in securing the abolishing ofthe ‘White’ and ‘Negro’ signs .which disfigure the railroad stations in Southern communities, also the absurd regulations in effect on street cars regarding the ‘seating of:white-and colored passengers. => “I have'just had a most humiliating experience in South Caro-. dina, which bas brought vividly before me injustices of race™ Prejudice and the evit effects of provincial, narrow-minded, notions which apparently have come down from the dark ages. LA Cuban friend“of mine was not permitted to ride“with mie to 4 Columbia, and a Porto Rican friend of mine staying in the same - city was insulted on’ several occasions. .On account of my being | seen talking: with these gentlemen and walking with.one of them in the parkpit was plainly intimated ta me that my presence in. Columbia was not desired. oF ig 7 —it-is my desire-to-give-these people a lesson they will riever forget. If,I-can secure the moral suppott of your readers’ or of any Negro who has had a humiliating experience, and who would “care t6. communicate with me, I will give these Southerners an__| ophortunity to prove why théy should not be held to account.” No; there.is no way in'which Mr. Mackay éan give the offending | reople of the South a lesson they will never forget, except in helping 10 create sentiment against the Nordic program of segregating the itizenship of the country on account of race, religion and nativity. The Supreme Court of.the United States, jn declaring the Summer sivil Rights bill unconstitutional, held that it was the reserved right f'the States to make such discriminations asthe separation laws of he South make, as’a ‘police power. The court confused civil “privi- eges and immunities” with gocial rights, with which the Jaw has ittle to do, and those who wantito wrong and degrade the Negro itizen’ have made the most of th¢daw as-construed-by the highest curt... : a re : "We have separation and segregation Iaws of all sorts in the South- rn States, based-upon the Supreme Coursedjgture in the Civil Rights nd Ku Klax Klan cases in the early days of the reconstruction gov- rnments, offensive signs such as Mr. Mackay instances being a art of the infamous scheme of humiliation in all public places’and s Beneficiaries in law of contractual obligations and the Soe ion of taxation for educational and other-public benefits, in the equal dvantages of which‘all should share alike. > We see no way of breaking down the color -baré erected in the south between the races except. in the growth dia new generation 1. whites and blacks, with more education ‘and wealth distributed mong the two races, and the-creation of a‘ public opinion which Will ote the offending class legislation off the statute books. The Negro, | he Jew and the foreign born atg steadily growing in numbers and jealth in the-Southern States, and ‘we look forward to'a time whert hey will be strong ewough to. vote the. Nordics out of court and’ be ble to repeal the class legislation which they. have fathered, with foper distinction between social rights and civil “privileges and mmunities.” It will take time and patience and steady growth in |: ducation and wealth fo brig about this condition, byt it is the only. yey possible. <= Sa Meanwhile the Negroes who find the conditions in the South in-|_ otgrable have the-right to get'them out and-into-States-where petter-- onditions prevail, and thousands have done this during the past | wenty years and’mgny arg doing it now. sciotnhieiioechciaiiabal eee linia capa Rimming ee HEALTH TOPKS By DR. 8.8 HERDER ae OF the New York Tubsroutesle an Mealth Association Bon cosertee un penyshent a ettecty ot ceompine pyles way Mls- oS ei geer eas =i ie = eae Ee = papeading Soe So eo meee a wD CF o>... eo oe re ge wee aie im thelr reaction toward the same in- fection; that apguprenées may make I seem riaicalous thet such «person should De degrivad af this and that ac- ‘Uvity, and neverthelggs ter, the ssfety of.that patent eyed deprivation may ‘be the only: whpe.thing. il "If you Rage of @, poreas with some chroni¢ dissase,’ the only advice you can wisely give g “obey the docter's: inatractiony te coe, OEE: per ay are - rok nappa ee t0o heavy tor 6 thinking poredtl te dave to care. x ewer Wensns ie be Geyem Wins Fame as ‘Wei tit 9 Vaan —4 ster gore yd wet ae Ther ore comer ai magenta «ete ‘ong’ Fades Ge Sis a Ro Beare. Wet SE Pe Oc mcm ae a eels s al eke 7 wet 7 3 zs coer i MMlada f-the Hart “= Ween Vhe, Mew York Wire” © | Blemapire sletretion: this. weeks he centenary Gf Ure fags vaitinns Go porves.wike wotion, Tt was'a hundro ‘yours dpe thie oymmer that the Stock ‘tem “and ‘Dartagion Rathyay. thirty jadt milan lapg, 09 opened 7.5 trak ot Wilriy-four carriages, with’ Georg ‘Stephenson at “the throttle, Britow learned with amanimeat that, sro "1oe4:of minety tone bad boon drawn ¢ Riese miles gn heur. When shat ay. tumA-the pricevof coal af Sisekien fa from 18, ta 85." 64. © ten’ and. stag lines beds thet bescanigare wore:-be: Ing corried for e-shilling. the economic algnificance ot the tngpvation began’ tc grow cleay, Within Ave years the Liver- ool and’ Manchester was rifnning, anc America, Prance and Austria’ all had Tn the century that has followed’ the rallway has established such domin- ‘fon: over the world's life that we cal hargly conceive of etvillsatjon ‘without it. "Ie appeared’ tn South americe. in the forties. Ib invaded India 1a 1853 “AustYalia In 1844 and Aftica tn “1866 ‘The world’s railways now total hardly Jens, than-100,000 milles and no region 4s too remote for the locbmotive's whiatle Hindu stalton-maaters greet Dlack Af- ream guarde as the trains putt up the pinto of Kena Coty, a akimos Watch the coa} gondoiae fying from Fairbanks down to Eeward, 543 ville. carriage in“Brest and step off in Viadi- Vostok, or in Basra at the head of the Persian Guilt: americans particularly, with thelr 280,000 miles of railway. are Iikely to t§igk of Ite conquest of the slobe, av fabrly complete. Yet 1t ix getually & very inpertect: conquest sul and one which moves forward beltingly. “The most impor- tant achievements of the rallway Dave been those of the present seperation, and greater tasks Wie. just ghead. . North Arierica betwetn 1868 and 1893 com- pleted six transcontinental lines, the| longeet being the 2.096 mallee of the Ca median Pacific. But the frst. trane- Aslatio Jine, the’ Biberian Ratlway. of more than 4000, malles, was not com- pleted till 1804. “it, wae. not until 1910 that the first trans-Andean. railway, was made possible by the piercing of @ tune), and not tnt] 1916 that trains moved over the rat trane-Australlan route, from Perth on the west ¢0 Sy4- ney onthe east. | The Cape-to-Celro| ine haw just been virtunlly falehed, with, only a sryall open saction slong he Upper Nile to interrupt travel. More ban 6,000 willes tn length, tte dimcul- ee Dave, dwarted ‘even thore of the Biberian aimdlway. 7 ‘The close of the century, in fact, sows he advance of the railwey marking a| decidediy uneven development. Can 44a, with-the world's greatest per cap- a mlleage, completed her third trans- soatinantal aystem early tn, the war, But all South America has not yet been ie to finlah a second trans-continen- a1 line. Afgentina and Chill should be ‘o-operating upon the Delf-finished allway from Buenos: Aires to Anto- agasta: but Chil! hange back. Farther north, where the continent’ broadens, Sranii haw failed to Yak. such cities as) ara and Rio Jangiro: Ih Aéeica there eno direct ail-rall route from east to] vent, Tete true that travelers can pieh 3p the Congo, and since 1918 cross BY rain from ite head-waters to -Dares- Sains on the: eat coant; while. in south Africa thefe le also a roundabout| ink by rail between, Walfish Bry on|: hé west and Delggon Bay" on the east.| But & dizect line wi} have to come., ‘rance fine planned a railway north| o south acroas the Bahara. and ap-| roved a route fro mibe Algerian cou} o the Niger River, but only 117 of thel 200: miles are yEt built. "The opportunities for great iallway|) mtrepreneura are thus fully aa large| oday a at any me in the Inst con-| ury. In pome natlons the need 1s ur-| ent.—-China, orith 4,760 salles:of-Fatt-| ray for an area of, 4.690.000 squere| niles, and Brazil, with hardly a greater nifeege than ‘Texas, are striking ex-| mples.">-Tho future’ may see “some| ingle lines, such ax tne long-proposed| an- American Railway, aa remarkablel s the trans-Siberian or Cape-to-Caigo.|, rot jt must bo recognised already, that |, ‘Dew element Des entered the, sitia-| ion with the rapid devglosment sf alr; scomnotion. "Tha eemtemary of the raif-|' ray la celebrated as British etgineers|, nature their plans for regular dirisibie| arvice ‘to Eeybt, ingi and. Australis, |" nd. America preperms ‘for the. larse-|| cale parriage Of freigh$ an¢ ‘pamen-|t ers by oir betweng Mey, Tork icago. Franee tocls lees aeed:for al” jane-Saheren Uno staan avigtgrs have own to _Deber: The orld wilt Continge 89 ‘ round equa uiticationp pyhety, bet the soul cacy af Geeotees wil te Rally, affected ty the dirigibie and ate. | eee nee cee mage ew. «Rea onan iment peers ae ees i owe weeds scrote aren ceane Gate oo ne bes eeesty qr Uae, eee oe conn aoe eee es secret age ora ose Vas aie Ganon, wel Te ‘eh Ho world bes Deas pad eee So sec 6 San vieteest. 994 bnestres geen whe wes Fae Bad coumyrocty enmuat in pian’ by fale gene and sey their way. ‘ele fe wot wellien tur. thi eeener- ears. of thon who simply one whe" are éevilch: ot heart ond chrsatc grambjers, complainers; byt 6f that finer Glas of min wheer experi- ‘With aGaite views” Who ono unafraid eg a Spm “Survie trapheings.and -vinture aspiributene te the . pede; progrees ond Pappinces, of the world Star of Rise. - enue |) A new, Negre yap appegred on the scent, The bind. who wants te ge somembere, They are jired of: plug: sing along in the same olf way: They ‘will refuse to” follow the,tob weaker and sthe-tatlow whe goes arcund with tich- Ing palms, Therefore, the thing to 40 now ls-to-organise-and organise well. Something must be done along the line, and that soon. There is much to’ be Gone if the interests of the people are to bs protected.—Bt. Lovla Argus. “all of us ho are capable. of sound thayght gro aware that we usta anyihing with consummate/s4il-uateas we heve-first’ learned how (o construct around and substantia! Youndation, and, we cannot” succeeatullh manage nd control any sort, of business or enterprise, unless’ we have been, given the necessary: training aid inatruc- Ueat—Nenport News Star. ‘To Buying power. of tex million people tw enormous. When Negro, brait and Negré hands have shown the abilly to convert our dreaiay. Into SCONE AU BRET ANE WHY TOT TNS OE les open. = The’ proot of the worth of a Negro foremiasi oF superintendent or macager lise in what be has done, and the beat posable proof will be bie’ abil- ity shown in making the mest of busi- | ness dpportuniites among our éwn peo- ple—Kansew City a’ 22s Iu the inidat of-Oie contlatad “apho- ston of the opposite race it Is Blgh ime for, the"men ‘and, women of our sroup to lay anide ‘their pecty- aitter- vaces and unite for, iyutunl pretection: ~Callfornia Voice,” 1 in body’‘gety tired “of ‘the Negro problem it is the Negro himself. He pots tired of ft Nacause be ts the. under; fog, because of the very stubbornness fit that requires 20: mich’ protesta- Jon, agitation, patience, effort and time o solve it; beckuee of the everiasting r altempts, Decauso ef {ts perpetual atruslon ‘pon bis daily-an@ hourly and Jmost momentary thought and’life and reams. Every which way be tirnn It nces hire! everywhere he goee ft duge is steps; every time he acts it bobs un. The Negro'ts thoroughly word"out with Scientists.as to Age ee ct ee apes ag eee Re has become a Badtt with Ptofer- ror'Plindéra' Petrie to Sea@himselt for 2 while tn the Bgyptian suburds-and to turn up with a couple of now elvill- tations tm his hand. Other archacolo- Binte are content to push back the frontiers of history a hundred years, or so at a-tima Flinders Petrie goen a couple of thousands yenre at a cllp. Not 0 very many yeare ags"the story ot Eaypt was aupposed to begin, with the dynastic Wings three or four thou- sané-yeurs before our own era, Then came & forward thrust by the archae- ciowiMs and ‘the, predynastic age loomed up gut of the misth. Then came & mighty shove and behind the predy~ nants stood revealed the prebistoria Egyptians. Now it would appear that hefore the problatorics there ware other elyilizations. Petrie’s last leap seems to have carried him back an entire Sve thousand years to a Badarian clvillietion of 12,000. "B.C. It was a completo civiljattion. Tt had not only fine statuary aad” pottery Sue’ ivory comb and aye paint. As betivesn ‘the civilisations of the Nile ont :the Buphrates it ured to be a clese-r&ce for priority, strongly resembling the annual:conteat betwean the” Olamta-and-the-Pirater-in-the Na= tonal League, The Nile would be leadtig by a few point when somebody from the University of Pennsylvariia of | the Britlah Museum or the “German Oriental Society would go to bat for the Mesopetamians and line out a-new stratom or temple or tivesury in the vietalty of Ur:or Kish that put the Sumerian-Accadiand Getaltaly in- the jon.” Bot siden had their rabs fans whe Hsputed whether civilisation frst, etane from Bedylonis ‘te the Nije o view versa. Of lets, hewever, tho Fayp- tamebave been threatening to + FEMWEy eco of it.” With Protamer Punters Petrie as snether John Me-| Grew 'to inapire them, the Nie ning hee taan psing Hike n bewep etre. he Fanting 2 the League of datiquicy pow to hes nee eB aera a to. poms tax" © $e goon being « vere. 4 eed a = one oes meat pacers St pas wouter tele be free one it.at hes patella Lander | Se ‘We ore making ow ena sroduatiy ee fe thd leareed proteenions, te. Foveey avesus of.thought and sélert, and: ‘We am getting more. encouregement fen eppesition in doing so, om the thes ‘eoy, porbaps, that ‘nothing succeeds tie sucoten. The race has every reason, te ‘be encquraged in-well Going. Revsits eount, and every litte helps. Mamever ee rete ek Sol} egret ope s have your own satinésotion.and. the preleo of your fallews—Mertolls Journal and Celta. o . Humpn progress ts Gepen¢ant aon, lasdesshilp, The great thinker.454:foer Giscovers the truth in #iature and bes eomes the scientist. He becomes « leader. along the lino of bis discovery, ‘and meakind Js the geiner thereby. (The man cr woman ‘who gives time and study to the solution of problems for’ ‘the betterment of the commonWeal te on ahe road {o real leaderahip. And thie fe true whether such endeavors, are im jthe world of business, politics,” the irades, profaisions or the arts and sct- ences. Such leadership is Limited only to the.8éld o€ their labor. and tts quality ‘a dependent upon:the success attained and thelr fitness and goneral ability to become the dominant _ eommabders. "Their" work Is meiéured according te the. benedits -that are: derived. by hus manity.—Northwestern_ Bulletin-Ap- peal. 5 ‘One must either ‘mpster “ecomemte conditions ad thay exist or sutter the consequences. of .poverty. This, ree duced to itn Joweat terma..meang one must speng lens (han he eerns seek week. Tk means, still: that during the months whew work. és abundant sae murt lay something: in store for the rgontha when thera ie nol work to be found, It means, also, that during the months when living expénges are at & minimum careful ‘preperation ‘will be, made for the oeason when expenses aty highest—Buffalo American, Down: the ceaturles Diogenes haw abisffied and groped, looking fr sa hoheat man. Why does he have to leek. go hard, so lone? In tt poratble that hie- tory and human development could have chrridd on as:it has In the fage of overwhelming evil? Do we forget and overlook? The honest, men are sil around Us “The men and women who will wot Ile, steal, cheat, murder and manhandle are the’ common: carrlere of OUF burden, THE BFOTR TH TE RAMs ténance of our society. There ere plenty of them, but they are not re markable becaure of thelr. righteous ving and, an m consequence, 40 not recelve the attention the rascal 4o.—t Cleveland Herald. . Long Winded Sermoas Are Always’ a Nuisance ee tay tak Scan. American sermons are too-long, com- piaing.a Wert Indlan radlo addict. tan Ihe right? Listening to" sermon, one often, wonders why the preacher id not cut ft in half and gréatly tmprove it. A’sermon, if there Ja any life in tt, ts iargety an appeal to the emotions, avid Poe was probably rifat when he said that austained appeal to the emos ons fs impossible. ‘There fe a limit to Four capacity {0 feel. However willing e-apirit, the flesh In wenk: exhauss sombverinkes. tt Whether or no. ‘The most wloquent sermon evet reached contains leas than 1500 worde and can be-read aloud in fAftron mini= ‘utes. Te was preached by-a carpenter from a mountain, and seema an ax cellent model.. Indeed, It given a Aint on this very subject: “But when yo pray, use not vain repetitions, -aa the, Reathén 4: for they think they shall be heard for thetr much -apeaking.* 2 } Posalbly our preachers have fallen into’ the same error as-the heathen. 2 they would: save thelr breath, tory people might go to church. ‘Farm-Populatten Declines - By 182,000 in- 1924.: e ‘WASHINGTON, July 11 (A.P).—The Department pf Agriculture estimates today that the'farm population of the United states decreased last year ap- proziinately-182,000. ‘The rural popola~ tion ts placed at 31,194,600 on Jancary 1, compared with 31,816,000 -0 year exrtter. Pie ea ‘The statistics shew’ varied move mente, New England and the Southi Atlaniie Mates experienced’ net tn= creases of farm population. while the other Aivistens show ‘lopees, with the Mguntetn Sates npdine In the daca farme lst your 190000 Feteraed them, end these, with Che aeteyel 19- cree of bivuys Hw) Scaths of 491.000, speceet tel. fom previntion' ee __Aitheagh the pelsise te e wr of res olematien, Ssdane see Sie te Oh wate wire ee Pret 5AM fi SP Oe es a a Re ee ee Ea a eR OR : ; , , : SE eee toe eee eng oe BS aera. ot cacao oe pee Oe Fe rs er Cae Ss ts stb eee Oe Sh S$ AEN Ee a atte imerap cabot. = m RENN eee Voge SEME Ra EN Cpe TE a Soe pea URN APTS A RET, ee PON ee ws tae, BE ae, so Meee alee 7 Sep aa ee Ra tae ne eg Sas os or Sate a ee Sa es : ely CaS Bak Bee ses Beets Cen as ee ee eer o a yore ee ge ge pe em 7 Tipe) Shirok) We Maier Baer war ae: Je: ae he 7 oe > Sad or . i = ita ie fg at ae ae, Oa mga PC maha Faget Soe AE a mas Sat a eine mamas ee Las Sots Fe rad EQ Ze Saw Nos he | © aetn e P —e 7. car wat Lt ee —™ — + oF eer Tea ee - ES ene is Nee hin the Booker 7. Weckiegten, hos rotaree & New York, having ox Noted ts Seiden tip niaatmtae somarteinn Pos. hepa cede te Saxe mS Cae pont cna Fas tnight-v_meosh, We sostly one, because we were compelled to depend elly upon. the ether fellow fey. cargoes... We failed to et business from him, and.in consequence ew ship wane operated ore joes. It is, therefore, our first care -pow, in the light of our bitter experiance, to make RE, ars Tesi en or a P Ne ve. more steam: ‘PERL Se? Miicen sedi" Bat te owrmand CONTRIBUTORS TO BLACK CROSS. “RESERVE AND OPERATING FUND maciwe: (akimacn tndsuciia: | Robert Rogersavrasvvesswiersen~ 1-00 Pram Mabery.csinwvineeweesss 1.00 Dante) Brock.srarrersxeqasesnene 2-00 H-Caaley-creeeeciemrsietirester FO Mabey McWire.cevregpt-cemene 1.00 ete. oe eee. se Me Moore. censessamessenseryaans 7 ero es oe TS Rounenccccamie Le E pe anctpecacrtecancaien T Yaseen eo B. J. Doxler......sestreeraeveres 1.00 FS cee he William “Washlhgionceccccs—s. 100 Bie denen cane: Ue Sener, puastiieereereesseoess <td OS eee Ee en esc Le Lng wor Sapa % hoe bee Miga Duitte JonnsoB....0;-22—7- E00 WHERE Letkeseseeeezeeteeeeess 1.00) Pear remi cccaceniene es oe Potett Metals intact Lat ne ee es Be es ee Foun Woolterieetesteeces 190 SS RRS oe = RAYTON, OHIO Weir rretete nee ee Pepe pe igh gewccecsecsess “108 Scam mhen ta Bispn andeiiieens oo see So onan be W. O. Saripsones.-cscescteepeees 1,00 Bia Gro. sempeoaeanmacs Hee Pewee ns "e FS aete mec tm Fete cercceostoteeccepeterone An pete Ba ae Gane mane. cacao ke Srant Kiichlngesctecsesccenceces 2.00) json raearianes Rea Bou kare, coe ee eee eee tae Prerthe Harrigon.ccsecesosgecves 1.00 Dic tieee lo e Sb eee cement bos Sefmeed Kiley: a Seinen Ike Rie semteapeiiieipecsesiaiss, -as Bo pe sence, HV. Kolley.gcocszsepeveteseeose” 1.0 BOL Won. -seeeeceeeeemte ge 108) pose Rite vecaeeeceeen, a Pins aisessssccccocreeseteecs tae Mrs. Gilbert....-..sarceesTesteees 1600) Gliriatinin Bentley. coecivonp oveoee B00 Seite ee Fe R WASHINGTON, 0. 6.” pines Cetaog epee ARES HE a ee tone oer CERT BiGnerd B, Nie nner tte to ae Pe ciinsida’ sea foes Pace i oR om TURET...--igeerrangzestst Jone, Walagap-sossenerene ses taal ia th eames 1 erates tocettretcattcnse's Vag fe ite Mcccieeteeies as mart ampbaicnn cores Real are late ccccccescsccoes Sal Reser rrr Ee Masyen...cseccis-ereesecsan th / pare Soeer cers tas Fipes Se seagags sc cyocrsseeescrs Sea a eens ae pea Spe Fetineaeeesenioe MAD Palas wrens scecorcrins— ee ek eal Reehiais fer Lapeer: oe a a ee 0S pa ees feces Beare Be Rca MEDALS NOW READY ready. “and will be - for- warded to Presidents 9f Di- Sunday, July 19, and there- after > P. L. BURROWS, _ ‘Asst. Sec’y-Ganaral : . a salad 7 Va | \y ily + S 2. : gi A | { patrior 2 \ ae ey Bade agate esseteeseesoons US ra rng ecg per eepobay ia kee meat ff eee EE Eee Be FAs ogee) Bed Sesto se is - OMEN, VA. ae ns ie WP. Boos... \oisccsoeuesccces 168 Ba IES a fey Se SEES yr PEE agg = ec isigssscsaceceey 00) Pale Se Brae Be. ov5a. sec sccn Las Eas Beinn tro cieticcecsiee bi = gle a MRE 2. ioe: Re ro RIM noe ss. Stoo Lat tao BOUT crete Peres Sa REN cers” Sa Ns laced Agesioen fi weve cea r 9 greaher ear, | a thousands of our 5 pend the revenze of Fe de. the rigs outlt, above WE Evosy. member aad well-wisher of the Universal Negra Inupomment Association, every lever :of tho race fo pn ak thin tires to contzibatic ONE DOLLAR A WEEK FOR TEN WEEKS to, the Black Cross Navigation and Trading : Cimesee, : _... To every member of :fhe who -campletes-his or her ten weeks’ contri/mution a hegutifv’d medal beer: kag’ ihe inaeriotion, “Negro Patriot,” will be given. “In to tis the marae of every recipiant of 2 medal will be recorded on our hovor roll of African patriots nnd pobtished in Tha Negse World. “ who can pre'asked to contribute more than one dollar a week; lest each and exary one is expoated G. W. 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Se eee 2 eany maralnt tn simeesio Sette a Anas dallar 1% 90 pace bepockcgtoryy - ¢ <— | Send in your doller tedey: | Acknowleigmen ~~ will ‘be made ‘through "The ‘Negno Werld every aveck. | _ Mf iuery mentber dese his and ‘ther duty at ‘this | time "the-success of ‘the ‘Black Cross Navigation mad” Tneding- Company is assuned. Z —... Address all letters to the SECRETARY ef’ the BLACK .-CROSS ‘SRESERVE~ AND -OPERATING FUND, 56 West 135th Street, New Yark City. . : * Yours for service, ~ “yo > WILLIAM L RARL | $500 Reward If I Fail to Grow Hair } t ey 4 Hair Root Heir Grower | fe 22222 | me ect Re oe ae 2! stor eer | Bee: | Sere | ea’ mat ss | pare et (ka BORTON. MABS. Bobert Bo0tt ose seeeeeeeeees 100 Winn ae ocesccceiy 189 ela belles. 2 2LSLLIIIIE 18h Token A. Ringwood Soissvccces22 80 ioeahine Harrison <2tc.cc22822, 1.80 Heorge aC. 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We Tones scozswsceces 3.00, rs Geo, WeToney scoscossoses 240 Jamen Weginn seoacciccescsss 100 Mux Johan wwletescsscesecse 00 Lowiae Jordin .tossczscescencese _ Mh Xana a. Gorden ssscscosecese 71 Elusiaiessescescsdeccessccenge Mee BAe Retauscnsccyecsccsscesede Lam i Guleniae seseadccsseascosees © 98 Amon Ciltgom <ollossgeseccsosese Lae Gunning Sinihii csccsflesescss Tam folin flash we.cccosecassccsesae Lan Mes. EG. 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GLARITA-BOCAS DEL TORO wine MOWAP voccecesscssisces M0 DM, Smith .toceclcosessesese INO Maile Pree, Sccetscseet! foe cormn-Brownovsersireeiecer wha SAT BaCkne sivsessecsseserses £00 pn ad Sreusescocseccieeisia. Lom 'Seewaer 2000+ Lan ( Wilamesan SEIT Lay Henry secsesscussueseeseeces MR ie BO oc. dae John Jo naoi, Cleveland, 0. +...41600/Hobert A. Thompran, Ambar John Appling. Cleveland, ©. .... 50:00[G. We 2. Joyner. Rankin, Pa.- Sarath Reeves, Cleveland, O. <2, 10.00) Hilder Caines, New York CH Josephine. White, Cleveland, 0... 10:00] Oven Cater. New York Clty J.C: CORGL Columbus, Olie....1 10.00] Joceph Slasnard, New Tork © Wlllam PieUnin, aikadedhla, FAS at. Wilin +. New York Clty Pa tiike eee ooetcee eis 1008] Lagan ha REISE oe Oe Phiiliy Warcen, Dhiladetpinin, Ta. ¥.00| Arnon! Soberstew Tork Cit Oséur Crawford, Philadelphia. Ys, 10.06 lavumemina, “Moreee.. Sew Ae Samuel Glasgow. Pattadetphia, «| VERY sessssressreesesereses He coeeestersecctegcenercsct 1aad Alger mescpnu ead SORC I > Gus Thoms, Plitsburgh, Puce... 1000 sinmatt tabacs Sens Feae ote See Veni: icine Pa nea fs Aina Targiiton sectuseressesese 00 Adoipnus Grown’ cioss2et0200022 Tn Moline seseescszassescaceass g 38 dy, Cooper’ 22, LEESEEEES ho Hinton Hee oe ccocccdeceeee Um Cloanonttivia Magni seeseesese 1 Matta oeeeeiis: ae Selew Toomae 200 III FLORIDA, GAMAGUEY, CUBA AWert BAU cesseceeeeeereees Hh Rw’ Memmtoriscvccescceescs] am Mapert Whynnccosecesossesess Le Hohn wencsrsccscssesesserses | tala dnahetba Mendes 200 hoa "BELIZE, BRITISH HONDURAS Vella Alexander Campin che Maurtue sYoungessccsreserssccet 2.00 Rite Watench tect Dm Jeep Sopnelvesiiceccszseccc: be Lam PUERTA CERADA, HABANA. CUBA Miutined Rennlescscscrevecurees hit SES awards 202 an) | PROV. GANTA CLARA. 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DAWKING coceeeeeeeceseeee 1007) fiw: cs cegseecoewces 1am | Eaerie cuanpionhtesesssesses 1 Shnriea ‘Hagehecctssscsccsecceee 2M it dontnons(cifesesecdessios 100 CD. omens os lywlisesiecceess 100 exunder Wiiliainsssccsseswc0: 10 ecemiay, Muar eeeeoaesenee: foe Hobert A. Thompron, Ambler. Pa. 10.08 G. We a. Joynes, Renkin, Ba. J0@8 titer Cainer, Sew’ York Ci. 1008 Olvan Chines, New York City. +, 10.00 Joseph Maynard, New York City 1000 E. M. Willie +. New York City... 1000 Liiura Whack, Brgosdyns 3. Toss 08 Araolt SoberasRew Yoik Cly., 10008 Wilnemint Mureny,, New “Karke Ermita meat) Aller Maren. ony Fuh Citys 1008 Emmott Haines, New-York CRY.. 10.00 TIS TRUE ! : “YOU HAVE. BUNIONS OF CALLUBES oN TOUR ee -. FEET? : 1g no, ANE. FOE WANT To me: GETS "EM SURE Corn and Bunion Plasters - . SEND 50 CENTS | iN MONEY aso MeN aces WE WILL MATL ANUWHERE ~ Hin THEATMET ‘ wine mtnce SPQ aly wane, ‘Whey erating. write nasi ane aaron our testewrat sags ty 790 how, oT Taee earag tt teen, fa eK te Write to the GET'S ‘EM SURE CORN CURE CO. ‘Dept £, 158, Weet 136th Stgect: New York City. Titer Bere i Selita ent wie AGENTS WANTED ME ies ete, “oeae aes Tecasenies, Seances Headquarters For Alt SCIENTIFIC BOOKS For Magical Purposes _ Ly 6a Hinde Oven Art Megte 0... .....6130 Movare Magicaws Mand bea. Shee Practica! Bypoetion end Pacem eh 00 Chevectry lnaicnteg by amavis ste; Sere Bold mets crn oem. Poe Vows, Met sone fe og Wee a ae Scopbin binecs sd peit Cs st Now Original Mggie 0 aaa raster Amarone Stumaré. 1! ‘Ragin the Severs with” tho” ioe saw to Cenvcres wich Spits Priondo te Tae mare won mae Oucee o losses Become Searerpied nner Saw a0 om 8 oe a anerte a Seg ae rortean Tritag Care: boot OT te Torrens Fottag to foot fabs... ee Scores of Catrveyeecs Reveted. - Soe. Get Aevahis Orecial Orin test. ee ae tee 7 COR Eee . _ Wha 70 gene cate tae Astre- _ B0-WOST Bnd Op, GE Beste GSE ig iy Re ae AD et Tete OF sete tee ec tmg SMa ot Saat She.” ak ae aS et see ates SOL Ee oh Eee eee pies me nie Re BS I ag en Ve SOR BATY EO a Se ie i TE ee le a remeceneit” -° a, geame- \pebeeene: eri igie de cape: Cage alee PA REC NFAT OR Pe NEWS AND VIEWS OF-U. N: E A. DIVISORS >a: , ee ts Se ee 7 Spe AMS eB s ri 8 Pg Ee oS AS ae Lee Poe 2 ee 7k Wak W tt SE RNAS, °° Ves 5 Ver PRE le: io 6 BO OF. es Z Ey ara r : NN oe rel ctr emem me chelelincindnenttnaoosouTIR pe pitt aes . ee an Reena: | % i ee ee ee ee ' ee ae RE Se eer noe OOOO EE OO eoOwET: SE ea) cemmmmmemcstacer tt, ee. ee {ine trmetbe Diviges ainda ak gvey: Day. July b The eceting evened “by the .Cys a: ’ Pravar. was ‘eater he ‘Hicks. : ‘peveident. Mr.“ L. 0, “Webb, Gesed she. program with «talk on ce" “Bin -Garvey's measage on oe treat page of the cyFFent issue of Gi Negro World was read bythe President, Mra. M, J.-Gettle. Elder 1 eee spoke in an able mnaner the duties of the members to the be pare Severg) talks ful of hows B enithisiaem were given dy-inte® ' members. in appeal for.co-op- fdon in putting over the interne al Pally for the benefit of the Parent was made by Mr. 8, Montgomery. The mesting closed with the singing of tatg-pational anthzm: #| “GERTRUDE MONTGOMERY, ] Pa ©’ Reporter. GARY, INDIANA “We are extremely proud of the prok- aes that the Gary Divislon Ix waking “Goes iwra Feaixe that there Is much room for. istprovement... The Indies of the division are to_the_front_as rar Gelore. Tag are doing fine work fe training the jventes, ranging from 1 to 1% years: We(reallze that the'glor- tops duty of carryiig, on the work of ‘selecting our motherland will wit- meataly: rest Upon: the shoulders’ of Wee tteoness - as ‘ar Jade 88 and Ud: we Wad Bs our Donored guest Lady Henrietta. Vinton Davia. Fourth Assistant President- Génoral. Lady Davis thrilled her hear- exe. With an‘ eloquent and’ vivid actourm ot:ber recent vinit to: the West Indies ‘aa@-Central Americ. Bho pictured the dabioradie-condition existing in these ovemtries..and the Southern part of thi{country. Bhe predtcted that in the wery-near future, bjack-wen in-thesé eutftties would ‘be glad to. look to Afrien an. refuge from the humillation z imination met with In the ser wie Wapeciat Titerary and Programs, .were rendered at esc of thded.‘mestings, 4 J 'MILPRED HUNTER, Reporter. Lady Henrietta Vinton Davir, Fourth Assistant President-General of the'U N.1. A. visited the Columbus Division July 3, 4 and 5. Three very happy “and succenspil maetings were held: The Givisions wan much benefited by Lady Davis visit, Bho @elivered ‘ome fine “Mer Sravels ln Vacioug parte of the world, and ber, work in thetfatereet of the Ne- -re- peoples of the world. She painted Saemrooe pictore ot the How, Sarees Garvey and te splendig work he ts “Going for his race. She also tolé of the Goat awakening thet je-noing on in Africé and the weltome she and others aeeelved from native chiefs there. Lady Davis left on-Sunday night atter many egrets wore expressed that her visit sould-not be longer. 5 G. R. CHRIBTIAN, Reporter. -CHICAGO, ILLINOIS: * @unday> July 5. Garvey Day,.found Ghicago Division unswerving in its Joyalty to the Hon. Marcus Garvey. ‘Phe attendance was good and enthun- Seem -high! ‘Attér the usual opening, ‘the Becond Vice-President, Mr. Frank Serreil, made an appeal for co-oper- ‘ation in putting over the “present pro- goumiof the organizeiion.” The npeaker Of the’hour-was the: Hoon! WV. A: Wal- Ince, president of the Chicos. local, wo spoke edoquentiy ana interentingly. ‘Cp: “Garvoyiom Under Two-Fiags.” “He Sie Ghee os oe Penns A Baby In Your Heme oy’, aa ie. fone ere | een a glam ees a Re et 4: eA “aif. GREAT TM FOR TRE HLL k ede essay, a k e DETROIT DIVISION. - = ged 000 ‘strong.’ to vigit Chicaga on chartered train, July W to'ses the busin 2 Ml activitien ot Negroes’ tn Chicago; wislt the. great parks, ihe wonder Br m, the Municipal Pier, 1he- Overton-Muliting. the-Btrga Bank; » ot UM uinerty. Lite, ad many other attractions. CAQY HENRIETTA: VINTC aor | OAVUR will also be prenant.. 7 : “6 7 det A MONSTER PARADE anc s MASS MERTING starting at +12:30,_ tr inet Haves State street, 'U. M. 1. A. Hall; to. Wabash to-38ih Street to: Dearbo Breet to Ith Gt. t0 Stats to 30th to Prairie to Wendell Phillips High Scho OS) 20th the place of meeting 2:00 P. M.A four hour program, something dot ef lH every minute, the pablic invited. Other divisions participating, West Bi oo: |fiGary Chicago Heights, Indiana Harbor and’ Robins with their bands ai oe |puniform ranks. a wat Sega oy. {PSt@- WILLIAM SHERRILL, acting president-generai, will be fMi- Chitas re | pAtmuet 154d 16.. Great convention trom Auguet 1 to:1@.U, Nel a Ha of Hog? Biat street: Coleman School. 46th Dearborn: Wendell Phillips Hf School, 28th Prairle, For infortiation call Atlanitle 1885.:" < : : SS | _WLA. WALLACE, President. a PS 6.000 atrong. to visit Chicaga on chartered train. July 3 to'ses the business jactivities of: Negrose’ in Chicego;“wisit the. great parks, ihe wonderfal the” Municipal Pier, the- Overton: Bullding.” the-Binga- Bank, the Liberty. Life, add many other attractions. taay ‘HENRIETTA: VINTON DAVIS will also be present. -> spent 3 lA MONSTER PARADE and 2 MASS MERTING starting at “12:30, from ‘4903 State Street, U.N. 1. A. Hall; to. Wabash to-3ttb Street to. Dearborn Breet to 36th Gt. t0 Staks to 30th to Prairie to Wendell Phillips High School, 39th the place of meeting 2:00 P. Mf." A four hour program, something doing fevers minute, the pablic invited. Other divisions participating, West Gary Chicago Heights, Indiana Harbor and’ Robins with their bands and) juniform ranks. a wat oe eae ae SI WILLIAM SHERRILL, acting president-general, will be Mi- Chitago,| August 15and 16.. "Great convention from Auguat 1 to'16.U. NL A. Hall fog Bank arse Coleman School, 46th Dearborn: Wendell Philips High School, 29th Prairie, For inforiiation call Atlantlc 1585.-" on ie a WA. WALLACE, President. eral who is suffering in prison, and pleaded with Mis hearers to keep thelr fat" t “ee On the plaitrom waste vieiemng aay presiden’ and Ex-Congresaman “3ur- ray, The speakers were well, received, ‘Tha program: concluded’ in the deual ‘Tha, Chicago Division held its_res- lar Sunday moeting a the Coleman ‘School,. Forty-sizth and Desrbora street,” at-3.15"p...m.'gThe meeting opaned as ugupl.with the procesilonal, singing and prayer. Our ‘processional time wa made especially impressive by the presence of the Right Honorable Lady Henrietta Vinton Davis. of New York city, who In-.guest of Chicago and nearby divinions. The juvenile -department rendered a wonderful pro- gram, The major part of thé program began with remarks from the Hon. W. A. Wallace, .president of the Chicago Division. A patilotic song wax then sung by _Mrs.. Stepper, .of-Wheelltig, W. Va, His Royal Highness, Prince’ Kojo. Talavou, of Dahamey. made ‘a very spicy and interesting talk, touch- Ing on Afzica. Mr. Fowikes, of the U. N. I. A./Employment Office. spoke on, the ‘erat number of members be- ing given’ employment through that department.* Mrs. Lula White give’ some—vety—enthustastic rem&rks. -Mr. Ben Sumbn;.¥{ce-prerident of Chicago Divictom-nove—a-resitel-dn-Freneh- for] the approyal of she Prince. After the singirig of x song by Mrs. Gooch, Lady Davis, Fourth Vice-Pren- ident-Gevera} of the U. N. 1. A., spoke. gn’ “Opportunity.” The house was packed and ‘all were ‘cheerinx and ap- plauding at every pause by Lady Davis, She showed to all prexent how ¢asy it was to redeem Africa by plctuting. the situation of the, white in Africa ax're- lated to-the Nagroes there. Special a= tention was called to the coming ff- jeen-day convention both by the Pres- dent and-Indy -Davie. The-meeting | udjourned with prayer by the.chaplain, Rev, M. Brown. «JAMES HARRELL. Reporter. DETROIT, MICHIGAN . ‘With hardly stariding room In Liberty Hall, aitd in aplte of the hot’ weather Suriday, July 12, every one present 1 ftientty watted ynuil itis end of a wop- dertut program. -Detrolt Divisidn was highly honored With many diatin- sulshed ‘visitors. _{Fitteen - members from ‘Toledo. Ohto. Division with thelr president, Hon, Mr. W. M. Davis, Rev. William Tate from Columbus. Ohio, Jand. Hon.’ Alex. Davis,” president of Akron, Ohio, Division..<The program of the evening was an follows: Many #e- ectioh& were rendered by the choir Jana “the*hand: opening address by Nr. lSerry Diggs: solo by “the division's frong ‘bird, Mrs, Mary. Massie, “It Stand Up for Garvey"; address by the Hon. ‘, M.-Davis, prasi¢ert. of (he Toledo Division, subfect, “What Tt Takes to Be, a Real Garveyite.” “The front pare of the Negro World +12 next read by the sécond vice-president. Mr. Chatles Betbel:, short address. by Rev. William ‘Tate-ot Columbus, Onle. subject.’ “True Light; nddresn and membership appeal by the Mresident of. Detroit Division, Hon. Fred E. Johnson. who alno presented the speaker of the, evening, Mr. ‘Alex Davin .of Akron, Di- vision.» Mr_ Davie wave a: Wonde-fui address which thrilled” every heart. The meeting closed with, the singing. of the Star Spengled- Banner and the National Anthem.” - ee Detroft Division: ts prepering a big excsirsion July 25, to Chicago.. We are expecting to carry | 3,000 ~ perstna.- Tickets are.-for aale-at, Liberty Han 1616 Rut Fe rip. We hope this will be the biggest hing, that ‘bas ever: Deen. put over fa: Detolt. We especially invite mumbere rom_othgr @ivisions to’ gs. within on- nie excursion, ne na amie alee ee eee la 3 RS PRPEE |! ae ee BR malaga seni 1 lays Tuty-S;7ttre-mem bers ind friends of the. Antille division ma [an unusual turnout to celebrate Garvey r ys REEKEE a Hew ore tm the division.” A speclat program Was Tenderea at 3p. Mm. in honor of the children by whom the program was rendered. . Credit. must bg giver to the lttle-‘ones for the remarkable way, They, srenteeSrood nee perform- Jancex, and’ praise to Mr. J. N. Douglas for the care he took in preparing the little ones. At 7:30 p. m. a mass meet- ing wan staged and an excellent pro- gram rendered. Mr. William H. Mills, prseident ot the tocé, aby presided, tn ts, openirig xemarka he told hin hear- Jers that aclea-tn our chief” objective and invorder’ to reach our,goal It In fexpedient that we make up oue. rhinds. Uke, our ‘grant leader. to pass through: the valley of nacrificer, 8 ‘A creditable musical program #as rendered, The" Iterary” program, though a lengthy one. caused no anxtety among the audience, All pres- ent tistened with rapt attedtion to the various speakers ax they. vigorously defined the. principles of the asgocia-" tion: THe reading of the front page of eee pega created an. atmosphere of seriousness among the-listenets. The principal xpeakers for the night were Meaws. J. N. Dourlan and Le Bryan, .executive and general- necre- taries of our focal, respectively. Me. Douglas took tar ble aubject the let- ters. ST A -R,. an’ representing “the words Serve, Trust. Abide, and Restora--| tion. He dealt with the aubsect in a. marteriy.raannar and-left a-fine im- pression on his hearers, ‘The subject of Mr. Bryan's address wax “Man, Know Thyself." He spoke ina schélarly way. He cited a num- Ser of men who have lived te Juscity ek éxinterice Décause they have been | connoissourx of themaelves. He’ paid slowing tribute to Marcus Garvey any appealed ‘o his hearers to acquit them- elves ike ren and, prepare for the ‘ound to come" confilet for the sur- rival of the fittest. Helpful addresses ver also “delivered “by Mra. M. R. ewis, Lady President: Mr.-L. Miller, reasurer, and Messrs. J. A. McLaren nd G, Edwards, members of the Tray e6 Board. =~ os Two new members were received tr he fold, and all went away feeling that, hey had bean greatly benefited. LEONARD BRYAN, Reporter. | FLORIDA, CAM., CUBA ‘Hanley, Messrs. Richards, Nelson and A, Martin, president’ of {he Florida’ Di- viston: Severatof tbe oremibers of the Cespides. Division gave short talks and pledged “their support and loyalty to the organization. Among those who apoke were; Me..C. C. Fields and Mi McKenzie, Tie “meeting closed with the singing’of the National Anthejn. ++. & G.-SINCLAIR, -Reporter, 2 BUFFALO, N.Y. |. B.-L Poston Chapter held 2 success. ful mage meeting on Bundhy, July J? | 4 spectat “PlowersDuy" prosram rellgiows service condwotee oy the | vice: present.” Mr, Segall Denn Afied the: Wilteteup, seevhie, ‘the meet. ing Vibes, tahned-evbr to: Mer Francia, silgtress “e¢ goreshontes, wh reed, tate the followin ren rectiptiom ries ‘De, Lege mpareae. G gSbirrs “ Tha es ai - We. rele aa : iSite: nee Seer. oe roan the gies atiep basal a SE Recto Seat: eee | Aeron eo finial ) " patente. ne: Se a | aca es RM ona tse. | = nares J . - . * ae FLAGS AND BANNERS OF THE.ASSOCIATION IN FUTURE MUST’ BE ORDERED, THROUGH THE- SECRETARY-GENERAL'S OFFICE IN ORDER THAT" WE MAY STANDARDIZE THE OUTPUT, OF SAME, AS. ALL FLAGS, BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 1, WILL HAVE TO’ BE -ALIKE IN ALL UNITS OF THE ASSOCIATION. i kan | AT A LATER DATE WE WILL ISSUE PRICE LI8T§, WITH SIZES, ACCORDING TO THE MATERIAL USED, WHICH MAY BE SILK OR BUNTING. § on . KINDLY. GOVERN, YOURSELVES ACCORDINGLY. z "ys, HL P. L. BURROWS,, ; SO Rone A Assistant. Secretary-General. _ YOl ING MA N GRASP YOUR, WUT. BERGE OPPORTUNITY Sy, Same on snceit siete ont ty tema? Seep ct Semereetee Be a ie ae wa eel eS P 4 “0-5 RARQEST Atte OOS 1 ee . e Po cigeeents: Ail READE |: CONQUIESs “OF. COOMASSIE - - SUING) Daeg Sg Beers 2 Re . oe eras: See nee as 2s COM ee ne acd | ede yao Ee ee i oe err s ‘ae irae 4 P G. ‘ ol ON Bi OR TROURAPOLES, . ND. ~PeKadianapeife Divisiga beld 2, sue coeatht: Dg Ties xeedting on” Sen day eventing, July’ §.: The: meeting wi Jaké' sortpemre’ redid, and the ‘gsleo jeage of the prociéqnt-senerel wis read [by the: secretgry and. enjoyed by all [present:: wélyetion ‘by -the members Short talk By the Thirds Vice-Prosiieat Rev... Lawts;, who’ presided over the ‘Tie “prégmam!tor the “eventsig :war | mostly. mad ‘wp! of testimonials ‘from the loyal: Sid dere. Who sBve Very en: jeoursging.and inspiring talks of thelr untiring determination-and ‘courage to wold up the U, N. LA. and the’ Hon. | Marcus. Garvey, under the banner of the Red, Black and Gree till -Africe has been redeemed“ and the 400,000,000 ‘Negtopes, shall enjoy lberty. ‘We were, honored to bave as opr tetinguiahed' vittor ate. Walker from ‘Cincinnati, ‘Obie. He gave & vers. ‘wonderful and. énthusiastic address. In, some-of His‘eemarks he stated that ever} other race loves Itself frat ox- cept.the Negro, and the time has come when we must love one anather— tor in unity there Jp-jstrength and power and what wegeed. 1 power, We must, remember that {t ae our ancestors who laid’ the foundation of clvilization and ruled."the world at one time. What men have.done, men can.do agaim by, sticking jogether. In his conclusion he pleaded that we do not let thls grand organtzatton go down, Rerponse bs-the chairman who'calied pon Nr. Grundy-to give some.remarkr of encoyregsment that was enjoyed by =i, Selection: by: the choir Closing prayer ‘by Rev. Burrell. The-megting slosed by, e{nging the “Ethiopian an- hem. ; ELEANOR BUGHANAN, Reporter. - CUETO, . ORIENTE,. CUBA This division Haw been, unable to held tis meetings regularly on account o! the recent heavy rains in this district ‘The'meetng on July-5 "was a -ereat sugeess-and-showed that interest n the fing wax Called to order by'ttie chap- lain, “Mr. Je Davidson, who conducted the religious: service. Before turning the nieeting over to the chairman, Mr. Davidson” aleo made some instructive remarks regarding the signiticance ‘of Garvey Day wndthe jleceasity for much falth and prayer “at this time. ‘The ‘meeting -was turned overate_the chair- man, whe .condueted the literary pro- gram. The frat speaker was Mr. H: A. Willams,<executive secretary. Mr. ‘Willams, was followed by Mr. Me- Larty, Both speakers urged” greater effort on the part of the membership to help put over‘the program xo’ dear to the heart of the leader how: fmpris~ oned. Mr. Sfedman Tv} rendered a rolo entitled, ““Garve; and the Na- Udns.” Ther-meeting cloned ‘with’ the ainging of ihe Nations? Agghem. : S. W. SIMMS, Reporter. July 8 was aqred letter day in the history of the Mirande Division. This was the celebration of Garvey Day, which, due to the streniious effortaypt the indefatigable Secretary. Bro: J. B. Leyden-Newsholme, was attended with Servet goin at gn ee eee Doe Parant, Body is the very heart of the. organization, . If . it fails: to function properly the whole’ organization: is sick.’ "1. mbt," therefore, call every member's ‘attention to the fact- -that the’ Pareit Body is passing through’a Very critical period. “Obligations are pressing tom every side, “The monthly rey-, enue -received ‘in “the ‘way’ of dues:in’ no ‘wise: enables ‘us to. Meet these ‘obligations. “We. are, ‘therefore; requesting egch, Division to raise,a special collection for the Parent Body every.” day during the whole of their local convention. This need nat” ‘interfere with your regular collection. it simply“means’ that at each meeting” the members’ and friends must be given “én “opportunity to contribute to. thie Parent Body:. These collec- tions mtist be telegraphed-to.the:Parent Body daily as taken ‘ap. Bs WILLIAM L. SHERRILL, ~~ Mel +S Meting: Bresident-Gerieral. °° the ytmost success. From the hour:o! .4 pe m:, Libécty Hall was comfortably filled’ with! a representative gathering -conapleuous “among Whom were the officers and’ meiners of, the Mutual Help’ Soctety, of .Mirfmdaie-the choral ‘section of which. under. the’ direction of: thelr organist, Mra. F, J, Watson, contributed largely to the program for the evening. ~ é 5 . ‘Thermeeting was called to order by the chaplain, and, opsned,-with ..the ‘einging. of Hyvim-2é-tront ‘tne: ritual, with Miss B: M. Thomas presiding at “the: ergan.- The usual preliminaries being beautifully cagfied through by the chaplain, the meeting was: turned ovér to-the president, Mr. J. H, Rick-. ets; Ha gave.a warm: and inspiring addrejs.on: the past achievements of members of the race and an otitline of the-work dohe. by, thé Hon. Marcus Garvey. Next was a thoughital speech by the vice-president. Mr. A. Clarke. ils theme’ waa’ a comparison of the work of Jeaus Christ on earth and that! of the Mon Marcus Garvey. Then’ comes a well-thought-out paper by Mr. Leyden-Newsholme dealing with the higher ideals. of leadership.’ which was Ustened to with rapt attention. A rect-| tatio® by Mr. H.C. Buchanan was next given and. followed by an Wddrenp yoy. Mr. Wr Rul secretary to the trustee board, who miade an earnest appeal for patience and permeverance. The choral itemx were rich and. varied and did not fail to receive tbe full applause of the audience.” Among them may. de mentioned’ the duet. “Unanswered Yet.” by Mis, F. J. Watson and, Mr. Leyden- Newaholte. "This wax a perfect blend- ng of two mauslenlly trained voices. The pieces “Prees On ahd “Be a Hero" wore alno beautlfuly ‘rendered by the! choir ‘of the Siitual Help Society, as also the holos by’ Aesars. Nelson. and Grant, with ofgan accompaniment: by Nir: Leyderi-Newsholme. -In his clos- ing address, the’president thanked all those Who no kindly contributed to the program and pressed the hope that on next Garvey ‘Day they will show ‘the ame spirit of earnestness, unity and enthusiasm which permeated the hall] hat afterrioon, ‘The Ethioplan Anthem, which was’ lustily sung, brought the meeting to a’close. . J. B, LEYDEN-NEWSHOLME, _ ae Reporter, Wonders, Secrets, ; eae Satire See ‘. Ezsiseas RUDOLYR SALE co. + 48 Gt. NIebolen Place, Sew Tork City ‘SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LOCAL, CONVENTIONS To the Divisions. and C&gpters of the Universal Negro 7 Unprodament: Association: ve ee ee te |. The time. is fast approaching for your Local Convention tobe held ae per Finatructions issued by the President General, Hon. Marcue Garvey. dated May’, which appeared in the “Negro World.” in the isaue of May.18, 1925, and in subsequent issues. 5 Mr. Garvey then’ said he considered it best. suitably for the permsnent existance of the development of the Universe) Negro. improvement Asso- ciation and further to safeguard the pame agaiost maliciovs.and wicked de- signs, that the uaual Annual international Gonventian be not “held, and instructed, that « 18 days Local Convention be held .inelead. 3 We are now for that purpose, issuing special instructions for your guid- arige: : ‘ . 1, No one shall be admitted to the Local Convention but 2 member of the ‘Universal Negee- Improvement Association, exrept with iy resommandatjon froma High Official, See Section (4) Article (1) of the natitution. - 7 Z-No Member. ef a Division, Chapter or Unit, shaft: be efigible to'sit In your Local Convention who ie net financial with the Otvision ‘apd the Par- ent Body. : : b 3. No Division or Chapter with Jése than fifty (60) financial Members should hold these Local Conventions, but should combine their efforts with the largest Division or Chapter in their City or Town. * 4. Each Division, Chapter or Unit, shall bear the expanses of its own Delegate. “ : . : - 5. No Division in one State should. attend the Local Convention in an- other State, — . oes : & Your subjects must be discussed for.the.edvancement of the Organiea- tion generally and for the progress anid development ‘of your Community. Your Programs must be if keeping with the established principles of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. A copy of your minutes must be forwarded, to the Office of the Secretary ‘General iintédiately. upon the rising of Convention. ae sees “ 7. The Political condition of your Comminity “knd:the pert.which you will play myst be discussed with care and should forma. very vital issue in your Lecal Convention, ws ; z P.L. BURROWS," - - a 29 “* "+ Asst.’ Secretary-General, IF YOU WANT TO. BE™ Q.. BE *.:. LUCKY, HAPPY AND:WELL.. . =] me Your Secrets to the Right Man. Happy In_Friendship, Business and Domestic Affairs. “High: John: the Conqueror, CALL, or If Out of Town: WRITE UOTE ln ade seers nave mony. caters sg 1) GASH OR CREDIT... atity ~ DOWNING HERB (CO. ?2. _) 99 DOWNING st, BROOKLYN::N. | “HOW-TO: ACQUIRE). See “READ -~. ree THE PRELOSOPEY AND OPEMDNS.OF MARCUS CARVEY ‘Regre:.. This wendedel book gives you.9 world of informé- tin ants te of tpn Be css Oller cate, [Glia He hn willy a ee ee eee oe Po cs Sane paid, Pa. a + LAPLACE, LAS: pee meee.” Fa under the leadership of our faithful and hardwerking— president, G- Wil- Mam Jackson. The legion -was_recently thony, fAirat“Heutenant. We: have: had mouch-opporition to meet-and overcoine: and We know that the end Is not ‘yet. But as long as ife lasts, the ‘members of this division Intend to watch, fight and pray. We Will net reat unt? the compellédto nuffer sescegation, als- crim’ration and! humi'iations- of all WINSTON-SALEM N.C: . The, faithfulness, of: the) migmbers of inte device piearkrvahown: by Se | checrtial qgit-o2 way.tn which ineg, Fe te the repeated Snincial [demandgmmaich we have been com- polled ‘auging the past’ months. Mase mectings ars. be)d regularly, by the division and weeny, interesting pro- grams ;rendered.. The attendance ‘at these meetings. fs uiways,good.' On May 17, Capt. J. G, Goode,.2 walle knwn resident df_this community and ‘a charter member of <Re division. de- livered the ‘principal address. | Mrs Lackle K: Lytla also Terved ov the:pro- gram: On May 34, Rey. W..R. Parham A@ivered the ‘addroas of the evening. A splendid. paper by Miss. 4; Brises.was aleo a fine’ feature on the-program.” On ‘June 27, the “ptincinal: parucipants on the ‘programiwere: Dz. Hiram, Hairaton and the: ‘Migsés Dorothy Hall and Bertha Edwards. Mr. Craig Crone ‘was the principal speaker. On June 24, Mr. ©. N..Granderson, férmerly-ot this State, but now of Chicago, was the dis~ MIngwiuied guest of he alvision and the spaker of the evening. On this qecasion, the Felton later®jfavored, us with-a-numiber: by- ther: temowe- quar tes * On July 14_ Mr T_Ht_Glibess. and Mrs. ¥. J. Williams addressed we. The musical Program on-this occasion was especiaily good. The program, was. arrariged ‘by Mq. A. Ke Tate. The UNA. Band, Srgatitied and aitet= ed by Prof. J. S. Reaves, 1s rendering éplendid service.We ‘are yery proud of It. : We regret to report the death of Mr. John Landingham, a young but faith~ ful member of the divieion. Mr. Land- Ingham was buried on July 4. ‘The legion had charge of the seryice.” J. H. R. GLEAVES, Reporter. NA rea . * en = Bd HS ANS ay sete nies oe ern ee - a ‘ Zoli, fs iz bie PST Sale gee te TRESS pea an ne eee SEER eee 7 Q PRIS "« ee ete _ ne ne SE eee ae ee RRR RIE GR Tear mR s - cs ga Bg EE MY eee, Be ee elon e Soe : Nae ee ieee ee ee ere TN ORe jak . iawet-* als, a a aay agrees CAP eR fetayer SRS oath ay eels yr te Be. ¢: ee bbe Sos kek herlety s the +p Pent, ne DS Be Pipes Stee Ree et econ ek SE Ne Rae gt oS eon Sie a i Se se ten ae a ee oe weit ee diay SON AM ga PPT ge tet Ba A i a a aE eee eS elt, pa an re ne ee Sis ne Sane Se Cometh lbw oes Dade um ne Sle ati ail Malaise iS St I a ge TAD WICAMAGAG ocd ULE Ae Lae Vv FLARE oe ae ee SBUDSESS THE. CURSE OF INDIVIDUALS,“ DAERCRARKD YOUTHS BTEC EARATET E Rn eee - "VHERE ccgnes a time in the lives of individuals, dations. and " races, whea they should ‘geriogsly tele themselves .to task “:. tordetermine whether they have reached the goal of success, “@r'ate on the road'‘to it; or whether, being buffeted bythe winds of “eirowmetance, they are leaving -the progressive-path and;losing-them- selon in the fuire of Slothfuiness 20° 0:07 7 | te “Man's objective should not paly be: to get the beat out of life, but to give of his best'to life. ‘The selfish jndiyidiial is never truly beppy- ‘The longer tie lives the more ‘ynhappy he becomes. The world’ Logins and ends:with himself, and in such narfow confines the Sun- shine of Lov¢ cannot penetrate, and Happiness, the generated warmth from love, is non-existent. Until he can expand hid selfish being, share ‘the: joys” of his “neighbors, ‘and “help-to' lighten -their- ‘burdens, he contributes nothing’ to:life. arid’ quite naturally he gets, nothingin return. If he has hoarded ‘wealth,-he Has to leave’ it all when Death calls, and his end is. made wretched by vgin_chidings and regrets. He. who loves his brother man truly lives. » The’ selfish nations that thrive on the sweat and life‘blood of op- pressed. peoples” newer flourish for ‘long, because their “prosperity is not built on righteousness, and they. fall never to rise again. . To- day we see this exemplified in the crumbling of two great empires in Europe. ‘They are about to fall, but like the dying ass, they are giv- “ing their Hardest kicks. “Retribution surely ovgrtakes phe guilty.” AW of the nations, so of the raves. ‘Thre white race tas traits day; aiid now twilight js closing in on it. The white man on the whole has been selfish and inhuman in his dealings: with dark humanity, and.as he foresees the eclipse. of his power, he becomes fegrful. Yes, he js fearful, becatise he is taking stock of his misdeeds, and realizes. that during the centuries of his existence -he. has been” sowing.the seeds of hate, and just as love begets love, so‘hate begets hate, and the dark avenger will-hasten him to hisdoom. | :° Had he sown the segds of love and-kindness, he would reap the liarvest of good will, and all humanity would bless him. ;:He shows o-aige of repentance, however, grid the Great. Architect, as” pro- nounced, the verdict, “Ye are not fit to lead; step.down and-give the. place to a worthier race.”. *- ae a ave ‘Let us all- individually and -collectively. examine ourselves care- fully as-to.our positions:in life. Are we fit subjects to, enjoy. the _picasings of life? Arid are we contributors to that. great forit of human kindness? ..No‘sman can be great if-he is selfish." "The men who. have made great material contributions to humanity have beeh devoid of selfishness;:arid: likewise have made their spiritual coritri- bations., The greatest reformer of all’ times has said, “Take no thought of. yottrselves.” 9 +", s - ; . “Service to race, according’ to'uur leader, Marcus, means sacrifice.” and'the ‘man or woman who essays’ to work for the-betterment of the, Negro race must forget-self in the struggle upward, so that in the’end all will enjoy life more abundantly, s___«. fi We Want.1,000Agents i ce To Sell Hobb's Famous ~ e e HAIR GROWER ae | Hobb's Grower Wi grew Wate tn One 7 ie SEND $1.00 For xpritasrimart oat ete tor For Feil Particulars Write to ie Dora Hobbs Manufacturing Co. - hg ‘BRO Weed Léles Street x Stew Tone cate am " ¥ me Ie eo & ‘ Care’ of “Mothers During ~ United States Public Health Service instrest nd social leaders of France a: "Ftezaing the demand that expect? ant mothers should have adequate med- ical cate, and that, therefore, it Is es- ‘ienifai to” make’ compulsory the early notifleation of pregnancy, so that ven- eréal affliction, when present, may’ be Getected and the clnciaent danger to the unborn child prevented. It 1s net sumMctent to protért.the child only from the moment of its birth, as, according Seateoe ee Spee ses ce ‘tee survice enero Sen Say, Be 4. tee a ee a eoretriss a ane oe to_Prot_A_Couvelaire. of the Baud: locae Hospital of-Paris, 41 per cent of the deaths of infants during pres- mancy are‘due to syphilis. ‘There {s considerable evidence that, the. number of such deaths may be greatly reduced by timely examination and care of ex- pectant mothers. Similarly the cop- ference of Venereal Disease Control of- ficers of the State Health Dephrtments and the United States Public Health Service, held at Hot Springs, Arkansas, in December of last -year, urged that special attention to all details should be given in tho “treatment of women becaune of the pobsibility of the trans: gulesion of the Giocase to the chile.” pate becscen = et ae lace TO 1 PROGRESS . - Se ee re eet ne ge aig eee When you asked me: for en artic Ser veer page this afternean I was cor tafe that I hed no subject upon which |$0 write; but.as I gane.eut of my win: Gove sootas om tee petat of retiring, J ad pissity ot teed tor thought. - Under ‘my windew are. ¢even. ce wore beys-raagtng in ages from ehir, tesa to perhaps sizteen—Just on the jeve of young mankdod—the. future fathers and Ddullders of ‘otr race—e wace.of which we should be 20 proud— {-what-are-they—éoing ?—-' Playing sonie wholesome wiime, dlecussiig the topics of the day, commenting upon. the deeds of and great men and of thelr race or'of other races? ‘No, I am sorry to say, they are more Uke monkeys than human beings ‘Three .or four of them are clapping thelr Randa. One has stick andi Deating a tatto apén the electric: tight post: another, is drumming on an old tin boX which’ someone threw out: yet a ;-on_ths top of a packing box, and all are making as na) is feet and afhging in unison. “Hey. Hey! Hof, hey!" while in the centre—they have formed a circle—the spice of the crowd Ig doing the-wo!l-known and ean- hy. regogntsed-~'“Charteston:"—tr whch .he is injecting x, many. animal antics as bis hotlow brain ean con- cave es o Now are not these -the actions of primitive man? When we see pictures pf our forefathers, poor benighted mer who have never had an opportuniey'“t know better and to learn better, hold: ing their ritual dances, we smile, of sigh oFshrug our shoulders and. say that §t cannoAt- bé true; yet here in this enlightened age, in the midst of civilization with its generous supply of free schooln amt other Institutions o ‘Tearning aad culurié, we find our young Boys cutting up thexo sort of. capers, “Boys will be boys” you will say Yen. that ix, nértsctly" true—but, tn be- ing boys ciurft “we form’ habics .an¢ perform deeds Which will teed .to “the upbuilding and’ betterment of tbe race: Why will we ax x whole—father anc mothers, teachers and guerdians—not renlize thut tha child of todey ta the man‘of tomorrow, and that “Just ae fs bent a Uttle twig. 4p will the tree be when grows big.” and try to Instill Inte thoxe young -minds something whick will tend to progitssion -and not. "te relrogrension. : ‘Are we as a race going to really achieve something good and worth- while, or.are .«6:Koing to “Churleston’ right on down through the years t come an we have through the days tha are punt? If we are,-Lcan see no, aa! vation, but a dark future for us, We complain,.and justly complain, that «it fa race wo aro held back, imposed upor agi’ downtrodden; but do you no think’ we should stop and analyse out selves and see (ft wa ourselves do no in gome measure contribute to our 4¢. plorable condition and to tWe opinions -which the other raccs have of ua? 1, myaéif am a Negro, but I am: try- Ing to Yok up. Hundreds pf otnen are trylfg to aspire, but when T ne performances as I viewed tonight (I fg the Ilttle. phings that really count you. know), esming fram the youth o our rece, I Jn @ way cannot help ark- Ing. “Are we prokresting as wo would wah, oF are we slipping back 10 teno- rance and darkness?” ~ GARRIE MERO LEDEATT. | There bre appraximately 3.199 Negro —c. P. BY . "er Honored) . $ Ov’ Vfe RM of a es aH aa A | . Lowa J NSS Se Y Sag yy H:. tot te gation to at fler which = splee@id Heéeon Su- ‘Six Coach will $e given to Miss Hoon hay rv srt te, ainttes cay, oe (the eater if sack orate be Soiree wees Sere hee st to tenieys Goes Brews earns ets at eR OR roa rik « Ek *S ee “a 2: gaits Sit io ote we hy bk en Ee ES yy ee PEACE POINTS FOR WOME BES ater a Fourteen points for domestic’ felicity initTaF Tn genieyAT Intent IC not In direc Yon tothose proposed by the late Presdent’: Wilson, were introduced in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn by Mya Momhray_Whitity as one_of the exhibits in her sult for separagion. She sought 375 2 week allmony and $1,000. counsel fees. pending tila)... Upon be® application Juntico Cropesy Feserved decialon, She alloges. crite nd inhuman areftment and says that her husband, former flyer and now an executive in arpaper company, has ai Income of $10,000 a-year. The Whit- Heya were maatried In 152-and have two, childrea. . sen The points were included in « letter from “Mra, Whitney. to. her husband, -who.dentes all charges, 4i.a-time when Oley Were Uvhig apaci. “IU follow’ tn parts “3 ot The Fourteen Points “Dear Jack: ct “I told“you that I would give you my. Verdict today. and I am keeping my Word.’ I'sr-willing t6 go to an apartinent ‘With you only upon the following con- ditignx, which I deem very fair: “1: That You understand that thie te [Zour ast chance Co.prove yourself. “2. That the home that we may form wilt be run on, the principler of love and gentleness and in no doing, the Baby will kriow only kindness from One Parent to-another. - #'3. Thet there will be no interference or, auetattons from ‘in-law on elther side. “B, ‘ -"4, That the running of the housé and the managing ‘of, the: clothing of the baby and myself ie’ my.departmient, And. your business is yours, | ie Flint wher Lienve my mothers home her financla. obiteation cenyes ‘and I shail Took to you for-tuilds which F deom_nacensury. bel 16. “That C will havo,help, to relieve me from: the “heaylent crudgery, gpm Jae scrubbing floors, waxhing, etc.Aan/ at some one will come in eo trae | can Jeave.the baby oceaulonslly ‘in ,the atternootfand evening. St “7. That { have -your-entite conflr dence in financial matter and an’ ac- cein to your bank account, and at lea have some. small margin for-myscif, a0 that T shouldn't feel ax poor as a church moure, % °S ‘That thie marriage shall he run fon x Afiy-Aifty basis, with nelther of us trying torrule, the ather: but when potntn of disnension arise, a calnt dis- eussion of the facts” - Bans “Entestaining of Ladies” bg, tas Twill have Sour utmost co: operation and thoughtfulness in every wey. "10, Thay_we will stop all discussion of past upptrasantnoss, SH, YAW will have one night week for yourself anid T will have the same, Werkenda we hoth piny when the work In done. . "32, Ne more talle of bachelor free- dom nor entertaining of young ladjen by yan, 2 \ "18, ‘That you will ‘not put obstacles tn my path if a divorce seeme to be the heat solution. “ti, That you will stick always to tha truth and non deny. statements “in reply,.Mr. Whithey said that the etter “rend for all the world ike tha terme, df x victoriown general to a for he hae forced to an tinconditional sur- render.” : “I am willing to talk with. you and ace What we'can do to Kmooth out our Aiterencen, but Tam not. going to sign on any: dotted line.” he added, and urged her to read over her letters, of which she wrote she had kept a copy. He “expressed doubt that tho terme would lead to a real reconciliation. , zee Aimentots Yager erin ie ‘the Inver: Tog SF "tne 'smunent: phe i preset SaaS The ‘ast word’ Ie vogieet ching, Women ‘want it atvsleht® dex scase IE reltewse tae maayaitiments, pee Sellar fo them. Thie stings makes other srethoas of Gnaching astm ‘Steciets ane ‘une Tieegle. “genie ean "make. d1e.9b cordi2 08 pat day~ “MScal and "Sat of town, agente Tented?” dest commissions, "Gena Weiss Gees, will forward propa, aguate loa tis our ange powder 8 Boog! triketee, he Xmericdn veges Core’ Pe Tenth Si. Now Fork Guy. Dope, Ta, aes | oe [eee cee ae ina ] Sees Fe ergo : eae mages serie Scone | Ear met eee See ees | rate aN Se oot Tans fos Spore seas ees diapers may leqd to écxems: The dia- enpe Is alve caused by Cigestive troubles due te ovectesding-and often appeare in’ conajipated bables. ‘There -causes suggest the measures needed for “its ‘evention. The disease should be TWOMLEd” DY PYAAR. —NETIBGE SouD nor plain water should be used on the BROAN WHI are Ua The Fead and face. Bran or starch water umly be used if necessacy, Ut 1. of the greatest Importance thaP the ehild Eave A-tree-bowel-movement-overy-day.—Ta allay the itching dbver.the parte with Dorie acid powder, and see that. the baby’ dots’ not scratch the inftamed skin. 7 (To de continued in wext week's ‘isse.) NEWBURG. N. ¥.-On last Saturday the Empire Btate Federation of Wom- en's Clubs met and adopted as “untrue and sland@rous” any reflections on the contict of Hegre troye in Pranco dur ing the World War. . The, Federation went on recont ax deeply-resenting the memoirs of. General Robert Lee Bul- lard, and called upon the Negro youth of New York State to avail themselves of all opportunities for training and education, ‘both military an@ otherwise, “How to Make Othe . Love You Hole to chares and tacinate! whom ou il ake han act Cl Hert Tarsiery to Soain, and Ture to. Spanish Mrumorny Bice Bork tells what to dn Cg I Sacniist “plata ‘wrapperd Cannot. be be: SEAPETL sr oie, SH Turpriding revsiotion {Com weird,’ won: Sen Tiaege Boek Areca Whe: ine,’ Kee, Dept jaslo Barreto, Teetucns), Rie te, Totoro, Brows oth ee et cael EE a ee ee el VOTE FOR P. L. BURROWS IN. WALKER TRIP-AROUND- As readers ate aware, the Madam C. J. Walker Co. Inc., popular. heauty specialists, have in- augurated a unique-contest. as a result of which several men and women adjudged the ‘most popular in‘ various Negro institutions in this country wilf*be sent on a trip around the world: at the company’s expense. “ — Ancertain-voting strength is assigned to each of the many preparations of the Walker Ce. and | buyers are asked to give their votes to: their favorite fandidate. "7 * — Mr. Percival L. Burrows, the energetic Assistant Secretary-Gerieral of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, is one of the candidates, and in a.letter, published below. is seeking ~ the support of the members of the organization. . : Mr. Burrows’ participation in the contest has the sanction of the Hon, Marcus Garvey, Presi< *] dent-General of the Universal Negro Improvement <\ssociatjon. : ws : Mr. Garvey’s Sanction : p< . . Atlanta, Ga.. July 1, 1925. 7 7 Mr. Percival Burrows, . : 5 56 West 135th Street, 4 a ee x New York City. i‘ . Your letter received, also Oshorn's. I can.see no reason why you may 3 not enter the contest for trip around the world. , o & ae MARCUS GARVEY. . ; : : Mr. Burrows’ Appeal -- To Officers and Members of the Divisions of the’ Universal Negro Improvement Association: Dear Co-workers: I have been nominated by the Madam.C. J. Walker Co..'Inc., asa tittes- tant for their trip around the world: In this I am_representing the Universal Negro Itiprove- ment Association, as indorsed by the Hon. Marcus Garvey’in his telegram reproduced above. é) 7 Festog dare thet] haf reeelve your support ‘and. thereby reflect. messuré of the grest.. strength of our organization, I have'the hewor.tobe |...” . Ste df See oon ial Your obedient servant," -'e : woe, PES “ : B. L. BURROWS, .-.. e a gg sats oe Asvistant Secragary-Geseral, U.N. TA.” <<... THE VOTING STRENGTH OF THE VARIOUS PREPARATIONS, 6 INDICATED, BELOW - a6 we . fi oe . Ne eae = Gabverer 805, 300, ‘Tetaey Sobre: 89s, ar 100. voten; Voqseaity Shemmatiy. BRE eae pees vie ee a ee ae, 3 ae SEA: Or 0 verse: Frotio fester Water <<a. SLA ly gosta os Aoits Ms AS eee a ae et gS, ME ce ee eee eile Common of Cheddren Bythe Bisci Gress Nurges of New Verk -PRICKLY HEAT—Thie ‘disease te ue-to-thie heat of eunaise oF to..uin- necessary heavy undercloihiag. » It Bianleate Teel faa Nie Fee FRG eMTEN comes when the baby ts oyer-neated and fades away under codler conditions, It Ja°very annoying and makes che baby frOttur and "restleas:” “Ifthe ran ap- Pears In cold weaiher the "Gaby Is too warnily divesed. Heavy fanneis are to" bo svolded and a thin garmont ‘shouldbe worn next to the kin. When Je in caused by: summer heat, the Baby whould be made as cool es possible, drecsed in the thinnest clothing and Frequently bathed lu cool’ watse. Soap should never be used on’-an Infamed skin, but starch or. bicarbonate of rode dissolvéd tito the Water will help to relieve the Intense itching. . Oin'mente are not #0 soothing in this condition au powders. - CHAFING.—A fat baby ts vocy apt to become chafed in the folda and credncs of the skin, Chafted flesh should not hgye coup used upon’ It Keep the skin clean und uso babs’s talcum powder. In obstinaie cases clean with fresh olive olf only. using no eee ne Ecue. [A.—This Is one of the most wont offat and anvigytrig, affitetions of he" bitivod: It fa Characterized by a Leila skin often covered with tiny sae oF crust, sometimes having a 4fvatedy Aischarge: at other timer dry gad .poaly. Some babies have. pre- disposition to the disease, and in them slight cause fs suMcienf-to produce 140. & baby's “skin is. very delicate ana any ‘irritation, such as chapping from expdsare to cold wind,. or. the use: of bapa ‘wafer, strong soap or unclean Almost every Negro organ- ization is “sepreseaited in ‘this contest, and I am“3ure that it ig your desire that“we Should. win. _ It is my desire’ es your rép- resentatve to wih first: prize; but-witheut your co-operation this cennot be sceomplished. Sas al | Re eae eee a prcieaceicnanareernmnerea, The Women Protest (Columble Prese Bureau; The report is current that our halre. dressers are forming a national Oryant« aatlon.—C. P.-B.. : ‘Charteston- County, 8. C, has-896, lees Negro farmers’ than five years age, STRANGE POWER . | } z Noqlioe Knloeteereittiisious adviace wapae BS a itaet cad onate dietee® aisttes nogialecota--i"'cas "golo you' concer Ca TE Dusinese, domestic, iove aftaire seeiot Sealiond ee roe be at Seiangetiadhe Paquin taboos agg Marner Warm coe vecult ua You's base Theda . z ‘Aarons your letter tor 5 Grace Gray de Long: . MIAMI, FLORIDA , ‘Tam, therefore, secking your support and would be ‘glad if you would forward to .me COUPONS found in all pack- | Ages Of her preparations, 2 st of which ié given below. "For any further informa | tion please communicate with. me ° a eflect.2 messuré of the grest. |] vee EU lient servant, © Ee _.P. L. BURROWS, ... - § cropary-Geberal, UNA. * Hf ARATIONS ‘18 INDICATED, 3 a oo Be Mier 100 votes; Bi weer 160 .vaen, =e HON. MARCUS GARVEY STARTS FUND WITH $50 In a telegram to Sir William Sherrill in regard to the international rally for support for the parent Body, Hon. Marcus Garvey says: "I heartily endorse and support the effort to raise a fund of $50,000 for the work of the Association. I feel sure that the membership everywhere will rally to the call. I contribute gladly from my meagre means. $50 to the fund. Best wishes for success." CONTRIBUTORS TO PARENT BODY Universal Negro Improvement Association $50,000 Marous Garvey $50.00 Amy Jacques Garvey 10.00 W. L. Mackill $50.00 P. L. Burrows 5.00 Levi Lord 5.00 Alfred Robinson 5.00 Z. L. Mackey 5.00 D. L. King 5.00 A. Ward 5.00 Charles P. Bailey 5.00 C. G. Wynn 2.00 Emmund Royster 1.00 A. Rothery 1.00 Mr. Thompson 1.00 Mary Holmes 1.00 Robert Stewart 1.00 J. S. Mills 1.00 R. Clark 1.00 Archibald Alleyne 1.00 C. Daniel 1.00 M. Russell 1.00 Prescilla Taylor 1.00 Catherine Miller 1.00 A. friend 1.00 A. friend 1.00 W. W. Weich 1.00 Kate Levy 1.00 Kelly C. Small 1.00 Mary Hunte 1.00 William Marshall 1.00 A. friend 1.00 Lawrence Bruno 1.00 B. Fobler 1.00 J. Thomas 1.00 Edwin Campbell 1.00 A. friend 1.00 C. Fobler 1.00 A. friend 1.00 A. friend 2.50 C. Coelle, Brooklyn, N. Y. $5.00 AKRON, OHIO John McElwain .1.00 E. Shakespeare .1.00 Lilly Taylor .1.00 James Taylor .1.00 Joe Player .1.00 Sam Thomas .1.00 Ida Burris .1.00 Mary Durman .1.00 William Powell .1.00 M. S. Knott .1.00 John Autry .1.00 Emma Autry .1.00 N. E. Autry .1.00 Rosa McElwain .1.00 Biner James .1.00 Sarah Wimbish .1.00 Effie Player .1.00 Ellen Lyles .1.00 Eliza Porch .1.00 Leona McCarcvey .1.00 Fannie M. McCarcvey .1.00 BERKLFY. VA. Albert Johnson .1.00 Lissie Johnson .1.00 G. H. Bowe .1.00 GARY. IND. Gary Division .112.75 Mrs. Lula Carson, Springfield, O. $5.50 William Carson, Springfield, O. $5.00 Jaxinx R. Cowherd, Indianaapolis, Ind. $5.00 P. S. Waterhouse, New Orleans, La. $5.00 August A. Pierce, New Orleans, La. $5.00 Louis Drew, Atlantic City, N. J. $1.00 Rosa Drew, Atlantic City, N. J. $1.00 P. I. Parrison, Los Angeles, Cal. $1.00 Jake' Carr, Homestead, Pa. $5.00 Phoenix Division, Phoenix, Ariz. $10.00 Gadson Fluitt, Lackawanna, N. Y. $1.00 Fluitt, Lackawanna, N. Y. $1.00 Ida Scott, Pacific Bluff, Mo. $1.00 Alice Thomas, Poplar Bluff, Mo. $10.00 Wilfred Brook, N. Y. $1.00 my first necessity was to get a piece for the night. *Hearing that much color prejudice had arisen in Shanghai, pinned the war, I did not wish to suffer the embarrassment of being reduced at an hotel and checked my bags at the railroad station while I went on a commuterizing tour of the town. I saw many places but hesitated to enter nor did I see a single colored person, though I walked around for several hours. At last I saw the T. M. C. A. sign and went in. The lady in charge received me courteously but said she hadn't a single vacancy, and after trying to get me a room elsewhere, suggested that I try a certain hotel, which turned out to be one of the best in town. I finally decided to try it, and was received with instant courtesy. I was handed the foreign visitors' book wherein I had to tell about myself, and my parents, where I was born, and my age, etc. This is one of the unrepealed war measures. Most of the other names on the page were Americans who had just arrived like myself. One of the first things the American visitors did was to flock to the saloons, ordering liquor eagerly for the fun of the thing and enjoying themselves like children just out from under the disciplinary eye of the teacher. To make matters worse, the George Washington, like the other chape of the American Line, is really bone dry. As for me I had a glass of fine port just for luck. For the night's accommodation and breakfast next morning I paid three dollars. The accommodation was much inferior to what I would have received in the United States for a like sum. Housing is much inferior to the States. Early next morning I took the Great Western for Cornwall, where the opening scenes in my approaching novel are laid. After a pleasant ride through some of the loveliest country I have ever seen I arrived in the quaint and delightful old town of Penzance. At this time the English countrysides are a scene of reharkable beauty. The fields are cut up with green hedges of which all kinds of wild flowers are blooming. I had always imagined the Englishman as being very stiff when traveling. Back of my mind was the story of an Englishman who is said to have healted to tell another whose coat was on fire of it because he had not been introduced to him. Quite the contrary, I found my fellow-travelers in the same compartment willing to talk after I had opened conversation. When they learned I was from America they became even more interested. And I noted that when they spoke they said "You Americans," not "You cofed people." Here one is thought terms of nationality, not of race it seems a very difficult thing to take. Englishman at home interested in me. Here, at least, all the dark peoples from the other parts of the Empire are thought of first as Britishers. Not once so far in the many conversations I have had has race ever been referred to, with the result I have come to think that it, simply isn't thought about. Wherever I go in barber shops, restaurants hotels, theaters, I am treated as any other man. And because of not having, we go to and find some of the ordinary accommodation I have been brought to topp to some of the best places. "Whatever the colonial policy of Empire may be—and God knows it is bad in most parts of Africa—bore in the Mother Country a man regardless of color is treated according to his morals and capabilities. The single black man I must all the time I was in the south of England, old, when I remarked to him on the absence of prejudice, "Why, this is the worst part of England. It is where you Americans come. You ought to go to the north of England when I have lived for more than twenty years." When I asked him to recommend me to a place in London he gave me this notably reply: "Go where your pocket will take you. Act as if you were a white man in America." This Negro is from Barbardos, and is a medicine doctor, selling roots and herbs to credulous white folk. He says that, although times are hard and there is unprecedented unemployment, he makes an average of twenty-five dollars a day for a few hours' talk. Negroes. I notice, are not the only ones who sell for fake medicine. This part of England is one of the most prosperous, being known as the Cornish Riviera. The weather is delightful in summer, and although it is about as far north in latitude as northern Canada, snow in winter is a rarity. While in Penzance I visited Land's End, the most southerly tip of England. Here immense boulders are piled up by the hand of Nature, forming a most astonishing sea wall. It appears as if some giant hand had taken up these huge boulders, some of them weighing many tons, and carelessly piled them up hundreds of feet high. Some of these great-rocks look as if an infant could disturb the balance and send them all hurtling down. Nevertheless, they have been in that same delicate position for thousands and thousands of years. With its tremendous waves dashing against these granite cliffs, with its great caves and blowholes, its weird formations, and the marvellous coloring of the rocks and the waters, Land's End is a place that one does-not forget very easily. The only other natural sight that I know excels it is the Grand Canyon. Cornwall is also noted for its tin mines. Students of history will recall that the Phoenician merchants used to visit it long before Julius Caesar in order to get that product. One of these mines I saw, known as the Ding-Dong, has been worked before the time of Christ and still is. Some of these mines extend under the sea. The Cornish people are very polite. Seeing few colored faces one would think they would gaze at a Negro, but they never do, accepting him as a perfectly normal human being. I went for long walks in the delightful narrow green lanes, meeting here and ther alone a woman in the fields. There is apparently not the slightest reserve about meeting me, and if just as a test I ask a question her voice is as friendly and normal as ever. More then ever after this do I feel, positive that color prejudice has to be taught and that there is no such thing as instinctive hate of one human species for another. For, if it were, surely those people who saw Negroes least ought to show the most fear at contact with them. Here, however, are these people, who as I said, rarely, if ever, see a colored face, acting just as if on the other side of the Atlantic there was not a tremendous color problem. Nearly all of the land around Penzance belongs to Lord St. Leven, who on a very high cliff cut off by high tide known as St. Michael's Mount has a magnificent castle, like one reads about in fairy tales. A few days later I left this beautiful part of the country third class for London. The English coaches are quite unlike the American, being much smaller, but more artistic in appearance. First class, the only other class, is so high that it is only for the rich. After seven hours' ride through country fully as beautiful as that I had on the way down, I arrived at London, whose outskirts looked just the same as that of any American city. In my next I will tell of my experiences in London and of some of the places I have visited. Farm wages have increased over 200 per cent during the past sixty years.—C. P. B. The Colored Mechanical Mfg. Co. and Citizens General Fix-Up Shop MR. GEORGE A. E. BARNES, Mgr. Artistic Painting on Cloth Special attention given to made 'up goods in designing of flowers. We make made 'botanical' paintings and painted table and chair yellow alpa, terrace, horticry and hats. Speciality on velvet silk and mat designs. Will ar- ange for class work in all branches later. 252 W. 136th St. NEW YORK CITY For Your Health! SICK Men and Women, do not neglect your Health. Take Assinee Bitters You can get treatment by taking Assinee Bitters to treat your sickness. Assinee Bitters are made from assinine, a plant that is used in the manufacture of perfumes. STORAGE, KOWALSK, POMER LAVER, BILLOW, MORGAN, MORGAN, GAMMA, AYRON, MORGAN, YAM, MORGAN, MORGAN, MORGAN. Assinee Bitters are made from assinine, a plant that is used in the manufacture of perfumes. Assinee Bitters are made from assinine, a plant that is used in the manufacture of perfumes. Are you looking WEIGHT? Are you always TIRRED out and ENCHOKED out? Do you walk around without any COURSE yourself? Take a step away from the gravel. Don't miss this opportunity! Come on! Time Out! Order the SPECIAL for This Week Only NO DEPOSIT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY OF PHONOGRAPHS THAT YOU HAVE SUCH AN OPPORTUNITY TO OWN THE BEST MAKES IN TALKING MACHINES WITH ACTUALLY NO MONEY DOWN AND TO MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS—GET ONE THIS WEEK, AS OUR STOCK IS VERY LIMITED—WE DELIVER THE SAME DAY YOU PURCHASE ONE. HOUSTON, Texas, July—The Interracial Committee of this city at a recent meeting decided to ask the city administration for the addition of five colored men to the police force, of Houston, and also for the establishment of a senior high school and two junior high schools for colored children. The meeting was held in the Chamber of Commerce rooms and was attended by a group of representative white and colored leaders mostly business and professional men. Among the white men present were the former secretary and president of the school board and one of the city's civil service commissioners. The colored group was represented by a number of teachers, ministers and physicians. The fullest freedom of expression was encouraged and committees were appointed to take up with the city administration the matters agreed upon. Editor Love, of the Texas Freeman, a local colored paper, commenting on the meetings says: "The editor observed that the .nen constituting the committee were honest and sincere-in their efforts to get together on a common level, to harmonize their differences, and to stamp out friction wherever and whenever it bobs up." Federal Experts Hope to Put New Fruit on Market WASHINGTON, July, 12.—The Department of Agriculture today promised to put the famous mangosteen—a fine fruit produced in the Asiatic tropics—on the American market within the next ten years. Orchards are being successfully developed in tropical America. The process is slow, but much energy and determination is behind it. The mangosteen has never made its commercial appearance in the United States. Experiments on young trees are now being conducted in the Canal Zone, Costa Rica and Honduras. "The mangosteen," the department explains, "is unlike any fruit cultivated in the United States, and it can be SPECI NO FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE SUCH AN OPPORTUNITY WITH ACTUALLY NO MORE GET ONE THIS WEEK, AS SAME DAY YOU PURCHASE VICTOR BRUNSWICK SONORA COLUMBIA KIMBERLY ROYAL STORE OPEN UNTIL 11 P. M. EVERY DAY ```markdown ``` grown only where the temperature never drops below 35 degrees above zero. It is the size of a mandarin PROVEN WAY TO STOP FALLING AIR and DANDRUFF Try This Dandruff, falling hair, itching scalp and baldness are enemies to scalp health and the growth of long, lustrous hair. Scientists admit they are "germ" diseases and to cure them the germ must surely be destroyed. There's no longer reason for having poor, unhealthy scars and dull lifeless hair. It has been proven that MADAM C. J. WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR PREPARATIONS are directly opposed to harmful Experiment! C.J. WALKERS FURFUL HAIR MATIONS OWNED" J. Walker's for sale by and by mail Walker Mfg. Co. St. Indiana 50¢ Everywhere For This Only POSIT MONOGRAPHS THAT YOU HAVE MAKES IN TALKING MACHINES TO MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS RY LIMITED—WE DELIVER THE Dont Experi USE MADAM C.J. WA WONDERFUL H PREPARATION "WORLD RDOWNED" There and Mme. C. J. Walker's Skim. Preparations for sale by Agents, Drug Stores and by mail The Madam Cel Walker Mfg. 640 N West St Indianapolis - Indiana AL for eek On DEPO THE HISTORY OF PHONOGRAPHY TO OWN THE BEST MAKES MONEY DOWN AND TO MAKE YOUR STOCK IS VERY LIMITED THE ONE. STORE OPEN UNTIL 11 P. M. EVERY DAY MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS ON ANY PHONOGRAPH YOU SELECT orange, deep, purple externally, with a thick, woody rind. It has a taste between that of a peach and a pineapple. germ life, that they attack only diseased tissues, tend to keep the scalp free from dandruff and itch, allay falling hair, enrich the scalp, stimulate growth and make for long lustrous hair. VICTOR BRUNSWICK SONORA COLUMBIA KIMBERLY ROYAL reais erneanieninee ernie aaa a iinee Spiteri aOR MDI Penn minvee Th CECI tT OM GI CA ae Ly ORME SAR ata a en a ree eect Bice ese aie ret oe oats alae eta a4 i al ¥ pets ; L bg rents 7 pee 7. y , Q oo rs Pee I ae or : . “ a ae tee fap DO ME ek SOC RS ee ee: tet cay Th ometiestees Eg! ot, iB i nema are SE Ae, ae, Se ee % So Sag ce: > Rt Be ew gees ‘ : pe ln Bh ae — = : ‘Must Fight on daily the U. NOT Ais Srey Wills > .ciples_who do_not fea eg Garvey Wil principles of the organit Pghat ot The Negro’ Works: ~ This organisation has | "FW Wioushis and ‘frnier detertains- | £4 powerful force’ th bee ‘often the.restilt of the unhappy | Minds of black men an $aibttoament and the many sruggies-of | Rere. Marsme Garvey ue; Negro Even: a small degree of| We aro thankful that | ‘often seems impossible in the| Meeweached the place raf the obstacles’ placed in our way | Prisonment.of the. lead dy She-majotlty group. Beeing the in} the Work. The faithful -gfleotiverves of bur efforte'to wat on the rsanisation are cerry! werain- of the, other. gvéup. we are| Its very necessary t ‘swan upon our own“nit-ative and must Propérly presented to-¢ re a program of olir awa. We 3x a| Face. so that they may ‘jpeople are competed to shage our own| be ready; to carry on deattiy. they take thelr place’ai {At this critical period the members| teiligence is necessary: ‘a Gowntrodden race ought to teei| Must be prepared ment eorly ratctur'to Marcu Garvey for | Fe*Pensibilities which # ‘conceiving and giving to them the Uni-| Marcas Garvey is insp versal Negro Improvement Association, |-28 Well ag the ol. The This “organization hae decome known | /#7les are & credit to U Yeroughout the world for Ke slogan. and| The shirit of Marcus “wscompromixingatand-for-“'Atrloa for | Out from Atlanta and the Africans!” men and women throuk 5 Marcus Garvey har shown. that no| THEY. Intend to marc Bacrifice is ¢oo reat for him to make Bening for (free for. the cause. His courage and deter-| Atrica.-.They have ca mination have inspired others,” and Marcun.Garvey has uit “a ’ a Sida An beineicel one . cree” Albvays there is pain and suffer- fig. always women must bear chil: Gren, alwayn thera.in meepticinm, Siany are doomed to ‘Untold agony because they will not believe, that there in relief’ permanent and ef- fect} for them in the experience, Glecovery and labor of other.” There ie a vast ntore of knowledee Gurong men outside. of books, espe: -elaliysin and around the home and femily circle andthe lie and alle snaf prospective mothern and EbRaren. Ke precrtent-are tere at iments that the term, “Femaly ou Bigot cin universsily. “applied to wemaias something incurable as = matter of course, and set. there are Thouengda of pronpectice ‘mothers: aud others, women. children and fen who, know and will tell You that by the Use of “CHILD VISION. — “a medicine-cmanutactured by. tho HABBARD MEDICAL COMPANY, Ine. prospective mothers cap re- Higve pemecives of paintul epiia- Bigth. Re pein and frequent afver= suffering: that rickets and Infantile Percivals can be permanently re Bored when “CHILD VISION” te sppiiea Tn tims: : hd eiaion in daticthy a farliy medi Stoo ‘chat wit warely etiave formate Wows SE Se! "FEMALE TROUBLES . . VENEREAL DISEASE * - —"RICKETS . INFANTILE PARALYSIS: PILES . ee ASTHMA TUMORS | BRIGHTS ear I CANCER Ss ECZEMA . | tTcH | HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE ma many other tile common to men, Beh Badia and conmamption i Wevarly ningees when taxes tr tne re fitter trom any of thoes wiimente do FOE SY, Ree dence te Habbard Medical. Manufac- _~_.turing“Company,:inc.- 1244 80. Wabash Ave, Chicago, Hil, for thie wonaertel iheatcine. CAUTIONS Be “eure thet you oan, the rade sare. “CnIED: UCN "Oh uae : ea , L < A HEALTH RESTORER | ‘EAT WHAT. YOU : - DRINK*'WHAT YOU ~’ } ’ SLEEP WHEN YOU __ * . __ Bf you are troubled with constipation, biliouenese, indigestion, gas belching, iver rosble-stzmech rouble skit eruption and waak bowels, OROER & pot tis of HOLY-BARK COMPOUND, a most wonderful all-venr-round tonig, at ‘Dace and take’a dose'mornings only and you will’ be plearantly sutprised to notice how-your.food digests better. You are not troubled with your stomach Gay more: All indigestion diatrenn afver enting = mone. Do-not tet joplect of Jour pomach become chronic. because the reeuite are Gangeraus, "Act at Been. "Band for a bots of this Godsend medicine this minute. Biailed any =" Prive $1.80 in U."8. A.” $200 in Forsign Countries Including Postage ‘12. you are not antiefied with-{t.return same and we guarantee the refund ef your money. : .~ ae ers @ sary ET ‘MUST. BE SENT WITH ALL ORDERS . FAS West 143d Street’ - =. NEW YORK CITY.-| Lt Full Directione How to Take, With Each Bottle «| Nature's Way of Forcing. the Ey 2 3° ere is . . om > Hate cans’ ceowds yect c oa J the svete. De Silene wet in a Pe & myutery. 2 --;; tale grower, ‘Fry Bh, Lotion, et os i Pa i Sere 0 Sak ste siepates tesatment 2 gg Ra Een 0 parent ete, ae Ct atone ; hen 5 yk Se res ng es ee ee ee in ; aN i ae i 2 Re a «ig en Neen eee Pen PONE BRANES OBS aS ee tere Cee ce a SR ai ee aig 7 y Gaity the U, N. I. A. ts turning oat dis- ciples who do_not fear ‘to’ preaclr the principles of the organisation amiwhere ‘This, organisation hes become a strons and powertul force’ jh the:néarts and minds.of black ren.ang: Women every: where. Margie Ganvey ‘s:in prison, but we aro thankful that the organization has.eeached the place where the im- prisonment of ‘the leader’ faile to stop the work. The faithful members of the organisation are carrying jon. It fe very necessary that the work be propérly presented to thé youth of the race, so that they may understand and be ready to carry on the work when they take thelr place’at the helm. Ind telligence ie necessary. Young people must be prepired mentally,to meet the rexponeibilitien which rre sure to come Marcus Garvey is inspiring the young cas well aa the old. The juvenile auxtt- taries arb a credit to the organization. ‘The ‘sfirit of Marcus Garvey ts-kolns out_from Atlanta and Inspiring black men and women throihout the World, They’ intend to march on.- unitedly fighting for a free and redeemed ‘Atrica. ‘They have caught the- vision, Marcun.Garvey has uiught his’ people to think in terme. of race and national- fty. ‘The knowledge which can be rained through the U.N. 1. A. te the Kind that “Nesroes can et nowhére “alae, JOSEP -A-MORTON— New York, N.Y. * . : Mere Words Will Not. Help the Program To the Edltozat tie Xegvo World: Hew Mtle mre wordx help the grea” cause of Attican Redemption Fhe timo has nrrived for words to be followed by acto! on the part of Segre men and women. The Honorable Mar- un Guecty han given to'the Nearo a Gaiverml danguier Day Ne dee th proxram which ‘wax conceived by Mr. Garvey’ for the. amelioration of the suffering of hla race and the permanent tntubilenment of the, Negro tn hin own country and with his own government comes nearet arid rearer (o renilzeton Many call Me, Garvey a. dreamer Dut the geatest achievements in the Srorkt—were: once junt dranme—‘Theta have always been scoffers-and traitors Xo discourage dreamers. The ideals ‘of & people lve th the dreamers.” Sinr- un Garvey In autering to pvt over the Program which Is the dream ot, the Rew Negro, We know that the adams of "the Honora, ‘Marcus Garvey will ‘one gay Deed glorious. revilties, which oir posterity will see, know and Cnjoy. God bens Siarcun Garver! * FRANK B. CLARK. ‘renton, S.J. . Grapple With Problems -- ln a Practical Way - To the Editor of The Negro" World: It {a unfortunate the many Negroe: Go-aot reallze.the serious position ft which membera of the race everywher ‘find themseiven and are: unwilling { [beitir themselvek to do one thing to ald the, progress srhich a comparatively owt struggling membere of the race ars rsing to make. Most Negroes are lke Rrasshonpers. They make late of nots And then do nothing. We as m peoplesmust realtzn that we are not living in’ the clouds but on the earth and we must try to eolve Present day problema in x practlea manner. ‘There is nd time to. lone Every ‘Negro must be up and dcing Industrial changes which ara greatly affecting tae Negro.can te observed - .. .. THE NEGRO “SATURDAY, JULY. 28, 1938 dally. “We are more and mop ocing| a at a ee Jefe out —or things, Indust ialiy “and. ~Be - , | the gana Honment:« cilKinerclatty. We are deatai a livel!- ssaultansousty wit {cod and our Tamilies are guttering in] ©, * 7 | maritime , customs, ccosequencs,. Let us get toysther to. Teprésentailves: of | Litter our condition. “The program ot | + i _] . | her? ther began ¢ tha USN L. ax"te & golutior.. Let vis]. . Jour principal port help torput hove. ef P . [reservations, where 7 re OWES yy. baxuckiRD, nese popaiations © Hermondale, Mo. ©3047 me nese Government it eae eS eat 1 {t was natural that to ezn’ alg Te 7 cop ite 5 restive, «| ( s Nationhood for Negroes: os \ col! Wes wht anaes Ie a Necessity oe * <S(Continued from page 2) would fudge us fair ‘To the Editor of The Negro. World: * Te is a vory-great‘plesure and I feel that it la a golden privllege-to aaa word of: praise for the’ splendid work the Honorable Marcus Garvey and the U.NILA, are doing among our people. Every Neiro. man and woman ought ta turn,a-willing ear and listen to the app*als’ of this great organization with itm reat program tor race advance- ment. > oe ss The Honorable Marcus Garvey Is In prison. “but there are thousands of |Negrors everywhere who knows that there 1s none Ike him and who are déily praying for himyelease. He shall continue. to haye, our sympathy, -our prayersnd—oiir-doitarg-and -the-or~ anlzntion’ shall conurive’to have our [nupport In putting over the great pro- gram. e The ‘Negro needn a’ fing and a coun- try of hie own. He can never expect tS get anj protection or recognition with= ‘out a government of-hin own to back up hii demanils, Today.~to kill a Ne~ “are-meanegnathing | vars Negro. knows the conditions whlch mect'us dally and for that redvon ought, to db ‘every. posaible. thing to help the organtzation which Is trying to change these conditions, 8 ss Thé Negro race.han many greater’ and women who are looying In the wrong directiqn and working for, the Vrrong things. Soet us get tonethior and work to a common end. MRS, SARAH’ MAELIN. i Pcie Soe eat = Have Great Faith. for Success Is Certain —— To the Editor of The Negro World: It Ina great pleanure forme to send & word of praise for the great organ- faation which wan tounded by the Hon- orable Marcus Gargey. This organiza. Liteon hus had many trials, Blt we arc Rot ARCS TEST ATR ehare with pysence, courage afd atendy labor. we ‘are hound to win. Right.is bound to trumph, ‘The. way Seems darii.ndis, but tomorrow may bring much Joy. | Let us have great faith. E, ERNEST, DOUGLAS. _ Westbury, Barbidos, B. W. I. Where There Is Unity There Ly. Power To the Editor of The Negro World:, . I Delteve tat God fs revealing him- felt to the black man through the Hon, Marcin Garver. Wa ought to stand to- gether am one to put over the great Program which he hne given us. Where there In unity, there in strength. And where there in strength, there 1s pow 41, While our leader ts suffering for us All, we must-stand together and re- spond iheratty to ‘the: many appeate for funds to carey on the work! The redemption.of Africa ts our aim'and we mug! not stop until we have reached ft. MRS, ETHEL BROOKS. Newark Nod” Let Us Remember— “That our personal suffering ts but Mile compared with that which the Hon. Marcus Garver is now cheerfully enduring for the race, sito, t0, win love and iientbin, exer re Reta roeercan el eet nord ental mocthed ‘Tatroduced “tate Spang fe cient Mears. Spreading hike nanvasre Frce book (in English) lle what ws ds, enngental [natn wrapper), Cannot ited elsewbere in the ward, Sem tee yaterout, “enigmatical,araway Soon meric. Send. Ser 4stnenpay to Seip on ane. ee. Addcen: Be W. Morey, De 46, 47 “Paulo Barreto (Boraloge). Rh "Jencire, Beeul “Soon Amenta,’ (Us Ha address Toon" send coin) EGER TREASURESE Bot astro mer C1) a wl esd yoo FREE lator | moet my een your | ieeema Secret Sf Tecan Sedereround or barlad trmese| eres. If you srent this secret, ‘rie us teeeye Addrece ‘The Mageetic Ce. . 9A Lente, Rie AOiR ie ee Ukaee le res CASINGS i ies fy Sete A = Ses aR Eee = . = zee a ir | ——____-____+-__ | LODE STONES iy, LODE STONES teva 'and enoper. Town te Gamh wih seen * ae ¢ ae re be aa ox Sree CHINESE GENERAL - “SAYS HE WILL: FIGHT ENGLAND * < “(Continued from page 2) yours, although we'aie already awak sning Yo our weakrees. oo +For: years’-the-Chinese nation’ ha deen kept in tyrmoll by-the commercla Intereata of the’ foreign nations. Out of Evil Comes Good © For ghe-last ton years or 0 we. have been making every attempt to unite oui factions against, the common foe, and this Shanghal Incident har .accom- Pifeh more in uniting our great fac: tions against the common enemy thar Wwe could have accomplished by ght. ing in another fifty years. The foreign nations holding concee- slond in China by. virtue of treaties signed "by our late monarchy will be foresd_cut_of_our_country,_and. In’ the coming struggle we find in Engisnd the greatent obstacle. ig 8 Wo -will fight England and it the government makes «{ts decision my army: wil] be the first one on, the field ‘to sweep the English battalions out of every inch of our. country.” . We realize that the foreign nations who hald an tron grify over China_by are made up of two distinctly different Gasser: - “) The element who haye for cen- turles exploited yelinw and hack races to thely-owingnrichmenty "st « (2) The great cank and fle of Anglo- Saxonn who are fair. liberal, and would Uke to neo Justice dene to all. But, unfortunately this latter element afthough In the majority hoth in Eng- land and América, are powerless axaiinet thé Imperialisni of thelr ruling classes, en. nese The great British people. even woady. dé not understand ite critical issvie in China, “Neither do .the American masses J * The English press systematically ob- cures the txsue, Whenever there (na serious collision between the natives ant the foreigners anywhere in, thelr concession ports, the British presa in- wrrintts—interepresents—it—ae--Chifiene rota, : : Riotis by natives’ againsr, the com- mereial interest ‘of féreigneri on aur own roll! * Tired of misrepresenting the facts In- volyed in our disnutes with foretsners on our shores. the British presx now resorts to another expedient: Weare Bolsheviks! Reds? The Bolshevik propaganda: Is biaxed Dut to scare the Occidental public, ~ We Ask Justice? T tera ft-nonsansg....~ When we appeal foy’ justice and the Dccidental powers answer us with gun- pont, it ti, natural that, my: country> nen will Welcome any kind of allies vho are willing,to help we expel the ptriguing foreign nations from our oll. : s Do the “people of the Occident, ss- eclally America, know the real truth nehind these masancres now taking Ince. thanks t9 the armed forces of ne Enalish and Japanese ravarnments? If the people of England, and ¢n- ecially America, knew the truth there vould be such a widespread feeling hroughout the Occidental. continent hat Reither- England ner Japan, -nor ven that small element of American ommercial interests stazioned in our reaty ports, could Stop the avalanche f reseniment started by pudite opinion, n thoxe couniries. * China is resentful of foreign dom- nation. Lately this resentment has ecome so general and somewhat un- easoning, that aven missionaries anid hose educational institutions eataby shed in our country by humanitarian preigners have fallen under this head. PRT WONDER: of ‘the: reali 20th CENTURY Tae gant. oslo par a agen Haneuch, Mereante, abet etl Bees tea rather ebay seyth Goa Wat eal seer reg Pog cae ta er ech hae Reena eae Aer Stae tie Seat Senet a PR cee ie, Sie satis eA a LOR ents Bi, Tease l, etna WPateca ne Eas fascias Sa eerste oat fameiuecins Rigs ssc ea Hak secrsdaen as SiNairsiee Neee iat Peer ane ba ety CR adet ERE fest ens hake Pete eaete ‘OCCULT SCIENCE ASs'N . $00. Cheat B Deans ooo oe Font Oty Gee» } ral haere aa i i aod eae e SL e Sah a Ua | -¥ Betve OSES Wipes Ae ie" coael ay i he 5 ra Ch. coaning ae. F ees ee oe conn ee Eg ee = ore e an a wists - the ~ poopie “of “China “observ the seat lanment of tae tanto | maritime . customs. int ‘the . . Teprésentailves-of foreign mations, an wher! ther began to see tha thirty: 6 Jour princtpal ports, containing’ large Jreservations, where sré immense Chi. [nese populations ovbr Wham the'Chi- nese Government itself has no control it was natural that they should become retive ft _ E ‘The vast masses of the Occiden Told sud un tally tc they ney tha the butk‘of ur forejgn trade is Yn the hands of foreigners. . - ow Task how ihe Americans woilld foo 4€ the situation’ were reversed ‘and thirty of their ports were. tree reserva. tions for, foreigners, over which th American-Government had: no poxer: ‘Yet whenever lawlessness ‘appears in those reservations the Chinese Govern- ment 1s held responsible. a ‘What would the English. people think Ae by: virtue of some unjustly impoxed treaty .by a toreign ‘nation, a foreign reptenentative was ‘constantly at Mr. Baldwin's elbow telling him what to do. + “Plain Massacre” * Shanghat ig.a Chinese clty with mul- Uple foreign concesnibns. It ts & great Industrial centre, exclusively comroilea by foreign capital. The industciek and mills fn Shankhal are éwaed by cel dental caplialists, who have “come, to China to utilize the cheap coolie inher for the purpose-of competing against the mills of thelr respective countries— England, France, Italy or America. labor and with Engilsh capita} ts corne poting against Englishmen in Mane. chester, Lancashire and Yorkshire, And. the sarfie Ix true of the French, Amari ran. Italian. and Belgian caplial ine vested in pur concession porte. These industries are not a blessing 19 their nationals and they are a curse ONChiia, . ‘The Shanshel-aftatr. was the emule at a labor dispilte i & Japanene mill where @ Japanese foreman shot out right one ofthe coollen employed there, J number of whoyn were demanding patter wages. : $ These things had happened before, Dut until recently our. people took these outrages {a a spirit. of nubmissiveness. But today. even the spirit of. the sole 1s changing. The saeident \rouned the atirdent element in Shang~ ial, awho paraded the streets in protest, rmed-—with—poktae and — Thereupon the British police fired upon ho -demonstrators, ilUng between aventy afd elghiy and wounding over hree hundred. It whould he noted that jot one British policeman wan killed, roving ‘the contention that the s0- alled miob was not armed. Whatever folence occurred -took “place after- card. : When seventy or .cighty of their countrymen were killed and over 300 | et Fa i OFFER | eee CHES om Send No {=e . REREE eae] . Senreeemees ee ieee erie Setaserea Beet set, SS eae marcas Ee PROORERS TATLORING CO, owt, 201, eHICADE 3 ie a prescristion for, Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria 1 killa the germnie. - | THE.NEW [. DISCOVERY” STUBBORN BLOOD ~ 4c DISEASES? toning, Sai ith. Scary ex rheumatism. etc? VMarkhowe's Rebwtt-| pee Cameeteg theo carat mesa hg Slinsttter Masser ee eae een SEE, Fortine Telling SEAR . Globe! ina Gor ae == 64 B24 ete oe ae baa =n ee th 2 ee ROA me ota tapes QENG Sao est (a) S25 ey i ob a pain, 3| B aioe week (ee Sosa @ DROPSY Sect orc Sat er eee oS eet = a , e, oy ons aS i ate | FROM YOUR WALLS! a s . abe Oe ec Behn You-can-now obtain wallicards, artistizally printed of epi grams from ‘the sayings of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Ret! mia of racial thought... Rey | Six different mottoes to ong, set. Only $1.00. - per set. For hanging or framing, - _ size9xI2Zinches. 2". | Also that masterpiece wfitten by-our great leader, entitled “AFRICAN FUNDAMENTALISM,” beautifully -engraved, with deep edge for framing. Size 16 x 21, Price 50 cents’ each. Sue : fy, Every. member of ‘the U.N. I. A. should .pro- |. cure the President-General’s picture; ms: _large size, for framing, price 50 cents’ “8 "SEND ALL ORDERS TO. _ i MRS. AMY JACQUES GARVEY Box 22;Station L, New York City _ Postal-Order or Express Money Order tir cover coat. -Presidents-and-Secretaries:of Divisions_of the Organi- zation should:.send in Shet-onders in time for ‘their. local Convention: om A | wounded, the Chinese population certuinly became angered. It was a massacre’plain and simple, And some ‘years from now, when -ihe. united Chinese nation celebrates its Indeyen- dence from foreign riile, that date will be the date for:them to commemorate. And the City of Shanghat will be the placo that will be considered ay the place. where the first shot for indepen dence was fired, and future China. will canonize the’ seventy students, xilled in Shanghal ag the ‘first’ royp who Jaid ‘down their lives for the liberation ps &¥ ee il oa » > . Ree Free HOROSCOPE Free Are You Happy: and’ Con- | tented? Is Your Home: in Good Order? Have You Any Troubles? Are You Success-. ful in-Your Love and Business: Affairs? <Are You.Sick? Fe ere oe waa van one pod Sobel Eemrue art. ete C8 98 deen ony scan i wis ee seg oni ee wns Sin with soil Sal soasehic ees cco tie ote Sell ont ca ae ae Te Astrophrenological Studio seat oe new tases | fet 1000 LUCK gente bergen hia A ane ser eer A og Me ae ee A CPS SAU VY Aone ARE YOU UNLUCKY, Nt, én GUAR Sproles stoves Seubeat tare py ars ree ores ore Se See aaa B Tay St ee SPSS | ate, tects Bes Te pps | Esai ft SD | Reeersrr SSZZ | restate aS ag china Sten Tle Beg, aang Met ale 7 cent, Satan unten Sf eat oven ed Set er cers fs arte aecs seagate yr Mtard'S Cine ey bet STS i Setar Mt etait sone cnee lr A AR Eat PRODUCTS. Con cose, He) Tarawa ane Tad aide. Fer gemiay, idle = Uneet uretiad lreasares BOW 0D WHERE TOPE THER seer Sal oer oat 5, ON OLN, cman, CL. je ‘t you bave EPILEPSY, FITS, eae rire cas eee tats iS 22222 PRES se ratnte inca sneha ieee RASS rid nonce ‘Mr, Banister, formerly of 144 W. Pricd peiaes see eae ia ae tae eer ee a ea vines Fon ane eee oe gece Ley a ect each ete See == Sh eee retest ts wie chenens of Robert Dewytass Revy, Broce A. Roby and See oe ee oe ike GS Faw a Beale eee ee ' ae you yeurestt agel. A Pa arate Sree ree Rages Sere Be pre. oes. Sea ye Ee (er Sere se pres Sage Weg. tah rage Sg ae | ™” ‘of their soll from forelgn yule. China: bas, already responded. ‘Throughout. the whole nation boycotte have.been declared against British and Japanese goods. .And before many days the English troperialists will be regretting the day when_the Britis policd~massacred 40 many Shanghal demonstrators. . : : E Gea eee ss S"Reborrn SALES CO. i488. Nipnelan Flac New York Oty 1S TSFORNATION WANTED Rak persse or peresne hovsing the whore 3 Calcame at Mr-Peat Prancenge: Shek ae eet Ste mipincrom org teem Tony inane’ on Kinniat Kounesine Wen Cee Lainie” inte notify Re Fe Word 33" Pecwe Beye Wendie Se s2 Pecks Anvene weawine the sheretvoute of Bae ANG pusehendes, Minsetanian)s pidae tee Geant Buxaheri oak Copcreio™ saa Pedre Som cpagien ‘Wandutan: Ck. ofthe oce she Regs ors Ter 6 AM DISSATISFIFD.” second sahton, 1 nom rendyes Bice fe contact Stee habe abe saat and Steg ase Cepeavle. Orders direct. from. ZEBEDER SREES! author’ ast Sbieldeotreet. Pitter Stree Fes. 2 wae eS BECOME. INDEPENDENT — Foote BPR saan ante Sree toe SRR a Tae ee ie cae EtSour-omsby combleteiy squipping your Sore MmatiPcath Supmante! Salento dn eer meenthiytinmatimenta ie you ave locations Biever shone: Merie kacinmeat Gon SW.a' et oan: 98th BLOOD TELLS: Hot Springs and sectors Bhioe nite Keine teeattnent purited bloag niga dube’ Burdculsts Yor gtampe Lies PW Regs EP Tg A le . : [eset wiltng sath « a4y-aatiee tollet preparatiéns and 100 “other items. esd oo toeetinoans ty woe hese Helauger Sums Smith, Wels TYSON & COMPANY - PARIS, TENN. eee aan wae ne dal irae a Tn Saber eg Sete aD Roca ea, BTS Geese eee es SER ees ia ete ee peaiearer dat wetacs eo Seekip sand bonus “MADISON MFO. 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