The Negro World

Saturday, August 22, 1925

New York, New York

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LET'S PUT IT OVER The Indispensable Weekly The Voice of the Awakening Negro Negro World Reviving the Mind of Negroes The Best Advertising Medium A Newspaper Devoted solely to the Interests of the Negro Race VOL. XIX. No. 2 NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925 PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U.S.A. TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES GARVEY SAYS A STRONGER CAUSE, A GREATER DETERMINATION, IS BOUND TO RISE OUT OF SPIRITUAL SUSPENSE Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting: This week I shall speak to you on "The Pleasure of Service." To some of us work for the cause of humanity is a pleasure. Man can live for no higher and greater purpose than that of serving his fellow-men. Such a service is not one that can be bought or paid for, but one that should be exacted of every true man. There is no greater opportunity for service than at the present time. There is no race that needs greater service than the Negro race at this time, and in the giving of that service some of us glory, and as given through the Universal Negro Improvement Association, some of us look upon it as a delight. It becomes delightful because of the universal responsiveness that we find from and among the people whom we serve. Foundation Well Laid Looking at the work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association for the last seven years, taking a survey of the sentiment of the people at this hour, one probably will be led to think that the work is stationary, that the work is not as progressive, the spirit not as enthusiastic as it was some time ago; but this is the viewpoint of the man who sees things from the surface. The man who looks at the success of human movements not from the standpoint of the glamor of the hour or the wild enthusiasm of the minute, but from the permanent foundation that is laid, can come to no other conclusion than that at this hour the Universal Negro Improvement Association is passing through a period of great success, for we have laid a foundation that will last forever, a foundation upon which a structure will be built never to be demolished, never to be de- That gives those of us who lead a NOTHING DAUNTS THOSE WHOSE PURPOSE IS FIRMLY SET U. N. I. A. HAS BUILT A FOUNDATION WHICH WILL LAST FOREVER NEGROES EVERYWHERE MUST BE PREPARED AND ORGANIZED FOR THE HOUR WHEN OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS AT DURING WORLD WAR THE NEGRO, IN POSITION TO DEMAND NOTHING. GOT NOTHING the foundation entailed there could be no structure. Period of Spiritual Suspense We are reaping the reward of a past well spent, I say, but we are also passing through at this hour a period of spiritual suspense which will ultimately break out in a fresh and new enthusiasm, the like of which was never seen before. The greater triumph, the greater success of the Universal Negro Improvement Association will come in its rise out of its difficulties, in its rise above its apparent setbacks and handicaps. Nothing daunts those whose purpose is firmly set, and the purpose of the Universal Negro Improvement Association is as firmly set as the Rock of Gibraltar. It is set in the hearts and minds of men everywhere, and neither the cunning of the oppressor nor the deviltry of the near-sighted of a few within the group can hinder us as we seek the goal. So let us take fresh courage; let us put on the armor of new enthusiasm because out of a suspense of months will rise a greater movement, a stronger cause, a greater determination that shall admit of no setback, that shall admit of no handicap or difficulty, but coming as it has from a bereft people shall go forth on the wings of time and continue its flight onward and onward until it brings to us the object in view—African redemption and an emancipated race everywhere. When Opportunity Knocks Understand, we have nothing to fear. We may as well get ready and prepare ourselves the world over for we know not what the changes will be in the year 1926. The thing that we have been organizing for during the last seven years is likely to come at any minute. We were not organizing for aggression or to offend anybody, but we were organizing, we are organizing, so that we may be in a position to take advantage of our opportunity when it presents itself. We lost out during the last war and after; simply because we were not prepared. If we had been prepared, if we had a program and a policy, we would not now be talking of improving—we would have been improved long ago; but because we were not prepared, because we were not organized, because we had no policy and no program, we were not taken into account and only those who had a policy and a program—whether they were Irish or Jewish or Polish—were given the consideration they demanded, or at least a modicum of it. They gave us nothing because we demanded nothing—we were in a position to demand nothing. So when opportunity again knocks at the door let us be ready with a policy of a free and redeemed Africa, an industrially, socially, educationally and politically emancipated Negro race. And you men who expect liberty, who expect freedom, who expect a new and real emancipation, must make up your minds to live equally as you make up your minds to die. Cowards shall never win anything, but shall lose all. Be firm in the faith, hold high your heads and keep plodding steadily onward to the goal. I have the honor to be. MARCUS GARVEY. Founder and President-General. al Negro Improvement Association. WAR, SAYS. ABD-EL-ARIM WARNS AMERICANS: THAT 'WAR.IN| WOROCCD: I NO “PICNIC AND ALL. AMERICAN AVIATORS CAPTURED. ov WILL BE SHOT INSTANTLY ’ “Adventurous American Youths Should Remain Sv” 7 Near’ Their Mothers” ; ‘ ‘ e - . Lt ” _ FRANCE, LIKE SPAIN, WILL REALIZE THE “FOLLY OF HER WAYS : ." 2 ° “World Should. Not Believe Doctored...Com- - muniques Sent Out by France—8,000 ° - »t-o~".J'penchmen.and ‘14,000 Colonials ‘ z : ‘Captured. by Riffs ey Frémi the. New York-American, ~ - Sse tae 5 °° By ABD-EL-KRIM ~ - .* “The following ‘statement: from the leader of the Moorish grraie> fighting the armies of France and Spain is sent to the: Hearst pagers by 2 fiscal’ agent of Abd-El-Krim, a graduate of the University of * Madrid: soe : “I have been informed that a grup of American ‘aviators have made application to join the French Air Service to fight the ‘Moroccan barbarians.” The French source has intimated ‘that before the sea- ‘son is over there will be no less than one hundred American aviators Office or War Office may have induce’ nome Americans to go to Morocco ir French nieehipe. But whether it true or not, L-warn auch youths tha the war now going on between ‘th Riftians and Spain and France te no a plenic, and_that in confarmit;:. with the battle standards set by France, the Rit Republic tx forced to adop methods which: the brace Berber would have healitated to adopt namely: 3 “Let U. 8 Airmen Stay at Home *¢a) Any bona fide Frenchman ‘cap: tureq. by the Rule. forces will be treater as & prisoner of war: (>) Any, Moroccan of Moglem North African, fighting on the side o France, when captured by'thé’ Riftians will be treated as a traitor to hit race and faith; = "(c) Any mercengry foreigner fight. ing for pay or adventure on the ait of France agrinat ux. when. captured by us. wYl be shot instantly ‘ “We are forced to make these declarations heeause. having no press and all the news of the operations in Morocco being controlled by France IUhae heen represented that France. ts fighting the African menace againat western efvitization, “This erroneous statement. incites youths of adventure to take sidea in A dintant confiict, the nature of whieh they do not understand. I advise such youths sto remain near their mothers, ."Reports from Europe and America state that France has offered “is peace and that Iam fighting’ to destroy European t#auence in North Africa and threaten the . prestige. of | England, Spain,’ France and whatnot from Africa to the Far East. i “K€ the French Govériment. and ennectally the War Office; incited by her financiers, could tell the sruth they would admit that France ts Aghting for the-Riffs' coppér deposits. “Fiance, during the last half a cea- tury, has exhausted her copper re- sources, In Normandy. and Lorraine the: copper ‘ore ts highiy’ phosphoric. while the ore ‘deposité in southern Spain and, northern Africa are leas phosphoric.and better adapted for.in= numerable industries, especially elec trical, and it is.upon electricity that France is relying to bul}d up her new Industrial economy. i “In 1922 = famous Baglin mining, engineer entlmated our trom ore ye- sources at 15,000,000." teas.» France Knows that mining conditions in the; Rift are very eesy: our mines are ‘open worked’ and labot ti chee. eth ef 5 controlled ty? French combital, ‘The Banque de Paris et dee Pays Bas has for many years been interested in tron, inc. and lead orve in the'Rify, - <It: was the Banque de Parts ot deo Pays Bes which, as sarly as 1908 and’ 1904, issued ‘loase to the Millan of “(Continued om page 8) 4 pEeer | Bes eae fg ea ee ae hghting the Moroccans. . ~ auch an enterprise. ad is Freéth propaganda . because the the statement: The French: Foreign aN ra i <9) MIRACLE S -T0:'NE!- a ‘MIRACLE TONE! Athlete: Jo Beicom Aven eee Gratiomen: ‘soittGt ath dbaiie"pRtemcnie Tlxreia ee Beas’ S nummer Sein -enihéren PENG ace thera be sick tong bal fe Sromed tbat ip apite ef. me callfag in Bhe*Se mbatead SEAT Sad Souter fe es Fe regen sare anon UlantcOx but l ever take ateck ia BE Tibscerh mata or'my bedi Satneg Heieneeey min? S "Karsiet <teiend of Tin Sard of way cumaliions “After sais Biterd Saws Rerard atthe sens rapists tnuee arcane fe Sed toy sayihing aace s+ 1 wes Soopentin to evs cede “8 tT stated, Sat desired Shange came ast anPircona henna fat’ aren Baie etSoday gee Beat ° pe te suite ates tne Gtant.ox, treat- mand fe inae “everybody to aera ‘ates Tes eSeuldialL'Uitator oth and = Giaat-O% - will: prove. a miracle: to ea ae ee eee vecie nee Bie ‘New York City. | YOU HEAR MANY MEN AND WOMEN SAY: “On, te, ppsensn that buoyancy of yout! “Te Feal the pte of fan and Jove "miaking. again. To, feel the firaa_of passion burning within.my sout—the same as in the Gays of my Budding. bubbling youth” ‘These Blessings that you dhee HAD can be FELT again by tak- WM Glant-Gx, Glant-Ox le w gland tonic possessing all the necessary Sloments such ae glands, iron and plycerophoaphates with .a special Bore that restores “the “Chemical Balanee. of the bleed and nervous plandular system. .. ‘The oe are the batteries of the entire ‘nervous system. Medi- eines and druge do NOT help or feed the glands es the ‘scientists in Servers, poe. Auttcia proved. it is “on fect that glands of the eheep and the ox contein the yore of the human body. It ree charges theea email glands sah now "energy. thereby "penetrating new eigonete tate. the very interior ‘hess giving. ee tear In. crber Seime nae lense tn SecacTramnsua'the/bedy oo as'te give 1h the etemina te endure. hard work =x ‘with. « light heart. In + pampite teling of - Aaasien, 204 ehimmlates ‘normal i aes 0 —snrishes the biced | om sats Seon hr ti 4° £ FIZ pial i se = peri ee pad fae cae ae cane ee pee + OS: 8.0. 0a 2°: THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, . AUGUST 23, 1925 - CD | THRONGING: BAGK:| THE: NEG ess Sal] 7 salute the nctga Americal yf AL LCT | ma é people ta, the namie of tha young : "AL AT: as || Rurian paepls, who, for Nberty‘s: ee , - ate Bee : wake, still-suffer the evils of war: Me momen TY — rThcensnr] | She timiane tebe te-ratch some | angie of Natlone Oficial Talla | Reply t6 Charge : y & situation similar to youre— a situation which you won by || of Rush of Jews to Land of| and the Chicage : dint of’ efforts, and- sacrifices ae : : OCCO: IS NO} | ecucry “te the ‘utstimene cc || Their ‘Fathers—-Problem, Now}. Labor’ Congress ‘ yous‘ aspirations, at @time when; |) [8 -Regulation of Immigration|; Negro Jn Ameri CAPTURED.: ike’ the Ritians, you, werwiz tet ——-Britieh Greed and Jerusalem| - Slave Love His | , cycle of youth. z : = : ae “My people, inspired’ by your, enene 3 ae . - |] nigh principle, have been atrig- || WILLIAMSTOWN. Maes. Aug 10—| ._gy.LOVETT FORT gling four years for their inde~ Dercriding Palestine ax “an intellectual! “Tne attention ‘of t} : Bendences and afe ready’ to make | | airyiand and Zioniam as-“one of the] mittee calling the . very je sacrifice, for who- | | <1 = ald Remain | | 2022.72 srets na ane rioue porn | ott extraordinary political phenom-| Tabor Congress hae | shall aurely arrive at the right’ | | éma” Re: bad ever studied, Dr. William | eaitorial appearing < goal. : BH Rappard, member of the Permanent] Tribune on Aug. 11, in “I am now profiting by thé op- |'|-Mandates Commission of the League! supporta the warning : portunity ‘given me by one of 4 ot Nations, declared before the institute wm, Green. president your journaliata.(a man bath gen- _| ” * LAZE THE] | ieoscsna'ipartiintegs es Sona"| | of Peli tay the Jews in Palestine | rpderation at arse : You, my_satutation. Greetings! had attained an astonishing measure| unionists taking part “MOHAMMED BEN. ['/ot succes. "5." roca s1 Sege@ LADOF Congres . ABD-EL-KRIM.” Dwelling “upon the success of “the] Chicago beginning C British-Soviet- War -Predicted by Freach Editoi Wilhamstown, “Maos..° Aug. 9.—Pre- diction of an inevitabjs war between Great Britain and ‘Russi. with Europe endangered by Bolthevinm sinless’ ¢he afters her policy of vbiute force” tow: ard thé Orie, was made “by Felts Vilyl, of Paris, today in a statement wide iublic hy’ the Inntitute of Pol Ulek- M. Vaiy! Is one of the insittute lecturers and tn editor ‘of the Revue Politique Inzernationale. 3 _ “Tremendous upheaviyii phe Eas from Moroced to Mongol, whith.con- atitute one Immense fe remnant directed by the same spirit Of nationalism, can not be treated by the ugual methods o! European Colonial Powers, The Euro- pean races: during the war lost thoi prestixe in the Eant: there inno chance for them to solve hy brute force the ‘economic and “sotial problenie “WATCH contront them." : Islam and Asin were portrayed as demanding'a ‘share on equal,terms with Fyrore in “the movement of modern [dtene ‘The free evolution of-mankind waa endangered naa result of Europe's policy of plunder and partition in the nineteenth century, and the _non- Christian civilization which protuced Kemal in Turkey and Gundhi in India wan a aplritual one not yet understood by Europe. Religious and social presu- Gtces were poisoning the air between the Occldent and the Orient... +.."The rea} innue at Stake in whether the best minds of the Orient Will, co- operate with the best minds, of the Qccldent to save civilization or will help Russian Bolshevism to destroy Europe. < * oe “Itsy ovident that Soviet Russia, having offered the principle of social equality to all Oriental nations. will prof by the mistakes of the Colonial Powers. The only means to react ¢M- clentIsvagains! Bolshetism in’ Atsa ts to start a new piolley of co-operation on the linen advocated by. the United States toward ‘China, - “It the British Empire wowld agree to foliow that example with spectal regard to all Moslem nationa who want their independence, !t might survive the tre- mendou:, world erisix which endangers British eupremacy in the East. “instead of introducing oplum and whisky: into Chinas ‘England should give more attention {o the’ spiritual am- vlect of her relations with the Eastern world. Otherwise in the inevilable ‘war which in coming between England and Russia within the next generation, for their conflicting ideas of economic and rocial life cannot be solved by peaceful means, the British Empire might.suc- cum’ to the-hatreg of Asia, “~The Lennie of Natfons. tteelt 1x accused in the whole Easter world of being merely an instrument of her most powerful European members. No Ort- ental nation has any confidence in ite See acces Diamonds in South Africa; Exceptionally Pure Species JOHANNESBURG, Aus. 16.—A true alamond pipe (the soft aarlomerate of volcanic origin in-whien diamonds ate found) has been discovered at Mwansa, Tanganyika Territory, Dy party. of Bouth Africans, according’ to reports from East Africa. oe !'the-Aiamonds aresaid to_be_excep- tionally pure, a: parcel recently ‘die- pétched from Mwansa averaging value of 28 per carat. - sa O Z ANE 7” sy wo tas ‘ ‘Say ""Bayer Aspirin” WRGIST! Unless you s90. the ame oem a Set. aj: AOR rt JEWISH PEOPLE ~ THROWGING BACK “TO PALESTINE ‘WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.. Aug 10— Dercribing Palestine ax “an intellectial fairyland” and.Zionisr as-“one of th most extraordinary political phenom- ena” he:had ever studied, Dr. Willies % Rappard, member of the Permanent ‘Mandates Commission of the League of Nations, dectared before the Inatitute of Pelitics today the Jews in Palestine hed attained an astonishing meacure of-auccess ss Dwelling “upon the success of “the Zionist movement, Dr. Rappard sald the Jews there came from Eastern Europe, that they arg flourishing and that it was the only place he knew of there there’ wan a rush to the lend. “The problem row.” he said, “Is. not.to encolirage {t+ ‘cration, Becauge tramt- grationYis 1 praceeding at the rate Of 3.000 a maniht..which Is using all the available fanaa: but to regulate and diminish, immigration.” te Dr. Reppard atressed, the industry of the Jews: tn thelr, new. home, thelr ef- forts to cooperate with the Arabs and thelr spirit ‘of self-sacrifice. He de- ‘scribed Chem as iiving a eort of. com- muniatic ‘lite in order to build up ‘the country for future generations. : Referring to the beginning of .the British desire to regain Palestine, Dr. Rappard gave what was purported to be a conversation between former Pre- miler Lloyd George and Visegunt Allen- by, recently High Commissioner of Egypt. * How. Palestine Was Won "Gen. Allenby told me how he came to he called upon to conquer Palestine. Liev Georee called Wm@gnon The TIe= phone and said: “Allenby” I would Uke Jerunalem’ an a Christmas present. whereupon Prenvy replied, ‘That de- pends on you." Lloyd George answered, ‘T-don't understand why that depends on me. You are my general, and I tell you to go and: get Jerusalem. ‘Well, Mt depends on you hecaure it will de- Pend On the material which you sup- ply. Lloyd George: ‘What do you want? Allenby: ‘I want elght divi- sions. 40,000 camels, so much heavy urtillery and so many machine guns. Lioyd George: ‘All right! Allenby: ‘All right. Tou will have Jerusalem a2 Chylatrans prasengy Dr. Rhppard ssid there were four reanons which actuated the British in regaining Palestine: the War Office desired to control the east bank of the Suez Canal; the British felt the deatr- abiilty of.regaining prestige in the Arab world: a Fenatsaance of the cru- rader feeling wan involved: the British desired to establish a national home for the Jews. Aati-Zioniat Objects Rabbi Solomon Foster of Newark, N. J.. took issue With Dr. Rappard on Ziontem, stating that the majority of the Jewish people were anti-Zioniate. “Political. Ziontam,” he declared, "is ré-| garded as ead among the Jewish Peoria. Intelligent Jews today do not expect -politi¢al independence for the Jewish people.” He concluded with an appeal for fair treatment for the Jews, throughout,the world. ae The prediction that the future of the world depends on Asia or America was made by Fellx Valy!, editor of the Revue Politique IntéFnationale. in hin lecture on “The Spirit of Asia ait Asiatle History." , “The fate of the universe.” sald M. Vayil. “is,no longer in the hande of the European races, It dapends hence-. forth upon two non-European factors; on the one hand, America, atimly frozen nto her relfglous and*agcial ‘traditions, vid on the other, Asia in full effer~ vercence of new Ideas and few senti- ments.” : : 4 Mr. Valy! asserted the Little Entente was an artificial group. purely military m ‘character;‘and that it was one pf he causes’ which contribite to the present hopelens atate of European af- airs. “It maintains,” “he-satd, “the pirlt of distrust in Central Europe.” _ Aw to, Hungary, Mr. Valyl's mative and: “The majority of Hungarians hare the'paint of view df the présent | Magyar government.2hAt the presence, t Mr. Jeremiah Smith of Boston in Budapeht as high commissioner of the ague'of Nations ie @ much better quisition for the future of Hungary han any of thé nuinefous archdukes f the Mapeburg family might be.” # doubt whether @ satistactory method for the election ef-Sndges for World court could have ‘déen effected, ad not. the Lengad of Netione bien ‘tn . Réeves im tho Ryund om, ta wrnations! Justion (70 He showed that tt would-hays been | | te, have. ope power rép-. a Bee ei ees of ae ee rie EABOR CONGRESS, . THE NEGRO IND -By LOVETT FORT -WhtvemAN “The atfention ‘of the national cof mittee calling the American Negra ‘Labor Congress has been calle@to an editorial appearing in the Chicége Tribune on Aug. 11, In which the frriter supports the warning Issued dy Mr. |" WEm. Green, prenident of the. American Federation of Labor. againat Negro,!abor unioniste taking part in the ‘American NO#tO” LABGF "Congress “to” De-neld~in ‘Chicago doginning October 28. Mr. Green charges the.:American Negro Labor Conkfess with being “supported by the Communist element in this coun- try and constituting a great anger to the Negro working class. The Chicago Tribune in aubstantiatirtg ther attitude ‘of the head of the American Federation ot Labor argues that no 4 eater dis- nervice coaid be rendered the raco than tho premetion “of Soviet doctrines among the Negro people'ot América. ‘We of the Amerlean Labor Congress have not assumed a definite position in respect to. the nocial situation in Rus- aia at this time, nor Js the American Negro Labor Congress a communint affair® ‘True, the communist element throughout “America have shere and ‘hero. proffered thelr sympathy, and support for the work of organising. the Congress, but the communist groun Is ‘nly one of those amorig many, con- atituting the most progressive elements within the Inbor movement of America, who have taken a helpful and fraternal Hattinntetoward-the-work-of bringing about the American Nebro Labor Con- hgrens. ‘The Negro working class in America suffers all the ‘gocin abuses of the working class in general, but plus racial persecition. We well know that -the ruling, class In this country. as In all capitalist countries, is better able to maintain ftself through keeping’ the ranks of the workers divided. elther on caste, racial or religious insues, "In In dia with, 4tm $20,000,000 people, England in able to.hold power through ever Keeping alive the caste sentiments in Ireland {t 1s Catholic against Protest fant; in the West Indies, mulattoes seeing Dincka, and hee icpour oy “free” United Staten, it ia while against black. Mr. Green and the Chicago Tri- dune churge that the American Negro Labor: Congieas has for tts policy the intensifying of interracial bitterness, Héwell knows that that ts absolutely untrue. It is merely a thin shield to protect his own skin from the grow~ ing reaction throughout the. labor movement‘against the policy of restrie- Uon onthe part of many unions. ‘The American Negro Labor Congress 18 ac- tuated by the desire to build up In this ‘country a sentiment of comtnon interest PDetween white and binck seorkers, %0 eradicate the practice of using Negroes ap.atrike breakers, renulting always in race riots and the intensityifig of ractal antagonisms. ‘The Negro ie the most oppressed group in our Améarican hife, and he ts fast coming to see that the causes re- sponnible for his degradation are tn the social system. It is well enough to say, that there ts some degree of prosperity among # small nection of Negroes tn our ‘northern citiés. But what about the great masses of the race residing fa'the Southern States, where they are denied every elemental right vouch- aafed even the mont, undeveloped ra- clal groups"In any other’ section ot ‘world aoctety. The Negro ts admon- ‘inhea to be loyal and support American tHetizutions. Loyalty has no virtue within Steelf: 1¢ all depends upon ‘that fovwhich one ie loyal, Is there any’ vir- ture- in the slave being loyal to bie master? -Lyriching 18 one of Ameri, ca’s fastitution. Ehould the Negro not seek with all means at his hands -to undermine this institution? Likewise, {ts Tim Cedwinia, political dlstranchise- ment: industrial discrimination, reat: Gential segragation, etc. . ‘The American Negro Labor Congress can Dy no means be interpreted as a Bolahevik,.movement among Negross. Bat we ite fact, that the Jew before the Rus-| sian’ Revolution was the Negro of Rus- bia, and. there’was mo country in wie worla"more sfarcte, with racial pxaby, Jems than old‘ Gearist Russia... But to- day, seven years after the Bolshevik revolution, Russian capttaliem “hating deen overthrown and the causes of ra- clal, problems there heving been re- moved, the Jew ts no longer centned to-the Pale sectomanan: the Mosteme ot Turkestan no ‘longer compelled. to, ride jn Jim Crow care and denied ofu- cation! fuciiities; but cach and every] one of:the many racial groups af foo pottienl, covnemin and o Mie of con souatry. Actin. 22 Jpettey. exzirpphing out btyj-] m Oily Svmntry bee ene ons goeate- ana: evenness: Ye z sna) aude eit ‘ast abate 8 0 Me wees. 3 0 {ey ten me TE Boe ei ; kw , eed - i} Fake ERIE leat iar | Boe (acruaL SIZE) -- . | Pluko HAIR DRESSING s, ; ay. ( a cl | S Ley ce 7 BE sg i At be aU ea a I an 2 oo an Bi Hee Te pee soe CATAL SIZE). gas | ao ee on Behind Mr. Garvey, ‘Prom the African, World, Cope .| .- Town, Geuth Afrioa «> ‘Tere! are gradustie and grad- Gates gmpong- the Africkne who’ are mombers and admirers and- | propagandists of the. Universal | -ferprovereent—Associatiin and. ‘African’ Communities . League. AaEoEs GAEYSY ‘1s SINS © OE of five” years> not’ because the members of the Universal, Negro Trapravement Association lodged | ‘complaint, or charge of ‘theft against him. but hé is in the At- lanta - Penitentisry because of Anglo-Saxon diplomatic manipu- lations! ‘The entire Negro ‘world: has implicit confidence in. Mar- cus Garvey ana we have assisted him.and we have made it pos- able for: Fitm to purchase © ship that sails the sever, seas” and tt will continue.to sail the seven seas -until..the.... Africa Zimpira..ts founded. The legions of hell can- -]-not-stay-the-onward march of the Kuehite Race. Naked Hollywood — . Dancers Arrested Loe Angeles, Aug 8.—An alleged all- night revel, featured by a spectacular “aance of nature” performed by four naked eiria.came to 4, sudden end to- day when police raided « stately house i’ the heart of Hollywood and ar- rested the four dancers and seven men. Charges of violations of liquor and” moral laws were placed against the. eleven... The detectives sald they spent -8250 In the resort, #100 having cen paid to witness the ‘mature dance,” music for wbich was furnished by a colored jazz orchestra, they said. ‘MOST ESSENTIL ~~ TO PROGRESS Sy Rane: Tyee Diicipline ie the greagest sisgie os- sential: to the collective ‘prosrees of the, Negro, and’ his’ ultimate atedin- ment to his rightful place in the sun among ‘the. great péoplp of the earth. Disciplige presupnoses. frat, an ot- dectivel gpecond, the ability’ to con stantly Gisualize“and “hold that ob= Jective before the mind’ eye; third, -the-terribie;-death-defylyg.~delermina~ ‘tlon to carry through to the end—to touch that objective with the firm “hand of auccess.“ In any one or in the collecifon of these@points the Nerve is brilliantly conspicuous for his failure, as a face god’ an Inditiduals. Candor may regretnthe:2dmistion, but fs justified in its Intention, to serve. that this denunciation can be made. with equal measure of no other racial group. e » Ethnic differences or climatic in fluence cannot alone explain ihe su- preme sife of elvilization, as we know it, n some races and the atmost com= plete Absence or ateyance-of this gift in. others. Civilization 18 ® positive contributfon of humanity to itself and ROt, as Rome ‘Aippose. merely dn-en-- vironmental circumstance. a, fortunate conspiracy 6f fates. as it tere, Civil- ization ts a, dynamic projection of the (Continued on page 5) LIBERTY HALL WITNESSES BIG DEMONSTRATION ON EVE OF MARCUS GARVEY'S BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY GREAT TRIBUTE PAID TO GREATEST NEGRO LEADER AND THE MOTHER THAT GAVE HIM BIRTH—HIS COURAGEOUS STAND FOR NEGRO LIBERTY IS RE-CALLED—NEGROBS THE WORLD OVER ARE URGED TO FOLLOW HIS LEADERSHIP—EVEN THOUGH IMPRISONED FOR THE CAUSE WHICH HE CHAMPIONED GARVEY STILL CONTINUES TO WORK FOR IT Hon. G. A. Weston Deprecates Idea of Division Between Negroes of United States and West Indies—Is an Attempt to Destroy the Very Foundation of What Garvey Has Built Up—Negroes All Over the World Are Urged to Unite in One Common Cause HON. LEVI LORD CALLS ATTENTION TO SOME SURPRISING FACTS REGARDING THE WAR IN MOROCCO—FACTS ARE GIVEN REGARDING THE SUCCESS OF THE RIFFS. AGAINST THE FRENCH—U. N. I. A. PROPAGANDA HAS INSPIRED THE AFRICANS TO FIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, Aug. 16—Loyalty to the cause of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and its imprisoned leader, Hon. Marcus Garvey, was incontrovertibly evidenced today by the thousands of people who joined in the festivities attending the celebration of the eve of the thirty-eighth birthday anniversary of Mr. Garvey and then repaired en masse to the usual Sunday night meeting in Liberty Hall. It was truly a Garvey Day Kelly, and the minds of the treimendous gathering of people were obsessed with the one thought of doing honor to the man who has stirred the world and caused it to have a new perspective of the Negro and who like all martyrs to a noble cause is willingly and courageously naming the penalty. The meeting tonight was opened with the usual preliminaries, after which a splendid musical program was rendered by the choir and the Universal Band. Miss Ethel Collins, in excellent voice, rendered a soprano solo, and little Miss Bessie Smith gave a recitation, "The Black Man," which was much appreciated. Inspiring speeches were delivered-by Hon. G. A. Weston, vice-president of the New York Local and chairman of the meeting, Col. Samuel F. Dorsett, and Capt. Mills of the African Royal Engineers, and Hon. Levi Lord, and then general of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. The whole tenor of the speeches was praise for Hon. Marcus Garvey and the great work which has been wrought by the organization which he founded and an appeal to the Negroes of the world to carry on and perpetuate the work which is already bearing fruit. Mr. Lord made happy reference to some of the results which the propaganda of the Universal Negro Improvement Association had accomplished in creating a new spirit in the mind of the native Africans to the extent that they are now waging a war in a certain portion of Africa in defense of their rights and to obtain the privileges of inde- Fallowing are the speeches: SOLONEL DUETSETT'S ADDRESS To Samuel E. Dorsett, of the African National Engineers, a unit of the New York Local, was the first speaker. He took as his subject "The Lion in the Cave and the Hack Saw Within His Reach." If the lion, the Negro, he said, but knew how to reach out through the bars of his cage and grab the hack saw within his reach he would not remain imprisoned long. If Negroes the world over knew how to use the dollars floating around, if they knew the value of organization and the value of leadership, they would not be suffering long. If Negroes the world over but knew the tremendous value of organization and cooperation, their gifted leader, would not now be lying in an Atlanta prison. Not only, he emphasized, did the Ne- YOU POOR KID, WHY ARE YOU SO SKINNY? Don't your mother know that Cod Liver Oil will put pounds of good healthy flesh on your bones in just a few weeks? Tell her every druggist has it in sugar-coated tablet form now, so that you won't have to take the nasty, fishy-tasting oil that is apt to upset your delicate stomach. For that, McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets are check-full of vitalizing vitamins, and are the greatest flesh produce and health buffers she can find. One slightly thin kid, age 9, gained 12 pounds in 7 months. She must ask any good drugstel for McCoys God Liver Oil Compound Tablets—50 tablets—50 cents—as pleasant to take as candy. gro not know himself; but the other fellow knew that the Negro lacked this knowledge of self, lacked pride in race and the power in organization. And so the other fellow remained dominant. It was this knowledge of self and pride in race that made the Japanese nation great and caused them, after the defeat of the Russians, to make a law that a Japanese woman must not be seen with any other man but a Japanese. Japan did this because she desired to build up a still greater nation. This was also the attitude of the white man, even more pronounced when he was, like the Negro today, down in the scale of life, than it is today. The speaker ended with a stirring appeal to the women to stand 100 per cent, behind their men and to spurn consorting with men of other races. Other women were satisfied with their men and were patient when their men were not in a position to lavish wealth and luxuries upon them, and the Negro women should now do likewise. Let Negro men and women follow the leadership of the Hon. Marcus Garvey and riches and position of influence would come to them in time. CAPT. MILLS SPEAKS Capt. Mills, of the African Royal Engineers, followed. He said, there was a bright future for the Negro if he followed the path to nationhood indicated by the great leader and made an earnest appeal for greater cooperation and earnestness on the part of members of the Association and the race. HOM. G. A. WESTON'S ADDRESS Hon G. A. Weston, vice-president of the New York Local, was the next speaker. He said: We are gathered here tonight, as we were this afternoon, on the eve of the THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21 birthday anniversary of our esteemed President-Generali. It is the first time in the history of the Universal Negro Improvement Association that we have been able to demonstrate on the sidewalk of New York as we did this afternoon, and we must thank those noble men and women who assisted in bringing about this splendid demonstration. We must also thank the captain of the precinct of this district for his kind permission and also the neighbors—our neighbors here—138th street—who did not complain but entered into the spirit of the occasion. The Usual Propaganda Referring to an article on Marcus Garvey which appeared in the New York World that morning along with a full-sized picture of the great leader and the drawing of a prison kitchen in which the leader was pictured as working, he bade his hearers be not discouraged. On the contrary they should be heartened, for even the prefilled writer of the article could not but admit that the great leader was conducting himself in prison with the same courage of spirit as characterized his actions without and remained firm in his conviction and determination to work for a free and redeemed Africa upon his release. Great Mother A GREAT mother In an eloquent passage he thanked the mother of the Hon. Marcus Garvey for giving to the world a man of such dominant desire, a man of such great ideals and genius who was now feared and respected throughout the world. He could well picture the mother of Marcus Garvey, thirty-eight years ago, as she ushered him into the world praying that God would give him wisdom and understanding with which to lead a downrodden people from thrdldom, from servitude into the glorious light of freedom and liberty. Seeking to Make a Division The speaker at this sign said he would take the opportunity to depress the raising of the question since the Hon. Marcus Garvey was in prison of a division between Negroes of the United States and Negroes of the West Indies and South and Central America. "When Marcus Garvey was out, there was no division," he said, "and now that Marcus Garvey is in jail there can be no division. The individual who attempts at this time to destroy the thing which Marcus Garvey has created in the minds of Negroes universally, that they came from one stock, that they came from one family-tree, that they were descended from Ham, that they are Kushites, that they are Hamites, that they are the same African people though they were scattered by slaveholders in the West Indies and in the Americas—those who attempt at this time to drive a wedge between the West Indian and the American Negro are outstanding enemies to the race and to progress. What Counts "There is another thing we must watch," the speaker added, "and it is this: There are thousands of us in the Universal Negro Improvement Association in American who, born in the West Indies, thought it necessary to become naturalized citizens of this great country in order that we can fight side by side with our brothers who were brought help. And we are going to fight side by side with them for their political recognition, for their social rights, and at the same time constrain them to fight with us to eventually free our God-given territory, Africa. Marcus Garvey's ideals must not be allowed to drag in the dust because envious individuals desire to see a division within the ranks of the Universal Negro Improvement Association at this time. We are not concerned with what island you came from, we are not concerned with what part of the world the negro came from. We are only concerned with whether you are a Negro. So long as you have one drop of Negro blood, you are lined up with the race, you are one of us, you are a potential member of the great Universal Negro Improvement Association." "None Can Replace Garvey" Mr. Weston, concluding, said he desired to reiterate this statement: No man can take Marcus Garvey's place. Marcus Garvey is wrapped up in the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the Negro race is wrapped up in Garvey, and those Negroes who do not now hearken to 'Garvey's preachments eventually must. "I want you to see," said he. "that even though Jesus, the Great Teacher, never built a church during His ministry, and those that came after built churches and great edifices, they have not been able to replace Jesus—they cannot take the place of Jesus. So it is with Garvey and the Negro race. Those that come after may build upon the foundation he laid, may cause his tenets to be universally accepted by Negroes, but they cannot replace Garvey. So let us not take our eyes off the ideals of this great organization, caring not what the individual or group may do or say. That way destruction lies. And we celebrate the ove of his birthday, and we will celebrate his birthday tomorrow, rejoicing that he has given to us the hope of an asylum of refuge, has given to us the ideals of a redeemed and free Africa and an emancipated Negro race." MON, LEVI, LORD SPEAKS High. Love Lord was the host speaker. Advertising to the article printed in the New York World requesting How Marius Gorner and his impersonator, he said that Mr. Gorner will build himself up in the spot of the great poet and the greatest Italian writer. in that the press both white and colored has given more publicity to him than any other Negro living or dead. The fact that the New York World should devote three columns of its newspaper to Marcus Garvey was positive proof that he has attracted and still maintains the attention of the public, whether he has wrought good or bad. It is a thousand times more beneficial to the race and its liberty, said Mr. Lord, to have Mr. Garvey working in the kitchen in Atlanta prison, than to have him in New York doing nothing for the Negro peoples of the world. It matters not whether he is in Atlanta doing mental labor as long as that particular labor is contributing to the success of the Negro peoples of the world in their fight for liberty. Marcus Garvey, he continued, is not fighting for himself nor for the Negroes of America or the West Indies, but he is fighting for the 400,000,000 Negroes throughout the world and he has told the world that, if necessary, he will die fighting for the cause of Negro liberty and the redemption of Africa. A New Ideal The Universal Negro Improvement Association, said the speaker, has given to the Negro a new idea to strive for government, for liberty and for independence, and it matters not what the world may think, the Negro desires to have them; and, regardless of what the consequences may be, he intends to fight for them. The Negro has made up his mind that he is not going to stop fighting until he has achieved what the other fellow has achieved. The Negro has been in the background for a number of years; but he is now emerging from that position, because the Universal Negro Improvement Association has taught him that anything he desires to have he must get it by fighting and not by begging. Proof of this was found in the activities of the Riffians in the war that is now being waged in Morocco. The Riffians, said he, are fighting for liberty, independence and self-government. They have begged for those things for some time, but today they are fighting for them, and are getting them, too; for in the New York American of today's date there appeared an article purporting to be the result of an interview with Abd-e-l-Krim, wherein in the progress which the Riffians were making was reported. Abd-e-l-Krim is reported as saying that it matters not what the newspapers say; the Riffians are progressing and are not losing any ground in their fight. Abd-e-l-Krim says that since the beginning of the war in Morocco the French have lost 8,000 French soldiers and 14,000 Colonial soldiers. In addition to that, he states that the Riffians have captured 5,000 French soldiers and 25,000 Colonial troops have joined the Riffians and brought with them all of their French equipment. This goes to show that the Riffians are making splendid progress toward their independence and self-government, and they deploy the fact that America should infect herself into the war by having American captors join with the French against them, since the Riffians are fighting for the same thing that George Washington, the father of America, took up arms for and won for his country, namely: liberty and independence. Black, Men and Self-Government Continuing, Mr. Lord said that the Rifflans see white men and yellow men at the head of their own affairs, and they are determined that black men shall be at the head of Moroccan affairs and direct the destiny of the Moroccan. The Afrikan has made up his mind to stop begging, but, rather to go forth, and take that which is his, and this attitude is largely due to the propaganda that the Universal Negro Improvement Association started a few years ago. So, though our leader, Marcus Garvey, is today suffering behind pusson walls, it brings joy to his heart that the propaganda of the Universal Negro Improvement Association has taken hold of the Africans and that they argomarching forward, seeking independence and self-government. Let Us Remember— That our personal suffering is but little compared with that which the Hon. Marcus Garvey is now efferently enduring for the rate: For Your Health! SICK Men and Women, do not neglect your Health. Take Assmee Bitters You can avoid operations if you will always apply but not continue using paracite treatments which gain. If you suffer from. STOMACH, KIDNEY, TORPID LIVER, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGEN- TION, CONSTIPATION, RHEUMA; TISM, BACKACHE, BOILS, OR PIMPLES If you are sick with PREDMATRIX, SCIATICA, LUNG INFLAMMATION, BACKACHE, MISS MEDICURE, BUNS, PAINFUL JOINES, ACHING BONES, IF YOUR BODY IS fall of URGE OR BLOOD PRESSURE, IF YOU DIE IN DAILY DIAGNOSIS or in daily pain WORK, CAN'T DIGGE WORK properly— LOSE NO TIME—Get the wounds well properly JOITZONE REHABILITATION MEDICINE (Double Strength) Just take a dose of this immediately that pain stops. The blood becomes purer, no more BORN, STIFF, ACHING JOINES; no more SCIATICA, LUNGINIA, NEUROMAT INFLAMMATIC PAIN—gains. Take 'Fork' away from the area. I Will Give You a Chance To Earn $200 a Week FRANCE WANTS RIFF COPPER a consortium of French banks which secured a concession from the Sultan of Morocco, and formed the State Bank of Morocco. Later, in 1912, the consortium joined with other concerns to form the General Morocco Company. In 1922, they formed the Morocco Railway Company. For years they have subsidized the Sultan of Morocco, and through a bestial palace in the capital of Morocco the French and the Spanish financiers maintained their profits and power. "The Banque de Paris in Madrid alsoields an enormous power in Spanish politics. But to say that the financiers, who in their attempt to rob Morocco of its riches, involved first Spain then France in a Colonial war, is not telling the whole truth. "Associated with the Banque de Paris in bank promotion in Morocco was a Belgian concern in which the Hon. S. C. Peal of S. Japhet & Co. is interested. This firm is now concerned, together with Rothschild, in a financial company of which Sir Alfred Mond is the most important director. That explains why certain English interests approve the Moroccan war of Spam and France. A War of Conquest M. Caillaux, France's present Minister of Finance, was fondly a very high personage in the circles of the Right now, today, I offer you an opportunity to be your own boss—to work just as many hours a day as you please—to start when you want to and quit when you want to—and earn $200 a week. These Are Facts Does that sound too good to be true? If it does then look at these earning records for the past several months for Spencer Warren. Mr. Warren made $424.82 in September; $480.82 in October; $449.86 in November, and $272.34 in December. W. J. McCrary is another man I want to tell you about. His regular job paid him $2 a day, but his wonderful new work has enabled him to make $16,800 in three years. Yes, and right this very minute you are being offered the same proposition that has made these men so successful. Do you want it? Do you want to earn $40 a day? A Clean, High-Grade, Dignified Business Have you ever heard of Comer Topcoats and Raincoats? They are advertised in the leading magazines. A good-looking, stylish coat that's good for summer or winter—that keeps out wind, rain or snow, a coat that everybody should have, made of fine materials for men, women and children, and sells, for less than the price of an ordinary coat. Nov. Comer Coats are not sold in stores. All our orders come through our own representatives. Within the next few months we will pay representatives more than three hundred thousand dollars for sending us orders. And now I'm offering you the Banque de Paris. 'M. Loucheur also participated, at the height of the European war, in 1917, in a syndicate to work water power rights in Morocco. M. Loucheur is powerful in the French heavy industries and in finance; was Minister of Reparations, and after the fall of Herriot's government before Painlevie took office was mentioned for Premier or Minister of Finance. "Such are the interests of French financiers in copper and iron, electricity and steel, which force the French ministry to continue the war of conquest. "Buny assure the French people, as well as the whole civilized world, that the French-Spanish armies in Morocco have already met with severe checks. They have kept from the French people the fact that since France started the war against us they have lost 8,000 French and 14,000 Colonial soldiers on the field. In addition to these, I have captured over 5,000 French soldiers, while 25,000 of her Colonial troops came over to us with all their equipment. "I would challenge the French to state that they have captured 100 Riflemen. If the French army could show to a disinterested commission that they have captured more than 100 Riflemen, I will be willing to exchange every Rifleman by sending them ten of the Frenchmen I have captured. "If the French commander could tell the truth he would say that, since they started the attack upon us, we have captured 75,000 Miles, enormous ammunition and 120 machine guns. We have brought down thirty-two of their artillery with their machines." Sixteen French Posts Captured France in her communiques has so far admitted that we have captured sixteen of their posts, and these communiques always state next day that Give You a rn $200 chance to become our representative in your territory and get your share of that three hundred thousand dollars. All you do is take orders. We do the rest. We deliver. We collect and you get your money the same day you take the order. You can see how simple it is. We SPENCER WARREN In addition to the bigh earnings I have a plan whereby you can go to a Chevrolet Cruch to help you in developing this great feature. Mall them for full details. furnish you with a complete outfit and tell you how to get the business in your territory. We help you to get started. If you only send us four average orders a day, which you can easily get, you will make $100 a week. Maybe You Are Worth $1,000 a Month Well, here is your chance to find out, for this is the same proposition that enabled George Gaton to make a clear profit of $40 in his first day's work—the same proposition that gave R. W. Krieger $20 net profit in a half hour. It is the same opportunity that gave A. B. Spencer $625 these posts have been recaptured by the French. "The truth is that my soldiers attack the French posts, not to keep them, but to secure the war material stored in them. When the Riflans capture these posts they carry away the guns and ammunition, and if there is any assistance in the French troops later reoccupying these posts we are satisfied, because during the last two months we have depended some of these posts of their equipment as many as four times. "The French, command knows that although the French forces in Morocco number more than 200,000, they would not dare to marshal 25 per cent of this force in actual combat, because they are not certain of the loyalty of some of these troops. The French use native troops as a frontier for French regular troops in action. "While I realize that my brave Rifians are fighting two powerful nations, before the season is over France will realize the folly of her course, as Spain would have realized it had the French financiers not involved their country in the dispute." Africa Listens In On Island Radio Another instance of long-distance radio reception on short-wave lengths is reported by the American Radio Relay League headquarters at Hartford, Coun. The report, states that, S. C. Please, operator of station O.A43M at Johannesburg, South Africa, recently listened in on a two-way conversation between Haglett, Weatherwax, station 6CNT, Humphin, and C. F. Butler, station IGD, Tacoma, Washington. cash for one month's spare time. If you mail the coupon at the bottom of this ad, I will show you the easiest, quickest, simplest plan for making money that you ever heard of. If you are interested in a chance to earn $200 a week and can devote all your time or only an hour or so a day to my proposition, write your name down below, cut out the coupon and mail it to me at once. You take no risks and this may be the one outstanding opportunity of your life to earn more money than you ever thought possible. Find Out NOW! Remember it doesn't cost you a penny. You don't agree to anything and you will have a chance to go right out and make big money. Do it. Don't wait. Get full details. Mail the coupon now. C. E. COMER The Comer Manufacturing Co. Dept. 185-X, Dayton, Ohio Just Mail This Now! C. E. COMER, The Comer Manufacturing Co., Dept. 185-X, Dayton, Ohio Please tell me how I can make $300 a week as your representative. Send me complete details of your offer without any obligation to me whatsoever. 5, ee i Bs ee a ee Seay a are sc eteenease ft tee oe! Bt as — par ae, ie ae i ern tes foe amet . fegto PAAMMorli a & att ty * a. Se ty raw we SS ON A A aes S Se ee, on eT a ea ame Row Ver Z BS 2 petep tone Marlen, 2977 ss * ‘every Waturduy im the: tuterest of the Negro Race end the ee nae tasroviapent sssootation ty tho Atrican Commusitice League Te amen onro TD Lt Stet Eietes water . i Mepoaogtieaanver” 52050202252 Sse. | +. iter é Pili elt 2 seenee stor "3: Ses Womos 2S 22555 2 See -bpawont eo taremswe 5505-5 5.52 Siainate Manager ___ See ‘SUBSCRIPTION RATES TO THE NEGRO WORLD ~ ‘Gee Fear... .snsecrccesseevee B20 | One Yearsc.scocscseesosonegece HE00 Menthe. .ccccsccsecasccssees E98 | BUX MOathe, <ciscccccceeseeevce B40 4 Months secencscecccssese AB | Three Months. cocesscanscseeces LES aes : é {S6 Batered a2 second clase matter April 16, 1919, at ths Post-. Bat Now Fores Neve pnder the AC oe Marek & 1873, 5 ta ee PRICES: Five conte tx Greater New York: seven cents Bho~-etastd in the U. B. A; ten cents in foreign countries. ——— 5 Advertising Rates at OMce = * ‘ puree jc Gee : “MOL: KIX. NEW YORK, AUGUST 2, 1925, No.2 |” _” The Negro World does not knowingly accept ae ee fraudulent’ advertising. Readers of the Negro World are , €ammestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on the past of an advertiser to adhere td any representation contained Eases . : f LET’S.PUT IT OVER ~ | SEVEN YEARS_OF..THE .UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION ‘ UT N the opening of his brilliant oration at Liberty Hall, Sunday | ‘evening, August -3, and published -in The Negro World o August 15, acting’ President-General William L. Sherrill said . “Seven years‘have passed since thirteen Negroes, inspired and led by Marcus Garvey, ‘organized the Universal Negro Improve- itient Association. Seven years of bitter struggles with Negro groups. in-the race who, being drunk with white psychology. .. could not see from a black man’s point of view. Seven years of stiff opposition on the part of white forces who have seen and Felt ia Atria the West-“hridies-and-CentralAmeflea; the-dan-— gerous effects of the teachings of the Universal’ Negro Improve- “ ment Association on their systems of oppregsion, rape and ex: pleitation. Seven years of sad disappointments on the part of ‘members of the -association who have worked and sacrificed « their time and money only to see every attempt to actually ma-' terialize their dreams. and ambitions thwarted. Yet in spite of all of this, it has been seven years of hope, courage and thank- folness because our. spiritual gain has far outweighed our * material losses. Our very attempt at big business and eoloniza- tion has‘ awakened Negroes everywhere to a consciousness. of ‘the mighty powers within them and inoculated them, with a, ~-vacial patriotism which is destined to. manifest itself in a united face-and a self-governed people.” : > Every member of the Universal. Negra Improvement Association feels about the hard struggles and splendid sitcecsses of the organi- zation as Acting President-Sherrill feels. They all feel-that a great work has been accomplished and that 2 greater work, building upon the foundation they have dug, remains to be done. All honor to Margus Garvey and the Thirteen who laid the foundation upon which She association has been builded. © * . THE NEGRO LABOR CONGRESS AND RADICAL _ SOVIET PROPAGANDA .. . . OME Very intelligent Negrocs have been working up a Negro S Labor Congress, and it is announced that it will mect in Y ‘Chicago in October. A lot of persons who like to know where, they are going when they start’ anywhere wanted to know in ‘the beginning who was financing the Congress; The need of-organ- “ixzing.‘our labor forces more systematically, and thoroughly is gen- erally recognized, as our labor interests are among the most im- portant we have. They have become more so in ail economic seitse since the réstriction of foreign immigration weit: into effect and demand for our labor became more general and remuneraiive. Because of this fact, the program of the American Federation of Labor to organizé our labor force more generally, which it had not much favored when there was no restriction on foreign Jabor, was Fegarded as a hopeful sign. . : ‘Mr. William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, in a statement. made at Washington, says the Negro: Labor, Congress has-been called, by American Communists in affiliation with the Russian Soviets and the Moscow International, and warns| the American Negro’against being mixed up in such a-network of. ‘tréubles‘as the Russian Soviets and the Moscow International “‘gmbody.- He does not think that there are a great many Communists dma-the country, and:few Negroes are affiliated, or desire to be affilitted ‘grith, the Communist organization, and in this we quite agreé with oe Mr. Green: states .the-case very tlearly'and conclusively, we : We. gave his views in the last’ issue of The. Negro World, ‘Seg we are sure they were read with interest_and will cause mim ‘SeBettion among those who read them. They are worth close study, | ge the question of the Negro affiliating with the Communist organiza- ‘iden is'a five one'not onif in the United States but in the West Indies @ed Aftica, especially South Africa, the South, African Communist me tion being very outspoken.in defense of native laborer in- frets 20 being identical with that of English speaking laborer. in- fitete in the seme part.of the world. : Fhére mining ip 2 leéding Miaiiry. snd-white-zed black labor ie being. exploited fo the liteit pee bagtish and’ American corporations, as they ere beitg BPN Wie being tatetests ix the suger and todsceo and coffee pi ehGNie: and Haiti, Negro labor beitig the main: thing ater Min cotporations im the latter coustries. 0 y8i) Siareatars nine me derrecsice of ht exiting Sie Sts owethtow of * Af Be a Piao nqeig: not: spleen onttiunleetiegtiy’ to Peony Cpomrennee Lepeipetiinat, et: the: Kae oe pene ena ee vaes. 0 Fe ee ne ee eee net one, “REA ome oute Ser eee oaliyg ne Ec Reecal! eae 5 eae co teh Tie NEGRO WORLD,.SATURDAY, AGGUST 2% 1908. es 8 eRe ie ae eee oon Mee rem ree Mere te ee ee SS ‘nethilig td consetve except tis chaina, “Negroes have nothing Jyocbing Soe varniag. :5 believe Saat X ony mame pocnte Wowie be radicél- Negroes should be. Redicalism is a label that is alwsys applied to a péople’who:are endeavoring to get freedom.” . _ We have always been radical and:always' will be, and we strive t: be discriminatingly ‘radical. «Where there are wréngs to be righte those. who, seek justice :must follow the logic of their contentiog even if it leads to the destruction of the system and the forces tha Sustain it, if. these ‘latter are so stiff-necked: gs to refuse the redres cf grievances cqmplained of.: The Fathers of the American Revolu tion took that attitude in dealing with the colonial misgovernmen of Great Britain and achieved their independence by rebellion: anc force of arms- If the MotherCountsy had yittded_it_would have been. differents but it did, not yield, therefore ‘the British statesmer of those times were responsible for the loss"of the American colonia to the Mother Country,-and none of them dreamed: how great wa: the loss. Mr.Green says: |” _ hy “Communism in America is comparable to the. boll-weevil in the éotton fields. Both are.importations and equally injurious. * “While the convention to be held is called the American Negro ‘Labor Congress, behind the purpose of ‘its odentors ‘is to . <imislead the colored men into believing tbat’ all their grievances “ will be remedied by overturning’ the Government of the United ” States.andestablishing a soviet republic—otherwiee, the dic- tatorship of the proletariat. Race hatred. will be encouraged to bring about this end. : +e “A number of uniome, composed of colored men have been _ + deceived into” sending: delegates. They have been ted to believe © they will attend a converition of union Negroes: _- “The fact is that-the.cogyention was called by men who are not members of trade unions or if they are they do not attend “ the unions of which they are members. The organized labor movement is expelling Communists as rapidly as they are found out: : * ’ ste “Although there can not be more than a few hundred Con’ muniéts in the country, they give an impression, becausé of their noise-making propaganda, that there are millions. ~ S ~ “I-wish-to-warn-all Negro-members.of- trade. unions. that théy are being led into a trap that will eventually be their undoing.” Mn Green makes a very plain and fair statement of the-question, and we quite agree with him and'the position of the American Fed- sation of Labor, as far as the question affects the Jaborers.of the United States: We do not believe in the. Soviet theory of govern- ment nor in the destruction of the industrial system nor the govern- ment of the United, States: we believe that white and: black labor can secure justice and fair play in our industrial system, and it has gained much in the past half century, by -peaceful agitation. and legislation : nor do we believe it any mofe necessary to sitbstitute the Soviet_or_any_other system of zovernment_for_that“of the United States, because: we believe it thie best system ever devised through which men can work out themselves their social, civil and’ economic values, or can-be devised. The people.are the rulers in this country. They govern, themselves. “They make and enforce their owxtaws. here is no appeal from themselves.except to. themselves. If they ‘annot make their self-government a Success, if they cannot’ so legis- ate as to ultimately get,a fair and equitable, distribution of the labor nd production and resulting wealth of the joint capitalism of labor nd production, the thing simply cantiot be done “BY. any other rossible devisible civil and economic system. * Insthe British colonies, and the colonies of other European powers, ¥e should take a-very radically different position, . Especially is-this rue in South Africa, In the self-governing States and the cdlonies of Great Britain, and most other European powers, the native peoples ave none or very little voice in their government, and the control { their labor and production is entirely in the hands of those who ule. Even these latter,.as to-the higher administrative officials, specially. the governor-general, are appointed by the king or the orcign or coldMal secretarigs in London, Paris, Rome, Madrid, .ison, and the like European capitals. This being,the case in.the. West Indies, in Africa and in Asia, the rative peopiés, having no voice, or a yery restricted voice, ‘in ‘their swn government, while their ovérlords are appointed and dominated xy the European Home Offices, and are to that extent restricted in heir administration of affairs, the native subjects have no appeal rom the civil -arid economic tyranny, government and capitalism ways having a working understanding and going. hand in hand, xc@pt'in open rebellion against the industrial'system and necegsarily gainst the civil administration that authorizes anid supports.it. If he lattér réfuse to correct abuses the former has no redress except n organized appeal to force. Long agitation has accomplished very ittle reform of abuses in administration and industrial exploitation nd taxation in the Wést Indies, in Africa, in India, while in the Inited States we have had and’are having progressive reform. We aould not, therefore, adopt the same line of policy, nor advise others o.do it, in the latter as er the former States. ; Where it is possible to reform abuses in a government or’ indus- rial system, and. this is always-possible where those who rule and hose who work are self-governing, it is not wise to join with radicals who would destroy these; and'all the more so when they offér noth- ng better to replace what they would destroy. Such would be cceptance of Soviet civil and Communist economic policy and sys- em. ,Those who-are-directing the -fortunes-of the-Negro Labor-Gon- xess should understand this fact, or be made to understand it, efore-and when, they hold their convention itt-Chicago in October, | with the leagiS : o . HEALTH TOPICS _ | with the leagus of procrastinations. ——__By_De_ A 8. HERBEN of the. New York Tubsreulesia and = Health Association — : _- dts a. Puzgle Once upon a Time ..thére es lady who mn rele peraiaty ane the Sas ever young ang verp petite Uttle lady, tee, Bike héd bobbed hatr, bet “she <i oo on the whole she was ap est mise ‘peroop, The "one rie Wh = thet che was ae--toe, oa ae oe Ei ce tn ee ad Gat: |: Goctérs whe .hapuenped. ty; semi around, heh dnd. erery, 060; See os a Seas Weed. tone 3 oe a ot saithing! SR Mpptiet. wae: agen: “warsthia chs” sql, thnk pens Die} aig io night Oat: ty - $ ert ele ap ters SP ae ere Bt ae ee Kat on oaths , ‘with the leagi® of procrastinations. And in a day or, £0 they all: declted that it bad. not been appendioitie at st esnips cacti ti vit was finally decided that the ohn fad a, kidney which was leaving its happy home, and ‘sinking onto. the Gepths of abdomen-ery. Hence the pain and heace the misery and quick fatigue and afl that and all thai. Again the doctor eaid-.GO GET FAT.” And thts time the very young and: petite ase eatped|pely nies. little lagy heat and if ‘not- low hee bobbed hand or shat ‘ber..ise ventiy though she ould notRing. And che’ -s Grinking: wailk' by the’ qusrt ahd ‘opting all: the fattening foods. TH ehesess Are thatiahe to going po pet; Chet :tid- erat beak, te leh oe, ‘3 Bee helt 6¢ Mat and am wil bens & ubead. fine te | very. YOURE, gh. posite and-on the: Whelp am wed cn tg dpe ao aon ‘seendumnadlicancr nc ey: mot R PS Dewees Paes Se ce aie a ec aed Ba eee Se eee a ee And the: Fesd: Production’ . That Will Be Needed ‘ieresahe Mie vice: Wedlin = « + Thay, the populgtion growth ‘of’ the Tnited ‘States will pratticelly cease at 200,000,000 inhabitants: that four-Afths of these will be city-dweliers.“and_ 40,- 000,000 farmers, 30 per ent, more dm- cfent thah now, and'that people must lve then more largely on foode of cereal, vegetable, and dairy origin— this 1s’ the prophecy -at_Willidmatown ‘of Henry. A. Wallace, editor of Wal- lace’s Farmer, “But he foresees within five or ten years a world-wide foga shortage. bringing with it Increadea danger,.of{ “afother universal. blood- letting.” Wars are ‘to. be averted rather by contiéillig population. than BY Increasing food Breduction. ~ ‘As a. practical farmer Mr. Wallace agrees ‘with the neo-Maithusians ‘Hke Prof. East, who ‘hold that Jt is im- practicable-to incfeane soll, productive- ness to an indefinite extent as more optimiatlc | pernonx have - assumed. While thece, may: be. untimited nitra- gen, the supply of phosphorous and potassium for. aoll..enrichment ts Umited, If the population-of the world doubles ‘every sixty years, the great- grandchildren of-men aow living might. In'the view of this school of students, be ghrown into a great international ri dPeA Ge toss iO sustain Whe, + , Prophecywin always dangerous. Sir William Crookes in” 1898 caused a. great sensation in his Presidential address before thé British: Association by saying thatthe United States was about at thé end of {ts rope ax an ex- porter of food. We did, in fact, ex- port snore food in the next than in the previous quarter-century,-but for that ina ar_was largely. seaponutbie: and the war gives to any authoritative pre- Aiction of coming atrugelea for the control -of food wources a poignancy that it could not have had in 1598, Crime: in England 7 And United States From The New York World Again, by & speech from the British Home Secretary, we have driven home to us how badly England has us beaten in dealing'with crime. Comparing con- ditions naw wlth conditions fifts eat agg. Sir Willlam JoynuonzHicks shows that there bas been xreat reduction In erlme in England, and a-corresponding reduction In prisoners and the cost of ‘thelr detention. Fifty years ago there were 20,000 persons in local fails in England, and 10,000 persons doing penat servitude. Now there are only 8,000 persons in local Jails and 1,600 per- sons doing penal servitude. What progress: have we made in this time? ‘Of that it would be better not to speak, The extent to which crime has ja- creased in, the last five years gives un ail we meed to worry “about. without ong Into Ralt-century records: How does England do it? That ts something we had better ‘get our minds on; and quickly. They succeed, we fail. Thinga‘haye reached too ¢ritical a-stage for ux to be ashamed to copy methods of proven success, Raising Lizards for Skins To Make Women’s Shoes " LONDON,—Wizard farming in Eng- nnd has been greatly stimulated with- in the Inst few months since the skins for women’s shoen"have become fanh- fonadle, Lizard shoes for street wear have become very pomiilat in London this summer and Hzard slippers for evening wear have deen quite the tad for some weeks. Dealers “say Mzard skin #hoen are here to stay, an the materikl {s serv- Iceable and comfortable and not nearly 80 expensive as is usual when a new {dea ts introduced, Lizard skin shoes retail here at from 316:np. Most ‘Crying Babies Only imitate, Doctor Asserts “LONDON, Aug. 9.—There is no need for a healthy, well-mana#+d baby to contract the “habit of crying, in. the opinion of Dr. Eric Pritchard, medical Girector of the Infante’ Honpital here. “More than 60 per cent of the babies ‘brought to my clinic.” he auld, “have this complication, while 20 per cent are brought: for that alone. ‘Imitation plays an important part in the forma- tion 6t Wablc and character. If one baby hears another erying, or making 04d bunds, he will do likewise. We had recently in the Nursery Training School an Indian baby who had so closely’ imitated the fog horn; which he had nerd on ship board soning England, that, the hotel propritors here refused to keep them In their te becaute Ne made-a nolee like the whiltle of the locomotive, a habit he had. picked up, Decause his. parents tived, near a raitway station.” A Jailer Who Needs | ae ae The Whisoing Bess- OH, N.C. Aug. 1.--(By A. N. P) "The State prison to never going to pay watt they put te ‘Teather Rack” Geclazed J.-B. Mermmes, Wake County ieiler, Mongay, ta conmisating da Che poor fnanctal contitjen: 6¢ the Oretvs pena! sytem. The prtbone-are partly eupperted dy the work of Ge criminals sed Mumwe ts.o stieng be- tees tn the power of the task to NOTE: Pans: tet, biave Chere Ss states poate @ eeotioy Hao ciptens, Cet the-obusm of at oe ent earereem, ae se ban cee eater. Safer r @ am oe | i Pree ae oa AXE SOOT EEE a) BG ay aah Biv. a8 ae er. IER ht it i ae peemese o gos Fs Tee ee a a Te eae REE ee ee eng. a Se Aces Nea e, mealies. veh ON, Aa Cone ar REPUDIATES::: *: _ EDITORIAL ‘WHICH APPEARED IN ° “PREVIOUS. ISSUE OF NEGRO WORLD “Two télegrams from Hon, Marcus ‘Ganvey “in reference to his; Feported “Alliance with the White America Society,” are published hereurider at“his-xequest.° “=.” —— wae “The telegrams, it will be,noticed, are. addressed to Mr. Norton G. ‘Thomas, Mr. Garvey’s Executive Secretary: and, Associate Editor of the Negro World. Upon, the news ‘being broadéast thag Mr. Gare vey had formed an alliante'with the White America Society, or the Anglo-Saxon. Clubs: or both, Mr. Thomas wired .toMr.-Gatvey at “Autaiitainfarming hiny that the Norfolk Journay and Guide had in © scathing article referred -to-this “Alliance” and..asking for instruc» tions in regard to the canard. > |. 80 > "le a FIRS? TELEGRAM - oT ~"'Mr. Garvey’ in a telegram dated July 19 replied as:follows: “Y “ “Your telegram received. I ‘have not Teceived. the article you refér to and therefore can* pass no opinion. . Nevertheless My attitude on the race question has ‘always Been one of, fairness, ‘to all races. I Believe'in a: White America for white men and a black Africa for black’mén, and if that,can be-interpreted. to -mean sympathy with any other organization Working for 2 sim- -ilat-ideal-fortheir.race, then the public or iy enemies are privi-. leged to think as they.may. I am sorry for the Negro who is ~ being made a fadlof by agitators and organizdtions who know that they can ultimately accomplish nothing in the midst of overwhelming opposition that’ will nevér slacken. I believe in aiming after the reasonable and possible,” : . Subsequeiitly;, in The Negro World of August 15, an editorial was published stating what the éditor belieyed to begthe position of the Universal Negro Improvement Asiodtiion in regard to the foregoing: = i 3 After the publication of the said editorial. the following telegram was received from the Hon. Marcus Garvey : . SECOND TELEGRAM a ; “Atlanta. Gat x x f “Augiist 14. , “Norton G. Thomas, * “Executive Secretary. on . : _ “I am surprised at editorial in Negro. World of today’s date- under. caption of ‘Marcus Garvey aa white American. Society,” in which I am mentioned as making statements_in regard to Measrs. Cox and Powell of Richmond, Va.. and their respective . societies. -I know nothing of the spirit of the editorial, which I regard as mischievous: I repudiate-the attack upon these two frfends, wha have given no cause to be thus insulted.. I further object tomy name being used in editorial of that naturé attack- —ing-an-organization-of persons without my knowledge and_ap- proval. You will please reproduce this in its entirety. The policy of-the organization has ‘been defined ky: me more than a thouisanid times, and there has been absolistely. no change on my part. What I stand for now I have always maintained. I re- spect the rights of Sther people equally as I expect them to re- spect ours. . Useless agitation does not help and shall not be encouraged by me. I am no party to it.” ; . MR. FORTUNE'S STATEMENT. - Mr. T. Thomas Fortune, editor of The Negro World, adds the ollowing statement: 2 ‘ . “As éditor_of, The Negro World and feeling that ‘I under. stand Mr. Garvey’s attitude: afd the policy Of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, I wrote the editorial in good faith." I see nothing in it to modify or retract.” EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS «It fs the duty of the government not to deprive any eltizen of an opportunity to earn a living, but to provide all citizens with the opngrtunity to make a lying. The cosclence of the coun- try must be aroused to the economic plight of the Negro. Economic discrim- ination against fourteen million can have no other effect but to destruc- tively affect the body politic. and n= stead of enriching a part of the people as the plan contemplates, {t will make poor all the people. Ignorance Is 2 poor mvestment, and the fellow who believes that the keeping ‘of somebody else down enhances his wealth, and in- creases his opportunity, will-find in the final analysis, thas he was mistaken, and that the broadeat poticy is the bést policy, the humane policy, and shat the government, lke the individuat? who depriyen hls neighbor or fellowmarr of what ti Justly bis, reaps what he sows. Atlanta Independent. * The talk about a war between the white and the darker races has gained some Impetus, since It Is regBrted that Marcus Garvey. {s to be deported. when he {a refeased from’ prison at Atlanta. — St. Louls Argus. Be kind and considerate to the aged. It will cost Ittle, and it in thelr due, and rdmember, you also will be aged when the allotted years have been lived. —Nortolk Journal and Guide, a No ¢ivillzation 1s so’ ized or-20 nal that I{ needs to be saved at the expense of subjecting and exploiting millions Yor he Benet of the Tew. Nettache’s theory of the superman ts too muth in practice ‘where white men deal with, colored races.—Boaton Chronicle. | Back: Americans are now being awakened "to" thd necessity of being prepared for, the fast Incrassing pro- gram of sagrigation and:scbecribed o9- pertariity ta deing f6resa upen| them by titehe' whive: brethres.— Pacific Detender... = os At times WR appearh tat the Angig~ Senon mind ip legt for ways and moana, te” give expeedeton to thet -domtnent| pote of sreqeicn, We are reminged af this fast whenever we ride the etrest par and oboprve waite people etanding bs. preferences te sharing & sent with a mene at shoes ‘an or ot ‘eh. everspey 60: arene yaere in nothing we “Gn.qhodt ¥.: Mbereover Where ty CeO ERD ANY NEE. SPAR ec io bee rain Be Sa See rhe as peuiy niyo a pene papa re * the cpr ie bane. ane Rage Eivay Snes ee) en ene are eats ee ne cramped conditions we feave at home. Omaha New Era. © 5 Like all the aftairs of Itfe fn which the Negro people are Gizaged, “it bee hoover them to pay a greut deal mora Attentiqn ta tne honenty: of the person than to the ability to carry on ahelr business, whether material or political. There might have been-kome derree of. allowance for the probity of “Negro Tenders in days gone by. heeguse both of the strangeness of handling- money and ‘thelr impoverished condition; but in’ these days and conditions there can be no excuse for putting « person of the race In a position who tails to pric fice honesty and exert ability. —New- Port ‘News Star. . The self-respecting, law-abiding col ored citizen suffers from the reflection cast upon him by the féw criminals of hip race in-way that the whitecitizen foes not trom his. “Therefore, we are more deeply interested In-seeing that criminals of our race are apprehended and brought to justice than the whre eltizen ts—Omaha' Monitor, * ~Proofs are coming every day tliat Gar-, vey has done the African race a insting aervice in awaking ft to dreams of in- dependence. and equality. “The South Atricaiy Garvey’ Organ that has nailed at ite manthead “Africa for the Afri- cans” is galvanizing the natives of the’ African Union into a ferment that will Home day serve well that sicred cause. The Nght is slowly breaking “in the: Dark Continent. Let no man be #0 mean and narrow as to deny doing thie epochal,” eternal thing.—New -York aa The Way to Cook Them From The New York Werld ‘Now that the restaurant men are qeoktag the bat ast o4 beme cooking, why Gta they turn Male ettention te ‘Sand? ‘Beans have’ practically Cs from Ne ‘York. mits” = get freen Benes cafe’ #2.16.28 ‘Foaet Long aland. ducking, with angio ‘sauce and weet potatons, $1.50, of sew ‘eee, 99 dents, or corn om tim gob, 60 ‘wants, 6c even. raspberry. cberbet.’ 9 SIEM DE 7a cannot ont bose, wae sidered, uniess i to served Ser breaths there te no‘ finer food fe the. : im the bean: “Tt to gped bet ‘hel. } Ss gesd cold. Tt tnabts: geod’ ous pened dipper asa a Zoness to. collages os ead ees iC radi ad ro ig Prawd ale Sele = eA So te Savi dei cede Bee CONTRIBUTORS TO BLACK CROSS RESERVE ‘AND OPERATING FUND -EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD. | ith one drop Of the Belen Bleed of Bittepla In thelr vine Bei Tbe OPUBARTOS EAOH & an eee eee te eee Beccogs «ree: RES a. oak. y >) rere NEW ORL@ANA LA. A Yolen - 1 2seeecvesergorsceees $1.00 Mary MIME Le caegelyercenee 108 Dos. Bye. coecwvercciespesccee 1.08 ma I sscedeseseresense 3. Fam Morgan veowenivesecccesers 08 BPs Semper ESTs agian “Henry Beott soe liouiiticnescess Bi Ed Mead ssotssessstevecsscsste “88 Yee Okey 2000 ee “My lee Bender vis .ss0sie seers — 206 Joseph Washington soeccesces 1.00 B.A. Derby... ...ssessecsesecess “100 Andrew Doubiag 220220000025 | 6100 Samuel froith: vecscovereccercnse: 1.98 B86. Gilbert LLIN 80 dames Lowi .iciscecccccccess 2.00 Di a, Hoye (Teeliececcceess 1.08 G. W. Hudson wisssccepcccccees 2.00 Samelia Buths Voecesscoeserecse "1.08 Gustave Elway WT, 100 B. B. Russell vwercccccstecccsess 188 “Sarah Moses wwrcciscasieseececse 100 Ered AbbOw Teeeceegscescsoeres” 1.00 {Bll Sten -..tessssscenecsecesce’ 100 "Leopold Berry ioikicscecewiecces 1.00 Joe Taylor .cesscsecestecceesera 1.00 Zalle. Groen "isecceescustewcommee 390 John “Robinson “mesccceneceeceeee 100 Herbert Martin saiscesesesececoy 3.00 John” Wittiama “2221 Yen, . _ BALTIMORE, MD. a Ed. E. Spence. veseenseceseeceess 10.06 Deane Spence “2022202220000 10.00, Francis Granger ~ccsscsccecsece, 10.08) Gerald 6. Davis-c...c.scteses. 20-1000 UERTO BARRIOS DIVISION GUETEMALA GAL Bir Geo. C, Reneau.+n.eisseges $10.00 Jonathan Ballentine c.ce22c8sa05 30.00 ATT. Gtignon ....ssesesasecens 10.00 Ftances E. Arnold. sccerssessssze_ 10.00 William Osman’ s,cccegeesecseee 10.00 James Wethfield .-ccassaawe-mens 10.00 James Soldant ..iccsmesccesses 10.00 C.E. B. Radcliffe peoscssccereee 5.00 ‘Arthar Haynes «.scecsncnssccsee 5.00 Jonathan Ballentine s.ccvecceses 6.00 ‘Mrs. Jounnah Seymore secccsece 5.00 Mrs. Jestna Campbell srseusesngs, 8.00, Thaddeus Ruwhford .ttsceecene "5.08 Qdadiah Wilson -veessssesvesees 5.00 Lucius Ringroxe soseqsesccceeee 5.00 Donald Howen sseescedscerucemes 4.00 ROA. Mendez 2i0iiiicceceeses 200 Soneph Gray IIE 3.00 Joseph McCalla aescaceesecsvets 2.00 WW. Minott .....cteccccceursceeee 200 Ciuliam Fy. “Price ecscecmecvecee 2.80 Jamra Ds aletbeccsacseccss, 200 Teen STCRRMMens ese 309 Willord, Eyann ..sccscsicccecess 200 E.R. BU weecssceecseccseees | 200 Eather Iatrett costeccrescoscess 1.00 Casper Canin v.ccceccssceecceeee 2.00 Amy Broastér .iliiiscecpenseess 1.00 Bugéne Bautou c..ccscsveccsees ° 1.00 ‘Caroline Gray terieecesgeceecese 1.00 John Bmith seecccsscestecsecses 180. Joepn (Gray COIL roo Julia Mera siicssssssusssescees 1.00 ———ERBT -CHTCROO; IND ——— O. Perey veececcsetesseeeserse B00 Mattle Perry vince lol B88 _ EDMONTON:-CANADA, M. LUther Coss ee esses eeseeeee 5.00 MORALES, GUATEMALA, ©. A. Joneph Sinclair. ...sceseeenerers 10.00 Stanley L. Tayior.:.cscssecsesss 10-00 Euntace Kirlow..:.csscsanccseecs 10.00 Charles Dickson. .cccccuccsseeers 5.00 Irene Rasis...-sssescuenesverese 6.00 Nathan Dasiig. ccsscscssssecoss 8.00 David” White?...cvsecsesecvedece, 5.00 Henry Kelly... sc sssacsesecsesss” 5.00 Timothy E, Taylor.csseseecseeess 5.00 Richard Wiatter...-sccsceszesecs 5.00 Witla DIPKson. IIIT 5.00 We AC Fishers ss cecescscseseses $00 | Mis, Stanley LC. Paylors.c.122222 ‘8.00 | Mex, Hilda Young.s....csccsscss 5.00 Guniavon Tvans.cscsscseeressose 800 Ann Durant......scsssssescecess 2.00 Renozer Edwardecccssscssiz. 260 (MeN BrOWA2.cessceserecseee 1.00) LOS AMATES, GUATEMALA, ©. A. Charles 1. Henry. ceeecceeeeeeee 1000 Henry. Genuin.seesssesceseegecece 10-00 John Erazet ..scccoscesessosees 10.00 Levi Johmaon..2222.220IIIINIIZ 1o!00 Joseph Miller’ 2.2220 0IIIIINII. 10.00 Ernest Whitely.c2.C2IIIIIIIIIS 10.00 Joseph Carr. .....2.tsssssssezess 10.00 James Henry Smithicescescosee 6.00 Samuel Williams...ccccvceesecs ROO! Nathaniel Mowessccecsarseerecee 5.00 Jonoph Stewart..ccccssccseessess 5.00 fadam’ MeKenzie..20020IIIIT 5.00 Julius Hitchman.ccccssccecsess B00 Joseph Mitchell..wceeseessssvess, 5:00 Isabella Clew..ccisssssssssessee 5.00 Mary James. .ccsscescocseceecese, 5.00 Alice Joshua...cscsesssessweesees’ 5:00 Dalman Frances...sssveserecsose 5.00 Thomas Jons....cscecerecececece «500 Witla! Monded.cccscccsssecsess 8.00 Cecil" Archer....ccssescsesgesnes $00 Mary ‘Stephenson. ssecoseesseesss 2.00 Ben). Campbell SII 00 PUERTO CORTEZ. SP. HONDURAS Richard DKON... seeeeesecevene” 400 PUERTO CABTILLA, SP. HOND. | Claude Daleyereereeserreeeresees 10.00 Gyril Thompaon-.-aseucsscwoseoe 2:00 Thorodior West-c-csewscsccssers 5.00 &, S"ANCON, CANAL ZONE Brg. A.J. Bratthyatte........:. 10.00 LA CEIBA, SPANISH HONOURAS Richard F. Stewart... ..000+ 2.00 John Kenbard Stewarts....-./- 2.00 FLORIDA, CAMAGUEY PROV, CUBA Rachel McIitosheeceereeeengeres 2.00 ‘Ap MOTri8ON...erecsreesseccncnoe 1.00 NS. Green.cessccsccssepsccceccrse | 5.00 a Mann coccoscccensecenscreees E08 C.'Binciait. ceecescsswscewess2 1.00 CENTRAL FRANCI8CO, CUBA Joseph Scott Bryan.teeeeeeeeevee 10.00 ‘CENT. JAGUEYAL, CAM., CUBA ED. HOM own cee 4.00 .CENTRALK CAMAGUA PROV., CUB) ‘Thoman Butcher...+++eeseeerecee ” 5.00 Joseph Butcher...2¢----+--ees075 10.00 CEM, NAJABA, PR, DE CAM, CUBA ROW Melntosh.ss.ceecseeeeeses 200 f Aldric -T. Welelis.sscsccstscsusee 1.00 J.C, Drummond.,..---s---erere2 1.00 _ _ BATON ROUGE, LA.” Blale Johnagn.....cseeeceeeseeee 200); Neleon MeKAIght.2.+.sveyecccsee 340] Lizm, BRITISH HONDURAS. | ge FICK ler. ne enveeeweqeeees-- $2.00) Roeeissccecsecsccsacees - 208 BE Omit... as | Leb eels. . “MEDALS NOW READY “!The Medale-"are. now weedy and will be, for warded to Presidents of Dt visions for presentation on Sunday, July 19, and there- afte - P. L. BURROWS; |. - * Asst. Sec’y-General . FRONT View. a) fy SNE =~ #vecno (na J Qo, . 2 * BACK VIEW os ERTION AHO Ow Sc hp 2 AY el He Qa . ‘ | see // wamnneron The above is a facsimile of the medal which will Se awarded to every -Negre Patriot whe" conteinutes 410° tothe Black Cruse Reserve and Operating Fund within the specified period of fen one CLM. BUaINe ws eseesecteeeeeseees 4,00 Foeeph Merihaincssccscsscsssces, 190 SEN GEE cossscceteseet: 188 Sin Beater mnscemcens Eee Shrines Gahersoccececeecces 1088 Beemer Barre eccccecsccaiecees ne Ut mane comes Us WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, CANADA sone einan reset can teeD ~"" PRESTON, ORIENTE, CUBA 5, Ar Reena te rire eee Taal “*LA CERBA, SPANISH HONDURAS Pen Sr AMISH MONOURAS, KINGSTON, JAMAICA Goth genre et es ea GASPAR, PROV. DE CAMAGUEY, Cuan Jamen Aine SIeCRIBM eso ieseeeeee $00 EL PARVENIR, SPANIH HON: % Burke Rebeten Davies eee ae aes RAMA NIGARAQUA, C. A. SA Rater eS eas Mie eich Poe ect Is MORON,: CAMAGUEY, CUBA Thomne Davia Miata ee 5.00 Foor ies eestemeccnsises ES LIVINGSTON, GUATEMALA Waiem Rebatonts ceeereneses 1800 Melia Rersaurcccccceiccce 88 Thomas BR anices poses” 1888 Samuel B. Vernon.......e..c- 2. 1000 Aled ergpmecesssscoscceesss 190n Fhomes EMG coco, 888 Metiader wiitstcccic: Ee Ghettes Enimecssccccccescoocces 28 Siquel”stedtna.ccccccecccusss 28 Mame Stedinacteccsecscicss: 248 Senn ‘Siamese: a0 Ronny seereenscevicenit: aa Roberf MeDonald...........02.5 3.00. nae RAgRETROIT. Wi, Beate niher eT, 300 we seme ser 28 Bea Wighiscocsrroccsstece 14a Erte, Wateescocseornoresestecs (aay allan Suimmersccoveeesiecs 1888 mele Mane crests teas Pui ehnemeic costes BS Riis once recs crecadeecoaeen Oe Nancy Wright. 2 ..cecceeeee eth. 1.00 SN Ad cscs ane id deeasiisiscecaseeins dae Sera See sees ae Sink Maioess cere Le Mate ntaericicteccetturcc ces) ae Margarette Taylor.....sewseeee iyo james Sicha rssicccsicn Bites Petieeeaiiens ae Bia Rotisserie ae Rebetee Mowardsrccaceeseccess 298 Ae baweg sisi Ee tate Mack oijssiiccwsteses 18 ie eden J. H. QHOPPRTG...-sereevecersseee Ll pruihie Bomafdslcciccslecesse an Gabe Hayieressccsseectaee pratiis Coleen eccccsssccsees 338 Prey creaebine: Ssvesnsbecessee oom +e ide Seyuinesccsevievioseecs 18 if eerste Le Sign Sen 188 PABBIO BRADY. «~~ eae sewers esses c™ Lill TAL BOOK. fcasieedccccsces BD ery Mewlth olactagscccase Le Philip dec scescegiesastes et ‘Det -Momt....cstecsqagesevenss 10.0% 30k Lampbiga 2222020000 , Fimothy Mears: 1 fae, Drends iengessegeeetees a |Menrletta Posters. ..etevectenee 3,08 Reginald . Peleon.:.....sss++-++ 10.00 NEW. YORK CITY ANI BROOKLYN ard As Willlame cove sesnenss¥10.0 Belo canis te ws H, Devonish <elarccctss “8 Ly CO. Devonfen ..i. ces ccc cc ens 42-06 James E. Brown semgeceseses 1.00 Hubert James s--cestedzesecess 200 Helen Bisir .....secosqescsseee 1.08 | Nicholos "Black “scrctzeleseccses 1.00 Daniel Eawarde’<cccceacccectse 288 aroline awards’ ,.2mz2sc.2a2—2: Tt TORN '....ceceseinenccaes 6.00 Lemley: Matthews ssigipsecessees 1000 Se"Thomag. veresecscocceseseces 200 Wontord™N Laithersent20220% + 199 Annie Banka s..--s.lcccs x Helen Westall fersteeseteeeseges .00 M. C, Kembell: -.~.1eserccceses? 1.00 Jonephine Drunkrett soutiitne ee James (Pluman ses,eccascsoecce 100 Allee Ficman «6. USI 190 James Blaw 02 TTQII EI ree Withelmina Sands -..cecccteoes » 1:08 Robert Foun weeeecseceicevesees| 6,00 Fla Reid s..cccsssusncsecces 100 We godington 22ST Tbe Win.”'H. Cunningham “ssecesece 100 Wm. P. Cunninghim: 2itiict ibe Lovetta’ Cunningham “ceccscr22 1:00 Nicholas Sgndg ..-+--lyseseses 4.00 Withehminaygfnde’ 22000 Tae Wilfred B, Umbther 2cncscces 10 Meee NE Fee carat B4 jane Wilkinwon, deggey GigE 3. 2s Be Anderaon set cece, 10 ‘Phomae. Bell 2.2e.ecoscccscocee 100 Henry Going sscssscereceeeec 1.00 Go Atmstrong ecieviecucicccees 208 Sonepnine “Rela” "222 10 Wentworth Forte: (0220/2001 anion ‘Minn Joa. MeCourtie s/s cisizste. 2:00 Manuei 9: George sc.c0lioiciane ne T. EB. Greentdge weseesecsenease 1.00 FP. D. Hinkson .......ceciceeere 1.00 ©, Btown! csssssisseccreeossecse,, 108 A Wiggle INIIEINE, ae Henry jaBEGKLEY, We VAL fenry JnckWOn weeeveveesesegZe 9.00 Julian Morris pedececet sana 1.00 Mary Lue Morris 2OTIIIINI 190 WHEELING, W. VA. Di FL TYMER seewesecesneecser ess 10.00 ROSE MONT. W.VA. David Thompnon eiscerciuseeess 6:00 BARROCKVILLE, W. VA. A Friend, Box 82 sssereeeserers 1.0. ; CAROLINA, W. VA. Caroling, We Vas Division set. 3.00 BUFFALQ<NEW YORK Dr. Theodore Maniza Kakiza.ese. 300 William Enslich cveccessessse S90 Mra, Nathaniel Englivh 220000202 Raw Ade Bell evsseersvessocecccees Rae Percival, Grant .eecccesecceneees 4.02 Bana Jackson LILI 205 Jamed Ford ...c2liiliisnessss 290 Perey. Blackman ccscscccsesiie 800 Wan: Boyd’ ssereosvesesecvocssces | 100 Go Pey cscssesessscsstescnmes 200 L.. Laly MOOr€....cenceeeceeeeses 1.00 Shemeld Dennis ccyccescscasss bn Lene denkine .....-lessuiescil 20 Ulele Hatehinnisuns reviverieven— Ba Pansie Frecnuat vessceceesessee 200 Men, Baten ssrsecvsvccevecusecee 10 MreCodagan 2020202000000 199 W.M. Huytehiiton..lcciciis Le FD. Jadtson.orsscliiitsiseiss 200 e PINE BLUFF, ARK. John Powell \.cecescentsresezess 1100 Surah Powell .issclvseesescseses 100 Ae Friend s..csesccescecqsegeees’? 2:00 HP. Murphy SUIIIININEID Soo. BALTIMORE, MD. Francia Granger ssceecere veces 5:00 Gerald S, Davie 62. LL abo PORTSMOUTH, VA. Hounle Oneal seseecsveestaceccees £00 Saniuel-Boykin cscluscoscseves 200 Damen Brown y.222.020c0202201 80 Henry Noble 2i.c2yzzseseveesee 100 BERKLEY, VA. John F; BIvIIe sessereeesecessee 3.00 HJ, Ward o..cccecdesocsarcses 200 Harriett Hughes ..sccccessesesee 1.00 Rev. 1. L. EMCnn...csceecseseee 3.00 Wright Perkins scccocucususece 1a c.C. Chambers willl 100 BW: Gileheiwe 62200 LITSTIIE 280 | NORFOLK, VA. G. AL MED. Cookers essserseess 200 Pix. Rinntt Devaughanscvicises R00. I. R, Johnson sevs-vsecsccceccce 2eR | Siar Fe Holland. 220 hoo : _ SOMERSET, VA. Judith Gtewart seeseceseeseceee 245) Sarat Landay. ssrvescvecwseas LOG Biviston ere ciesscnigercccsss Eee a Anglo-Saxon Immunity From Punishment for Crime “+ (Brora the Ghicage Tribune) CHICAGO, Aug. 7. — Anklo-Saxuns can commit the most cold-blooded mur. ders ne Chiengo and yet ehcape the noone. I can't hélp. but think of the number of young Negro men who have been hanged recently —alniost before they had time to notify their distant relatives. ° If Ingantty ts 50 common among the Anglo-Saxons, what ie the hepe of the future generations. Mes, "Albert. Niche Miss Lyda D. Newman is one of the best known HAIR. SPECIAL: {8T8 in the City of New. York and han practiced her eystem for thirty ‘Years with auccenu. She now takes pleanure in INTRODUCING this fyatem to" the general. public through the American Wert, Indian | Hair Preparation Co. We do not recommend SCRUBBING BRUSH for aharipoaing. we dinapprove, of TWO LATHERS and TWO SCRUB. recommend WRAPPING THE HAIR. Thene methods STARVE, AND ‘DISTURB ‘the roctsand re- tard, the growth. “We advise. treat- ingyine’ ande’ of the hele in’ prefer ‘énce to cutting same. We ae. vise havthg your hair teeated once in three or four weeks, but you rust take care of your hair betwaen these - . Therstore sou can jteARR “this, HUMANE: 6VeTEM ‘at. nominal Ve witi give you- = COMPLETE COURBE of jnstruc- tions with DIPLOMA. Courses taught tm perpon or by mail, Call or write: 7 ee 7 + =. Y « aera _ | 220 West @3ed Sweet” - « NEW YORK.CIrY Se 7 aiaaam- 3, i A a oy re B ae —_ hr biel Fe en ee a L T0-Pae ie es ~ (Geatisinad ftom pape-a7< collective ‘iled,.'g:.resthees, brooding inertia “of. movemedt' of the “group Japirit. Ite. initiator ia discipline. - saaianeg ct os, Genter : wan tpheritanoe of, the ‘eenturies- True.’ But It is sio‘an |inheritor of the moving mind It is schard matter to determine to which of these classes the supreme peoples of the earth are given; it ia ‘evident that It ts to the latter erder that, the Negro‘must.turn for salvation." The ‘final fosurance against that alow and Inevitable overtaking of die- anter -which comes to backward and mollusc peoples 1 aiscipline._;1t la the only. roval road to micfess, individual or collective. It. étskingulahed the Roman Legion an the Macedonian phalanx~from the barbaric -hordea of Gaur on the one hand and the. iI- ‘pyganised army of Persia on the other Discipline’ is the. difference between the 15th Infantry, ‘for“example,-and. a Iyneh mob down In Georgia. Discipllive is restraint, commonsense, Judgment: nay. more, it tn futoftion, the Inteltion of the. group, throtigh Its- Individuals, That grasps the Iminense glJective’ of the future. sith tlear-cut vinlon-wiih- out Mlusion. . on Discipline 1é the only ‘resat rend to naccena.: With the. dominant. races of the world succeru haa always been an objective: with the Negro'lt Is usu- lly regarded aman object. a right, nllttering, “vartexated object . with winks, to be nurgued like « buttery: ‘hence the pleaeure-rhasing nepnensicy ‘of the race, a: preference of fhe pool room: to a push-@ért; of Dark-town ‘Opera to Feal Deumgtle manterpiecen: of credit clothing w* cominen senxe-jn business compétition.- ‘The trouble x that thé’ Negro seems never to want to“krow up to race maturity: hence his traits are all thoxe of children. He hax no objective and enw dircipline, Group. Diseipling Group discipline 18 amenabitity. fo order, to obedience: to the difection of bleh.command; it tn subversion of the Individual. whimn and wishes, of jhe nelf:neekinw.uree to the larger col- lective need: Thin hing ihe Necro lacks hecnune hh hax no sense of re xponathility nor the ability, or perhaps, the tuclination. to appreciate the Inner suecens, that of his race, With the dominant races of the world whe- comm in m projection of.the group will: {0 Is co-operation to a general ob= seetive: hener the enormons trust com. MMon,-tha-harlaoiiat_and-cartical ass tems of buxinesn control, the nuccenne ful armten, the achievements. in art and Uterature:and actence: hence the radio, the telephone, the phonexraph, the printing prengothe rendatte and permanent press, banks, conimerce, ine dunws.: The dominant races of the world are an the unt. "Connider the ait and be wise.” ‘The Nexen race In Uke a colony’ of wlothn—alwaee treed singly, and nearly alwayn ‘careying ‘on’, in an Indolent hermitage. Hence no nuccenaful stearmehip ... « I remember vividly my firat day apent ‘on the first shin of the Black star liner, the Yarmouth, Tt wax in a Went Indian port. The captein had ordered A hundred water coconuts and had Kone ashore on & trip of exploration Meanwhile “tha cacenute arrived aboard, Immediately they were hee Ing distributed to the crew, and the captiin had apecied that the nuts Were of his own purchase and for his personal use, Some one who knew of the trannaction remarked that! those coromuits belonged to the captaln, when the tnantmonn reply was “There alt no captata aboard here. Right here the finger 1s placed m the weakent Iink of the ehain of Negro.en- denvar: here, patent atx sin, we have the stronzect aisorcanisina actor the collective effart of our people: “There ain't no Captain wboarde Rut we are wrong, oF are not whey Meht: There 18 zeneratty a captain nhnard, but there Ik never any diset- pline,... There volt are’ No djant- Pliny and, therefore, na surcosstut steamship af black men, baught and paid for by inck men and “women and even children, and manned by blnck men: men to th enre, How. can this he shen {0 he manty=-ta be men— in to be discinlined? The Nero race In not aven inn staze af adolescence: Tha Negro is atsll a child with all the paychosis of children: false pride, selt- inhnesn, inofdinate vanity. Inck of the’ enan ef proportion. He in rebellious, suspicious, unstable and, ko most children al n certatsi age, undisetp:ined. "Why Nordics Are Supreme =~ Rigid regimentation in the wateh- word bf the axe, The stage, even, In peing reximented, Individuriiam’ nx a cult Ix dead past reaurrection. Indi- TIS TRUE ! __YOUHAVE __ CORNS BUNIONS OF CALLUSES: .. FEET? iF so, AND, To0 WANT 70 me USE ‘GETS ‘EM SURE. - SEND 50 CENTS | - axe Syria te oan, ee eae ies og 7m ae Pee Sa Om, arc ae” Se, . $500 Reward If I Faitto Grow Hair ; ‘Hair Root Hair Grower Ha wasnt Liston ceiReree rege Wa Oe eer ee i feseosteaaraiits Mora, ee: Fee oe eae ie te er Eee aa Pea Ge ee tae eee: 4 Sarees Herat net be oot seus } hagt “hire, Lattatte writes! “After nave |, MeN SS, tet St pate with | ar Sie ree a dere ar Tetneth aitabaiee eis 3 Bega, hahaa et | AP Pires seer eae Lestat } Bee Rage ses eosin ene, i. Fi ee, Georg. Mette te . Rite este a } iy SPECIAL PRICES | wae 2 *YO.DRUGGISTS' Ri droge ail roel? and money orders to ix AND AGENTS: PRoyal Chemical ? Company mY a - JAMAICA, NEW YORK | - a (Chantion' ty mere YOUNG MAN sresrroxy q ow P OPPORTUNITY “HARLEM RIVER AUTO" SCHOOL & REPAIR SHOP LARGEST ANG OLDEST SCHOOL IN HARLEM |. ~ 2165 Madisem Avenus, between 135th and 130th Streets . | Phewe HARLEM 6715 Mg MEW TORK CHY. 4 ee - C\LEON ESTWICK. & BRO. ~ re > KN fis sipeeniptie Depa ; “seni ‘caprembey ‘ty Set g myth. That le ecteal, projected eupcpmacy thei a4: ‘mits of Bel “racial tendamentale’, seni- ton fot the -whites are tm overwhales- ‘ng; tact, whlch “overtalign. an wairl- fret way.mietern. Why? Bocouse the wiole:atructere.te based on. nppine. ‘You doubt? ‘Then study of the dominant races. And. thie, the Negro, because of his economic status fa: than. admlfable position to accom- lish. In the ste} factories, the suger refineries, the atedmahipe and steam: boats, the fundred and one different Grganised_anterprises_ of the whités, let the Negrp atiiéy theed in an analy- tleal._way ... their social .gctivities. Even ctime, ‘according. ta Richard ‘Washburn Child, in the'Baturday Eve- ing Post, August 1, (a: being regt- ‘mented. “Crime.-saye the author,."in Amer- sca.la being organized song the lines OF “Big Posinenn: cut-throat ‘compet tion by unorgapized crooks In being eliminated." ‘ “Think “of, it! Even’ the crook Ip amenable “t# dincipline—the. self-arii- Ing which recognizes individual secur ity and well being, In collective con- spirxcy. How. much more’ should the Necro! nob :eaylp himarit-tor-a-1dglti~ eee in co-OneresGA2 Cheittation, the elviization fn wht Negro finds himself, is the harmonious functloning “of multiple units, from’ precine government to ex: net farming: the whole construdture is bared on order, order implien con: tributary, effort, andetilaeimplien tp= dividuals, disciplined ‘matured, | who fo to make the ndcial will to order. Would the Nerro attain the aguer Fea of having arrived in, tha sume of nations? Would he achieve Bik Business, largo. Industry, substantia} Natlonhood? Then. tet. him pool” his brain, ix Thrawn and hile. mney, chgose hix executives for euch divi- Non and tmplleltiy abige by the rules of omer. Dixcipline alone cin create the group will to thiy order and, its rigid obrervance. ; | Erudite Fools That other camp. me Newro Phikis- tines, wha’ move always in a vicious circle Rerause they have norobjective worthy of determined, concentrated definite pnranit, have sehleved nothing, nothing hut belles lettres, excelent pamphleteering,. brilliant .conteadle- Uons—and qeapatr. They dexpair a men gist: who have no will to decision, ache ure. companions ‘withthe dead past, staves of the prewnt, ad Igno- sami of the future. They have oncr- motis erudition 2nd no wisdom. They are tactless, nalve, gullihle, shallow. Thay are hoodwinked. by Nordle hy- porriny whieh. to say the Teast, is an ingenious: device. They preter to be Yetalners tn am nuension than lordy of their own Ios cabin, ‘They nd rather be asaimi= ated Gi euphiminm for bring soft- soldered to death) than they would survive. They neck the path of Teast resistance, which ix the colirse of ‘weaklings, of the unvirile, of the ef- fomInately fastidious, the “Sackule” of the tthe, " ‘An Individual, i granp, that prefers boing itked and despised to being hated and respected or feared, even secretly that woull rather be tolerated us 4 sreuphan€: than be prosecuted as 4 Black rtaicwereder of undying prin~ ctples.anf human rights. of rare-n gsr Hon, merits the eontemptnons pity due the horn Partah, Such Gail to admlt, even tee thet coiW8R, 225, White Tan's ansentons Inerhanssin of government “abvide ind vile" in bin deallpas with the colored pares esportaily, ‘They have na dest= mite objietive, henge are torn hy, a oxen cross currents of almiess de- sires, of vain agplrations, “Their cult ts yellow inéividualinm, ‘They will not he disciplined becauss they are Uke men In-a desert abstracted (rom the thirst of vain glory, and the mirage of askintlation, Disciniins, tha discipline that should Mra: ess A ie ee SR 2 ts Gade pon Rag, Poy Ade Cceper,: Now Gricens.-La...01000) -..: Genney,: Bosiban.: Gay me ‘Balboner, M4... 1000 Foie Sos" tus ‘Goobs apace Deave pattin Ma... 1040] Feet eeu 3 ‘Preacia Gresait, more, 0G. 10.09 | “Cute —0.0.0 vrs eeererersereier Clare. Vv uelant, Revie Ve md ae ote Le Gee. Ce . ries. 1000) 5. a. re “Hiecréges ‘Frances E. Arnolé, Puerto Bar, | Thomas 8, Wiluhire, Livinestes wither! Basti “arvios:| 10:99 |-wittam Ravateant Liviagston James Wetnheld, Fuerte Barrics 108 oA ig pena iyi james Boldana, [o Barrios, « 10.00 | wari Vernon. Livingston © org Bare Chicago. tnd. ngs 1888 | Ge Re re eiricrarears Mattie Pérry. East 150, Ind., 10.00 | Alfred Vernon, Livingston, 6. oA ‘M. Luther, Edmonton. Canada., 10.00) William Summers.) roit, Mich qs ‘Sinclair, Morales, C. A... 10.00|-Dan Wright. Detroit, Mich....... Beetles ‘Tazlor, agora res. C. A.... 10.00) Dan Hunt, Detroit. Mich... ...6 Bustace Kirlow, Morases, C. A... 10.00| Reginald Polson, Detroit, teh. Shane Monroy “Low Amates, 0 | Aisore ritiame, New, werk Gi C. Acinsecesasecreescrsceersess 10.008] Chae] isb, New York City. Henry Genus, Los -Amates, C. A. 10.00/ L. C. Bevonish, New York City. John Fraser, Loe’ Amates, C. A+: 10.00 | Jamen Brown, New York Clg. Levi Johnson, Los Amater, C. A. 10.00] Hubert James, New York City.. Toeeph Biller, Lon Amaten€! A: 1990 | B-Br Hinkaon rowdy NY Ernest. Whitely,” ow Ainates, | James Mons New York ciy- Se eee NE vasa inti” Bettas “Seas va ostnh Gait, oe Aiinten, CAT! 100 LN Cte eters neces Ghaalte, Daley. Puertor Apaniah WH. 10.00 | Pita Reid, Now Wovk Cli S J.C, Deummond, Central Baragus 10.00 | Nicholas Sands, New York Ciiy C. Usher, Belize, Britinh Hon... 10.00) Henry Jackson, Beckley. W. Va Sonn'Robinson, Winniveg, Case. Wen |. Fe rynses wheeling: Wy ae Sr a ot - We arecepnrgd nom forme pave Sagar’ Farnishes Heat Wee Gust Gee ai toate . ey =| sweatening” pucposes, cube gus And“ Energy tothe Body] rciouc snapes ana. slsess po Peay | VetsOUn SPADES BRE Elees, .¥e) By PRUDENCE PENNY 2 In N.Y." American se ae The degiro for sweet substances acemb.to be universal fy’ men: and ta Flot unrominon. tn the lower animals The ancients, were timiliar with honey ‘as the chief representative of thie clasy of Coos, although: they alno uned sweet frults. The Arai true sugar wus pre- pared elther from-the juice of the Bamboo or that of the sugar cane, and wan probatiy firat’ known tn “India Ie was vers early Introduced Into Chine: the nusar cane wax ano cul- tivated in the valigy of the Euphrates ahd Tigria rivers. Sugar comes to the lucky onen of this day ant generation in many forma, Remember in the old stories how the sugar for a cuke, puddings or candies had to be chopped from the suxar loxf and pounded Into grat ular form? Just think of the work he_the dentze and asim .of all selt-re- specting Nesrorn. prestippones. first the objective, the sane and legitimate will to economic, Industrial, commercial and natlonal achlevenient. Then there munt he the incandescent enthustasm, the nustained zenup’ selll to achleve- ment and the Intense concentration edna, Thre tm there ent be, ne al ternative, no middle eourae to auiccern along there lnex. Ry dixctpiined, cor- porate measures, the Negro could pro- duce and recognize all the magnates of induxtry, commerce, and ataten- cratt corresponding to those of the now dominant races of the World, Quit: Playing the Child | By disciplined, corporate measures the Negro can and will achieve # Na- ‘oral atatun, even within a Nation He cun de adequately represented an i people intact and solid; he can be thoroughly feared’ an a political power of the first: magnitide, even in en in- ternational rense: he can be respected ax a fitmen of hin own world ant of the world at laree: he can be hupere tuned as an egonemte anantity ef no Catalogue Free Full of Good Things to Buy and Sell 100 noveltion and Holling” Rome: heautiful Negro delis, pletires, eal> cre Rat for Your Cope Tatar ART NOVELTY CO. eagane SEERA i ws FA, -Seanegy.. Cesiten.: Ga ees. Ve depanene’, a os'a) Sk: ie ee Thames BW juhiee Licinese. _ ctuatemala, ©. Anse ie sescees wine navatenic”“Livinanion semiusi’ "a" Vernon. Lvingoeaa: Se Ree tinea Wiltam Summers! Detroit: Sicd: Dan Wrignt Decl Mick. Ban Hattba cue Saeko Reginald Botson Geert ich: Resinale Rowen, Bele ea, Shan tplventan new werk City L. C. Bevonish, New York City... Farneer robin oer rere Clty Heber Somes, Nowe Bork Gi. Bb dame: Nest gheet ee. Tanto Rone ee voke Cline: Wilken” Sander “Saw Moki Fite Reid, New Work Cltys.i. Ti aisidadids, Wise York City: Nem teckoam wackiey, Weve, Henry, Jackson, Beckley. W. Va. Wo aracepargd- now, form g: have Grase. ulated sugar for ai) cooking and aweatening: micpesen, cube pumer_of varloun shapes and slses, . powdered sugar for our frulte and confectioners” suman for Iclpge, as well ex numerous’ ‘othern not Ingstich common household Sugai ix one of the most digestible foods. Starchy food must first be acted upon by a ferment, in the belive, and then by & necond ferment contained tm the Intertines before Jt iu ina gulte able ronditbin.to be taken into the Moog! wn a nuirlent. Suger,, on ithe other und, doew not require ie-come. Mex a treatment before it can be-ase snutiated. it ls, through. the action oC certain fermentn by. the process of “invernion,” changed In the digestive tract, Into glucoar and fructose—eime pler sugare—which ore then ready for shmorption. It has been shown by experiments that, ax a part pf a simple mixed. diet, five ounces of auger a day can be consumed by 4 healthy! adult and 98.9 per cont of Ite total enersy becomes avatlable‘in the bedy. ‘The main func teh of the sugar ie to furnish heat ‘amc. * meaft’ denomination. But the Negro wis” GAC Payne Che” chi, we waUae vow up to the larser and more mo- mentous {ssues confronting him ax & race laboring still far down on the Meep incline of advérsity, alone the unmeleume highway of contemptuous tolerance. He must dvill hfmxelt in what ds ut once the wclence ahd the Art of collective. siintalned effort. To this end wiramitation in hin de wvertouked, and his gallant -efturt ‘nally gain the whole-hearted appro- [Bution ef the “superior” races, Me exemplaries. , Like them, to achieve ace supremacy, the Negro must tirat be amenable to group discipline. ‘New York City. Headquarters’ For All SCIENTIFIC*BOOKS . For Magical Purposes yr Sai + <fix 2? Mada Orel. Art Monte seoe-s 9 | Medeen tnatlane Hea isk aean Froeica ngnotom and Mowacti 8.20 Charset talented br Mandwinest23° Seven ald Riciteseoctoorecen a2 For voume Semasciceelooernensieeae for Yomee Wom eccrine Eegesip tundos and dient Sie Now ovsinai Siceing ootliiescvss Weonaers Ameren Bishdard.socccs8a0 emuise Medion ceecrsioras ones fend” dhe''Seenre chin "the ist Giume tatesssrssveneteesteree e300 Mow 1s conver wit Spirit fviondo ne Too ‘ways G0) mish Gathers ee Teron ‘rete tneepreed corse hq Gin andi Beak of Stow. ahs alice Mites coco ee Manama forcrtceet carrer roctune Teli Cer bot aun 800 Nat rorturs Suletsrteeserese ota Magic cords tenga cctccccebhee Fectans Telia by Carbs tooniss ae Sstete of Chrveyance Reteated.2. bet ow to mend fropiee Minderrecc. bee Gp Salis etey Players” reas 1g acrai's driniai Breas ook.” ben Bw ao Ontea Your Decrees eee A Ceuiny all pemipcte awit ih See ae ante SS: Thane cane Feline Gh = Tonks of lantFactioas. Soares 8. a ae oe ae ag Wisi you dent com wits tr nex. STUDI Phreno i (noses Dept) | 210 WEST 62nd 8T., N. Y. C _- You Sheald Barn — Oriental Lack Incense i In Your Home ~ | oe ma pees ABTRE) 2 verte soe ‘ wun ecie if rte on care 4 | “the voting of be’ : ri eae a | poli trae} ‘Weiguge |. =o =. Sm | aa 3 ame: SORE pele ag a Wen ae % THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.L. A. DIVISIONS - Ee eae eet ea Se. aise oS sie aed . ; CINQROIATL OF10 =; Cegane, Division -seheed 2 fergs farede"at ‘the opening ot the second | Joeal convention ‘aind in Ronor. ofMis. ‘Auiy Jacques Garvey:""wie of Hon. _.Marcus.Garvay..Lone_hafbre_thepaz “rade started (fongn assembled in the * ptreaia. to. witness the opéhing cere- monier of the convention, .The parade moved at 1 p.m. First came the band, followed by Sir Wm.-Ware. K. C. -D. 8, 0. E, president of the divinio’, fol- jlowea by tho Universal African Le- ‘gions, Motor Corps and, Black Cross Nurses, in command of “Maser Alvin Washington: the Black Cross Ambu- lance. in gommand of: Mrs Renfro elie; she Juvenen of ont atnon feeMnnand of Lieut. Solr BR. E Gitker, First 80. ACY. and executive secretary ‘of the Cinéinnati Division; the choir: ted by Lieut. Rufus Merron: the divisional: oMcers., Rev. McQueen ‘and"hid,stafe of preachers: the members “ot the cision with such KlogaKS ax TOME on ae kane tetas “War. “What Ts the Negro's Attitude ‘Towerd the Mofoccan Situation.” "God fave Africa,” “Long Lye America.” The World Resriects Organized Force.” “All Men Were Creatgl Ean)" HA Government-in Afrten.for Nograns™ ‘The parade dishanded at Emery AUS Aitorium. : Promptly at 3 p.m. the program for the afternoon began. President Wile] Mam ‘Ware of the Cincinnati Tvinion presided. ‘Many presidents of nearby Aiyinionn and chaptene were present, al) ‘anxious to hear the message of the| Hon, Narcur Garvey by. Mes. Amy Jacques Gartay: Among thore, ented | fon the rostrim were Mrs. Amy dae: gues Garvey; Sir Wim. Ware, president: Mr. Elder Trip, second vice-president: Mr. Ben Montsomery. arst:vice-preni- dent; Mra. Maggie Stott, Indy preni- dent; Mrs. Zeild Michnux, second vice president: Mrs, Maggie Spencer: third vice-president; Rer. Razor of Florence Divlslon; Prof. E. W. Curry, Mrs. Ber tractathoun, Rov. J. F. Walker and many other out-of-town presidents and visitorn 2 ~ _¥o. Wace oullined the purpose of the convention In: an eloquent opening ad~ drean which’ received much -applause. The prosTamy was an TMOWsT Soae UF] chotr, “0, Africa Awake": original poem, by Men. Béttle Hutehing: one by cholr, -"Booker T. Washington.” After the original nom bs: Mrs. Tettle Huicbins. Prof. E. W. Curry made a motion thint « teltsicam he rept to-Pren- Ident Calvin Coolldge and Attorney Generat Warren nskinig for clemency for Hon, Marcux Garvey. Rev. J. F. Walker seconded the motion, which was carried unanimously. The tele- Aram. wan immediately nent to the President and the attorney general. "Mg. Amy’ J. Garvey wan then Intro- duced. After reading the meataze coming from Mr. Garvéy, Mrs. Gar- vey talked for-one hour. Her addrens’ was inspiring. She spoke on “The Mo- rorean Question.” = 2 Aman many interesting Yhiges she referred to were! Nesrocn talQng the | organizaiion as a Joke: ministers | preaching the wrong doctrine: Adbel- | Keim blizine the way for Afeican re |, demption; Americane going to asin |, France to fight the Ruthans, and what |. contribution are Negroen making to Affiean redemption’? rola Curry ales" spoke, his-address wan very inapiring. The National Anthem was sung and tho || mesitng adjourned until & p.m. ! ‘i E.R. GILKES, Reporter, |; DETROIT, cMICH. ‘The Hon. William 1. Sherrill, necting President-General, and Mr. W. M. "Holder. were the distinguished visitors of the Arst local convention of the De- aoit Division on Sunday and Monday August 9 and 10. A mass meoting was held at Turner's Hail at 2 p.m. Seven hundred people were pretent and all enjoyed a wonderful program. The pra- gram ‘of the evening wax nx follaws: ‘Opening services by the chaninin, Rev. A. L. Harrison: anthem, by the Phatr: election by the hand: solo, By the Lady President: Mrs, Mary Massie: address by the Hon. L Smith. ‘che front nage of The Neeto World wax read by Mr. Franklin, ‘Address by the on. Wil iam M. Holder, ino made an appeal for financial aid to the, parent body. ‘The, president next* introduced the aptaker-of the evening. Hon, William XL. Sherrill.’ who delivered a wondertul addréan, Mr. Sherrril ald, tn his re- marks, to-let not our hearte he trou- Died, but to piay’ at this“ moment ‘iat dur President. may. return to tin s06n and:that Afrita may be redeemed. Our convention so far has been very muccesstul and the attendance Ate On Wriday and Saturday, August 7.and 8, the division was also honored with the presdnce of Lady Amy Jacquex Garvey and Mra. M. 1. T. De Mena. It grieved our hearts to bave them leave us, an we all enjoyed thelt wonderful addressee. ‘We pray Gos's blessing upon them that {a7 may do great caine for the'U. K. 1. A. The meeting cissed with the sing- tag of the National Anthem. ° > :_ MRSFRED B JOWNEON. _e, Mencee er we. mann? T0 } $0 Ta AF RIC) A ‘The Evaton:Diviaion neld.a very sue- constul mass meeting on June 14. Mr. ©. C. Kalinda. president of che djyision. opened the meeting with religtows cere- montes {r6fh the ritual, “Ae? the reil- wlowe-EervIges MET MGA HO” (OOK Be chai and presided while the prokram was Fondered. All of the numbers were fultable.to the Secanion and wae sch enjoyed." The speeches were stronk and.encouraging: The.attendance was unusualiy. large: nearly four hundred were present. Seventy new, nembers Were added.to the roll. hye menhera tnd tends of the tS BK In South Alrica are holding the banner high and never’ faltering In the great work of furthering the cause of .Afcicar re emption, We look eaxerly for the coming of The Negro World with its insuring messages from nur Srothers in other parts of tha worid | |_| BENJAMIN J. MAJAFI. * Reporter PACUARITA, COSTA RICA | The Pacuarita Diviston No. 62 pf the JENA. and A: C. Lb not dena, nor asleep, althouah for culte «while we have not sent any news to The Negro World, Our Sunday meetings are well attended, an are our eneral meetings Iput on. Garves. Day the attendang® ex- Eetded, alt other meatings. Werhava pledged our loyalty to.the “Hon. Marcus Garvey, 40 -stand” with hime fer him, and by him, te push and pall the program of “the U.N. 1 A. inti It fx put oyer and Africa ee deemed, We have] caught the spirit of the U.N. LA. andgre as resolute and Aetermined as wrenthmm Jacoh of old We are not going to le: go untit Africa In "860, We have also. pledged our- elven to the cohtinued aupport of the Binek Cross Sfeizetion and Trading co. TON Sunday. July 8, we celebrated Garvey ‘Day. There wax a splendid program and totr-of enthusiasm. I're= cierly at 430 p.m. the meeting was called to: order by the chaplain, The Opening, e2e Aeon “CF Fen TET Mountains” was sung. The acitt9, One God, One Aim, One Destiny. was re- peated. = The chaplain read from the ritual ang from the Bible, St. Luke, 28d chapter {The president offered prayers. The chaplain greeted the audienc: and refreshed thelr memories an to tha ob- Ject of the meetin. Our attention Wan called to Muthew, 16th chap verse 24, "If any man will come after me let him deny himself. and take up his cross ‘und follow met” . ‘The spiritual part of “te meeting over the chgnitin turned the chair over to the president, .The president welcomed. all io. Lih~ cry Hall, and gave a diet lecture: on the sacrifices we ouRht to be willing to make and encouraging ux to do all we can forte HX. 1A: t6 ive will ingly, not Rrudginsls. not for todas but until the proxram is put over and a Rovernment, Wy Negroes anit tor Neo Rroes 1s established on the great con- tinent of Africa. “A duet was sung by the Indy prest- | dent and Miss Cather:ne Mitehell en (iuled "Maren on for There's Victory anead:"a song’ omposed by St. Frank Moulton, ex-president of the division The Executive Secretary, Mp. David Raney, Rave an encouraging address, Onward Christian Soldiers" was sung. an-Protessor Christian, a famoun Gar- cage, wax Introduced, He wulogized inedmoverent and spoke In rlowink lermn’of the life work,and sacrifice of cur imprisoned Trader. He @buses the enthusinam of the audience, So eaptis rating was hig address that six new members came up and enrolled their names. Mrs. A. Lyne, secretary. sang \ sclo. Mich Charlotte Jarrett, one of ihe newly’ enrolled, members, eave. warm address. She said in part thit “Ethiopia is stretching forth her hands unto God.” and that she t prazing for 4 apeedy: complation of the program, 39 that she, too. can sox, “Lord, riow let chy Aervant’ depart In peace, for mine rvew have seen the. glory of thy £alvar, on.” Mf. Moulton nave an address’ on our women And Xing K AONE, one of nin thvorite compositions. ‘The presl- tent in a brief talk thanked “the ay- Slence for thelr presenes. The meek- ing tas then brought tos close: with ‘he singing of the Ethlopinn Nations) Arithem and prayer by the chaplain. M. AUGUSTUS WILSON, < es, SHINNSTON, W. VA. ‘The local divisions of the U. No. A. of Northern West Virginia. opend@, up thelr annual convention, holding = three-day session August 2, at Shini- ston, W. Va: August 2, at’ Matenta- pon. W. Va... and Avgwet 4, (at -Mow- ongeh, W. Va. Vartecsyfivisione from Ronsieont. W.Va, to Meatamn: W. Ye were represented at. enh: pessten. work: of "the. sueniniee ‘et “Montene; W Va., to to be Righty: brates’, Race pride te strongty .inettipd te these’ tertio washers beerss =: re ‘union wes organized: known as the Tri- County Polidteal Union of the.U. N. 1 A. “which will combine all | colores Yotera of Harrison, Marlon’ and Mon- ongahela counties. This tintan has al raaqy. Htartot to, work for the pelter: ment ‘of euf™pwople. | ‘There “are "ne words to exnrens the Rood thin con- Xention Wan done foc Northern Went ‘Virginia, Fallying the drones and: slug- gages of our organiiation.. “The won- Geral, nermon. "Back “to Africa.” preached by Rev. Freehian! Simmons, of Montana. will be, published in pamphlet form 20 baw mersae for ‘his race can be tead.and appreciated by ur,nebple far and snear. If all ‘Negroes in Nortnern'“W. Va. do nol Join our ranks It In siét,becaure. of the, failure of our Hon. Prot, D. H. Kyie, Hi. C. to tnapire and, All them with the sath, Brotherly Jove and race pride. We ure vers proud of our-#igh Comminstoner, What quccesngce shave in disc ¢o. him. An emageipatied collection wil be held at’ Monongah, Traction Park, by this éranalzation. There pax bec Kome Kreat ‘work done: during thin conven tion. Oring to conditions-of this-state of no work for one year, we feel as if thin convention In a aticeess, Anan cinlly= 2 “The followine divisions sent_repre- acotativer to, this convention: Huteh- invon, Shinnton, Roxemont, Lauri Lee, Monoprnh, W. C. Baxter, HYG: Powell Clarksburg, Montana, Farmington. FANNIE B. BROADNAX, Reporter, _ CHICAGO, ILLINOIS The local convention of Chicago Division opened Sunday, Augunt 2 at the Colemun Shook, th and Dear- born sireets. The opening xession wis marked by mutual expressions of felendly ferting and a desire to see the ProRram of the Universal Nezto im: provement Assorlation put aver. It Is very pleasing “ond upiropriate that we should have Mré Amy Jaques Garver. Wife of the president-goneral, with us Jat the openms af our convention and Sir. William Slierrill, acting president- zeneral, with ts at the close. The membership has been divided Into RroUuns of delegates. representing Fan “or the” State ofthis" Union, and countries having larze Negro popula |Uens, sinillar to the plan of yh Inter Rane Cone Aen nT New Tere All delegiten were formally rhxistered Monday. AuRust 3 UUThe program for the convention ix very hntorenting ane appropriately. ar= ranged. Its printed in xourchie form, On, the outside rover is a Bleture of UF Liherty Hell building to be exeeted shortly on 4th and State streets. It contains many topies of vital Impor- tance "to the acelfare of the. Nesro, Which are belnz discussed: during the season hy numeof the lending Nexrors ot the city. and by the delesates, at large. Sr The aucéew thus far has “been all that contd be expected. The most- no\aworthy feature, howaver. was the Mint of Mrs, Amy Jaques Garvey, whte of the president-zeneral. She de- livers a stirring address to an over- crowded sudlorium, President Hon. W. A. Wallace is working hard to see to Ht that the convention i a eumplete success. Special arrangements ate bee Ing tnade foo" the, visit on August 1 and ifof Sir Wiliam Sherrill, acting reeldent-cenerai. E.R. KNOX, Reporter. BOSTON, MASS. Boston Division. opened its local convention on Sunday Atigust 2 Seuth divine sorvien tn the African OF thedox Church, ‘The service wast charge of the chaplain af the Division Mr. Svanes’ Blackman, assisted by th Rew. Hollinsed, Rew? Greenidge” ans Rev. Rayner, Rew. “Hollinged wa the preacher for the occasion. Th Scripture Joeson was rend by the Rev Greentdge: a special prayer for the Hon, Marcus Garvey. wan delivered bs the Rév, Raynor. After the benedic: ori the president of the division. OIF Alkens, formally: opened the conven: tien. s, ‘big miasn mecting wos staged in Butler Hall at 230. Betore a. laize and enthumantlc audience the oMcere delivered thelr convention adérrsien Mr. Wiltged .Grimth, of Cambridge one of the apeskern of the afternoon. propounded the doctrines of the U..N. 1. A. The mast mestines at nights were ‘very auccenatul, Monday night wan politieal_ight..._Atty, Mitchel and others delved into the political situation. Tuesday night was medical Blah “A Dealt ale Was given Dy the leading Medicos of the ‘city; Or. J:-B. Hal, on Tuberculoain;' £7, Baraktts on Heart Strain; Dr. Gaskisi, on the care with lantern lide ‘Wednesday -night 'G® reljtous ‘as- pert at ine. communty: £7 Mav. Pi man, Ray. Hollinsed, Bialop ‘Tretman, and ethers were'discussed. ° e “Thuredey night, Mrs E.G. Meadiey spoke om Community Betterment. “Her subject wan presented erith eartest- gees. At the close -sreryowe-teft: with tne thapiration ef 6 be whole ecere, comnmisall, oe’ = eepentalty: for ‘oo Friday, night te, et| the Jocal divisions poke ta glowing eri of ‘ime encrmragapeink tat, 620 pert given hes. Tes, GviehOest, Mr. tet ges took eae Sto : 4 leet Be pnveniion bs the epmnig Jour: will be from greater and more, phopyuatul..:.” - BS&> pms co. +e, ee ee, ane : mee | eich eee t ome eet - Bs a oat "2 Thé ‘Parent Body is the very heart. af:thefrganization. if it fails to function properly the whole’ orgjnization: is sick. “T must. “therefore, call every member's atteftion to the fact that the Parent Body ds passing through a vqy critical period: Obligations are, pressing from. every ‘side. The monthly rev- enue received in the way of dues in'no whe enables us to meet these obligations. We are, therefore] requesting each Division to raise a special collection for the Phrent Body every dae during the whole of their local conventiop. This need ifot interfere with your régular collection. It simply’ means that at each meeting the members and friends dust be given an upportunity: to contribute to the Parent: Body. These collec tions must be telegraphed tothe Parent Boly:daily@s taken up. “" WILLIAM.L, SHERRILL, Acting President-General. or" CS TOp DIVERSE”) ef aes St oa Ge cane Sana ocmieoeeck Tk Tror oF aaa. ae Re ep Ro rer ee aes agaeie eee re ed aia ae ae ae : MARIANAO;-HAY., CUBA- Sunday, August 2. being “Garvey Day.” alt Martanao’turnéa out to pay {tribute to our noble’ tender, thus, how: ing tothe werld that the spirit of the Universal Negro Improvement Asso- ciation much alive in this town The Boy Scouts and, Motor Corns, under the able leadership of Captain, Gil lutte, marched arouse the towns ac- companied. by the local hand, which donated Its nervice for the accaston. AUS'R m, the procession entered Lib- erty Half, which wan Tucked to tte utmont capacity. ‘The merting was culled to order BY the president, Mr. "Ro Perrin# who in hin usual way ex- Mained to the audience the meaning of "Garvey Day.” The acting chap- lain, Mr. Williams. profeaded to at- fend to our epititual wants, (aking his text from Psalms 23, Attor our Rpieht= ual tient was quenched, the: president then Introduced ,the chairman of the evening, who In is opening remarks Said, that "Garvey Day” in to the Negro race what Vietori Day ts: to the, Englishman, the Fourth ef July Js f6 (American, and the twentleth of May tn to the Cubans, _Wewere favored wih a. woll_ar- Fanged prosram, each item being Fen dered ak only Nesrors can, Speci! mention must te made of a duct by Mesdames Campbell and Durant, 4% idress by Mr. C. Morris, the per= formace by the choir under Cholr- master S.-Blair, rol by Miss Palmer, and addresses by Mrs Purcell and Mixx James. The proseam want ag followa: #Shine on’ Eternal Light.” hy: the audience: adiress te, ‘Corporal Graham: reading of front page "Ne~ gro World.” Lt. Quartermarter. §. Powell: solo, “He Leadeth On.” lady. vice-president: “Convention Hymn— "God Blesx Our President,” audience: address, Mr. MeBeam, « asteggts (com Mechfnic's Lodge: anthem, ““Adora- tion.” by the choir: address, Slater TE. James: duet. Missex Bana und Winnie fred Graham: address, “Owe Perfect Pattern,” Sister MeCullum: address, “Advancement,” Lt. Quartermaster, Powell, duet, Mesdames Durant and Campbell; address, Mex. Purcell; anthem, hy Mr. Williams and his son stera: address, “The Oath.” by Brother Graham, hymn, bs the audience: ad- dress, ‘Mr. Barton: solo, "0. Africa Awake.” ty Miss Palmer: ‘ address. “The Nesro Achievement.” Mr. Mor ris;_anther, “Marching On." choir: adress. C..Codogan, a delenate from the Rising Star Lodge: sot Mise, Ed na James, The meeting closed by singing the anthem and prayers. JIM GARDNER, Reporter. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. ‘The following progeam.was rendered in the Athintig Clty Division on Sun- diay, upunt.2; ‘Processional; invocation by Mev Joba Wilson: praver and. an- them by the-cholr; Bible lennon rend y Joceph. Braithwaite: prayer” by the fans, Sr, Dona Tearwond eee om by the choir; address, Mr. Smith; eriection by Prot Conpin, organist: ad- aress. afr. toneph Brathwaite: address fy tha Indy president: Mra. Dudes mem bership. appeal and. remarks bY" the president, Me. Darasille Simmona: af- fering, “The meetigg closed with the cinglag. of ine Bthonian. anthem and benediction. " aoe _-D. SIMMONS, Reporter. BUFFALO, NEW: YORK «: R. L, Poston Chapter of the U. N. 1. ‘Achad: ap ite-visitor Mr i6-L—Demo-o South Africa at the mass eating hela on Sanday. August #. 19 agdition to's trlendla addrece by Mr. Domo and. ty the president, Mra. Theodore M. Ka- kaya, the following viey enjoyable mu: sical and Mterary program wae ren- dered: Opening. exerctave conducted by the chaplain, Rev. J. BoVeckson; 24- dread, tf. Piercy’ Biatkmain; tnetru- mental solo, Mise. Lactie‘Apderson; 2a cess. Mr. Shetheld Dennis, vice-prest- dent 66 the éiviston: -olliringy ‘The resting closed with tha singing jf the wot sehen ee MRS. NATHANIEL SNGLISW, og nae eR apietion. OAKLAND —CALIFORNIA- ‘Saturdey evening, August 1, the loca! fonvention. of Division 188, Oakland Cal, wan omciny Inunched. AK su: tomobile tour beginning at local head unrtern. ond Keine to various mam: der# homer. rerronesting the different countries of the world, and, serving light refreshments caminon to the par- Ucular countey, mn@ terminating at the local hall in an evening of dancing and gocial entertainment, wan the opening feature, and called a “Trip Around the Wort Sunday attersonn, at Catnenter's Halla. large agd. well-attended. mass mecting wax held, It being Garves Pay. n special proxram wax arcana Vice-President Hodge omclated as master of ceremonien. ‘The prozram 3 the Juveniles was especially. Interest. tng. An essay wax read Rv Miss Mary Clark entiting "Why: We Should All Be Garvevites”” A plana nolo wax ren- dered by Miss Ruth Clark. "A special number was featured by the choir, with ‘Mish Loulte Blake ax soloist. ‘The pre- [Amble of the’ constitution, aims and objects of the U.N. 1. A. were next read by ‘Mr. Johnny. Young, who tk loyally foliowing fm the footiirinte of Hon. Marcus Garvew._ A tright future is predicted for this brilliant younR man. A splendid musleal trent ean rendered by .irs. Mary’ Martin Grubbs, one of the nlghtingalen of the Pacific Coast. Her seloction was enjoved ena heartily applauded. The ringing mex- sae of the President-Genéral was next read by the secretary. ‘The essay ren- dered by the Juveniles “atarted the fire." and the message war likened unto fire when gasdline In poured upon -{t. The audience then nang the song dedl- cated to our Inder, “Where, He Leads Twin Fottow: ‘The speaker of.tho dey, Prot. Barclay of Lonéon, England, after. commenting on the masterful menaage, chose for his subject. "Give Honar to Whom It Is Due.” Mony geod and (rue things Were anid touching the Key's of windom in the audlence aid causing great resole- ing. After a wonderful lecture the Nationai: Ethiopinn Anthem was sunk. Current topier by Prof, Jordan were next heard. ‘The Chinese problem and the success of the RiMns were mont interesting. ‘The announcement of the local convention. tobe held during the week Inft all (ealine convinced of the tremendoun worth of the Universal Ne- gro Improvement Association at home and abroad. MARY G. CLARK. Reporter. INDIANA HARBOR, IND. Arent demonstration was, staged by Indiana Harhor Division on Satur diay, August 8 "Thin day will ever live tn the hearts of both white and lack, Members of the Gary. Division, over Atty nironk, went over to the Harbor This ‘number included. the. oMeers Tenlons, nurses and fuveniies who tade tine showing. ‘When the band pented out Connectlout, Rreat ‘shout went Sp from the crowd that had lined the atreets for hours waiting for Garvey" nighty hosts. Atter, we, hee com- Pleted out route we made = atfalghi ative for the Methodiat Church, whose pastor ‘hax opened hie doors tthe members of the USN.LA, This gentie- man made it plain“in his remarks that he Is ready to assiat any organiration that stands forthe emancipation of black nomanty. : Tae ausionce, won nthe Sai: of avi ax apeaka?"attar efadker polred out their souls as touching the im- prisonntent of our noble leader, Marcus Garvey. and the principles of, thie Kigantle organisation. Mr’: Brookes, president of Gary Division, made. it plain’ that we will shake the very pillars of Hell 1 ood: be to re: deem Africh. The mesting came to 4 close with the singing of the Natioral Anther. = ‘The chotr of the Louisville Pivisjon wil visit Cinchineti-on Sunday, Aveust 16, and be the guest.ct the Etnetungti Division. The Lowisvitie Division - 1s pctond tebe atth te r-iphet wich sigter @tvisien-tn Gia.wey. |” “EAT WHAT ‘YOU 4 DRINK WHAT YOU E SLEEP WHEN YOU ° os . If you are troubled with constipation, biliousness, indigaation, gat belching, liver oublm atamach Zrouble, akin eruption and weak bowels, ORDER a bot~ oct HOLY BARK COMPOUND, a'most wonderful all-yeat-round tonic: at once aud take.2 dona mornings only and you will be pleasantly surprised to notice Bow yaur-tood digests better.. You are not troubled with your atomach Iny more. All indigestion distrene after eating dx.eona Dermot let-nepleet of- Your stomach Became chronic, because the rénilia ard dangerous, Act at Shee, "end for a bottle of thie Goduend medicine. this minute. alle any- Price $1.40in-V..8. A. $2.00 In Foreign Countries Including: Postage | 1€ you afe not sitipfed with it return anme sind we guarante-the, refund of your moneys cas i or MUST BE SENT WITH ALL ORDER®, : us ‘West asa Street NEW YORK CITY 7 “Bull Direetiona How to Take, With Each Bottle _ os HOW TO:ACQUIRE .. - RACIALKNOWLEDGE . saa tee gaps 9a, Sia Wal wenesdl Lied phic rest wets of Micros: Moo nee Mle ft Gerben ee ‘t ; ie 2 isle a Aves ee Sven, r i ree Ries le: chit eg ee yt New Kensington Division isa: fine meeting on August 1." In common, with other divisions of the’, organtzation throughout the.world, this division eele- peated August 1 In; a ‘epectal manner. ‘The following Very: enjoyable program wan, rendered: Address. of . welcome Rev. Jang. Alle) Robliaons: panes Bite, Richardson: explanation of the alma find objects Qf the organization ‘by thegRer. Johnon; cornet trio. Messrs Johnson, Harris and Werner: paper, Mins Fitzpatrick: xolo,’ Missy Ovetta Johnson: closing Address by Rev. Neatherson. | as ‘A apecial program wan rendered by New Kensington Divigion on 6ufiday. Auruat 9. The meeting opened with the nual song and religious service, Rev. G. H. Johnson and, Mensrs. Robert Harris and Jordan Jones eaci gave in- apléing talks: The presidént, Rev. J. H. Robertion,,” presided. The tollowing -proxeam:_.srag,fendered:_Duss,_Mex ‘Jullg Patterson and Mr., Arthur War- ner: paper. Minn Lillie Jackson: selec- tion, Mr. W. M. Gross: maaical num: hers hy: Thomas Harris, Waiter Gross and A. Warner: short addtess. Mes. G. 1H, Johnson: musieal duet by W. Grane and Thomas Harris, The program cloned with a’short addrean by: Rev: Robertson and .“# nlaging of the na- tonal anthem. | J. A! ROBINSON, + Reporter. |. In celebrating: the conventiqn -of thé Universal Negro Improvement Associa. ‘lon and African Communities. League ‘in this Republic the loyalty of the sup- porters of this international movement Of Afriea for the Africang and "One God. One Aim. One Destiny” to “al doubting Thomases” that the program for the redemption ‘of ‘the Fatherlana which hax been laid down by the Hon. Marcun Garvey will aurely: be fulfilled, sometime in the future. Hon, Charles H. Biyant. commls- Moner of thin Inddabte wofk of rejuve: nation. according te the instructural auldance af the parent body at_hend- aaartere NewYork, wecomplinhed A intinct and unique achievement when he pronored to annemblengtorether all unite of this colossal undertaking for the purpore of meeting in solemn con- clave to dincuss and treat upon the in- dustrial, commercial, educational, po- Uitical, social and moral, ethics of ad- vancement of the Nexro race an a whole, : . The spectal train which Yett Coton ratiroad station at 8.20 brought over ta this capital one of the larcest crowds that has. aver taken advantage of the tranaportation facilities of the Panama Rallrond* Company. torn being made at the ‘a+louis centers. of the U. NT. A. ncuvities on the Canal Zone and pos- nessionn of thie thriving Republic, there elng membern from branches operat- Ingunder chartered rights Arcangementn completed. the procen- sion. numbering approximately 5,000 rouls, with the High Commissioner and Gen. Downes at the head.-marched throuh the principal streets of the elty. Girly’ Guldes. Motor Cofps, Bors’ Brizade, auxiliaries, choirs connected vith the variqus chapters and divisions and a Juvenile bind of rhustelans made up the procession. “Liberty Hal, of Diviston 17% was {n= adequate to meet the housing reautre- ments for the accommodation of the U.N. 1. A, members, and Hon. Charles H. Rryant-atterdue consultation with bis cabinet ofomcers, supported by President, J. ‘Collins ‘ot Diviston” 3%, President 8. Howard of Chapter 14, With Gen: Dosines! in iatteridance, ad- Greased the cfowd irbma.tbe veranda. ‘The ‘program: to complete the cone pentlon, Weeva| with the. processional nymn, “Shine On! Eternal Light," £2 towed “"hy~the-- opening: ofe;—"From Greeniands foy: Mouhtaina”: prayer by the ‘chuntain_and “rhe #84 Pealm, the President's. Hymn, proyer by Chaoigin, Rommsst wane frat tenon ty Hy Bell, chant: dy -¢holr-and congregatid® “Hall, O-God of Ethiopia:” hymn 3%, “Oh, Got Our Helv’ th Ages Past’: anther by Galan Divislon 796: sermon by chaplain: onthem, “Almighty Goa," by Division 17; introduction of chatr- man by President J. Collins of Division 17; chatsroan’s opegiog’ remarks: hymn, “Qnward: Qhrictian Soldters™ unvellinn of Dominion charter: antheni “by” Di: vision 17's chélr: sadrene by represen- tative fom Division 37; anthem’ of Colo Disision's choir: ‘renrerentativer’ hymn.-“The-Day Thou Gavest Lords. Ended*:' Ethlopla's, National Anthem Cotifidential Medical Advice ‘and Examination , = . 4 a oN. 5 4 Sy ] Porn d ruaedatits SAGE, eae a Reston Gieabeat Physiclans. to SERUM and Seis All those whe seme tue ot mmuatnine, private Seamination Gor any aitense or alls Seren ras: he guttering Crom If you are Sick—Pay us.a visit. If. you have been suffer- ing—Pay us¢ visit. : Tf you are about to -give hope—Pay -u2-2-visit, — Uf you have tried the rest) then it is time to try the best Specialist there is ig the country. FA nunatione wand, rhete are al Sn tgeeek gave tee ame eres WV eu"may anatecd She in'stamee oF coin to help cover cost of thib notice, Horaign ocuntrice ond. Pont Omics MomepOrdeetor ase" Astro-Phenological Studio 210 W. 62nd Street .NEW YORK CITY _ corer. ¥. 8) [oer + 148 West 13ist Street EGISTERED CHIROPODIST NEVER IGNORE PEFT TROUBLES — ‘TUET INSTRE THE NERVES ~ OUR WOMEN and WHAT THEY THINK-Edited by Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey Call Upon Negroes at Convention Session of Washington Division to Organize to Secure Great Leader's Release Mrs. Amy Garvey, wife of Marcus Garvey, president of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, now incarcerated in the Atlanta penitentiary, following conviction for using the mails to defraud, pending deportation, addressed an audience of 300 Negroes at the new Bethel Baptist Church last night. The meeting opened a six-day session of the second local convention of the Garvey Association and the African Communities League, 183d Division. Mrs. Garvey made an impassioned speech which attracted attention of persons from the street, including several marines; who entered the church and heard a vigorous denunciation of the occupation of Haiti by United States forces. Mrs. Garvey advised against adherence to a league of nations or world court on the ground that Great Britain and other donor nations desire American financial assistance with which to revitalize colored nations of the world. She also called upon American Negroes to organize for Marcus Garvey as Egyptians did for Zangioul Fasha when he was imprisoned by the British. Raps American Women For Flaunting Charms In Degrading Costumes PROVIDENCE, R. I. Aug. II. Asserting that American women are faunting their physical charms in costumes that not only degrade the wearers, but are a constant source of sin to others. Bishop William A. Hickey has threatened to har women "improperly gorped" from churches of the Roman Catholic diocese, of Providence. The styles of today expose the female form so freely that nothing is left to the imagination. Bishop Hickey declared in a sermon at the cathedral of St Peter and Paul. Reminding the congregation of the fate of the pagan nations when their scantily clad women paraded their charms before the populace, he said American women appear to have entered upon a similar fashion of intimate exhibition which are seriously affecting the nation's morals. Bishop Hickey agreed with Henry Ford's recent statement that immoral dress, dance halls and motion pictures are breaking down Christianity and denounced bathing beauty contests as shocking and conducive to loose morals. Woman Sleeps Two Years After two years of almost uninterrupted sleep, Mrs. Otto Stanklevitz of Pound, Wis., has shown no signs of improvement. A Baby In Your Home In past married country there are children that thousands of ages of a new book by Dr. Will Middleton of St. Paul's Hospital whose parents go to children's room. Any family interested in extraordinary conditions of nature that hinder the age of children should write to this book today. It describes a diurnal home treatment for children with a serious condition that has had marrowous results all over the country in rerouting sometimes. Every woman who wants to live a normal life must have a child to care for. Would consider it her first step to know what it is and how to care for it. All in all it is this little book which is well written shape or objection in a plain way here and organized to them. Send NO money to Dr. Will Middleton, 1977 Ballard Street, St. Paul's Hospital, St. Paul's, MA 02169. A Real Scalp Specialist WALKER'S SYSTEM One of the oldest and the best Get the Right Person to treat your hair Consult MRS. JOHNSON 281 West 129th St. BROADWAY 400, 400, EXIT 1-W NEW YORK, Aug. 10-14 frankness between parents and their children is the reason why, many girls leave home, according to observations made by Miss Elizabeth Nye, social service secretary of the W. Y. C. A. In the course of her work with the association, Miss Nye has met and talked with many hundreds of girls who have left home without their parents' consent and are having trouble to adjust themselves to life as they find it in a big city. In practically every case she has found that these girls have not been able frankly to talk over their grievances with their parents, but when they find a third person with a sympathetic ear they pour out the bitterness of their hearts. "At home it is, Mary. I forbid you to do this." instead of Now, Mary, let's talk this over." Miss Nye is quoted in the Evening World. "The more bans you put on young people, the more fractions they grow, and the time comes when they're driven to undesirable subterfuges. Frankness 'First "It I were making a Ten Commandments for parents; the first would be 'Encourage frankness in your children and be frank with them.' Although the younger generation has grown in independence of thought and aption, the older folks must at least try to understand it without throwing up their hands in holy hour at the least-deviation from their straight-laced ideals. A mother who shrinks in dismay from her daughter's very likely innocent dis- Anniversaries Remembered Knits Family in Bond of Affection "Do you still keep your birthday?" asked a woman of me the other day. "Of course I do." I replied. "I stopped that years ago," she told me. She could not have been 30! When she had gone I began to wonder at what age a woman should cease to celebrate her birthday. The more I wondered it over, writes Mrs. Nestor Noel in the New York "Times," the more I came to the conclusion that she should keep it as long as she lives. There are several reasons for this. If she be the mother of a family the fact of her birthday being a day of celebration teaches us selflessness to the children. For weeks beforehand they can plan for mother's birthday, working at home-made gifts in secret, asking themselves what she would like and being ready to give up little pleasures for her sake. There are lonely women who have no children. Wouldn't it be a grand thing if someone in the village or street where they lived found out their birthdays and arranged with other people to give them joyous surprise? Flowers can be given to the women who are well to do. Cakes and other practical things—quickly suggest themselves when the woman is less well off. Men do not care for these things so much. They forget their birthdays. We know they often forget their wedding anniversaries. This is a fact: Men do forget these things. Women, however, are different. I think that even the modern woman clings more to the old traditions than a man, and even if she says nothing, yet in her heart there is an ache somewhere when her birthday has been forgotten. I remember once going to see an old friend of mine. Business kept me from getting to her house until 6 o'clock. She had a husband and nine children. When I came so late and presented my gift with my birthday wishes her eyes filled with tears as she looked at me gratefully. "You see the only person who remembered my birthday," she said. The gift I had taken her was of no importance. I have forgotten what it was. She was quick to see and appreciate the thought behind the gift. She asked me to stay for tea. An she hastened to get it ready three of her children whispered together and then ran across to a store. Later they came back with a present from each. "You see. I remarked, 'your children have not forgotten you.'" They would never have thought of my birthday," she whispered, "if it hadn't been for you." Then her mother-love made her make much of their gifts, but I wished that they had not needed to be reminded of their mother's birthday by a friend who, however dear, did not belong to the family. We want our nearest and dearest to remember us first. Even grandmothers should celebrate their birthdays. It is so good, for the rest of the family. It knits them together with a common bond of love. I mean to keep my birthday as long as I live. Even if I should have sev- closures will choke all impulse to confide without helping the girl to see her foolishness before it is too late." Lack of frankness, however, is not the only offense of parents, according to Miss Nye. Many girls leave home, she said, because "their parents are eternally raising the smoke of hate. The parents are so busy disagreeing with each other that they haven't time to look after their children. They blame the children for breaking up their home when they, with their friction and constant ill-temper, are the real trouble-makers. "Another type of girl complains to me," continued Miss Nye. "that she works all week earning money to help out on the family expenses, but when pay-day comes, the parents take all of her money and she has to ask for every cent she spends. That isn't a way to train a girl in either saving or spending, neither is it justice when she has earned the money. Let your daughters pay you room and board but leave them the resillence." Another source of trouble with which the social service worker comes in contact is the attempt by parents to mold their daughters according to preconceived notions instead of helping them to satisfy their inclinations. "Young people can not be scolded, nagged and threatened with parental wrath if they refuse to fall into their parents' plans for them. Rather, parents should do everything within reason toward helping their young attain the heights of their ambitions." enty grandchildren and they should each present me with a pair of slippers. I would be thankful. Not that I should need all those slippers, but I would certainly need all the love that prompted the gifts. Women always need love; they cannot live without it. Let them not be quick to say: I never keep my birthday. When they allow people to forget their birthdays they lose the manifestation of a great deal of love. THE CARE OF THE SKIN By the Black Cross Nurses of New York The skin fulfills many important functions. Not only is it a protective covering for the different organs and tissues, but it excretes waste products in the sweat and regulates the temperature of the body. It also is the seat of the appreciation of tactile sensibility and contains the delicate nerve-endings which convey a sensation of painf whenever the skin is injured and so enable the part to be removed from the source of injury; consequently, the importance of maintaining the skin in a healthy condition becomes very evident. In performing its excretory process it gives off sweat, which may dry on the body and leave the solid waste products there. It also secretes an oily substance which makes the surface greasy. All the time it is liable to contamination from outside dust, and this clings particularly to greasy bodies. Owing to the accumulation of these waste matters the pores of the skin are liable to become choked, and health must suffer from the inability of the excretory products to escape freely. The removal of all these waste products is essential to health, and so it is imperative that the skin be frequently cleansed. This is best carried out in a hot bath, as cleaning is facilitated by hot water. Frequent baths, are a necessity, and the choice of soap is a very important one, especially in the case of children, as their skins are more sensitive to any source of irritation. Cheap soaps are often made of rancid fats and are highly scented to disguise this. They are apt to irritate the skin and should be avoided. There are certain diseases affecting the skin which can be to a large extent prevented by watchful care and treatment. NETTLE-RASH.—This is a common complaint. It manifests, itself usually as a white pimple on top of a red base. The patches may be large or small and the trouble localized or extensive. It is due to some form of poison absorption arising externally, or internally. As examples of external irritants one may mention the sting of insects or the use of chemical irritants in treating or washing clothes. Examples of internal irritants are poisons resulting from the ingestion of various forms of shellfish, mushrooms and certain fruits. The avoidance of any of these articles of diet is the surest way of preventing the trouble arising. When the trouble arises it is important to try and determine what has been the irritating cause, and by avoiding it in the future the condition is kept from developing. BERLIN, Aug. 1. (A.P.)—Bobbed-brained girls have much greater difficulty leading jobs as hosts servant than midsong with long hair. Berlin's public employment bureau finds. But the Berlin housefrau's aversion to the shorn and shinged, frankness of the kitchen originates not only in prejudice against this modern fashion, but in January as well. Bobbed-brained then far has bypass considered the exclusive privilege of the upper classes in Germany, the employment agency management. Their present servant advantage in the duties of the porter. German servant would seem far in line with Berlin. GOLDEN BROWN BEAUTY CONTEST List of New. York Contestants Who Are Striving to Earn First Prize of Hudson Motor Car NEW YORK—Miss Vera Adams. New York; Miss Madeline All, New York; Mrs. E. Alvarargo, New York; Miss Sybil Alvaragger, New York; Mrs. Estella Archer, Brooklyn; Mrs. Ethel Baird, New York; Ruby Bobbie Barber, New York. Miss Edna Barr, New York; Miss Anita Blanchard, Bronx; Mrs. Ruth Boykin, New York; Mrs. Morgan Breaks, Albion; Mrs. Fannie Brewer, New York; Miss Elinor Brown, Osining; Mrs. Gladya Brown, Buffalo; Mrs. Nannie Bryant, Haverstraw. Miss Lily Bushby, New York; Mrs. Mary Jalaway, Brooklyn; Mrs. Cambridge, New York; Mrs. Rose Canine, Kingston; Bettie Carothers, Buffalo; Mrs. Bertha Chavis, Buffalo; Madame M. Childrey, New York. Mrs. Eva P. Coleman, New York; Mrs. Joanna B. Coleman, Roseton; A. Mae Cote, New York; Miss Martha Cunningham, New York; Miss Sophie Cunningham—New York; Mrs. Delia Dalton, New York; Miss Dorothy De- Arcy, New York; Mrs. Ada Edwards, New York; Mrs. C. P. Edwards, New York; Mrs. Hattie Edwards, New York; Mrs. Louise Ellott, New York. Edgile Emickew, Buffalo; Mrs. Lamber- Erving, Buffalo; Ida D. Fairbush, Buffalo; Mme. W. R. Farrish, Syracuse; Miss Leena Ford, New York; Mrs. John A. Foster, Nyack; Jease Franklin, Buffalo; Miss Iris Garner; Buffalo; Miss Marion Gee, New York; Helen M. Gentry, Buffalo; Miss Martha Glicerl, New York; Miss Fannie Glerl, New York Mrs. Minnie Goddings, New York; Mrs. Hattle Gonzales, New York; Mary. Goodman, New York; Miss A. Green, New York; Lucver Green, Far Rockaway; Mrs. Solomon Griffin, New York; Mrs. E. Hall, New York; Mrs. Bertha Hamlet, New York; Miss Hands Hande, New York; Mrs. Leroy Harris, New York; Carrie Havens, Wantagh, L. I.; Mrs. C. E. Haynes, New York. Mrs. E. G. Henry, New York; Miss Regin Herman, New York; Mrs. J. H. Hickman, New York; Mrs. Wn. Hill, Passaic; Mrs. Mary Holmes, New York; Miss I. Huyler, New York; Mrs. L. Ingram, New York; Gertrude Jackson, Bronx; Irene Jackson, New York; Nellie F. Jackson, Toughkeepsie; Mrs. Emma Jenkins, Buffalo. Miss Katie James, New York; Mrs. Emma Jenkins, Buffalo; Mrs. C. Johnson, New York; Miss Estella Johnson, New York; Mrs. Irene Johnson, New York; Mayne Johnson, Syracuse. Miss. Nora Johnson, New York; Miss B. Jones, New York; Miss Jamie Jones, New York; Mrs. James King, Brook- n; Mrs. Sallie Kittill, Mt. Vernon; Miss M. Klohn, New York; Mrs. Alberta Lewis, Brooklyn; Miss C. Ligon, New York; Miss. J. L. Lyons, Harrison; Miss L. McCullen, New York; Mrs. D. McCuller, New York; Mrs. Marion McKenzie, New York; Mrs. Mary Meyers, New York; Miss Gertrude Montague, Flushing; Miss Lulu Muro, New York; Mrs. B. P. Moss, Rochester, Miss Elizabeth Norfleet, Yonkers; Miss Kathleen Norman, New York; Miss C. O. Norwood, New York; Miss Calle Odom, New York; Miss Leonora Parker, New York; Miss Thora Parker, New York; Mrs. James Paront, New York; Miss Leena Perry, New York; Henrietta Pittman, Rochester; Miss M. Mosson, New York; Mrs. J. Powell, New York; Reba M. Prettyman, Mamaroneck; Miss Inez Quinn, New York; Mrs. Bernice Stewart. New York; Miss Helen Summer. Jamieson. Edna M. Tate. Buffalo; Mrs. J. Thompkin. New York; Miss Bessie M. Tolber. Bronx; Miss J. S. Treivant. New York; Miss E. Wallace. New York; Maude A. Ward. New York; Miss V. Water. New York; Miss Anna Watts. New York; Miss Jesse H. West. New York. Miss Thema Whitaker. New York; Miss V. Williams. New York; Mrs Henry Wilson. New York; Mrs. M. C. Wright. Jr. New York; Edna Young. New York. Peppers and Rice Three large grenbill peppers, three onion, quarter pound dry salt pork, two cups of cooked rice, one can tomato soup, dijon amount of water, one tablespoon of water, one tablespoon of flour. Cook peppers, pork and onion together with slightly browned. This only peppers port, onion and rice together, and chicken, with tablespoon of flour, thawed with other ingredients. Serve with broad crumbs and bacon in one bowl. FACE BEAUTIFIER If your FACE to achieve or dark, if your SKIN to fail of PIPELINE, LIVEN SPOTS, "BUNNY", TAK, BREAKER, BEAK, if you are gauntless to BEAUTIFY your completion: LOVE NO TIME! Order a jar of SOCIETY FACE BEAUTIFIER Full Strength LIKE GOLD CREAM. face and admirably begins to brighten up change. Satisfy your look old, withered. ALL OUT COUPON and Maze Address City City now ordering with order. STRAIGHT TALKS TO WOMEN ABOUT MONEY When Is a Dollar Worth a Dollar? IT IS EASY TO APPLY. USE IT LIKE COLD CREAM. Instantly, the skin becomes cleaner, the face and ovalism becomes good-looking. As the skin begins to brighten up the skin, the skin becomes smoother. Don't look old, withered, wrinkled up, shriveled, saggy-faced! FILL out COUPON and MAIL IT TODAY! From the Chicago Daily News Some people are at first starfilled by the thought that a dollar is sometimes worth more and sometimes worth less than a dollar. Yet this is a fact easy to illustrate. When we say that a dollar is worth a dollar, we mean that its purchasing power is a certain amount which we consider equivalent to a dollar. But if the cost of living changes, the value of money also varies. An American living in Europe when the prices were low compared to the prices in America was able to get at times as much as a worth of merchandise for his dollar, and therefore we can rudely say that his dollar was worth 2. "But is not a dollar a dollar everywhere in America because it is United States currency backed by the United States treasury." A study of the Monthly Bulletin of the United States Department of Labor shows quickly that the buying power of a dollar is not the same in the different States, but varies greatly. In some States the cost of living is so high that the dollar may be said to be worth only about 65 cents; in others it is so low that one can purchase $1.25 worth of merchandise for $1. It is for this reason that the mere statement of the amount of wages paid in different States is not in itself sufficient to indicate whether the workers are well paid or insufficiently paid. Nor is an increase of wages over a period of time an indication that the lot of the working women has been bettered during that period. For a low wage in one State may have greater value in actual purchasing power than a high wage in the other. The wages of women may have been increased tremendously, but it is necessary to know in addition what the increase of the cost of living has been over the same period before you can really know whether the wages are actually worth more. It is to help in solving this important problem that the Monthly Bulletin of the United States Department of Labor is published. The bureau gathers and compiles figures concerning the wages being paid in the important industries all over the United States, and at the same time it compiles the figures concerning the cost of living in the different localities. By a comparison of the wages and the cost of living, one can determine the value of the dollar in a given place. And also by comparing the changes in the wages and the cost of living over a period of time one can determine whether wages have actually increased or not. Try This PROVEN WAY TO STOP FALLING HAIR and DANDRUFF 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 scalp and dull lifeless hair. It has been proven that MADAM C. J. WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR PREPARATIONS are directly opposed to harmful 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. Don't Experiment! USE MADAM C. J. WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR PREPARATIONS "WORLD INVOKED" There and hence C. J. Walker's films Preparations for sale by "diamond Drug Shops and by stall The Nathan C. J. Walker Mfg Co. 900 W. 10th St. Baltimore - Baltimore Your Personality We often place our personalities at a disadvantage by assuming for some reason or other that they are not worthy of the best in us. What we receive from others is in most cases in direct proportion to what we give, both in kind and in quantity. The instant a stage star allows herself to take the mental attitude that a certain audience is not worthy of her best efforts, her performance, and matter how many times she has previously repeated it, loses in quality. The same principle holds good in the simplest of human relations. A person may appear charming and interesting in one company, and self-effacing, dull or affected in another. "If the party is dull, Blame 1. on yourself." Is the Fule of a classic commentator upon men and mammers, and it is a good one to remember in those uncomfortable moments when we feel that we are either bored or boring. And the surest way of boring others, or to be unpopular, is to feel bored and unpopular. A little acting ability, to the extent of pretending to be interesting, or of seeking about for some idea or outside thing to be genuinely interested in, will come to the rescue of almost any woman at such a time. For the average woman is more facile and imaginative than the average man, in rallying all available sources for pulling conversations and parties out of the dolrums of social dullness. With some personalities "the whole show is in front of the tent." They somehow project early in every acquaintanceship the very best of themselves. Others, through physical type, or through some of the scores of influences of association, life habits and temperament that make personalities repressed and inexpressive, are seldom or never at their best entitled of their own initiative; these latter types must be assured that they are in the presence of a favorable guidance before their best possibilities of attracting and attracting are released. If you feel yourself hampered at any time by the more or less conscious feeling that your audience is unsympathetic or indifferent, or actively bored or boring—try the trick of pretending, to a common sense extent, that this same audience is sympathetic, interested and interesting. Many a public speaker and stage player tries the trick of creating this delusion of a good audience, whenever they feel that such an audience is not really present. Actors and actresses often pick out an interesting face in a seat near the stage and play to the owner of that face. We all need sympathetic audiences, on and off the stage. The most brilliant of personalities cannot always have them. Some form of the professional entertainer's trick of giving always of his or her best by playing to an ideal audience, whether such an audience is present or not, is sure to be a stimulating little device of autosuggestion for all of us. And like the professional, we will go, the most out of it when we learn to persist in practicing it in spite of apparent failures and half failures. MILDRED HOLLAND. Geographic Society Elects Woman to Fellowship Mrs. Helen S. Wright of Pittfield, Mass., geographer and writer, has been singularly honored by admission to membership in the Royal-Geographic Society of London. She was elected a fellow of the society for her writings on Arctic and Antarctic exploration and history. The society only recently admitted women. Mrs. Wright was doubly honored, since she is one of the few Americans to whom a fellowship has come. CHICAGO, Aug. 3 (A; P).—Women barbers, of whom there are 800 in Chicago, are to be taken into the Union of Men Barbers. W. S. Leidig, president of the union, said women barbers have been working fourteen hours a day and their pay is half the income from the work they do, with no guarantee. The men barbers get $30 a week and 60 percent of the money they earn exceeding $40. Who lives for self But lives for pain; He lives for sorrow Who seeks for gain. But his heart is light Who lives for others. Who loves all men As his own brothers. How to charm and fascinate whom you will—to make others think, get, and feel as you wish. Employ ample method that has been proven to work. Free book tells what to do. Conciidential (plain wrapper). Cannot be mistaken for a book. (a book) to help cover mating, etc., and get surprising revelation from world, wonderful, far-off. South America. (a book) to write. (a book) to botafogy. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, South America. (a doner) to send cones. FEMALE TROUBLES Win For • New Treatment FREE BOOK Proves Successful If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLES, take a visit with Dr. Helen Wells. She will help you with your Sirenhair, Bearing down Pains, Headache, Hackahare, Whites, Painful or Irregular Periods and run down feeling so comical to women. If you have tried all kinds of medicines and doctors, even though you have had them, you MAY BE MADE WELL AND STRONG AGAIN. Just send your name and address to THE MEDICAL PENN TENN, and they will send you a free book describing a wonderful new treatment that is bringing health and happiness to so many women. Not only can you find a new treatment differently, a patient medicine. Write today. OVEN WAY TOP FALLING --- THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925 Spanish Section ¿Quien invitó a los franceses a ir a Siria? Ellos fueron alli por su propio acuerdo. Llegaron al fin de lequierra, fuezon a despecho de las promesas' hechas a sus aliados del Moslem de dejar la Arabia para-tos arabes. Fueron con la fórmula de un mandato, pero con los sistemas administrativos de un imperio. Habiendo llegado, y habiendo goñernado por cinco años, y habiendo tenido cinco debeliones en ese período de tiempo, ahora tienen ante si otro problema. La sexta rebelión acaba de comenzar. El constante maltrato debe incitarnos en la persecución de la nacionalidad y del poder—Cualquiera que sea la opinión enemiga, nuestra lema estriba exclusivamente en el progreso de la raza—¿Cuál es el remedio para la libertad restringida y para el anhelo burlado?—Un gobierno de negros para negros en una patria libre y redimida En el fondo, es suficiente para explicar lo que ocurre, un nacionalismo serio, despiertio y agresivo; pero las circunstancias immediatas que precedieron, al actual levantamiento son interesantes como, prueba de los procedimientos que el occidente emplea veces cuando se propone gobernar al oriente: En la zona de Drusse de Siria, los francéses tu vieron que habereslas con un pueblo especialmente inquieto y de gran temperamento, que tiene una herencia de años de anterior grandeza. El primer acto fue encomendar la zona de Drusse a cierto capitán Carbillet, recipientemente llegado de las colonias francesas de Africa y completamente imbuido de las ideas del hombre blanco acerca de cómo gobernar una manigua. El próximo paso, cuando representantes del distrito fueron a Beirut a protestar contra ese gobernador, fue poner en la carcel a los jefes de la delegación. El tercer acto, habiendo fomentado así la indignación de los arabes, fue tomar un festival religioso como reunión politica y enviar un ejército a dispersar a sus concurrentes. Siguió a ello un tiroteo. El gobernador inmediatamente intento detener a todos los jefes locales de importancia. Un de ellos, el sultan Pasha, se resistió. Aeroplanos francéses en seguida bombardearon la aldea del Pasha. Las hostilidades comenzaron. Los franceses intentaron establecer una alianza en representación de la civilización occidental con los kurdos de Demasco y los cicasianos de Kuneitra; proclamaron que aquella guerta era una guerría para establecer la paz y el orden; enviaron más aeroplanos, arrojaron toneladas de explosivos de alta potencia y mataron, según un despacho del Cairo, muchas mujeres y niños. Hemos de realizar que este movimiento es muy serio para que su programa pueda ser facilmente alterado. Sabemos que hay entre nuestro elemento muchos que no estan al corriente con los fines de esta organización, tal vez por el poco interés que se hayan tomado sobre el particular, y para su gobierno hemos de repetir que la Asociación Universal para, el Adelanto de la Raza Negra recurre a todos los medios posibles para unir en un sólo haz, la potencialidad de los cuatrocientos millones de negras que pueblan el planeta. Tiempo es ya, a nuestro mejor modo de entender, que el negro se constituya en un poder, toda vez que en la era en que vivimos los demás pueblos y las demás razas se esfuerzan para disfrutar de su propia nacionalidad y de su propia independencia como consecuencia directa. Formando nosotros parte integrante de la única raza cuya independencia le ha sido restringida, hemos decidido unir nuestras fuerzas para demandar del mundo aquello que legítimamente nos pertenece, en todo cuanto concierne a la sagrada ausa de libertad. Por el hecho de patrocinar ideas progresistas se nos ha tildado de radicales. Para muchos el negro debe permanecer aun satisfecho con su situación retrógada de esclavitud, de servidumbre y de linchamiento; para nosotros, tomando en consideración las aspiraciones de esta organización, el negro debe ser radical y no conservador. El radicalismo es un sello que siempre se ha estampado en el sentimiento de todo pueblo con tendencias a menjorar su condición. El padre de esta patria norteamericana fue también tildado de radical, cuando tomó su espada para abrir su paso a la libertad de este país. Si el Africa ha de ser emancipada por medio de una actitud de adelanto calificada por algunos de radical, estamos conformes con el título de radicales. Recuérdese que la zona de Drusie de Siria es un sector ritorido, rocoso e impenetrable del país, cuyo valor commercial para Francia o cualquiera otra nación es de escasa consideración. El tal llamado prestigio es la cosa que se jugea alli. Y esta serie de acontecimientos en Siria es evidencia de que este prestigio puede llevar a una nación, muv leios, consagrarla a extraños objetivos y conductirla a una acción que no esta marcada en ningún momento por la perspicacia. ..... El problema africano tiene ser solucionado. Los enemigos de la raza, los que critican el propósito de esta institución, han tratado de engañarnos maliciosamente sobre esta cuestión africana. La experiencia adquirida por nuestro contacto con el negro norteamericano y con el negro antillano; nos determina el poco amor que muchos de estos tienen para con la tierra de nuestra-procedencia, patria de nuestro antepasados. La mente, el alma de estos ha sido maleada con la propaganda del hombre blanco por mas de cien años. Esta propaganda ha sentado su base en que el Africa es un sitio insoportable habitado por canibales x salvajes; que ninguna raza civilizada, ninguna raza culta se preocupa por Africa. Y mientras nosotros, por medio del efecto de esta influencia, nos olvidamos de africa, el hombre blanco ha explorado y explotado el país por mas de quienientos años. A excepción de los territorios de Liberia y Abisinia, notamos en el mapa que Africa está dominada por extranos. La paz en Marruecos (Dr La Prensa, N. Y.) Hasta ahora, cuanto se ha informado por las agencias cablegráñicas sobre negociaciones de paz entre, España y. Francia y. Abd-el-Krim ha resultado completamente fantástico. Lo único exacto y comprobado es la continuación de las hostilidades. Francia debe tener ya, según calculos moderados, más de doscientos veinte mil hombres en el frente. Soldados del ejército de linea, divisiones enteras sacadas del Ruhr, y un enorme material de guerra modernismo, que al parecer no bastan todavía para iniciar la tarea anunciada ofensiva general. El mariscal Pétain, que despues de "organizar" las fuerzas, regreso a Francia, supone que se resiste a volver a "Marquécos, de no contar con mayores efectivos todavía y lo que es más, independencia absoluta de acción para llevar a cabo una verdadera guerra durante el otono y parte del invierno. Los miembros de esta organización creen que es tiempo ya para que se inicie el reajuste de nuestro asuntos en Africa. Y a qué aspiramos en Africa? Queremos allí un gobierno prepotente, llames monarquía, imperio, república 6 por cualquier otro nombre. Esto no ha de indicar que nuestro elemento en esta parte del globo tenga que trasladarse a Africa. Queremos un gobierno constituido por negros en Africa lo suficientemente fuerte para que estos, vivan ya en oriente 6 en accidente, reciben la debida protección como ciudadanos del mismo. Tal es el programa político que esta institución tiene en perspectiva. Con el mismo derecho que el hombre blanco ha sentido politicamente en poderlo en Europa y el hombre amarillo en Asia, el hombre negra puede constituirse nacionalmente en Africa. El Todopoderoso utilizó un sólo elemento en la creación de la gran familia humana, y nunca significó al hombre negro que el sería el esclavo ó servidor del hombre blanco ó del hombre amarillo; el creó el primero como un hombre en común con estos ultimos. Los cuatrocientos millones de la raza deben, por consiguiente, aguar como tales hombres. Nuestro antepasados habrán dormido el letargo de centenares de años, pero nuestra nueva generación, representación genuina de la nueva aspiración de la raza, luchará muy despierta por los principios para los cuales ha sido creada. Los peritos africanistas creen que ello as una locura. El Riff en la etapa canicular es un infierno. Pero una vez comenzada la estación de las lluvias se hace fisicamente impracticable para hombres, caballos y automóviles. Como desarrollar las hostilidades en esa forma por tropas europeas sin preparación fisica para tal clima? Mientras tanto continuan los levantamientos de kabillas. La projaganda de Abd-el-Krim no cesa. Y el desastre francés de Abisinia, que sin duda tiene mayores proporciones que las que anuncia, tardia mente y a través de la censura, el gobietno de Paris, es seguro que dura mayor auge todavía al movimiento de sedición de los grupos vacillantes. Cual ha sido el resultado por haber delegado nosotros en los demás la manifestación de nuestros sentimientos? Avocaciones, linchamientos, segregación industrial y política. Gon tal experiencia, debemos conservar la mismaitud 6 desdimensión que enable favorable sobre dicha avocación? Hl hombres bien predican el presente por En estas condiciones, no parece lógico que Abd-el-Krim oiga hablar facilmente de paz. Pensarlo así es entregarse a un optimismo infinito, lo razonable es crear que Kapela y Francis tienen suma al la disyuntiva de reducir a los refluxes por hamura y aislación, obligados en su propia terribilínea, implícido todo introducción de provisionales de guerra por la causa de por Tanger, y continuar lentamente la obra política, aprovechando la oportunidades ventaposas, para dar golpes de mano militares a las organizaciones armadas rífenas. Este es el plan que puso en practica el general Primo de Rivera en la zona española, al ordenar la rectificación de las lineas sobre la costa. Y este parece el plan que, a la corta o la larga, se impondrá también a los franceses, a no tomar rápidamente la ofensiva y desarrollarla como se anuncio cuando el viaje del mariscal Petain. Las negociaciones de paz parecen, por el momento; vagas y sin base. Para España, tienen también el peligro de que visibilmente Francia juega en ellas con sus propias cartas y las de España. Y, diplomática y humanamente, no ha de deperlar las suyas en las bazas que deban entregarse al contrario, sino que preferiría entregar las cartas ajenas. Los acontecimientos de Abisinia, con su innegable relación con el movimiento moslemita y con el levantamiento del Riff, al mismo tiempo, debilita aún más la posición de Francia. En las condiciones de paz que se ofrezcan a Abd-el-Krim no debera, por ello, considerarse que es España la que debe sola sacrificarse, sino que habrá que hacer los sacrificios de ambos lados. Y este principio, también contribuira a retardar la solución. Cuando decimos que la vida es buena y cuando decimos que es mala, solo expresamos proposiciones desprovistas de sentido. Es preciso decir de la vida que es buena y mala a la vez, pues de ella nos vienen las ideas de lo buena y de lo malo. En realidad la vida es deliciosa, horrible, encantadora, terrible, dulce y amarga: ella lo es todo, es como el arquíquenoso, vestido del buen Florian, y ambos la ven tal como es puesto que en verdad es azul y de todos los colores. He ali lo bastante para ponernos todos de acuerdo para reconciliar a estos buenos senores filosofos, que se destrozan mutuamente sin compasión. Pero asi estamos hechos. Queremos formar a los qtros, a que como nosotros sientan y piensen y no permitiríamos la alegría de nuestro vecino estando nosotros tristes. Servicio más eficiente Los gobiernos cubano y norteamericano han concertado un plan para hacer mas expedita la distribución de la correspondencia de este país en la lais de Cuba. De acuerdo con dicho plan el correo de los Estados Unidos para Cuba sera clasificado en la ciudad de Jacksonville, estado de Florida, y expedido para trece distritos aduaneros de aquel país sin tocar en la Hahana. El correo para el interior de aquella isla pasaba por la administración de la Habana y de ese modo se demoraba el servicio considerablemente. A los miembros de la Asociación universal para el adelanto de la raza negra y a los.amigos de nuestra raza: Desde lo mas profundo de mi alma brota la expresión de mi agradecimiento por las manifestaciones de lealtad que hasta a mi llegan procedentes de los cuatro puntos del globo, con motivo de la apertura de las convenciones locales el 1 de agosto próximo pasado. Por carta, cable y telegrama, divisiones de la organización y amigos del movimiento me han enviado frases de aliento por la persecución y la humillación de que he sido objeto, reiterándome su entusiasmo adherido a los principios de la Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, de la cual tengo el honor de ser su fundador y presidente general. Es para mi una gran satisfaccion el saber que el transcurso del tiempo sive principalmente para dumentar el entusiasmo de los miembros por la causa. que defendemos y para fortalecer su convicción en mi integridad y honestidad. Al gran número de simpatizadores que me han enviado mensajes de aliento, doy las mas expresivas gracias en la esperanza de que han de asistir a la organización en todo cuanto les sea posible, para la completa realización de su programa. Con el mejor deseo y el sincerano helo, por el rápido éxito de nuestra causa, tengo el honor de ser. Vuestro onobediente servido. MARCUS GARVEY. Fundador President General. Associación Universal para el Adelanto de la Rum Negra. Agosto 10 de 1923. CRICKET One Big Attraction The St. Vincent Eleven VS. Universal Negro Improvement Assn. Two of the Best Teams in Greater New York Will Meet SUNDAY, AUGUST 30, 1925 At COMMERCIAL FIELD, BROOKLYN, N. Y. This Will Be a Regular Field Day Music By the Universal Band, Under the Leadership of Prof. Wallace Gets Opens at 1 P. M. Game Starts at 2:30 REFRESHMENTS SERVED GENERAL ADMISSION, 60¢ CHILDREN, 20¢ Tickets sold at Liberty Hall and Office, 80 W. 128th St. So Save Not to Miss This Game, Lovers of Cricket! The National Crime Commission dedicated to warfare, against crime throughout the nation, was permanently organised by twenty-three outstanding business and professional men in the office of Elbert H. Gary, at No. 71 Broadway, yesterday. Assemblyman F. Trubee Dayson was chosen charman and asked to prepare and direct the far-reaching movement for which it is declared, unlimited funds will be provided. Accepts with Proviso Mr. Davison accepted, but with the understanding that he will relinquish the leadership to another should his legislative duties this autumn require. It is believed that Mr. Davison's selection followed declination by Mr. Gary. Mr. Davison was chosen, apart from the other, qualifications. Because of his wealth, his commitment by his late father and by himself to public service, and his consequent freedom from prejudicial connection. He was proposed to the organizers of the commission by a committee composed of George W. Wickersham, former United States Attorney General, chairman; Richard, Washburn Child, former Ambassador to Italy; William B. Joyce, chairman of the Board of the National Surety Company, and former Governor Charles S. Whitman. "Ample Fund Necessary" This committee recommended that the "commission in the first instance shall devote itself to the problem of coping with crimes of violence throughout the country and the failure of swift and efficient justice." Next, it recommended "that a small body be selected from the membership of the Crime Commission as an executive committee, composed of gentlemen who can give considerable time to the problem; and, of primary importance, the formation of a small committee to provide for financing the commission's undertaking. Ample funds are necessary." "An important work of the commission; the resolution continued, 'will lie in promoting the formation of local commissions or committees. In the principal cities of the country, in acting as a clearing house of information as to methods, and in stimulating local activities.'" To Pick Chairman with Care Mr. Davison said he would first select, with great care, the chairman of the Finance Committee, then the Executive Committee. The membership of the latter committee, he indicated, will be drawn from the country at large. The commission, he continued, will first prepare its ground by gathering and compiling statistics. There it will begin its battle against crimes of violence. "Prohibition enforcement—will you take up that, too?" he was asked. "Our field is not restricted," he answered. Has Abdut 100 Members The Crime Commission had its general at a meeting in the office of Mr Gary about two weeks ago, Mark O. Prentiss, associated with Richard Washburn Child in his crime survey of the country, was a moving spirit in its formation. A score or so of men were selected as the nucleus of the body, which will expand under the same policy of careful selection which attended the invitation of the founders of the movement. Independence from political or other connections will, it is understood, be the prime consideration in the determination of the personnel of the commission, which now numbers about 100 men from the whole country. Those directing the movement, it is intimated, will avoid admitting to membership any one with an ax he might wish to grind on the small grindstones in the various States and cities or on the top one at the national headquarters of the commission, which it is thought, may be in New York. "I may announce the Finance chairman and the Executive Committee in two weeks, maybe in two days," said Mr. Davison. "But this is a movement which will go on for years, and it will be prepared with the greatest care and consideration." May Prod. Officials When it gets to functioning, it is also intimated, the commission will not only study crime but will call upon its carpal persons responsible for law enforcement and not only ask them for suggestions but also demand reasons for neglect of duty, depending upon public sentiment to support them in their demand. Already the commission has a lot of material concerning neglect and inefficiency among law enforcement and judicial agencies. WEEKLY SERMON By G. EMMONEI CARTER Subject: "The Martyr of a Great Cause"; text, Acts 6:15. "And all that sat in the council, looking aheadfamily on him, saw his face as it had been the face of an angel." The prophets of Israel had proclaimed the kingdom of God on earth; the Baptist, in his ascetic life, his intensity of character, his singleness of purpose, and his clearness of teaching, had "prepared the way of the Lord." The solemn hour had struck; what had long, been taught at last was done. The church was formed by the life and death of the Incarnate, and inaugurated in its divine preogatives on the morning of Pentecost. What then? What was, needed for this infant society? If spiritual work is to be done power must be put forth; in every department of her duty the church must be active; to proclaim a vocation, without exercising an energy is to irritate man to opposition, within out any hope of subduing him to divine obedience. One part of the office the Church of Christ is to witness to the world. Witness, my friends, is different from teaching as act is other than word. If word is to be with power it must have the sanction of an active, living result. Example, we all know, is better than precept, living forms than accurate definitions. Doubtless any reals, forcible religious teacher must be such, by right of both powers, but it is also true that some are called with special intention to speak, others to do. John, the forerunner, was indeed one of the sublimest of sufferers, but his office was, above all, to proclaim. The peculiar vocation of the Christian Church to witness to the truth was further to be seen in lives devoted to acts of heroism, marking the fact of that vocation in men's minds. The first, and, therefore, in many waves the most striking instance of this new divine power, is to be seen, without controversy, in the short and tragic story of St. Stephen the Martyr. The narrative of the closing days of St. Stephen is one of the most interesting episodes in the history of the early church. Everything about the story—it deep humanity its supernatural splendor, the skydivers of image left on the minds of contemporaries, the fierceness of the forces brought into play, the rapidity of action in this short but most moving drama—all combine to fix the attention and touch the heart, by the story of that savage young creature who was first to die for Jesus Christ. The interest attaching to the circumstances, the scene, and the results, is altogether in the highest degree dramatic, which is another way of saying altogether attractive to our sympathies, and rich in most ennobling lessons, in our common human struggle. It was in A. D. 37 that Stephen died. The circumstances of that year in the government of the Jewish people were altogether exceptional. By a strange combination of unexpected circumstances Taxes have more than tripled in the United States in the last ten years, a report published today by the National Industrial Conference Board indicates. The fiscal year, 1923, brought into local, State and Federal treasuries a total of $7,716,000,000, as compared with $2,194,000,000 for the fiscal year 1913-14. Great Britain in 1924, six years after the signing of the armistice, led all Allied countries both in amount of taxes levied per head of population and in the proportion of total national income diverted into channels of government expenditures. France, Italy, Belgium and the United States follow in order, according to the burdensomeness with which their respective tax systems are imposed upon the people as measured by the relation of taxes to national income. Comparative figures for Germany are not available. In both the United States and Great Britain taxation in proportion to national income has approximately doubled; in Belgium it has more than doubled since pre-war days. While taxation in the United States and Great Britain increased in about the same proportion, and those two countries lay the highest per capita taxes among the Allied nations, the greater material wealth and productivity of the American Nation make its tax burden comparatively lighter than that born by any-of the European Allied countries. It is pointed out: stances the power, even of life and death, in Judas had passed into the hands of the authorities of the Jewish Church. Pilate had left the country. The miserable efforts of that unhappy man to insinuate the anger, or evade the malice of the fanatics of the Jewish priesthood, by consenting to the condemnation of the Lord, Jesus, had been, as such unprincipled cowardice so richly deserved, a hopeless failure. Ex-Bishop I. E. Guinn, B.M. A Dealer in Negro Books. Business Letter, price $1.02; and the 6th and 7th Book of Moses, price $2.05. No. 7 is one book the Black Man's Bible, price $1.10. This ad and price list is all you need — "The True History of Slavery From 1613 Up to 1562, and 1453 to 1232." The past and future history of Negro Women, Negro Paula and its Improvement, price $1.10. One book of this and one book of Bible on the Ethiopian Black Man. Book on the world with music for singing or brass with music for playing or organ with "Our Home on the Mountain" and "Ye Gravy Nation." Price of 3 books and a Banded Business Letter, $1.50. not printed in our Bible, Price $1.55. 11 "A book of the Life and Work of Beecher F. Washington. A business letter goes with it." Page 12.5 12 "A book of the Work of Paul Laurence Dunbar. a business letter with it." Price $1.75. 2- The Negro Man who did more for the Negro than the million Negroes could have done in fifty years. He looked and Contemplated a Black Man. 3- The two Negroes who Founded a Negro Nation. 4- The Greatest Negro Paper in the World. 5- The Greatest Negro Statement. 4. The Greatest Negro Statesman in the World. more power than any other and Negro the largest Group of Negroes in the World. 3—The Negro who Writes the Printer's Book. 10—The Name of the Man Rescued, the sixth chapter, fifth verse, who is poisoned of as a Black Horse, who has the Spirit of King Solomon. 12—The name of the first Negro, who is the first of the first four cities that they built. From No. 1 to No. 11 is all in a print- folio. From No. 12 to No. 16 is also also with No. 7 in one book. History Price $1.10. - The History and Relation of Egypt, - Light Night: Brown and dark Tones. Price $8.50 d. The History of Jesus stepping in and up the path of success. Price $8.50 e. The past of the New Testament not Printed. P. 23.15 f—The Book of the Last Enoch, the Bach prophter. g—The Sages and Wonders of the World, The world's greatest book. h—The Book of the Last Enoch, the Bach prophter. The book of the Judgment of God at the Easter, and the Bible on the Ethiopian Black and Negro faults and future improvement. And a printed business letter of luck and how to make money in a year's time. All of it is $1.73. 10. A Book of the Ways of Business Industry, and How to Make Your Money Make Money. $2.05. 21. A History of Negro Work of Negro Industry of the American Negro. $2.05. 22. A Business Letter for the Man beg- ginning on page 21. This is the History. $3.30. —The Way to Always Have Luck. —The Way to Keep Well. —How to Keep a Friend. —The Greatest Negro Woman in the World. —The Three Greatest Negro Men in the World. —How to Master Tour Ensembles. —The Way to Get Healed of Dropsy. —The Way to Get Healed of Compu- sion. No. 1 to No. 9 is explained in a printed business letter. 718 W. 90th Street INDIANAPOLIS, IND. IF U DON'T C COMMON DR. KAPLAN The Eyewight Specialist RELIABLE AND REASONABLE EYES EXAMINED FREE 831 LENOX AVENUE NEW YORK Copyright Rutgers University THE PEOPLE'S FORUM To the Editor of The Negro World: The Honorable Marcus Garvey, founder of the U. N. I. A. has sounded the call to Negroes; of the world to awaken from their long sleep and organise for the purpose of setting up a government of our own in our Motherland. In this age of universal activity, it is a case of the survival of the fitter and, if the Negro does not make some effort to survive the impending danger to the race, he will find himself left far behind and perhaps left completely out in the race for power. There is no race or nation that willingly helps another race or nation to success. It has always been this way and will continue to be this way. The success of any people lies within them as a group. The U. N. I. A. is trying to lay a proper foundation upon which the future generations of our people may build. If our forefathers had had the opportunity to do this for us, we would not today be an inferior race. We would be a power to reckon with and be respected. THE WONDERFUL CHILD VISION TRADE MARK REGISTERED Always there is pain and suffering. always women must bear children, always there is skepticism. Many are doomed to untold agony because they will not believe that there is relief permanent and effectual for them in the experience, discovery and labor of others. 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Write at once to Habbard Medical Manufacturing Company, Inc. 5244 80. Waxhaw Ave., Chicago, Ill. for this wonderful medicine. CAUTION—Be sure that you see the CHILD'S VISION—on each bottle. WANT TO BE APPY AND WELL Out of Town, WRITE With goods ordered can have money returned days from date of delivery. ISH OR CREDIT not where you live. Enclose 10 cents to postage. HERB CO. DEPT. 714 ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. Any customer not satisfied with goods ordered can have money returned if claim is made within 15 days from delivery. CASH OR CREDIT 99 DOWNING ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y. Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower Hair Good in a powerful stimulant. It excites the scalp to a new and healthy action. Kills dandruff and better the very first treatment stops the flipping of the scalp and at once they leave tough hair begins to grow thin. This compound has the endorsement of the Medical Progression by being the first proven drug approved by the public. IF GROW HAIR as a kind that had kept hair still good. We can prove it. ASTHMA TUMORS BRIGHTS CANCER ECZEMA ITCH telling us that it is not too late to do the thing which has not been done, but which the salvation of the race demands. The Negro needs a country of his own more than he needs anything else under the sun because if he sets that, all things will be added unto him. To remain disorganized and find fault and criticism will not solve the problems of our people. Students of history know what has always happened to weak and defenseless races. The Honorable Marcus Garvey knew, and that is why he organized the great and powerful U. N. I. A. with a program second to none in the world for Negroes. There is nothing harmful or bad in the program of the U. N. I. A. but to the land-rohbers and explosers of Europe, the Honorable Marcus Garvey is a thorn in the flesh. But regardless of all of the opposition from nations and individuals, the U. N. I. A. will continue to march on to success. We do not believe that the Creator intended the Negro to be an inferior people—to be launched, burned and oppressed. The U. N. L. A. is the only Negro organization that points out to the Negro the danger of not having a country of his own in this selfish and dangerous age. Many have tried to call the U. N. L. A. a thing of naught, but it is a known fact that antagonistic influences are not directed to any extent against unless things. Now that the Honorable Marcus Garvey is absent from us, we must not ever become frettful or discouraged. His absence only means more work, harder work, on our part. Right thinking Negrades know that the hope of the race lies in the program of the U. N. I. A. Let us not worry about what the critics are saying. Let them criticize. When they are all dead and forgotten, the U. N. I. A. will be marching on to more power, greater success, victory. J. L. BARNES Port Limon, Costa Rica, C. A. Mr. Garvey's Deliverance To the Editor of The Negro World: I feel that I must say a few words of praise and encouragement for the Universal Negro Improvement Association which is so dear to the hearts of us all. Mr. Garvey, urged on by the oppression of our people on every side, is urging us to make every effort to establish a government of our own. We believe that this is the underlying cause for his incarceration. But we are not discouraged because we know that he is not the first man who has been imprisoned for preaching the truth. We believe that the same God who took care of us and delivered other preachers of the truth, will take care of and deliver our great leader. Negro men and women must realise that they are now fighting with their backs to the wall. They ought not to be satisfied until they have fought their way through to a free and redeemed Africa where the Negro can work out his own destiny to a successful end. We must continue to pray and work together for grand and glorious success and keep fighting without fear for what we believe to be right. The victory lies in the hands of the Creator. Mrs. ESTHER WILSON. Port Limon, Costa Rica. C. A. God's Hand Seen In the Movement To the Editor of the Negro World: It is my opinion that the Garvey movement is God's plan for the emancipation of the Negro throughout the Your Secrets to the Right Man. Happy in Friendship, Business and Domestic Affairs. High John, the Conqueror and Eve, all kinds of Roots and Herbs. Nature's Way of Forcing the Hair to grow long, soft and healthy. A combination of dried and powdered seed. Just clean your scalp and apply HAIR SEED GROWER gently in the scalp. Do this tonight; watch you hair grow, it's a mystery. Price 25 cents. An old-fashioned, true and honest hair grower. Try it. Ladies, let us send you a full six months treatment for $1.40. world. Marcus Garvey is but an instrument in the hands of God. God has promised to glorify-our people in the latter days. The founding and growth of the U. Y. I. A. is but one of the links in the chain, of racial destiny which will be worked out for the Negro in spite of any obstacles which may be put in the way of it. The Problem Will Be To the Editor of the Negro World: There is much food for thought in the message of our President-General in the July 25 issue, of The Negro World. I was so enthused over it that I have been thinking ever since reading this article that if I had not already been a Garveyite, it would have converted me. In my opinion, this message is nothing short of a master- piece. It is, very unfortunately, that there are so many doubling-Thomases. It is they who are holding back the program of the greatest organization the race has ever had. Those who are already lined up with the organization are not discouraged, for we know that the problem will be solved in due time through the help of God and the faithful work of the members of the organization. ALARIC WALSH. Central Nagal, Cam. Cuba. Negroes Need to Organize Much More To the Editor of the Negro World: It is time that the members of the Negro race put away self-pride and take up the cross of racial advancement. The Negro needs to organize more and more so that he may more effectively do the work which we can only do as a group. The N. N. I. A. is organized to do the things that the Negro needs most. The U. N. I. A. is appealing to the Negroes of the world to wake up and help themselves. It is reasonable that every right thinking Negro would desire to build up the association rather than tear it down as many are trying to do. Let us get together, and put over this great racial program. RUPERT MYRIE. Camajuani, Cuba. Abd-el-Krim Refuses To Bow to Sultan The French and Spanish armies that have been carrying on a campaign in Morocco are getting tired of being cannon fodder, and are bringing pressure to bear on their respective governments to stop the war in Morocco. This pull France in a delicate position, since she has been attacked on one side by Syrians and is trying to subjugate Abd-El-Krim on the other; she is consequently switching her armies backwards and forwards and the expense upon the French populace is growing heavier and heavier. The French government is anxious to stop the war with the Riffians, but it is also anxious to have something to show for the useless war it has been carrying on in Morocco. So, to save its face, it has offered Abd-El-Krim semi-Independence if he will how to their imperialist tool, the Sultan. If western civilization has not softened the metal in Adb-El-Krim, the metal that is common to his race, he will fight a war to the finish with the French, or at least, until he and his army are completely overpowered. FREE WONDER of the 20th CENTURY astounded the world. Startlingly reveals the secrets of hypnosis, telepathy, personal magnetism, memerism, clairvoyance, mind control, hypnosis, and the wonder of the 20th Century—worth $3.00, but sent FREE to you if you wish. Hypnosis—teaches you how to control others—make everybody obey your every wish. Hypnosis—makes men, win success in life and LOVE, obtain power, wealth, social position. Explains the need to be the most perfect, complete and easily learned method in the world. Pay only $1.28 per hour. Hypnosis—wonder of the 20th Century will be included FREE. (Cuba, West Indies, Foreign Country, by post office regulations.) OCCULT SCIENCE ABSN 102 Church St., Dept. 828, New York City Weekend vitality, kidney, bladder, tro- ble, gonorrhea, syphilis, constipation, rubismatism, otc. P. Markhowe's Rebuild- ing Compounds, otc. P. Markhowe's compounds, where others fail. FREE literature. Markhowe Herb Co. 2637 & St. Chicago. Jill AERICAN 'JUNGLE' IS SAFER THAN GREAT NEW YORK So Says White 'Missionary' Who Tells Why He Prefers Africa to New York—Terrors of Jungle and Terrors of Civilization Compared NEW YORK, Aug 7- Darkest Africa is a beater place of residence than New York, and the terrors of the jungle are as nothing in comparison with the perils of the subway. That is the firm belief of Wynant D. Hubbard, former Harvard tackle, who took his bride, who was Miss Miraagreet Carson, of Greenwich, Conn., to the African fastnesses for a honeymoon, and has returned, with her, and their two "jungle babies," born in jude huts in the wilderness. During the three years of travel Hubbard collected live specimens of wild game and had many thrilling experiences. "But the dancers of this city are appalling," he asserted with a rufous shake of his head, "and the sooner I can get back to Africa the better. The night after my arrival one of my friends of the voyage went ashore, and on his return to the ship was set upon by a gang of men who broke his jaw, split open his head and took his possessions. "Every one wants to know what the people drink in Africa," he said. "I imagine that they like to hear of long, cool delicious beverages, and obtain a thrill at second hand. But they have all been disappointed ally accounts of African tippling, and seem finally quite content with their own lot. "Northern Khodesia has the reputation of having more hard drinkers than any part of the continent, but there are only two kinds of liquor to be had—Whiskey and dop. The latter is a very poor brand that is left over after the distillation of the finer article. Formerly it was used only by natives, but since the laws against selling to natives are very strict, white men and women, appreciating its cheapness, have taken to drinking it. One drinks it straight, and gets more of a kick than from any other liquor manufactured. "Whiskey is used by the better class and in great quantities. In Rhodesia a drink is called a 'tot,' and the average drinker figures on three 'tots' to the bottle. Many people, to my knowledge, drink two and three full bottles a day as a regular part of their diet." There is no labor problem in that Negro Universal King coming to rule the World Rev. Webb The Kaiser and Napoleon failed in war to be Universal Kings, the coming Negro King will not fail. A reference book to the Bible tells the facts and a picture of this King is $1.90 for both. Negro Characters in the Bible Four picture in two forms. No. 1. "Negro King, Solomon" and "Colored Queen of Shikai," and also "King Solomon's Temple." No. 2. "The Negro King Tut, Tut and His Treasure." Price, all for $1.90. Agents wanted by Mounting, $1.90 for each. Write Rev. Jas. M. Webb. 1107 Takahima Write Rev. Jas. M. Send. send money order or register letter. written Mr. K. E. John- son. Other say it brings good luck and good luck wear, our own. RIMO. Made of sterling silver gold green finish. written Mr. E. John Lakewood, NJ Other say it brings happiness, success joy and luck using our EGYPTIAN LUCKY RING, Made with gold finish with green gold finish. FREE Your horoscopes; give date of birth. Also "Set" consisting of a ring, pin and stud, all tiffany setting Italian diamond. Pay post- money $225. EGYPTIAN TRADING CO. 19 Park Row ..... New York City You'll be dumb with upprise: my terious rings, Sphinx, charms, lode- stones. section of the world, according to Mr. Hubbard. The best cook can be hired for $15 or $20 a month, and these are few who demand such an exorbitant price. The average cook gets $10 a month. New York weather is also inferior to that of Africa, in Mr. Hubbard's opinion. He arrived here in time for a hot spell and has suffered from the heat ever since. "I have seen the thermometer at 125 on the African veldt," he explained, "but no one ever died from the heat. "But Central Africa is, not always hot," he went on. "During the winter months, July and August, a front-on the plains is not unusual." "Those are some of the reasons why I prefer Africa to New York. No servant problem, because any one can afford four or five servants. No housing problem, because one can build a very good house of four or five rooms for $500 or a temporary home for $50. No weather problem, because it either rails or is fair. And no subways." Briareus a Giant With 100 Arms and Fifty Heads Briareus in Greek mythology was a giant with 100 arms and fifty heads. He was the son of Uranus and Gaea, and had two brothers, Gyesus and Cotus, giants also. According to the most ancient tradition, Briareus and his brothers, conquered the Titans when they made war upon the gods, and secured the victory to Jupiter, who theroupon thript the Titans into Tarquy, and appointed Briareus and his brothers to guard them, saves the Kansas City Times. Other legends say that Briareus was one of the giants that attacked Olympus; he was buried alive under Mount Aetna as a punishment. According to Homer, this giant was called Briareus by the gods, and Aegeon by men. World Wheat Crop 2,147,000,000 Bushels Washington, Aug. 17 (A.P.).—Wheat production of eighteen countries in the Northern Hemisphere, representing two-thirds of the world crop exclusive of Russia and China, is estimated at 2,147,000,000 bushels as compared with 2,086,000,000 last year, the Department of Agriculture was advised today by the International Institute of Agriculture in Rome. The department was informed the Egyptian wheat crop is estimated at 36,633,000 bushels as compared with 34,156,000 bushels last year. This report completes the total estimates for the North African countries, which in the aggregate is placed at 105,000,000 bushels against 80,000,000 bushels last year, an increase of 26,000,000 bushels. Here It Is! the Big Sensation the Imp-O-Luck WONDER GUARDING! A generous beautiful gift. Blessed of good press and sales. Welcome to the Imp-O-Luck WONDER GUARDING. Biggest Lottery Fed of Years! The Imp-O-Luck WONDER GUARDING. This lottery is the biggest lottery in the world. You will win the Imp-O-Luck and high point prize! Send No Money! The Imp-O-Luck WONDER GUARDING. This lottery is the biggest lottery in the world. You will win the Imp-O-Luck and high point prize! Imp-O-Luck Co. SINCE 1929 SINCE 1929 Free SUIT OFFER By Our New Plan Made to Order Send No. 4000 for our unbattable MONEY in. we make this suitor free. Our new plan enables you to get out of time, made to order in any style, made to order in AGENTS' spending money. Wanted Daily. Cash for you besides Free Soft for sparse time. We have a large selection of neighbors and friends we show you night and day and FREE SUIT. No experience needed. Biggest sample collar, apparel and wool place, fashion styles, tape measure, simple direction WILLY be the wristband and Free Sample Suit. PROGRESS TAILORING DEPT. Dept. H-201. Chicago CUT TO 9.75 King of Revolvers Has all improvement in american guises $35 value left wheel, removable plate door, blue new out of order $6.25 or 30cd. Send No Money Pay on delivery $9.75 plus postage Satisfaction or money back. Federal Mall Order Corp., 414 Bway, N.Y., Dept. E25 666 is a prescription for Colds, Gripple, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It kills the germs. SHAVE WITHOUT A RAZOR Magic Shaving Powder will give you a clean, healthy shave without using a razor. It will also remove razor bumps and pimples from your face. Get it from your grungyst or send us 30 cents in stamps for a half pound can by mail, postpaid, enough for 15 shaves. DROPSY TREATMENT. It gives quite rapid bruising and shortening of muscles rapidly. Lice and fleas are not bitten. General treatment is in the morning by a very strong spray of anything in cool water. With Dr. Thomas G. Green Bank Building, Bar B. Chaseworth, Ohio. 91 I. MAIN ST. 2400 www.dropsy.com Dr. Thomas G. Green Bank Building, Bar B. Chaseworth, Ohio TAKE DOWN WHITE PICTURES FROM YOUR WALLS! You can now obtain wall cards, artistically printed of opi grams from the sayings of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Real gems of racial thought. Also that masterpiece written by our great leader, pntitled "AFRICAN FUNDAMENTALISM," beautifully engraved, with deep edge for framing. Size 16 x 21. Price 50 cents each. Every member of the U. N. I. A. should procure the President-General's picture, large size, for framing, price 50 cents Presidents and Secretaries of Divisions of the Organization should send in their orders in time for their local Convention. A. F. of L. Asks Adoption Of Child Labor Amendment WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.—A pamphlet urging adoption of the pending child labor amendment, to the Constitution has been prepared by William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, for distribution to members of all affiliated unions. "Citing figures showing that more than a million children from 10 to 14 years of age are now employed in the nation's industries, the pamphlet asserts the question of protection for children is no longer an academic but a practical one that can be met only by ratification of the pending amendments." State ★ Free HOROSCOPE Free Are You Happy and Contented? Is Your Home in Good Order? Have You Any Troubles? Are You Successful in Your Love and Business Affairs? Are You Sick? 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While nearly every civilized Western nation has made legislative provision to protect its children against industrial exploitation. Mr. Green said, the United States "has no national standard." FREE One pair high grade silk stockings or socks to any person who send us as many as 25 names and addresses of people that is living at present address. We wish to add one million more names and addresses of colored people to each pair. We shall only one pair to each person. Do not send false names. As we check each list and are able to determine just what source from which such names come. Send 25c for postage, etc. with 25 names and addresses and we will send you one pair high grade silk stockings or socks, your choice. Absolutely free. Chicago and Cunh included. Address all letters to The De-La-Herb Agency 2802 Cottage Grove Ave., CHICAGO., ILL. U. S. A. 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