The Negro World
Saturday, November 7, 1925
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
THE IDEALS OF TWO RACES
In a message addressed to his followers and friends, the Hon. Marcus Garvey points out that in so far as the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America, of which Mr. John Powell is the head, are working for the preservation and purity of race, they have his hearty co-operation and moral support. Feeling that the Anglo-Saxon Chibs and the U. N. I. A meet on common ground as far as this ideal is concerned, he advises that the two organizations work together to their mutual benefit.
The great leader further feels that Mr. Powell and his group represent the clean-cut and honest section of the white race—those who have honesty and lack hypocrisy in their dealings with the Negro. Emphasizing that the U. N. I. A. does not ask more than it is prepared to concede, he repeats that the Negro need offer no apology for wanting a free and independent nation of his own, with the opportunity to make his distinctive contribution to civilization. And, he avers, those who are against the purification of the races and autonomy, with the unbridled freedom of self-development and self-expression, are enemies of both races, rebels against morality, nature and God.
The message follows:
Fellow Members and Friends of the Universal Negro Improvement Association:
As you are aware, our Association stands for the highest and best in human effort. We desire for ourselves a fixed and permanent place in the affairs of the world-fixed and permanent from the viewpoint of autonomous recognition. Our longing cry has been for a "Free and Redeemed Africa"a home where our scattered race might assemble itself in the exclusive promotion and development of those things that are dear and precious to the human heart and, representative of the loftiest in progressive ideals.
In our desire to achieve greatness as a race we are liberal enough to extend to others a similar right. We are not selfish in desiring all to the exclusion of others. We believe in the doctrine of "Live and let live." To others, not of our race, we extend the heartiest of best wishes, and in so doing we feel that there are others who also wish us well.
In the great American confusion of races it is hard to discern our friends, but as a people we have not been entirely friendless. When I speak of friendship I mean that which is sturdy, honorable and sincere. Such a friendship I desire to apprise you of in the introduction of Mr. John Powell, of the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America.
Mr. Powell represents a body of men and women for whom I maintain the greatest respect because of their honesty and lack of hypocrisy. They represent the clean-cut and honest section of the white race that uncompromisingly stands for the purity of their race, even as we unhesitatingly and determinedly agitate and fight for the purity of the Negro race. All races should be pure in morals and in outlook, and for that we, as Negroes, admire the leaders and members of the Anglo-Saxon Clubs. They are honest and honorable in their desire to purify and preserve the white race even as we are determined to purify and standardize our race.
Mr. Powell and his organization sympathize with us even as we sympathize with them. I feel and believe that we, the two organizations, should work together for the purpose of bringing about the ideal sought - the purification of the races, their autonomous separation and the unbridled freedom of self-development and self-expression. Those who are against this are enemies of both races and rebels against morality, nature and God; for, to the contrary, no good or ethical purpose can be served, but a continuation of world confusion, immorality and sin.
I unhesitatingly endorse the race purity idea of Mr. Powell and his organization, and I have pledged my moral support to their program in that direction, expecting of the honorable and honest of his race the same regard and support for ours. We do not ask more than we will give. We want a free and independent nation of our own, with the right to make our distinctive contribution to civilization, and for this we offer no apology.
I am asking you, my friends and co-workers, to hear Mr. Powell, whom I have invited to speak to you. Extend to him and the Anglo-Saxon Clubs the courtesy and fellowship that is logical to the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
MARCUS GARVEY. President-General. Universal Negro Improvement Association.
AMERICA'S HONOR DEMANDS THAT MARCUS GARVEY BE FREED
WHITE SOUTHERNER DISCLOSES REAL ATTITUDE OF THE WHITE AMERICAN TOWARDS THE NEGRO IN THESE UNITED STATES
PURITY OF RACE SLOGAN OF ANGLO-SAXON CLUBS AS WELL AS U. N. I. A.
Negro Is Not Free-Despite the Civil War and Three Amendments to Constitution—Garvey's Idea About Self-Development for Negro Is Right—Negro Has No Real Chance in America
WHITE AMERICA MUST SEE THAT MARCUS GARVEY IS ALLOWED TO CONTINUE HIS WORK HERE
Mr. Chairman and members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, I have never in my life been more touched and more moved than by the cordial reception that you give to me and my friends tonight. I wish I were an orator so that I might give adequate expression to the feelings and the thoughts that are moving in me.
I would like to tell you how it was that I came to know more about your organization and the purposes for which it stands. Major Ernest Severe Cox, a man who spent six years of his life traveling all around the world in order to study racial problems in various parts of the world, wrote a book called "White America." Major Cox was for several years in Africa; he worked in the mines in South Africa; he went through the whole length and breadth of Africa from the Cape up to Coairo—5,000 miles studying the various problems that came under his observation. He wrote this book, "White America," the purpose of which was to find a real and ultimate solution to that great problem which has vexed the mind and heart of all America now for 200 years and more. His book was very violently criticized by certain newspapers which I believe, are under the influence of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. So it was a great surprise as well as a great pleasure to Major Cox when he received a letter from a member of the Garvey organization in St. Louis. This letter told Major Cox that its writer had seen a copy of "White America," had read it and felt tremendously encouraged to find that there was a white man advocating essentially the cause of the Garvey movement. He wrote that there were many things in that book which he could not approve of as his point of view was different. But it was a great joy to the members of that Chapter of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to find that there was a white man who was seriously advocating those very purposes for which Marion Garvey stood.
Major Cox's Letter
He requested Major Cox to write a letter to be read before that branch of your organization. Major Cox wrote a very strong and very moving letter. This letter was read by Mr. Gheto before his organization and he wrote back to Major Cox and said, "I wish you could have been here to have seen the enthusiasm with which your let-
For Weak and Run-Down Men
I FOUND GLANT-OX MOST
EXTRAORDINARY
Says a Noted Viennese Scientist,
Dr. Johann Von Zimmer
Triangle Laboratories, Inc.,
115 Balken Ave.
Bronx, New York
Gentlemen:
My congratulations for
young graduates that Ox
which is another triumph
in gland therapeutics.
I am use God with all
most utility, case of yun
down, systems with great
economic London
and in Paris. I shall hope to make
-ant-Ox famous in Vienna. I glant-Ox is
wining great success in every hospital. I am
making mention of it in all my lectures.
I hope responsibly,
DR JOHANN VON ZIMMER
THE STARTLING EFFECT OF
GLANT-OX
33
for was received; our members are reading and studying "White America" and many of the members have said that "White America" should be in every Negro's home along with the Bible." Major Cox was naturally very pleased, with this and later when Mr. Ghetto asked if he might use the letter to publish. Major Cox suggested that he enlarge on the letter. The result of that was a little pamphlet which Mr. Cox wrote and published, which he calls "Let My People Go." Thus pamphlet is dedicated to Marcus Garvey. It is a message from white men who wish to keep the white race white to black men, who wish to keep the black race black; and it is dedicated to Marcus Garvey, that great leader who has sought to do for his own race what the greatest of white Americans sought to do for that race and to encourage the race to do for itself - none other than Abraham Lincoln.
With Marcus Garvey at Atlanta
With Marcus Garvey at Atlanta
This pamphlet was brought to the attention of your great leader and he corresponded with Major Cox and his dine when I went down to Georgia to address the Georgia Legislature in favor of a bill for the preservation of racial integrity. I went to the prison to see Marcus Garvey. I expected to see a man with bowed head; I expected to see a man depressed and unhappy and embittered, because in the meantime I had read his "Appeal, to the Soul of White America," and it had touched me to the heart. When I saw him I saw a man with head erect, with eyes open and clear, unshamed and unafraid, free from all bitterness, free of tamen; one word of complaint escaped his lips, not one word of beaming; his one thought was for you—his people and his loyal followers. And as we discussed these matters I found that in every essential principle the ideas and ideas of Marcus Garvey were identical with those of the organization which I have the honor to represent—the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America.
Man of Highest Idealism
There, was nothing that Marcus Garvey could not say frankly and freely to me without danger of misunderstanding; there was nothing that I could not say to Marcus Garvey openly and frankly and freely without danger of misunderstanding; and I realized that I was in the presence of a man of the highest ideals and the noblest courage and the profoundest wisdom; a man dedicated to a noble and a sacred cause—the cause of the independence and interility of his race. On my return to Richmond at the next meeting of the Anglo-Saxon Clubs, I reported the result of my conference with your leader. The newspapers were represented at that meeting and the Richmond Times Dispatch published an account of my talk. In the next issue of the Norfolk Journal and Guide, there were large headlines spread across the top of the page "Garvey In Prison, Forms New Alliance." The readers of the Norfolk Journal and Guide were reminded that Garvey had formerly been a member of the Ku Klux Klan, and that his association with the Ku Klux Klan having been cut short by his imprisonment, even in prison had a close occasion to ally himself with other enemies of the race, namely, the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America. That article was copied in the Negro Press all over the country, and unfortunately, I am afraid, caused a great deal of ill feeling and ill will.
With the Richmond Division
Garvey did not hesitate to assume
full responsibility for everything that
he had said to me and her, every
assurance that he had made me well, to
Mister Cup. As a result of that, the
wife of my good loving name to Mister
Garvey always that they. I understood a
position of the teammate of the duo-
sister, Garvey, in the position of the team-
mate, Garvey.
LIBERTY HALL; New York, Wednesday Night, October 28th.-Seldom has Liberty Hall witnessed a larger and more interested gathering than that which assembled tonight and gave a cordial welcome to Mr. John H. Powell, a Southern white gentleman, President of the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America, who appeared to speak to the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and publicly express in behalf of his organization its endorsement of the Garvey movement and its plans for Negro uplift with a view of effecting a solution of the race problem in America. Mr. Powell was accompanied by three other gentlemen of his race who are also interested in the movement, and was deeply moved by the reception accorded him. He was given full latitude to express himself freely on the Negro question, and availed himself of that opportunity to state frankly the attitude of the South toward the Negro-an attitude which completely accords with the Garvey movement in denouncing the mixture of the races and advocating that Negroes seek to develop themselves and create a government of their own on the continent of Africa.
Mr. Powell showed that common ground existed between his organization and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, in that fundamentally both organizations stood for the preservation and purity of their race. He took the stand that the Negro in America was not free despite the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation and three Amendments to the United States Constitution, all of which were designed to set the Negro free. There is no chance for the Negro in America, he declared, and there is no use being sentimental and visionary about the matter; it was a practical question and the facts must be faced. Propounding the question and answering it himself—why the Negro is not free in America—Mr. Powell said it was because the civilization that he is living under is not his own, for which, however, the Negro was not responsible. Any white man would indeed be bold, said Mr. Powell, who would deny to the Negro the possibility of the development of a higher order of civilization and a culture of his own, for history proved that the Negro had a civilization which dated back 6000 years; but, he added, it is perfectly sure that the Negro will not develop in America. In America, he continued, the Negro holds a position of an intellectual and cultural parasite and no race can develop or evolve unless it is standing on its own feet and is supported by its own backbone. By scientific reasoning, the speaker pointed out the impossibility of two races living together without mixing, and while the argument against mixing did not necessarily infer that either race warbad, there was the danger of their being different and the mixture may produce something that may be tremendously harmful and painful to both races. If the Negro stayed in America he asserted, he was going to mix with the white people, and, the white people outnumbering him eight to one, the result would be the death of the Negro race.
There is no use deceiving ourselves, said Mr. Powell, but conditions could not be changed that make America a place of toil and trial and tribulation for the Negro. He paid a glowing tribute to the Negro for the part he has played in building up America, and for this he added, "no sane' or decent white man could fate the Negro"; the white man, he declared, owed the Negro a debt, and, with great emphasis, he said, "we intend that the whole world shall see that we appreciate this debt and will pay it not only justly but generously," and will see to it, further, that in any solution of the problem the Negro will get not only what is coming to him but get the honor and glory that grateful hearts should pour out in abundance to the Negro.
He wound up his speech by paying a wonderful tribute to Marcus Garvey and said that if the South realized what Garvey stood for and what he meant, it would rise up to a man and demand that this great leader be released and restored to his people. He demanded freedom for Marcus Garvey and came to a dramatic close by saying, "If there is any honor in the American nat' we promise you that when Marcus Garvey it free he shall not be deported."
At the conclusion of Mr. Powell's address, the following resolution was presented and unanimously approved by the gathering:
presented and unanimously approved by the galleries.
"Be it resolved that we the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association believing as we do in the integrity of all races, and especially that of our own, do hereby signify our willingness to accept any help that the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America may proffer us in our struggle toward nationhood and in our fight for racial purity."
On the platform were several members of the Executive Council of the U. N. I. A., including Sir William Sherill, acting president general; Sir Clifford Bourne, chancellor; Hon. G. E. Carter, secretary general; Hon. Percival Burrows, first assistant secretary general; Lady Henrietta Vinton Davis; Sir Levi Lord, auditor general; Mrs. Amy Jacques-Garvey, wife of the president general, and Hon. Dr. J. J. Peters, acting president of the New York local.
Prior, so the speechmaking, a specially prepared musical program was rendered in which the band and the choir participated together with the popular artists Mme. Barrier Houston and Mme. Fraser Robinson. Preliminary addresses of welcome were delivered by Hon. Dr. Peters and Mrs. Garvey, while Hon. G. E. Carter introduced the speaker of the evening.
Mr. Powell was given a respectful and attentive audience and was cheered for his frankness of expression on the Negro question; his references to Marcus Garvey were loudly applauded and when at the close he declared that every effort would be made to see that Garvey is not deported, the audience wont frantic with applause. Hon. Mr. Sherill delivered the address of thanks which brought to a close a very interesting meeting that threw light on the Negro question and fortified the position of the Universal. Negro Improvement Association and its leader, Marcus Garvey, in the fight for African Redemption and a government for Negroes.
Improvement Association expressing our indignation at the injustice that had been met out to Marcus Garvey, expressing our approval of his activities for the integrity and independence of his race, and requesting that our sentiments be communicated to his wife, who was to be the guest of honor on that occasion, and requesting that if it were possible that arrangements may be made by which members of our organization could attend that meeting. The chairman of the Richmond Chapter at once replied cordially and courteously inviting us to attend the meeting. We did attend the meeting, and never in all my life have I heard speeches of greater force, of greater power than I heard that night, and it is as a result of that night* that I was asked to appear before you tonight.
The Negro Is Awake
One more thing: A member of your organization in Detroit got in touch with Major Cox and asked him to send out 60 copies of "White America"; Major Cox sent the copies out. A few days later he received a letter saying that before the package was opened all the copies were disposed of; please send 250 more. Major Cox did not have 250 copies to send but sent what he had. A few days later he received a letter from Detroit saying that there were 1,800 Negroes acting as book agents in Detroit selling "White America" to white people in Detroit. Within two weeks 1,700 copies of Major Cox's pamphlet were sent in Detroit. Think of what that means! It means that the Negro in the United States is today emancipate; he is arraigned; he hates no longer to the deputy and the blindness of the politician; he is beginning to look back in the face. It means that at least in Detroit, and I believe over the whole length and breadth of this land the Negro is being treated in some way the way people or half of the population then the white man who contributed blaming us was.
Detroit. It was a bitter mortification to me to realize that the members of your organization were doing spontaneously what I have, been laboring for ten years to get the people of my care to do. And I want to congratulate you from the bottom of my heart on the courage and independence that you are showing in facing those facts and seeing them clearly and distinctly. And I speak to you not merely as a white American; I speak to you as a Virginian; I speak to you as the descendant of slave owners.
The South Does Not Hate the Negro
I want to say to you tonight that there is no decent white man in the South who can hate the Negro race; no decent man, no sane man who can have aught in his heart but feelings of kindness and of gratitude towards the Negro race. As you have heard before, your people did not come here willingly; they were captured by force and violence; they were thrust in between decks in the horrible pests ships; they were brought to America, and when they thought, they were going to breathe the free air of God's blue heaven and see God's green sky, they found themselves still shackled in the chains of slavery. And why? There were forests to be cut down; there was land to be tilled; there was work of all kinds to be done, and the white man wanted the work done but, did not want to take the trouble to do; if himself. Your ancestors did that work; it is owing to their muscle, to their brown, to their industry, to their good will that this country made the progress in a few years that otherwise would have taken hundreds of years.
Gratitude to the Negro
Not only that; these never was a people which under hardship and under oppression showed the spirit of kindness and sympathy which your people have shown. At a time when the nations of the world were fighting in a great war between the states—a war which was being fought on the path of the length of the sea, and your enemies all of whom were willing to kill.
DR. PETERS AND MRS. GARVEY EXPLAIN WHAT THE NEGRO IN THE U. N. I. A. IS WORKING FOR AND THE VIEWS HE HOLDS
NEGROES MUST MEET THEIR BROTHERS UPON PLANE OF EQUALITY
Negro Will Again Build a Great Civilization and March from Obscurity to Power as Others Have Done—It Is Evident Negroes Cannot Outside of Africa Develop in a Manner That Will Benefit Posterity
NEGRO HAS HELPED AMERICA BUILD; NOW AMERICA MUST HELP THE NEGRO IN TURN
Hon. Dr. J. J. Peters said: My job this evening is to give a cheerful welcome to the gentlemen who have come to join hands with us in the great struggle for racial emancipation. We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are willingly disposed at all times to join hands with those of our brothers who happen to be of a different blue, but we join hands in point of equality.
We feel that after all the Negro is a power with whom the world must reckon; we feel that the day is passed when the Negro with his slavish psychology believed that he was inferior to other races. We have reached the point now where we believe that there is no such thing in the human family as an inferior race; that all races are equal biologically and that the circumstances under which they live shall determine their degree of intellectuality.
down in Atlanta a few months ago and therefore he has no doubt in his mind regarding the calibre of Marcus Garvey is uncompromising in his attitude and in his demands for Negroes, just as Mr. Powell is uncompromising in his demands for his people; therefore, as two men of opposite races, they admire each other because there is no hypocrisy coming from them. Mr. Powell
Must Meet on Level Terms
We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association feel therefore that we must meet our brothers, whether they be yellow, brown or white, upon a plane of equality; if we must march on like men to victory we must march on regarding each other as equal in the sight of God and in the sight of man. For that reason we welcome to tonight these gentlemen who have come to us.
Rise and Fall of Races
Continuing. Dr. Peters traced the history of the rise and fall of races in an attempt to show that no race has permanently remained dominant and that whereas the Anglo-Saxon was in power today, centuries ago he was held in slavery by others and in like manner the Negro, though he was at the present time dubbed as an inferior race, would in course of time take the reins of power and march on to a new civilization. It is a foliage, he declared, to say that the Negro cannot create a government of his own, but he agreed that the Negro cannot in the Western world under Western civilization build up a civilization of his own nor a culture of his own because of the controlling influences around him, but under the guidance of the Universal Negro Improvement Association the Negro was looking forward in the day when in Africa he shall again create a civilization that will gain the admiration of the world.
MR8. GARVEY SPEAKS
"Mrs. Amy Jacques-Garvey was the next engager. She said: Mr. Garvey had prepared a welcome address for Mr. Powell and his associates, but unfortunately when I reached here tonight I received a telegram that it was delayed and could not reach here in time. So in my feeble way I will try to express to these gentlemen some of the views Mr. Garvey would like to express."
Mr. Powell is well acquainted with
Mr. Curvey because he visited him
down in Atlanta a few months ago and therefore he has no doubt in his mind regarding the calibre of Marcus Garvey. He knows that Marcus Garvey is uncompromising in his attitude and in his demands for Negroes, just as Mr. Powell is uncompromising in his demands for his people; therefore, as two men of opposite races, they admire each other because there is no hypocrisy coming from them. Mr. Powell is a Southern gentleman. We in the North have been accustomed to white gentlemen coming into our midst and telling us how they love us, what they will do for us and how they will do this and the next thing to bring about social equality.
Keeping the Race Pure
We are very busy at this time trying to lift our race to the standard and to the pinnacle that the white race holds today. We admire men of any race, and women, too, who will speak their mind and speak it plainly, therefore, this gathering will take no offence at anything Mr. Powell or his associates might say. We are here to be informed regarding the white man's attitude—especially the Southern white man's attitude toward the Negroes in America as these gentlemen believe in the purity of their race, so do we of the Universal Negro Improvement Association believe in the purity of our stock. It is true that because of slavery and abominable conditions consequent on slavery, of us we are very much mixed up, but we have reached the point where we do not want to be mixed up—any longer (Applause), and we are making every effort to keep our race pure and keep it black.
White Race Should Help
The white race will have no trouble from members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, when it comes to their women because we are working along those same lines and we condemn any man or woman in our race who dares to step over the borders. Much of the abominable conditions in the South has been brought about by that sort of thing, and if this organization can get a firmer footing in the Southern States the white race will have no trouble with black folks along those lines. But we say to the white race that we are an ambitious, aspiring lot of people and for that reason we do not believe that we can remain in America all our days nor can our prosperity develop themselves here in America because the white race is in the majority and it is hopeless to expect that they will permit another race to develop alongside of them. After deep consideration, therefore, and after experiments regarding the solution of this problem, we have reached the conclusion to develop ourselves in our Mother Country where we belong, and in this effort we expect the white race to give us its moral support.
We did not come here of our own will and pleasure; the white man brought us to these shores hundreds of years ago to help him build up America; we have helped him to build up America and now we feel that we have served our purpose in America; America has been built up; it is the greatest republic in the world today; it is the banker nation of the world; the savior of descent Europe and America no longer needs the Negro. But I know and Marcus Garvey known that some portions of white America that has a confidence is represented by these gentlemen who are born to speak to us tonight. They have preformed their assistance to us at this time to help us build a country of our own to help us toward the goal of independence and we thank them through the hostess of our hearts for any assistance they may need us to undertake this task.
Our Program
Our mission is to establish a site
A Governor Issues a Statement, but So Does the Majority Group—And Justice Is Deaf and Blind—Negro Must Improve His Status
Some people still doubt the need of a federal anti-lynching law. "Let the States take care of their own," they say. We invite their attention to the State of Mississippi. On September 20 at New Albany a mob took a Negro, Jim Ivy, from a sheriff who made no fight to stop them, carried him to Rocky Ford, tied him to a stake, and burned him alive, after the traditional fashion of lynchings in the romantico Old South. Governor Whitefield had the detency to issue a statement on September 21, saying:
The time has come when the law-abiding citizens of Mississippi should assert themselves in no uncertain terms against such mob action and should rally to the support of the peace officers in maintaining the integrity of the law.
On the same day the Memphis News Scimitar, published photographs of lynching scenes. These photographs show members of the mob with drawn guns and Jim Ivy with a noose around his neck; the faces of scores of mob members are so plain that a police officer would not have the slightest difficulty in recognizing and arresting them.
Did the members of that mob feat Mississippi justice? Were they afraid that, recognized, they would be punished? Not at all. One of the mob members, let himself be photographed standing on a platform with Jim Ivy. He was warned, the News Scimitar says, that the picture would be published. "All right; go ahead," he replied. One William - N. Bradshaw booster that he was a member of the mob. The Jackson Daily News quotes this Mississippi man follows:
Not an officer in Union County or any of the neighbor counties will point out any member of the crowd. Why, if he did, the best thing for him to do would be to jump into an airplane headed for Germany—quick. Sure, the officers know who were there. Everybody down there knows everybody else. We're all neighbors, and neighbors' neighbors.
Saturday night there were at least 10,000 men with pistols on their hips at New Albany, the county seat, but it was a perfectly ordered crowd. Everybody was in their shirts sleeves, and no one tried to conceal his identity.
A delegation of us went to Johnny the sheriff and told him that we were tired of feeling around and that he had to produce lynx or take the consequences. He said, "Well, boys . . . I'll put him in the county jail here. If you let me get him in jail and locked up, and then overpower me and get him I can't help it." We agreed to that. . .
Investigation? Shucks, there won't be any—or if there is it won't amount to anything. No officer down there is going to dare try to identify anyone, because nobody's mad about it. Even one of the judges down there said he didn't believe in mob law except in a few cases, and this was one of them, and that he had gone to the burning if it hadn't been bad policy. They'd be plenty mad though, if anyone were arrested, and there'll be a million dollars ready, in five minutes to go his bond.
William Bradshaw was right. The sheriff announced that he had recognized "no one in the mob. When reporters called the governor's attention to Bradshaw's defiance and showed him the photographs which revealed the faces of members of the mob, he replied, "I have no plans for an investigation." Mississippi is Mississippi. It is no crime to burn a man alive in that State, if his skin is black. Neither county nor State officials will punish a gang of murderers, if their victim is a Negro. If the people of this country want lynching stopped, they will have to do it by Federal action.
For Your Health!
SICK
Men and Women, do not neglect your Health. Take
Assame Bitters
You can avoid operations if you will always apply
Assame Bitters to your mouth, nose, throat, or
chest, and not continue using any
correction treatment which
gives you a fever. If you suffer from
STOMACH, KISNEY, TURPUS
LIVER, INDULGENCE, INDIGESTION, CONSTIPATION, RHEUMATISM, BACKASHE, BOILS, OR PRINCES
Call or write to us in front of the door
and request an alteration of order and your
payment. Please bring you to it if it is
necessary. All questions may be addressed
to the Assistant Manager, Business Ops.
rn te ee a oe Le 2 ¥ > SATURDAY; NOVEMBER 7, Teas:
4 22288. 4 . —
: 7] ‘ « R : aie oa % ng Os 0 Pe
4 ; a Bey. N teat Bg tlie
Bete . ethos” Soins? wl agt gt = * = snd * “ Bt . 1 Fe o b.
j Eben sie ~ {ton and’ Maue‘einetKnitby. «They ac- | low #0 that, they. may ultimately come | ff pe peeeaaee
‘ THOUSANDS: ENDORSE TELEGRAM To PRESS. DENYING Pquitted themscives very egeditably und | out victorious, 2. 7
. —_" ¥ a Fecelved greatyappliuse. * No Prudent Silence If you are SCR write
Tir , allowing. afe the speeches: 3, Ne whedon teeth ck!
--_ ALLEGATIONS OF. DISLOYALTY TO:GAR Eo ce [inten Carvers suterine one [HARA RPE
eo ee Se 7 + | MAS. GEO. W. COOPER SPEAKS | with which wo shout ai sympathize, |" YEU ROINOS, ie you
LEADERSHIP—NO SPLIT IN. THE OR( a .. The “Test ieaker. Introduced was Vecuuse If ho did* oe Dubois, Kelty. HM We Rowan cee
: f N . VNOF | Mes Geesge W. Cooper. Lady ‘Chap: | Miller’ qnd ail the other Negro leadere ~ SONOS,
7 = o. 5 *. . Jiain-of the Boston Diyision, She told] tte doing—tuklng the sde of. prudent os a
2 “BATION, AS REPORT SAYS... 0 os [Benet ate poten Distsion, Ste ott reare-cUarveyr'aould not hobs slg cate ett
‘ Ieee sf fe oi Univeraad “Negro Improvenient Asso- | Prion” burs’ todax, Maicus” Garves: |B Se Wind Sonntss nen
ey atte aa Lo ciation and; of tho fact that-sho wageslossjnet“fedl that he whatild taketh ‘ie thera
. s ‘ " among the ‘firat xevén amembers who | Course of prudent silence: he'sees the Don't walt, untlt tan
MEMBERS ARE STANDING AS UNITEDLY AS BEFORE] (ie oniccd the Moston Ivelston tt neve| Nese going toward Gostsuetions and Ph <tereett Zeer conan
rors St J great inspiration to. her, she} he hax told every Mack man what {fhe Sey ARRAS oe
PEN ey oe Bs sald. to appelis. On the rostrum . of | MMC happen unless he arouses him- | fl"
iD: i ‘ilaaak Liberty, “Halle ange that ‘inspiration | Sel and tights for, a-hothe tee. hinsc1t. | Vaggumeeeemenmmmmariaeay
Mr. W. McD: Holder, ‘in Tribute to Great Leader, Tells (ie itis nics te her Division | Continuing, Are Metter sas he one | :
the Reason for.His Suffering—Prudent Silence amd ive them. a greater res to] rented thé memhers of the wgunzas |
5 i cary on tite werk. speaking of fon, | eh (0 sink thelr petty differences and | sons for that expounded
Weuld Have Secured. Immunity, but Marcus Mareus Garvey, she said Mr. Girvet | thinks in terms of larger things 1¢] leader, Atweus Garyay.
é Garvey Is Not Built That Way [ean born leader, and thdugh he may | WE nut tight Jed ue mafshal our | Sou some. Mew we, it
“ETRERTY HALL, New .York, Sunday Night, Nov. .t—In ace
vordance with the custom which has been established siftce the im-
prisomment Of Hoh, Marcus Garvey, to, celebrate the first’ Sunday of
cach.month as Carvey Day among ail the divisions of the Universal
Negey Improvement .\ssociation, the New York Local observed to-
day with the usual display of patriotism to the great leader who has
given to the world an organization that has created recagnition for
ren Nice cand etapa hex Comeciremens au-nevee peldta:. -
PARENT BODY. MEMBERSHIP
‘APPLICATION
During the past three or four months we have heen receiviig
hundreds of letters of inquiry from persons in this country and
varietts parts of the world who afé desitous of becoming Parent
Body members. ‘These lettets-come chiefly ‘from: travelers. and
persons who: live in small communities where there is no branch
of the-Universal. Negro Improvement Association.
For the information of such persons we publish hereunder full
Fingtructions of how to become a member. It must be distinetly
understood that in communities where there is an established.
branch of the association, application for membership should be
made to such branch. :
; HOW TO BECOME A MEMBER é
he eutraaee foo fy twentyetlve cents, affor payment of which a cortinea%
ia dives the monthis contribution a twentyetive cents ten cents death
tae eanatitution cnate twentvedioe canta, and m button fifteen conten Cn
Nereint of aie dalla we will Temitthe articles above-mentioned, with one
dnanth's dus eredtied wis Sen dues cad. :
We snegest that sai hay vor dues quarterly, Aemf-annmally. ar annually
tuaatpitis the won seating of Sour dies eae tothe secetary generals
* . MEMBERSHIP BLANK a
sinstal Nie AOR PRIN etn nee ESN Neate ae
; (hast Name) (int Same
s HAY CUY cscecceseecerecesecnesonerrsnesnetsecssncccsssetscstessereceesoes H
B What te your ager Cast MUN dy). .ccc cess ee ec ec egeeeeesSeeceetmaneeweees
1g ve-you peneve in the principten of the UN. fo A.tesssagisssescscesscesecses |
12. Are you wilting to Iva up to the Conatitution To. ..cccccseecseeeeeeeseeeeeeeee #
1% Are Sou married of angie, widow oF WIHOWERT......ceseeeesesesseeeeeseeeeee |
"tn Whee tn sna negunstinn Micki scsicveesagsesasesansoessssccsadwensvassees |
aft =e 7 = 1
Ca am ade &, we aoe os we os @ ore ost == &
' f° R FOR,
“AS " -
gy Vf -2 Ss
. ale FL \
: ’ Pp | ‘ N
° Proved ste by million nd pescited by physkians for
eee euearets:
Thousands of people were preecnt on
Liberty Hall tonight and give ane
mistakable: evidence of “their loyalty
te thelr foader and thelr determination
ty carey att the work With the same
Viger as though he were present to
kuide the destinies-of the orzmization.
In promt of “Uieir jeyalty tho entire
“anMicnee omamingunsts apprevid oF thie
followin twleerion ty "be xen to the
Axsnehited Ptess ana the Department
Of Justiew at Washington: ©
“Huplan, Nesrees and purtivutacly
Lie doy Ineo che Calyersal
Nesta Improvement Axsuctatlyis in this
fity, asserted tn grass mesting, agaln
call your-attention t the Met that They
Stand unitedly to a mun behind the
Uncompromising Ieadership ef Mareus
Garvey. Thissis it contradigtion to
the impression given by the daily press
to the. unsisyrctiog nubile, that
S“tiartem’ again emphis over Gates
Pstigetie Garvey iy stl lest the Xo
byork Divinion (a bench of the Calver
ail Negro Inprovement “Asxociation)
fuiward towiirds: the aedemption of
|atrieact
|, Hom. G. A. Wester vice-president of
tv Stow Vries aocaly coulda overt
Lmreting andthe speakers, were” SITs
inane’ Qt. Coopep: Lady Chaptoln
the Heston Division, and, Ion. Wesiey
ielder. 2nd viee-president at the Xow
Tork Leedl. Prior te the speeches an
nteiestins program was renee “in
Shieh ang. oe te fltoing, SARE
teri Of tht Juvenile untis of the oF-
ants Fon took part with vendings and
recliathons: "Hievtor Hieektess See
FOuLle Besrentsailaneel Beaneed billlae
WHITE SOUTHERNER DISCLOSES.
ATTITUDE OF WHITE MAN
ton and: Madeleine“ Knibbs. - They ac-
‘quitted themselves very exeditably und
Fecelved sreatyappluuse.
Following afe the speeches:
MAS: G20. W. COOPER SPEAKS.
+The ‘test. neaker.: Introduced was
Mrs Gemsge W. Cooper. Indy ‘Chap:
iain-Of the Roxton Division. She told
of “her deyotion..to the cause .of. the
Univerant “Negro. tmprovanient Asso-
ciation and; of the fact: that-sho war
among the ‘first xevén members who
organized the Boston, ivitlon. 1 wns
kt great Inspiration to. “her. she
xald, to Apperson the rostrum . of
Liberty, “Halle ange that ‘inspiration
Ahewonid take sback to ker Division
and give’ them. a greater: urg+ to
carry on the work. Speaking of fon.
Mareus Garvey. she sant Mr. Ghrvet
was a born leader, and thduzh he may
‘lo In Jall, bis spivit woutd he atevays
alive tn the Liberty Halls thronshont
the world to give his fullowers Insp!
ration te carry ten, the, work,
HON. WESLEY HOLDER SPEAKS
Hon, Wesley Henler spoke on the
subject, “Garvey the Genlus.” Marcas
Garvey isd genius. te weld, becsnse
he has given ‘to the world a new ier
and a new vision, Maveus Garvey Is
suffering behind prison wally= today
hecause he dared ty teil Negroes the
truth, “Garves's satfering ie nothing
neys, heeatise every great Ieuley, every
great driginator-ef a new Idea, his
hatt to psy the price, snd anymndivid
Wal tht gIVA to the Wworkl a new
Yeiselon never recelvex Inks reward in
his own days. Mavens Garvex, thera.
fore, will not receive his reward ta
diy, but when he lie sone his name
WA forever we tn the mouths of hack
nen and shail? be recorded San the
Baked Oe Biisbenrst 7 :
Marcus Gapeey font that Nesries
in the Western Warlt ejiinat live siete
dy aide with thed white man in the
sate teerityry amd receive the same
terms of equaitys he kawws that if
the Uwe races ere to Gunttine tivins
Miley slite, sume day ar the ether
Sie face that isin the megorgst will
afew up the minerty rare, aven at
he Amefiesin white man extevininated
Hoe red Indiin. Heeatine af that ve be
Lawhing a Way for black ment fol.
(Cantinued fram pare °)
pean the Sou h ¥tryed en the planta.
Lions, protected the wom and eb
Jatvony raved thie ebm and sont th
fwd te the front te the army. the
Nae fighting: Ge keep ghem in slavery
Amal white people in tye Seah Kane
Neves ame White people ane tie Sout
=iitowe aphing a8 oasi ii elie aie a
Lstisnnisthie Ter foolsnas of gratitte oe
Sf thankfulness. We taewe what ws
Lowe yon; we knew it and we intel
that the Whele Worl stuck ser that we
coippreetite this debt cad pay it not
nly justly But jeenermusty. CApyietse.)
|" The Negro Not Yet Free
| Awad what is this situation thet tase
Pest His net a mew si maten: it hes
Feeme ap asain cand acca lie the gent
Wer gee at din sittin party wf thes West
tewiy. What is this sfiuation? Phe
Sed War.won IQyaneMaT he Save:
sin Amerata wing be frees that war
Was Wan, the Emuareipaten Priebama.
[tion anpetaimed chem yee: ti. hth
j Amendment te the United Stizes Cons
| stitution secured “that freedoms. the
PLth Amendment made them citizens
Of this coumtey and the 15th Amend.
Prnht avila jena tha’ ain om state
that sheubl attempt te take thie yi2t
[af suffyize frem any man on secon:
Lat, his ‘rae enor ov qwrevions rote
dition of gervitle. The great war,
[three constinuiienay ameredments, and
8 the Neste iw Amerieastuday. free”
(Cries of amt nots :
Does Not Receive A Square Deal
In the South hysiest people wilt tot
yon hat the Neweo does not get a
sanare deal in wny court of justice:
any honest man will tell you that
Nexro ix not allowed to vate freely
In the South. “In thes South he be
treated legally and politically ith,
less consideration than if he were
somg allen born beyond our. xhores
who had lived In this countey for a
few years and token out naftraliza’
tion papers No tie denies the unfalr-
ness and the injuxtice of that; I least
otal —Ia_splte. af.-tha.tact. thatthe.
[Emancipation Proclamation and these
“imandments to-the Constitution exist.
there Ix slavery tong in the South and
a Worse slavery. than’ that which ¢x-)
Jsted before -the war of Kecexslon.” At
thnt time the’ slave at least wag tho
property of hix'master and it was to
the master's interest that. hie prop-
erty be well takenccare of. Today in
nections of the. South they have some-
thing worse than chatted slavery? they
‘pave peonage where the people are
‘Slaves but are not the property of
mmanters,and_it ts. not tothe advane
tage of the’ man qh fs getting the
benefit ,of thnt slavery to nem to dt
that bls workers are properiy hgused,
properly fed and properly clothed and
Broperly looked-after, =
Such conditions exist in’ some parts
of the South that’ would make, your
bieod run cold. " The. story’ I-am ‘eolrig.
tor tell sou I. have trom a former wov~
enor of Cecrsts—a man -whon many
of you at one time learned 16 hat:, but
m man who sgcriGced “his whale ipo
tical career im order that he: might
breek up peomage in the Biate of
GanrgM. Hie told ‘sty of ihat’cace of |
Uris farmer whe bad gene imo the
court; he wasted “labor; certain
low #0 that, they. may ultimately come
out victorious... 3 ;
;, No Prudent Silence
+ Marchis Garvey's suffering Ix one
weigh wihleh Wo shoul all sympathies,
Woewuxe If ho did* a®- Dubus, Kelty
Miller’ qnd ait.the other Negro leaders
are doing—taking the klde of. prudent
Mtence—Garvey* would “not be vehind
priwn” bars’ todax, Maicus” Garvey
4logsjnot“feél that_he shauld take the
course of prudent silence: he'sees the
Neste going towards destsietion, and
he hax told every Mack man what
MEHE happen untexe he arouses him-
self and thehts for, w- horke ‘toe. himself.
Continuing, Mr. Holder sat he on-
treated the members of the ogguniza-
tion fo sink thelr petty differences and
thinks m terms of larger things If
Wwe must fight. let us” makshal our
forces and direct our batteries toward
the common enemy. This is ms tue
for Dhick Men te fight black men, This
Ix a serious time, ‘The tereh ot a erest
vontlasration ts Wt In Barayc tela
and we de net knew what my hap
hen in the next fed days: so we aire
Ielling the blk man tosursanice ithe
Self te stind toxether in ‘his. xteat
movement—the Universal Neate he
Prevement Axseiation—and foltew oft
with thi great determingiion which
Mareus Garvey has given us. tt wax
the duty ef every Joya! member to
futlow the leaders that Mares Garvey
Wits Hef, iw earry on his wad. If we
detieve In Mareus Garvey. it is our
duty te do what he tells nx to sta,
Femmmberine that be fe away fran us
and sannot actively carry en the
Work himself amd if Qvis werk ust
Eon there nist be. sumewie ah
wil carry it forward, weaait
In conehisink he said: This ie on
Rerivie time in the histery of uur
mnewertenig if be at Thue for tis to close
hanks cud tebe on tawiees.se new amt
greiter sehievement, ‘The wgorkt I
Heves that Ht is geen the Wek aman
aebieve, Init eur lechtevements have
been miler reat handicaps, We have
elteved under the avelshs af dan
Cre hayes ail the nibst of secen=
Zation. Iynehing ind Ieaneig, but
real achievement will te seen when
Woo have LH oe everett ef nn
awn in Aften,
ON eae Sey et Ee ee Ne Oe
for (fein offenses, Vem sen, they att
ied Rapped ter have Ty joke thea eat
[theme Had nue 1 aorta ater tn treve
fp Jel, Whey are Ineaichit mite smart
amd fixed, Thig peer teltew sannet yoiy!
Ue fines sind ae te bee pent in geen
ie Cumer steps mp amd pays us ocnTe
toe ili sanut: Hitec tlhe gernntne eyscaiie nel
fever te Min for weeks fer tity untiy fee
Sahar ase pound bach the canst wl
tye fine, Fiat seuss petty tain ten
fesse: anivtwoby Woon nasthiee watts oon
J faven thin Galton Be aide Attlee an
ore Nath At Weir hs ant "Pie pene fetto
is tahen an thee turin, tie Mas gat te
eats Me Was wat te Ide etait be
fis net gathewwrad tee ate ates oo te tneachet
int bigs hin feed aun ohethiess ane, he
Ways them front thie Dedner aad te
farmer kemprnain ai siesta Mate
Hime that pen dowel has Woche dD for
that biemer fer twa years oe ty Meare
fy dete te him than fhe Wa at the
MAUL Hf Whe tars tee get ook ak they ont
Uhe Maid Metts after hate ad st eet
him,
Now there Wp a tanner Wer thal a
Bak at Meme pesenes sett sey tegen ts
ket gStlesss tee Wanted dose rats
ated the tavnier get fishies led na ave
Wor dad a age y evenseie teem NtaE ths
is What he ded: Be teed, eben men
fmt tee Dts tied sa iaick dastight et
wretoek in tie afternoon, ab startet
Them digging a pat until teey tet ow
while ditety adeepearnemich, Mes took boo
EMM ayd chet mtuber one nt bis eleven
abererse in the head sitet kicked ine
over in thy dite rand tiie owthes tes
covered fine aye when he wae evened
up he shit number twee aus! the ether
nine covered fim api ant se Me went
on dowi the dine and sher the steven
anid KidKed the Lst me ver the disel,
and govered Aine up, himself .
J" “Hugh Dorsey's Sacrifice”
That happened in Amertea: ote
America, free Amorten, Yat, fash
Dérsey, detarinined that these “things
should not.he and heattenjted te break:
UE TNAT Aites Tuna: wT ke reat
hat he dll nat hreak tt mp entirely
but he did fimpreve conditiens tre-
mendouly and he was Kicked ant of
office and whl never arin hoid, poli
cal office {n the State of Georgia ak a,
result. Many peopl’ whom yor have
been tnucht tu resard ux your eremios
are ‘really + your frlends, and Hugh
Dorsey: is one of them who-has sacrl-
Need’ hix whole palities! career to at-
empt {o-stopy that Injfstier. Ht did not
top there: they began swon to make
Feonk of white. people too. You all
enow Af the axe down, in Florida
where they Wad White hoe THE
emiskiture heard of it sind They “hil
jormething’ to “nay about st and things
have been cleancd: up a little jt since
then. :
huaties, For: White Av Well As Colored
‘You cannot -he. unjunt to ‘one mem-
per of your cltizena without endanger-
ing the Uberty of all your cltyrene. If
inerg ig going to be juatice In Am wicn,
yare has got ‘to he justice for the,
solofed’ man and fer the white man,
tAppiTMe) =
The: Seuth Offers We. Secia!. Kquality,
‘Mow, my friends, in the South we.
Je not offer social equality; we do |
Bot ‘ofler you political equathy.”~-You.
mow why. You have beard ‘the rea-
fo gg Rites, es, ee pes ee SEP SL Di, eg hae a
Wt you are SICK with RAEUMATION. BCLATICA, LUM. — ee ee at ee ee ee =
aloge sett GRRE MATIN BOANCA COR, Tye we aampome
HACK ACHE (TIPE ubotran, Sone Vibe PAISEUe Ve, @. mex 63, Mnmilten Grange Sialien. NEW TOMA COFE.
TORE GiENG MON CUS obe HOUN ts falt ot ERIE, 0. Mex 41. rere an 2
IRONS Mer eaMe Stteue divine amen’ Seo ue ne wonertst Joreone Megiiee: alm the, tree
BRE RO TRS Satan coon oad NORE Opell SF ee, eh Manca ais sas ec omneane
~ + GONZONE, BUEEMATINM MEDICINE 1. SSS Novtovgy Tir ‘Se Mlvpinet tna: Sopsonet medians
ss Thaubie Steeasinae ° Sunrantecas azswanes tetunaearit am feceatiniee &
Jun amie a. dove. tt ta very ticannne tnuauity that pain Sten aricting tran Coke or Souh Amgviea: oneto ene
BOS UE eaten Battettag wit eae aE, Daath haar ae eramteh mens 4
ReWind SomNtS honors, RUATICAT TEABAGO, SECRE eldase srave wow wauy tacataidis vou wane
THRONE RerRMRCMATIE WARS one "Takers sey mee . ° ae
"tt cit nm nay wig, get g “HEME cereveeeeereeeveneeeegrenngtcetietemmah
USE aa SAAC RU NER igatrems Sesseeseeseecdeeengronseesmrset eeeseesnessbone
SN ADRESS Ae iNet coven and! wal Coupon ie ae g : “ee errs:
ACT QUICK! DO IT TODAY., . * Clty aud State. ‘. Sen sensenenseasenreeeesessones
. 4 - !
SSS ee ge
a L1LSN ES =
_ Ee ——
{cS SS cco women like Hiss Loic ,
<< <- Parts imme cc. Prima Donna of the "In fee
e ee) ae B iss
ey oe Ct Ceewewmes Bamville” Company vhs: eo
ay Soe 7 EM smooth, glossy. daintily pcr =
DT EN fumed hair, attractive!y 11-
iid EE ranged. gives her suck ana)
/ - r ‘ Scaling charm— —_—
= ROTH ome You. too.caithave the appeal mum
; = Gemma of beautiful hair, Thousands aula
~ . hiammmmmml = of our people, like Miss Gee, al
ete ess tte arcfiidiigitissimplyama- ji
ees oe Sete AAMNN . tcrofusingPluko Hair Dress- nd
are 5 hg aa ingtégularly. CE
A F BELEN Miss Gee says: “Snever have
ees: - a em. 2 bit of trouble with my hair’
Sg ieee = now that Tam using Pluko.as ” Some
SS 2: SS this delightfully pertuoed
To Natl MER preparation keeps -my hair
ak Bas, aN ENED ‘Soft, straight, glossy and casy el
fu eer: ee Sas » | 7 to-arrange in any manner I :
Fi va ee a] — — a :
jane eo é ; ; i
a of eS i ah c) 0: |),
E B ” sBBA ns , Pe Sy
oe a Te picaivimom OES ‘ at tied
eae (SEIS : is Ball a)
POM Nae Bt <2 fia
mc eaN if Core f:
: = = — J can a
4 a hig
* nA Uke” lt peed ee
=; a és i x ld tees The perez fg i
. : Pear EN
acl : y i isk Seate = 1
a wel 4 Bb pens <ossversee__t
| “At dealers every where orwrite Phikko Ca Memphis Tera
sons for hit expoimded by sone geen
wader, Marcus Garyay. [have given
you some Idea naw, If yer dit not
now ft before, ax ty how "rene peotsts
ave tented In the Souch, ut tw the
PNerth and West they abe offer yon
polities! and sock comattty. Tet us
new hoys'you are ireaced: fr the North
[anit he, West, Hew anany OE Sut tate
Fiewrd of Sgeimctiehl the hetne’ a
-Atwaluin Lincoln, where ‘untied.
fiate. poopie Meore viet, DOWN DRE ete
Me? Mew anny of you have herd
Hast Sto Lewis, where the only faut
fof sete peapheewas Mat thes were
HME te Werk ahengghe white people
Swanted te lve did get higher waxes
Stor Uvins.. Hew memny 6f yon have
heard of Chicane, where Une faull of
Fsuur pone vas that thes scaniel de
Foent hotsts ty dive ta in decent ones
Fimunities, Net only did they stout
Seu peepte deavn Igy ie Inutedreas,
Ahoy Jutted gone hnasess thea Muraied
Une refs off ever yy NeatlsAtend tn
Pemmstiani ae fo" years ase the
[Mayor af Chester, Pac got his patiee
farke-and rounded up every Neamt
Chester there were situitt Giotto
sand tnareked them down tr the
southe a leider af Hat fawn td
sald, “de back Santty where Nea bee
Tons: wer wven't hawe yen here” More
recently the Mayer ef uti towns Pa,
sast thar na Neste shontt Hive hn tht
tevin rine tried to Aetad all the: Nexrens
out of town” .
Has the Negro a Chance in America?
Yes, We da have Nea tities tte
the Such, We have Ipmehing, we
aver goewnciis WME Sesih tanger drertak of
any Beh Chivas happenin sentin of tine
Moranalsasen Hine, Worse tans are
shsie. te gap, Moose: ponte ef thee enti
Tey Where Mey claim miey are get
te give yori mucial eg it, and aan
joule vealiy Waiieve they sare gli
Tenet Ml TE worse: shatnasd feepywen te yet
ete thuan boant ent te. yesth any thie Sou
What ehianes as ttneres tea goat heres at
Ameria! Ae gf
eww, there as the Tusd Pedi” sont
rentals titers is tease Felted Eo IES:
we dive a a peaetiond tiie and, ae,
fie phaetical qeesphs aia we he ent
doe face'faets. apnael Mee Tee tenet fae nat
ter TRIER Cain SEAS
Vncted States of Morte c tobias ation ns
freed nar atte, Phe Want adnd net rake
Newt Troe ath sonsgstueharal semtesnd
tents ated aiet tates Year free ate the
ROA ACE Te ther wat Suse ye Foe
AVN rer goon freee? Lact ues ates recht
devin teetie tek battia an at Whe
aiew't youth tren Vout faxes sit masnti<
Cent qepatse Mets aR thas went =
pevale Bt tei ous, pode ot ate Dt
Ley eens fie uD «soo gle af ell >
eceg See. Wee ate tha int pete be
fumtetn a ete woe Why be at
Tsk Sen atte wed tree” What Dat
Why the Negro Is Not Free
Venn nee: nee frag Boe cantens Chie e avai
Ten fist Qetteore Heats uniter bs nt
Seay cea on Mashnaseed hat mean
Wetted gate eat bee Lovtd auton wentel dens
tee the Newiee the Saag Sety at the ate
Se lepinent fa fash: order af etvtiin:
on. Perhaps the ‘Chigese may, do tt.
Bee et ae eee enon connie
The Danger of Mixed"Races
SoMa It fs aero neation af whel er:
Ree nace de feciert an fewer or the
ate (Face TRIER necieawet ade
hes the peets€ at all, Phe dancer dees
Bit cone Tres ee WME ener mae
the otiey foteer The center comes fret
Rew dpe detent amt at as, met te!
PN. Mat either af tae tates ue ener
donee, bat goatee thar the mixture |
Bf these frees Mbe, frie seemed bine
Taber tad tec fete tace Niet sant pense
[ee st me Ameri, $a are emanate!
fen wat the wate pertde Sk tbe
White feebie eativamiber Jott ought te
eng What will hop nie ota, nay tracts”
STLGT Wall mae en he pteeth et Seu res, |
We yin stay here wating at saP mean |
ERE San A Roane Bae eT roy
LYLE tis Be White peste rat
GAME tee Kenge Lon bene thet wheat pone |
Me Mat ge aitewtet sates Ves, nel
Sean Winthigate y steereastnid samt the
Reser beat wate v atsete esate oped ett |
the etebak ameye gt lean don't be a|
geil.
[Negro Mving in America." That de
what Uy are saying, {We wil keep”
them here und xe ther anit let them
aie out.’ Thar is"what most*of them
are xaying. at knter-racial conferences,
ant they are saying that » Sour people
Ris try th eajule yo, “Are Yoo going to
stay. bhre and Int yonrselvew be used?
Hy a dwecreasine birt rated an ine
ovianing death rate ME yet stay here Ie.
uwans The death of your race—the sule’
Felle af sotir race, There, no use dex
Peeiving Youraclves and there Is no use
our’ deceiving Mirselves, veith all the
Sond will in the world, with all ofthe
understanding In the werkt we cannot
do away with cendgsome that ‘inake
Moathn Sentaie ot Blltand: tll ane
Teliutation’ Gr seu, PPapte cannot
Asli thee dnstinets; hes cannot help
Wp Gemarenthele nerhs, and some of the
Wisest amd Ural people are very often
the peaple whe are most fled with
premdiee and with bizetry. You have
seon that yourseif anf.we eannot help
It we pannot stake 1 ont of pedples
What we ban dois to gale, ax Preat”
dent Conliize sad -the-psher dag, “That
Wee are dn he same heat
Preserving the Races T° ~
| New 340r people and our pagple are
0 the sume fist Sear want tw nrexeres
Yetie pentile: ced den't want the Negro
few to lte in Ager and TD want to
fecedae lug: deciles. Talc het want. dhe
White rare teas In America. We
Muive that interest am commen, In ai-
dittnn tether san ave Lshored nobly
Sid generate te holy us fine tn
[Aaecsene stil Ase att ee tes reallze,
rahat sou have ate 20h us and achat
pom ave meet ts un and te 200 te IE
hot an aig secitee of this problem
peat ar waly weiae is cwtning, to
spn but sete ariietie ated the tore
that gwate ful herbie seul pour out tn
aninntanst®: toe jas,
ee re
My trisnds, Ifestieped tonight tht
tutte Sasithernon would Tin here with
ne atl coldness year f mean Georses
Gordon lates, tig attorney for your
kreat fadvi, Severat weeks azo f
have bean aeked ty prepire an article
miodartes asd lets gyement, sad t
Wrete tee Meo Prte getter: him what
Watied te she ade? ieet him to give
Ine pune fee ta Ripe a beak Me
Sent tie (osu 08 appl Se thee Preste
eed at She Viute D8 ete> fort matony
feet ane tag sens Wand af that
Apher’ Was genaire ant Sinewres and
Tins oer: when Eoeahed fim te,
et hee Hay bagi aver ete whether oe
Bir cte contd be wath tis tankehe he
Bead nnne Wy cones area im
Hat thas sy} vets fegsaeat ape nt
Mie tere ed 2 Pea have a fomuant
ehh Ae wae. ae MENTE Amat
dave Wait he weet erncesd ane toe Saye 10
iis ees ET tie, AR OE
ponte te hab ot Mates owen Wass tho
crevaitest Mobs egies of otoaeed that
there Was der Ene ome euatenee:
Which cout Toei suse een Qeted him
Metal et Whe pte th eeand and
That te Natio hoe eet only
Wisteria
BOMBERS OF DEFENSELESS WOMEN AND CHILDREN WILL FIND THEY ARE ALSO BOMBING THEIR OWN— PRISONERS DISTRIBUTED AMONG POPULATION
EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD
with one drop of the Splendid Blood of Ethiopia in their veins
MUST READ
CONQUEST OF COOMASSIE
By ALDEBARAN
A stirring, gripping tale of an heroic African nation—A wonderful description of the story of Ancient Ethiopia—An inspiring vision of an Ethiopia redeemed and triumphant.
IN FIVE GANTO, EACH
A GOLDEN GEM OF INSPIRATION
Golden Arm, Graces and Prestige, Golden Soul, Golden Heart, The Conquest Heart now the African Heart Prestige Heart Heart. Each during a performance of the African Heart Prestige Heart in Ethiopia which is our greatest English performance in history. A beautiful and moving story of the brave people of Ethiopia. Have the brave women of Ethiopia read it and then come back.
GOT IT! READ IT! READ IT!
Conquest of the African Heart Prestige Heart Heart. Each during a performance of the African Heart Prestige Heart in Ethiopia which is our greatest English performance in history. A beautiful and moving story of the brave people of Ethiopia. Have the brave women of Ethiopia read it and then come back.
NEW YORK, Oct. 24.—I am informed that France has posted $25,000 for my head through their puppet, the sultan of Morocco. This unsportsmanlike behavior of France genuinely hurts my feelings, for I am relieved that the man who defeated Spain and forced France and Spain together to marshal an army
ASTHMA
To prove Asthma-Tabs will relieve you of Asthma and those terrible choking spells, wheezing and shortness of breath, we will send you a regular dose of FREE, FREE and postpaid. This wonderful prescription has been used by over 150,000 people in all parts of the country. No matter what you have tried our treatment has relieved many of the worst cases and costs nothing to the 821 Simply write Asthma-Tabs, City, Moz, and a 5-day hostile of Asthma-Tabs will be sent FREE and postpaid.
Save the Drunkard
(Written by a worm who saved her husband from the drinking evil)
My man is very good to me, so loyal, kind and true.
No never comes home really drunk.
And the Q. But sometimes when he "got too much, that I were dead.
For there is no sunshine in my heart.
When moonshine's in his head.
Some folks can laugh at such a plight of some poor drunken fool.
To me there's naught but aching heart.
And into his mouth there's naught, that I were dead.
For there is no sunshine in my heart.
When moonshine's in his head.
Within the garden of my life,
Love bloomed in every thought.
But now I fear, it wilting fast.
And I must naught it naught.
I pray before it is too late.
He'll think how off I am said.
There is no sunshine in my heart, dear.
When there is moonshine in my head.
I read the book "The National Curse"
Sent me by Mr. James:
And I used the "Golden Treatment"
To treat my sickness in my heart.
The seldom mundum underneath
Is freed from Satan's ensnare.
But there is no sunshine in his head.
Our hearts have sunshine there.
I gave the powder secretly,
and the dress and cling,
Oh, woman, do the same today,
The act you cannot rue,
Olive trees are dead,
Since that first aid I read,
In our hearts are floods of sunshine,
And no moonshine in his head.
Save those near and dear to you from a
sickness, and you can do it by cutting out this coupon.
Free Treatment Coupon
Free Treatment Coupon
Fill in your name and address on blank tiger
bills. Fill out the coupon at J. W. Haley, 214 Glenn Idle, Chicagol
Dr. J. W. Haley, 214 Glenn Idle, Chicagol
Dr. J. W. Haley, 214 Glenn Idle, Chicagol
treatment to prove to you that it will stop drunk-
enness in your form. You give it it in coffee,
or juice. You will stop drinking without
knowing why.
of 200,000 'mach' should bring such a small reward as $25,000. However, such as move on the part of France betrays idle real military situation in North, Africa; that the man whom they could not defeat with such an army they should try to capture by base treachery. It also proves the captainment I advanced in the early days of France's declaration of war against us that she would not fight a recording to modern methods of warfare and would resort, in sheer desperation, to a prize on the Riff leader's head, or to unfortunate punishments dropped in trivial villages when the French alphabets were not dropping bmbs on noncombatants.
Rude Awakening Is Due
But if France thinks that, thwarted in her attempt to subdue the Kliffs by force of arms, she can win the final victory by proclamations, encouragement of treachery, or the press, the French public are due to a rude awakening.
"It must follow that when your army persists, in employing tactics abhorrent to civilian order, in order to safeguard your interests, you must retaliate, in some manner. So, though not as wealthy as France, I, too, have posted a prize of $5,000 upon the head of every American aviator brought to my headquarters, dead or alive.
"I hear that six American aviators have joined the French aviation corps, and I have also learned from trustworthy sources that these boys made several attempts, but have not yet been able to leave the ground. I hope it is tried because as much as I am indignant with these children, I would not like to see their heads brought to me by my men.
Francëla Credit
As I have said, France is using the press as another weapon against us. Not that it matters much to us whether Europe or America, thinks we are wishing or losing, but it is vitally important 'to France to give the impression to the world that she is defeating my Rifflair; for France's finances are in a bad shape. Unleash the world believes that France eventually will conquer us, or do about to conquer us, her credit must go down, even below what it is today.
On looking' over the clippings gathered for me from the press of the world, I notice that all messages ennate from four sources—Paris, Madrid, Tangier or Fee.
Made-To-Order News
South America, North America, and the European continent, are fed by messages, signal and unsigned, from correspondents, an army of whom, safely lodged in luxurious hotels, are reporting battle accounts under the guidance and protection of the French intelligence service.
The names of towns, villages and hamlets in the Riff and surrounding country are unknown to the outside world, and discrepancies in the French reports can be obvious only to foreign scholars in America or Europe.
So in the French dispatches, reporting French or Spanish "advances," I have noted many humorous and absolutely impossible accounts, showing that the French and Spanish intelligence services, who feed the foreign correspondents with information, are themselves ignorant of the topography of the country. "For they frequently report, as French and Spanish "advances" what, to any one who knows the Riff localities, obviously, is a "retreat."
As the names of our towns and localities do not mean anything to the western or American mind, let me explain the result of the combined Franco-Spanish attack upon us:
When France, about six months ago, began to make preparations to attack us, my troops took the initiative, descended down to the low country, and captured 85 French posts. The strategic reason for this initiative was two-fold:
(a) The Riff country being dependent on the wheat and provisions raised in the low countries, nominally under France, we had to invade these territories and gather up the food supplies.
6. A. HAYNES (PITTSBURGH), J. A. CRAIGEN (DETROIT), F. A. TOOTE (PHILADELPHIA), AND WILLIAM WARE (CINCINNATI)
Committee selected by Presidents of the U. N. L. A. at close of recent New York Conference to proceed to Atlanta Federal Prison and present various recommendations in regard to the Association and the Black Cross Navigation and Trading Co. to the Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General. The Committee, with Mr. X. G. G. Thomas, acting managing editor of the Negro World, as Secretary, conferred with the great leader on October 28 and 29.
otherwise it would have been impossible for us to carry on our Warfare against France and Spain.
(b) We have always repaired our gun arm ammunition supply by seizing French and Spanish posts and denuding them of their arms.
So in plain woods, the warfare carried on against us during the last five months or so has been in what might be termed French and Spanish territory.
We captured these 55 posts and held on to them tenaciously until our labor brigade gathered up the harvest and sent the wheat, barley and cattle behind the lines. And as we have no object or intention of continuing the unequal warfare against the combined armies of France and Spain in the lowlands we are withdrawing, and will go still further into our mountain fastness, just as quickly as our men can send the body behind the lines.
This is the extent of the French victories over the Rifles, so ghostingly reported in dispatches emanating from Paris, Madrid, Tamarier and Fee.
But neither the French nor the Spanish sources dare to admit that in their battles to recapture these 55 posts in the lowlands they have paid heavy penalties before my men eventually executed these posts, for which we have no military use.
Both France and Spain will pay still more dearly.
35,000 Prisoners Taken
We have within our lines over 35,000 Franco-Spanish prisoners, and, in addition to the sources whereby we receive guns and ammunition, we have captured from the French and Spanish enough war material to continue to carry on our resistance at least another year.
But within a few days mature will come to our assistance, the country will be floundering and the combined French and Spanish armies will find themselves in a precarious position.
Against the Franco-Spanish army of at least 200,000 we have so far put on the field, in actual combat, no more than 20,000 Rifles and an equal number of Arab caviers.
Another point the Franco-Spanish war dispatches feature daily is their aerial bombardment.
My intelligence service reports that there are at least 55 to 100 French war planes engaged against us in dropping bombs upon our "cities".
The Franco-Spanish reports give hard accounts of the have done to our "cities" and "towns", but when the western or the American mind realizes that our "cities" and "towns" are made up of mud huts and trifles they can judge for themselves to what extent these aerial attacks against us are liable to injure us.
Of course, we have centers where multitudes gather at bazons, and our enemies never fail to utilize every opportunity to visit these bazars.
Since France started hostilities against us they have succeeded in killing, according to the actual report made to me, 215 civilians, and if our enemies see any reason to be proud of such a record we will allow them to enjoy the consolation.
In Retaliation
Much against my wish, because my people, made such hard demands on me to retaliate, I reluctantly gave orders to distribute over the Riff country the French and Spanish war prisoners we had captured. So today, every "city," "town," "hamlet," group of mid-rifts or isolated text, has its quota of Spanish or French war prisoners.
If the Franco-Spanish war phanes must insist on resorting continuously to this pastime, they will have the satisfaction of killing some of their own men in their attempt to kill Riffan non-combatants.
Mina's fine, thank you. It wasn't all alright. Do you know Dodsworth, Indication, search of Sleimach, Ditchich, Heart Plattering, Four Handles, biceps, etc. I did and in the same way. Don't mind you, com. I will do the job, and produce results, for you that I will send it. all charges present, by mail, or by getting rid of your stomach troubles, you may send me one dollar. How is that thank for confidence and fairness?
CHRISTMAS
Cathleguie Free
Fell of Good Things to Buy and Not
Life Lessons as holiday goods;
possessal Merry data, pictures, all
editions.
Book for Your Ticket Policy
ART NOVELTY CO.
2800-7th Ave.
New York
CONTRIBUTORS TO PARENT BODY FUND
(Continued from last week)
William Robateau, Livingston,
Guitemala, C. A. $7.00
S. B. Ternon, Livingston, Gun-
tenmala, C. A. 5.00
Sunflower Division, Kansas City,
Kansas 5.01
Stop Asthma
Choking, Wheezing, Gasping and Short Breath
Sleep Soundly
The First Night
If you are a sufferer from choking, wheezing, choking, wheezing, gasping and short breath you will be able to learn that your suffering and discomfort are not only a physical but a mental and emotional experience. You will be able to learn that your suffering and discomfort are not only a physical but a mental and emotional experience. You will be able to learn that your suffering and discomfort are not only a physical but a mental and emotional experience.
Sleep in Comfort
FREE
www.contributorstoparentbodyfund.com
E. H. Stickney, Byp. A. P. C. Hill Street Ave., Kansas City, KS
Phone and fax: 817-555-1234
The failure of France and Spain to handle these tribesmen (the Riffis) means more than appears on the surface.
The number of white men in the world compared with the fighters of other races is simply pitiful. A leaf in a forest.
The white races have ruled for exactly the same reason that a skinny little Indian can rule an elephant. And for no other or further reason.
We can rule only until the elephant happens to think it over—Los Angeles Times.
White Southerner
(Continued from page 3)
matter of time when that injustice will
be alleged and Marrus Garvey will be
paroled. (Applause).
The South Will Demand Garvey's Release
And I want to say to you that in my opinion and belief, if the white people in the South of this country realize that Marcus Garvey was standing not only for the salvation of his own race but for the salvation of the white race as well: if they realize that he had been railroaded into prison merely because he did not have a white face—if they realized what he stood for and what he meant, I believe that the South would rise in a map and demand that you grow leader he released and restored to you. (Great Appreciation)
There are some of us down there who realize that and we are going to leave no stone unturned to spread that. Your enemies, in your own race, have the help and support of white people; white people give them money; white people go and fatter them and hold it false hopes to their help; and with them and offer them social equality and put up money to help them and some of those white people are people of great wealth and influence. I want to tell you this: that man for man we can match them; we will run up for you and for your organization; man for man, as many as your opponents have among the whites of this country and they won't be whites who stay and in one district of the country; they will be whites from the North, from New England, from the Middle States, from the Southern Atlantic States, from the Gulf States, from the Middle West, from the Pacific Coast, from the far Northwest. It is coming and you will see it.
Garvey Shall Not Be Deported.
I noticed when I came in, the first things that struck my eye were some tags which all of you are wearing and I looked at them and I saw "Let him go." I want to offer an amendment—Freedom; we don't want to let him go; we want to keep him here to do this work. (Thunderbirds Applause). And my friend, if there is any horror in the American nation, I can promise you that when Mercury Garvey is free he shall not be deported. (Cloud and prolonged applause).
GOOD FOR EUROPE BUT NOT MOORS
European Theory Seems to Preclude Liberty for Black and Brown
By M. E. TRACEY
In the Pittsburgh Press
You don't help admonish Adolph E. Kram, even if he is brown and believer in Mohammad.
No doubt, we white folks and Christians ought to be willing for his discontinuity, not if lending more substantial support. Still, his genius, though of the pagan brand, challenges our admiration.
Somehow he seems to belong to the mountains he is defending, while our European brethren do not. Somehow he seems as though there ought to be a place for him and his somewhere on the earth. But that may be wrong. It certainly is wrong according to the theory of European statesmen. Their theory includes no such thing as liberty for the black and white races.
Their strong is that the world belongs to those who can shoot farthest and fittest. Demanding self-determination for Ireland and fraternity of Austria, they cannot think of it for Africans. Solutions, for the rights of minorities in Turkey, they cannot conjure such institutions for heathen tribes.
Abd-al-Krimei wants to rule by himself, wherefore he is personification grata. Such ambition must be grasped even if the warring does not frighten France in capacity to pay. So we behold Marshal Petain gone out to save democracy again, with all the instrumentalities of death he and his country can master. And we behold some brave American farming an army deponed to help him, which is horrible, perhaps, but nearly in line with the kind of neutrality George Washington taught. Looking over the map of Africa, one wonders how much more of it European nations want, and when they have gotten all they want, where the people of Africa will look for that tradition which we say is an immanent right. Supernatural justices European, perhaps, in lording it over their dark-stained cousins, yet that was the very doctrine that Europe denied when Germany pleaded it as her excuse to rule the roost.
Discovered America
A campaign rages in Paris to show that an Arab discovered America 400 years earlier than Columbus. And a fourth town is claiming the distinction of being the great Christopher's birthplace. This latest claim is the small Spanish Colonial community of Pontevedra. It is preparing to put up a monument commemorating itself as Columbus's home town, says the Detroit News. Pontevedra's action has exerted the rival Columbus birthplace, Cotton, Calyi Colos. None will admit the competency of the evidence on which the others base their claim, and all make light of Pontevedra.
TO PARENT BODY AND
ON last week)
tennis, C. A. 5.00
Sunflower Division, Kanagae City,
Kansas 5.01
Ernest Whitley ..... $2.00
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
Warren Barnes ..... $1.00
CIEGO DE AVILA, CUBA
G. J. Molins ..... $2.00
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
Samuel McKenney ..... $19.00
Send for Medals. Now
All persons who have contributed their $10 to the Black Cross operating and reserve fund and have not received their metals are requested to forward nanoics and addressing immediately to top officer of the Black Cross Navigation & Trading Company, 56 West 135th street, New York city.
Parent Body Headquarters.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
peace. Yet it is not the country that so vitally matters. It is the home and kind of parents that wield the greatest influence in shaping character, leaving the best first impressions.
Lam always enrages in conversation with young boys of the white variety with a view to giving them fairer ideas on matters of race. They are good prospectors, because it has advantage over them of mature years and wider experience.
Their self-importance is flattered, because to argue with a grown person gives them the status pro tem of grown-ups. They are in the formative stage, as they are of my own sex. I am immune to the suspicion of erotic interest.
It is time, well spent. Who can tell whether or not the boy of today will be the industrial magnate of tomorrow? Or ambassador, for example, to some Negro Government. Or any of a hundred and one things having a direct bearing on the welfare of our people. The possibilities are mean and vague, whether you work to the secure, faithful mindfulness, among the whites, or in social office, among our own.
The thing to keep forever in mind is the importance of getting in a strong first impression. It is half the battle.
Pep!
BLACK CROSS NAVIGATION AND TRADING COMPANY
S.F.
BOOKER T.
WASHINGTON
in this wonderful, inspirational book,
"Works of Divine Love." It explains why Jesus said,
"Woe unto people well spoken of by all men," Luke
6:26; and, too, it shows that True Christian religion is
common people. Mark 12:37.
A warning about the theory of Evolution
Col. 2.8 and the way any person
must be converted to become a true Christian, also the Biblical solution of the race problem, are all made plain and clear.
The reader will surely find a most remarkable book; because it contains uncommon and seldom heard Biblical truths that apply to every day life.
A most convincing and helpful surprise awaits the reader of this book; because its foundation is Jesus, who surprised multitudes, which is the reason why it touches the hearts of many, and proven to be a masterpiece of fearless. Negro literature.
Has 250 pages. Price $1.50. Sent postpaid. Purchase through any book seller or write.
ILL. H. JOHNSON, 6217 Loomis
You Should Burn Oriental Luck Incease In Your Home
This incense was used in all places of worship in as many as 200 works with twelve, the zodiac of Human planets. A booklet inside the box will tell how powerful it is and made in Canaan, upper Egypt, the city of Jacob.
ORIENTAL
LUCK
Incense
OUR WOMEN and WHAT. THEY THINK -taicany aro Amy tocquea Garvey
HAS THE NEGRO. SERVED HIS PURPOSE
Tate ONE ANIC A Be
IAT: the, Negro-was brought to, America against. his, will is’
“e coitimon knowledge; that he intends to remain in America is
™ — the deterthination of many’; but undér what condjticns and
+ to serve-what Parpose’are questions that do not secm to te con-
adered in the desire to stays. : «
Negroes were enslaved and transported to America years ago for
the purpose of doing the-laborious work in building up the country.
‘The couritry bas been built up, the slaves have been freed, and for
sixty years the presence of these ex-slaves here have.created 2 ptob-
lem, comlnonly called’ the race problem. Divers: have been the solu-
tions 'offered;for the’ problent; but {ip to.now nd rpinieet legalized:
anethod has met the popula? approval’of both. raced. ..
Some whités Say; “Let, the Negro remain hers ang graguallt work
cut his salvation,’yet secritly knowitig that by eonomic pressure
lie may be exterminated in-another century. Othiers'say, “Let him
g0, yet they offer no.recompense for his contribution to America.
sand no help to re-establish -him in Africa,’ In brief. white America
i$ heattless and cruél and, is not concerned about tlie fate of tfie
‘Negro because he has already” served the purpose for which he was
Drought here. Thercfore the Negro’s future rests invhis owti hands.
"and should be'a matter of deep concern to him at this time. seeing
‘he is no longer the ward of the nation,» ” :
Sone Negroes believe that dy miséegenation he will be absorbed
into the white, race, and enjoy social equality with his erstwhile
inaster. Others -lelieve that it is a crime to’ mongrelize the race:
and bydlRtive campaign and propaganda, af endervoring to get
white America to realize its moral obligation to the Negro. and
secure its aid v helping ambitious, industrious Negroes to return to
their ancestral home and-there establish a gayernment of their own
along modern fines based on their dwn racial enlture.
‘The advocate of this latter group is Marcuy:Garvey, who has made
_a thorough study-of the industrial, political and ecénomic Tile of the
Negro in America and is‘convinged that the Negro caw rise ne higher
thah his present statue-athat SP the underdog in the nation His
development i circumscribed by an overwhelming white majority.
whose prejndices and intolegance increase daily. “He cannot employ
himself and is entirely dependent of the white man for work (which
brings him bread and butter) and that work is of the most menial
_and for which he is underpaid. Even’ these jobs are being jeopard-
wed with the introduction of labor saving devices. Where twelye,
Negrocs were formerly employed to dig a ditch, now two white men
can derate a maching ‘yt rot only digs the ditch but shovels” up
the carth and puis sani@ into almotor truck, in less than half the.
tine. As the Wark Work obserter init currentismes |
“In the decade following the Civil War there was oné domestic
seryant for every forty people int the United States. In 1920 |
there was one domestic servant for every sixty people. Mechan-
. .ical progress*has made this reduction. In place of the work of a
“maid carrying, cleaning. and filling kerosene lamps there is the
work of engineers and linemen supplying electricity. Food is
|. prepared by manufacturers, so that the burden of”cooking’ is .
lightened. Pipes carry water that servants used to: carry. | |
‘Vacuum cleaners help sweep. The telephone runs errands. By: |
all these contrivances things are done which servants used to do. |
"90 that now. servants are rrot only lees in proportion than they |
_used.to be, but the life-of those that remain is far less taxing.” >
Electricity and moter.power are now doing the work of the Negro, |
and it is iinperativg that he-ereate’-his owt jobs, or face unemploy: |
ment and coysequent starvation. ‘Theldife of the black consumer is!
shért unless “he starts out immediately to prodice those essentials |
of every day life, which will take him out of the servant-class and |
at the same time ensure his livelihood: but the question of protec: |
tion lies in the establishment of a governtnent of his own, in Africa. |
strong enough to protect him in any part of the world he may reside.
‘Yeuly the Negro has served well the white man's purpese for |.
bringing him to Ainerica: and the enlightened wide-awake Negro |)
is now determined-to serve his own purpose, that of living and en= |
joying life as any other man, without limitations and without Ware i
rier against his development and progress. +
Who can stop the onward march of ten inillion Sons of Ham, ty!
nationwood and to pdwert - : ip
gm: 3 DU JAJA
x ¢ A Mohammidan Scientist recently arri rom
oe Seire, Range. “Rpsoiniit in Goeuittom, of Attica and
gab See Te
SaaS
q . Dept. By 200 West 129th St, N.Y. C.-
Peale a nck 1 Tek Morningside 8188
We Want 1,000 Agents
| a
| . eee eee eek
° SEND 510:
es Serer © 8 iy om
Marriage An a
‘Equal Partnership
‘The Protstant Episcopal * Church
House of B&hops detunitely rerpbces
Asha" from the marsiaze eorsspony.
Many married ladies liad already: re-
moved it from the rontine of daily
Ufe, commen xowme tolling them Cyt
if marrigge fe not An equal partnership
it xn much.— Arthur Bristane,
_ A Real Scalp Specialist
~ WALKER'’S SYSTEM *
| ano af tne etanet cod tae bet
Get the Right Person .
ss ae ee aoe
Consalt MRS. JOHNSON
7 _. 26 West 129% St.
"Sgn Sksoncnes eae Exeia08
Pinch of Salt’in Water
Revives. Exhausted Miners
| How a pinch of aaltin wyeidrinking
Mwatet “prevents the Sxhduntion’ 6!
| woFhera in hot coat imines and ste
piante wan told before the” stitute
86 Mining Engineers in fyondon by Si
doslan Court recently. A shnilne die:
“sovery wax: anaide by Prof. Neville
Mous of the Ciaversity af Bivmuicham,
He found miners who anicumbed
rapidly when working in a tempera:
ture of about 190 degrees “were able
to enduro It better when their arink-
tig 'Wate® contained even one-fifth ot
A per cent. of salt. Dr, J. B.S, Hal-
dane, an’ English phiysloloist, ex-
plained that during work at a high
temperature the body. gives of much
perspiration and. with tt a large
amount of ‘salt: to ths depletion of
salt the physical oxhauation Jn partly
due: " The addition: af agit in tho
drinking’ water mazes UR Tor me loss.
‘SPOILED BY FAMILY
1 ae %
No Fraud Practiced on the
Young Man, Who Has Lost In-
_heritance’ and Bride—Way of
Mixed Marriages.
Young Leonard Kip Rhinelander
who ts suing Alice Beatrice Jones. 0
New Rochelic, for annulment of thet
marriage lant fall, hax becn, dixinher-
ited “becaiise of hin marrlege. forniet
Justien: Teaac X: Mile, hia attorney
assérted before Justice Morachauinee It
the Supreme Cour at White Plains.
The attorney's réigprke wore made
uring argument ona motion by Fred
ertek TE ‘Clune, of Chirk. Clone &
Davis, attorneys for the defendant
|. wife, for $15.00 rlditional counsel feos,
Close told the caurt that ‘Tthinefande:
hag.a personal Astate of, more than
$300.00 ‘and fin Income of from #18000
to $30,000 a year.
Statement by Mille
Mr, Mills declared, however, that the
young taan's own éstate doer not ¢x-
cond $250,000, that he has an theome of
$16.06 a year, and that unen the death
of his’ clients father young Ieifine-
Lantler would reesive $309,000 over
which hix parent had ae power of dis
position, z re
Justive Morsehiausor, after areument
allowed $3,500 additional counsel tos
to dirs. Ehinekinlers attorneys. He
made the further provision that at the
close of the tri an appileation tue
Ani eXtra allawanee ayy be eritorained.
AU one pohit in Mix argument Atvar-
nes’Close for the Mofense aid that the
tefense hind a, trunktal of decumen:s
to prove that ip froin had won conn
mlited, by Aira, hinskinver.
“So Nour detenwe In ter toe nt that
the deCendant isn't of Neen Biya.
raid Justicn Morschasner, “lt that
the wlatnit knew Mt even before the
marrhages*
“Lam, got siying: thegs rgeh fs te be
the detinse.* ropiiod Me, Crass, “int
Lo cAgmt, very Well stop sour ttonwr
from drawing coielustons:”
fore Fistice Morsehauser November.
THE CHILD'S TRAINING
The Home and Not the
State Is Responsible for
for Upbringing
ge MERRIER TA VINTES DAVIE
DPR ae ba aah ee eRe Bee CAEN Ch)
President Coolidge very reréntiy, 1
Lin adress to the dilesater to the
Hintorngtionst Convention of the ¥. M
Je. A. af the Untied States and Canad
jeatted the attention of Mie work te
[the fact that he homin ant noe the
Gite he romponsibte for the upbrine-
[ing ofthe child, We asa tace srouy
[must pause awhile art give set
[thet ant contortion to wt dat
AK parente to the THINE KeNeratten.
LEspeciatty those af ng whe tive in The
He nited States of Aterlen and ty the
tarce cities of thin country. ‘The mas
[Jorits" of us aire wbinkine eur respon:
[sibilities and, placing them wren the
ieachers In ihe public achoolss We
[seni one ‘ehuldren te, these neko,
Honving alisext their entire training,
Lnentatily, morally and physiealty, to the
[carious teachers aNere, feeling thst
when see have ivan our ehibieon food
clothing and shelier—sending them to
Sunday sehont and chureh wecastonally
sathat we haye done our whole duty
and the State If rewpansihte for the
reat, . oe Ye
the Mrects of every city and town
aid wang Villants are full of spect:
mens of this nexlert of heme traning
“Many ef these Younes people we come
In contart wifh are.graduates of Insh
schoo and colleges, Init thes are taek =
ing in moral atomina and eotninen (v9
Iiteness. If we meet an exceptionally
fine Young nan or Young Woman whore
language ix choice, whose ‘manners are
Mawless and whe ix considerate of the
rights of olbers, you will find that
that young person'a Rome training has
not heen nezlected. A chill Isa sacred
trust committed to the care of the pit
ents, ‘Phe molding and shaping“of the
child's charseter should! begin tn its
Rfaney. The habks are formed and
stmengiioned At an eurly age, and an
the mind Js developed and cultivated
ane parenth should guide that mind
Wich ax much care and rolicitude ax
you guile and support the. firxt tens
of the babe in its Infantile efforts te
Walk. .
Ip tenderly caring for the child ti
every way until ft renches the age
when it hall enter school: and then
feeling thal the responalbllity dn parsed.
oh to the teacher In a great mistake.
With the proper home training tho
parents can make ft much easier for
the teacher. The hours out of school,
the contact with other children both
lia and but of achoo! wiuat be cheefully
looked after, and as the child grows
elder the Kind of books that the chfid
remGe: all theee. things hive. a- great
pad wonderful influence upon the fu-
ture life and usefulness of the child.
‘The parents’ duty. goee’ not conse
ston when the child becomes a man or
» woman, bet rather incteases as out
of your. qretter experience yeu, should
pavieo your chid What trade er pro-
geasion er avesation tm life te choos |
Dent iisist om bis: being = doctor,|
hawever. When all his inclination and)
talent mabe him desiress, of being 0
sng 9 resonator when ove bas.a-|
‘whet abe has.
whys, pe) fe de m trajesd mores,
Aantet them to be that Sor. which they,
ment Guatve.tb.be_ Tha row shed have,
and the wortd “wat bp batter for your,
MEETING DISCUSSES’. |
| NEW SEX RELATION
Anvoverwhelining fear of Wotan,
deep tmthe nowt of Man, makes him
tragically helplexs and inadequate in
|the. face of her growing power. Bo
aarerted Dr. Beatrice Hinkle, eminent
rayehoanalyst, in‘discssing "New Re-
lations of Men and “Women to - the
Family" at the, first riational confer-
‘pnce on ‘modern parenthood : which
opened in the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria
fyider the auspiées of hte Chita Study
Asnociation of America, >
|. Moro than 600 women aind » few men,
reprenenting many States, attended the
first acenion, ‘The conference continued
for m couple of dayn and was atldnénsed
py" prominent educators and writers
gn the conclunione of present-day pays
chology In regurd to child training.
_ Speakers at Closing Banquet
Dorathy Canfield Fisher, the novel-
int: Angelo Fated, author and educator:
Mirlam Van Waters, «referee, In the
Juvenile “Court, Lex’ Angelos, whosa
book, “Youth in Confiiets* » has “just
caused a stir, and Dr. C. W. Kimmins
Gf London were the speakers at_the
cloxing hgnaquet. An nstitete mad up
‘of cantorenees, Ieeturex and damon:
sirationis followed, the conference, Inst~
‘ing from October 22 te Xevember 7.18
fisserintion headquartyye No. 51 West
Seventy fontrthy street.
Dr. Hinkle, wha ix author of “The
Kecgatiang of the Individiat.” sia men
ave fit a panie bechuse of woinen’s
striate (or greater freedom, and thai
the only sulution many males cout
offer Was “a fruitie appial tw other
men to bentir themselves saul fy to re=
turn to the, Rood “old days wher man
Max lord and master and wartcn did
Rix bhdding bundy and trembttingly.
‘They hoon to fall te Kee, whe sat:
that the present condhdion go the’ dl-
ret auioumne af niascullne was. Wotne
pn thomneelves age bigeeat conflet aver
the rival elahnte ef creer cond fanlly
andl have, tie Way fea “a stu th
of the problem, she ated. ~
A now relationsésip, hase om frank
news, ix already: in evidence between
the sexes, Dee Winkle siete fn that
napmen whe are fat adajuted Gr mother:
hood have dared yeast to pretend dee
vetion. t the rake, Als men are ex
Tirana gree instead eer ee nds
family responsibil, she believes,
“Prychological Weaning”
“vor ewrey myther canes the time
when abo ist cease terteatl tier sett
“precious tambe In pabtie nnd tuek him
ined at nleht, ptophatieally stated Be
Leta, Hullingswenth, assistant peas
foxsny af ediieation at Cotumbie Ua
Vinsug, Mhesntwke on “Getting Away
from thet Rants" Msuehsbogreat
weaning.” inereperty mannged by Dare
ents, often catisex xerinus eaacn of
homerivkness whieh -mgy develop into
felon misery aut futility for ent |
Jren,taheewarned, Ske advised pars!
mug meters expertly, ently te eultte |
(ate jfnterésts ether! then thar elute!
ten. we «|
Relieved of peany former Lane tins
yy Ue sehinal, ehureh anit the ike, Ore
canis ean eoneentrate ott yore pe |
ant respensitalities whieh ne other 4a. |
Fitution ean perfor, sfad Tr, Henest
2 Groves, prafessmr of sachat relence
(C Baanten Eanvesity, He thie tatd abe
gition shuatd be, he said, te diteet ,
wtistties of children, te stiwmukate then;
oy engin atherr pretest! porsttaligten «
NEGRO WOMEN LOYAL
TQ AFRICAN NATIONALISM
Will Ricora the. Names of
i. Traitors z
1 te tne te nating, alhensh 1 Be
is beth thar meaning ated fverieg S17
to life. ‘Phe Haht of her eve as at:
avayn the test te rite anit eften the dst
te sot pan tuan'e dav af tril, She
Wlelds a newer mareteers.ve fur than
ssRogifns in arguments or courts a
lant appeal in authority. *
The. woman cen bike man's whole
nature under her contrel, She becwmes
what sho lige been called, “the acvinity
of infaney* « Mer smile Js itn muiehine
her word its mildest law, untit’sin and
he world have handened the hears,
Thus it ix OYese virtues particntarly
dovelaped in the women, of the U.N:
JA, riako them a powér for Rood and
Prepare them to capry out the prin-
ciples of this grand organization ant
to uphoid the hand at oir Rreat Leaiter,
tho Hon. Marcus Garver.
In spite of obstactes, and treachery’
which are operated dally by wicked
and malicious men of our tare to
overthrow the xreat work that haz
been’ already accompilrhed by ont
leader, we women sre determined to
are that the names of such individuals
Be recorded m history that poaterity
eRall ree’ and be adie to deel accord
gly with the Geacentants of such
mae; even untorthe third and fourth
qeeeration. ”
It ta our Guty to demard of oor men
siheerity.and Joyalty.to auch @ grand.
and mobic cause ang to stand loyally.
by mon of our race who belleve in the
clevatiqn of their. women and the gen-
cra! aplin ai the race throws tha:es-
tablishment, of a government in cur|
mothétaga, Africa.
p SOC ont
. Sst, aac ae 3 - oe mes ee .
eeu, TACT. egtice or gure, ut pear, Si on ot Roe oe ee a ee
ae TAT Guero em 8 oer ee tt FA LSpaae anne w. sagan ;
Sec Hes BERS CRAren saber: V MARRE AED Sn Mee one
ET Ie Tiedt Atilous 1ocOBAUNUFT sour: complenion® ) ~ |riesen eooa ime your Seciety Pag" as
CAE sh iat Scars Sar | Regs Ras AGT
r «81 182-Glee ene to your’ lend) %
; SOCIETY FACE BEAUTIFIER | | cine sii? 2 ietgeie au Sattar ge
Fos eat agcenet co ctene | nest Hi tbe ae aa ee.
+ OF If BAST TO APPLY. CAm IT LIKE COD CREAM. » = wre te is
y Bacamen gvea‘ogking. "A8 ine akin beuine fevhrianien we ove oo
DSIRE fer a brianiar skins Dent tek cold, withered, ? oar encecemewnans ete cenrniN acento
SAREE MR Rhein Mimwrticeg FreL ow COGFON ond PP oe matencceeannn
MAIL IT TODAY! = a ow a ined searing tists Ciba’ or Soult America cond maser,
: -
e 3
Ww PROVEN WAY |
TO STOP FALLING
HAIR and DANDRUFF
f By, Dandriaf, falling hair,itching scalp «|
i Kad Nand baldness are ‘enemies to scalp
. 4a 9M Whealth and the growth of long,
“BR LQ Bp lustrous hair. Scientists admit
B Fe fj they are ‘germ’ diseases and.to *
0 Lp Fass *y, cure them the germ must surely
Eh be destroyed.
arr” - a - i
|, There's no longer reason ” germ life, that they attack
foe having poor, unhealthy © only diseased tissues, tends ||
scalps and dull lifeless “to keep the scalp free from |
hair. It hes been proven dandruff and: itch, ‘allay |
“that MADAM C. J. WALK- falling: heir, enrich the |
BRS WONDEREW, HAIR < ecalp, stimulate growth
.PREPARATIONS are di- ' .and make for long lustrous f
rectly oppoved to hermful - tysir.
USE MADAM C.d.. WALKERS \ f
WONDERFUL HAIR fous
Ww f m -
ONS “A
er a Me 7 |
Bt ee ON
deme, Sees Sere end ty met ia rn Me
ita es ss Sed
Bho Mans Col Waiter Nig Co. EGS
-Civilizaticn Founded
On Self-Mastery
L Raontandbon-=se eigpiaatinn'aga
bavesin (umded ino neté-maatery.
‘The better cur control of self, the
higher will be the type of vividization.
That our civ ization is in a shaky
Seadillon, Soaks EE Ok A he oe
“that we five largely slaves to ote base
fered ior trieieltien ial, gf the une
ledgaetder Unto that pale aig Gan
RO ME NGRLeOiGINEE, obey cmeiey
Must ats. RegR UPC dphtoEL Saw
Taeee, rin foods, sauimes, pecan,
eambiing, pelitieat power what tare
they all bat glméracka as compared
With the great realiies of Wit One
does net conden them wholly, on
(bn. tutita. siileny, variety abd -cotor-te
cour existence; but there are tee many
Mlle elise Ines aie aan a
GULen wih ohne ae ate thee AE
sat ibe gs
‘Imperialism Digging
1p Oi ee ceemn none
There leevery reson te belies that
tip, Biffiane will stewed an. dafenting
[the Ereneh Imporiatisis. They have
Slreaty eritnced ihe Syeaninty arms be
Ja dfemmanted Inte, The Krew have
_ironisie Jin Serie beatles hatin tWesr
| hands full, witty debt aiestuieernend
ater embiityetuena, "Theneh Rrit
Lain ‘iees mot tke 1 nee Ute prestige of
timpeerisliege ee damn im Afra, ber
mused with eanee 4x 00) bitter, tht
thie seer: esp. tee ser Ale rin
Tietorinus Oiatgh “the Kregel defeat
| inne Ieeptee: her wh. sithaert ‘pooped
bin the: Haat tos revnlt, “Ebie La aly. one
Fesampin a how importation v= help:
Sie na GE awn graves Patty: Wathen
le Sey
Do Bankers Sympathize?
Te peu rege Ht temporary abhi
athaiy funni sap ante tie anadtions
‘tte eieated hye atetdeetts ba ele ok
Arsen ieninet needles ted fnnds-=hy
Heine seit rs pentealated shewhn and
Stapeepiry iments tieinush bMuaudors ast
hye thanechtbess dejwemitern wh eset
the Manher to paw tw Me,
Ts the Teantien's attitandg teas
euctumen ss Man iets note safe Mian
iniseene?
Bo he mor oniisertatfin ad unféet:
fing than bors stminarietie? Mote at
fish than he ts altewtstie?
AW these driest ute skerwan the “pases
fesse ef fatthaths: and eatin one 1
Mentor whether hitman relateas hh
few ecenteatly any different in boa
tig tiem am ane ether kine nt fsmess
Pere tinec Anwar eT
A big taazeath of the werlls great.
fest aiet mined usetut meh have been
time hey, Who an’ ther yeuth Ineked
Fieerat taining sad prot opperte
ities, x
Uy thea’ daily sive and dy‘ tiete
npenitivent achievements, they offer
ideaniestiole sinew wt the valle of
A souk matleks taming and bree
Edits dedioonns 7
| .
| ;
ap
Wis
: £5} ’ }
;
CP > RY
} oe TA caon
(ee
picasa
i a7, ae,
§ i PF S775 ta
* OB rang Yate ccs pesca Nee eaten
rrapettannae, coe rae .
pee eres comet aay
Sia se, Sint, airing
Seat Se ele et
Summits Sie, onre
Be ie ot cra sacri ergs
al ectentite tonto (het Res Bad marelows seo
Re sate hh Seer auras ma
SA Pea sexe wate oreseeemek
“Ee, RH eh ae att et at
Fe ee Se ete reeacee
amie ste Restate eee
Bah nd foetus ae te
ee pec ne aed es
teh hice ached
Aare ee goat tee mee
Se ee ;
seus. putin neconrestinn ai rich
Magne, thotste nernaration .
=
mer
Afrerticn in the Bye. copy, le. Agents
Me ite Roth! Wilycroat os meena
Weiecumit 2i2) Pelton, oegekize (i. T:
SINE! Binh igh Etat ere
i rete tha dotek, Meet it:
Fen Cidtnk Paanmes: Nie Faasme Rinowton
ADVICE TO THE .
; EXPECTANT MOTHER
By the“ Black’sGross Nurses of
A pregnant woman is espociully*iia-
ble to suffer many terme of dyspepsin,
nervous troubles, sishplessnens, ete,
Mornhik sicktiess ts the most cominon.
UThe frst thing necessaré at such time
is to avelt althishly sensoned and ried
fom,alve ntrume twa-and-voftes. Eat
Lsht stuk shuple “Mpyert ab 3 o'clock
and_ne later tn 6. Die Jule of
Hlefious reduced with Sater will xome-
[times preve sory comtertunt, om Het
powdered mdanretiy aL heitbiid, tiken
Permanent retier, i
Ava caine or ane ather ‘presanre
The woth Inesely, fir many cites this
“Will frotent all stomach dixturbances.
CTig natuge’s mediemes, Now, Natnre’s
mintiptnes aye excigkawe in the open aur,
aweupsitiay at Rouselutd duties, AC
Hie sume tlie da niet overwork, your:
se. for children horn af overworked
Gees ae taiinke ane ses
pansy “Atcteactit te rertatn thatthe
SXDOsHNE meatier shieithd met be fool
Ishly Wley and, on the other hand, tt
is enally veptaly that they should
he relteved fent Iabarione aesupationn
Mint esbieugt aad unttt theni for easy
dotivers, Plsasant tnd sneotl phystead
amt intellerinial -emctnentltanshewever,
wil nef only de'ne berm, but positive
ov
Sleeptese@er. bs ment dikely te te
sone BE aneareeet Uviis, ath te be
preventéd and cured Lv ti appesite,
A glass or Uwa of cont water diaigien
Mowly on going to hed offen hulpe one
te ce ta mlesp: se deed bething the
fave nnd hauls And (et, or lhe tepid
nity Tenth om gol to hed, wid gentle
Perenisstoth eyven hye am attendant wath
Wotas at the tant aver the tack tor a
few mtimies dn vetteins, ta secnne
Seat segs oe eat re arate ae se
Verely VaN Hie mind nthe evemunge |
The Unterrified Bangs
delin entre: Benge. ‘Phew are: *
tbr ruth ane ae
Sas kse Phy AL peo, wnt pe
Ato Magid Sf mae,
Birth Control.Called Crime
Chyructerizing Vie «propaganda for
bivth control’ “a crime against woms
Janhoo@.” Dr. Ellzn M. Mosher, oldeat
[nrsctining woman phyalelan tn te
United States, unc women ‘members
jC the Brooklyn Chamber, of. -Com-
meres “io “raise your hand againat it;
Ramp ent Uhis vielone thing
De, Mosher was one of nine apeak-
crx at an all-woninn dinner, ats ghe
Lrookiyn Chamber of Commerce held
(% colobeate. the achtevementa of
“Krookiyn womeit in professions and in-
dustry, = a
Pte wleinun peopaganda for birth
control ix doing immense harm to the
young wemen sf this countes.” Dr.
Mosher declared, “Irie ruining the
lives of wamen who should be mote
ers, anid wha well wake up tao Inte to
realize that they have lost thelr most
stolons heritane, *
"Theve can be no excuse for this
luith control prapakunda. Those whe.
perhaps, shoukt hive thin Information
Will newer Ket it, and ‘thone who get It
are the fnea who ghouldn't Rave It.”
Dr. Mosher’s vigorous denunciation
Wet with, scattered upplause’ among
tiie S00 women at the dinheFQ—~
No mere man was nilowed inthe
Aining room with the exception of
Ratph Jones, sweatdent_ of the Brook-
lyn Chamber of Comnicres, who wae
permitted a few monients to welcome
Ue women. ‘The nine mddresaes bY
Whitten whe Rave bean unuaualty aue-
cosxful ‘In ine ontatanding fleldn of
avhlevement denit with the naw’ op-
jurtunities for wamen In each of there
lines, innit the ahatavien to De overcame
{f women are to conpete eucceastully
it seins ~
The Value of Mother's Care
~ “WORLD OVER"™
Big $4 Value $1
sine 340. poetage..Speciat
Syoatmnent ana’ algen Oil, #182
Vare"ippe Raves Side: temple
titettor sale! Rta’ #3, Plas
fustsaes, Shee wats ed te
MADAME. RHODA
130 W. 139mh 6t, MY. C.
fa aM times
FREE boon
ge haere
Daa
eee
ie eee ney '
A-PLEN TO THE AMERICIN PEOPLE
os TOEND VIRGIN ISLANDS SHAME
inition, in the ei of Justioe and:Fairplay, Mist heed
* Regime Which Ha$’Reduced the People. to Semi-Staveryand
, Economic -Ruin—Removal of George W. Williams, Judge,
a Propaganiist, Asked For—Dignity.of AmericasDemanis Ie |
INTERNATIONAL ms FOR ae AID : THE PARENT ro
Universal Negro
_ Improvement. -
- Association _
$50,000 |
* The Esrent Body, Universal Hee Imprévement Avecciation, now makes an appeal
its members, divisions, branches, ters friends to to support help-
ing to rajee Fifty Thousand Dellars for liquidating urgent demsnds on the Associates
Tor the: promotion of its work. 3 “ee ane ar
The expense of running the Organizaifon: for, the good: of the ie tremendous:
a work inact be done snd current demands must be taken care of. The Sight
Mer Ais's vedertion oa coy cons snd must be borne by members of cur-race.
lo mood pions) sow move than aver to cair's on the sree! sreeniantion Marcus Garvey
"scouivete 80.50 ict arrheve i Mieeediatety: “Thace heen give we $10, $05 em
Z a ss
‘te hip an. be-sent ‘te Chancelies, Negro Haprore-
liediaaney poner 6-3 Saws te oo ame tes, Thee Sas Goes
. ae NeshceSs Rite mes -ooeeting Sit to arnt: dors RS gq
ated tkisete wa ne hg Alin age ocak ane :
PE Ra Ee St nay a Mig
RCN Re so ae? a a rea eee, a
EO die its ari ae PI Ie 3 in ala ian = tata ae
EL Re ee et ee me
ad aE eae ee Ly nna pM be
: = ars 77
[+ BY CASPER HOLSTEIN
President VirgisTIolands Congressional
et oun:
tate peade ok a at have pantie
ines the Gongvers ot the Cited Staten
Peon £ eartorace uauvure proving
quiredcDanish Inandn of St, Croix 3
‘Thomas and St. dehn's, until such tine
SS the pabbe Setare of tacts inode
fauntes .
Under that Iesisiation, ae interim,
islands was put Inte the dunds Of the
other Im the gavernor's chair, Mvery
Seticil dorucenat eotnting: AWE kee
A Remarkable Home Treatment
|. "Given by One Who Had tt
sdurcular und Sub-Avute Theametism. 1 |
fuffered an ory these whe are thus at Hl
Mileted know for over thrar years. tried Bl
‘ty Sears old, “aia ‘che re i
Pan
a ae
“Et Bed Kharp Puine Like Lichtning
Tastcl newlee Thro ty ote”
*F want every nufferer from any form of
abe ceric oe ann tart
Yalue of my imprnvedt Sitoniee Trent ment
See ier eet ay
Pi a eal pa rairs
seule eG ceaetes teeta firemen
a Se rerear tg dersaeta dans
Beers art ain eT eye
eae ehiralan dnd tack
jeara He ausaoon, t3h, ersten iad?
dee, Ssanen wre ice cnemeat eve
ffx letter hed \desiznated it quite
frankly, down fo u recent ported. xs
thé “naval government’ of the Virgh
Island” of the ‘Enlted States. And
even’ the: very" recelgtly Isstied “Gee
graphical” Dietionars” “trasned ty the
[United States Department Af, Com-
merce “kn deserihes It, | Yet the offl-
chifs af the Navy Department, from
the Sqrretary dawn ty fhe petty den
pushers a the Mlinds, ave teoicicty
Jind’ disingenuniislydeckering that
Jhere ty ny sich thing as a navel Rows
evnmenit inthe Ylrgine tsketds,
2 The redxon for Te oxtrieh like pte.
Conse in ter bee fei tin the fet tha
the people of the Vasin, [stands
white and Wied atike, dislike the naval
resime whieh has intradaced theri-
fonatgre prejudice In the. bstonda in
Ty mont torutal ated eynivat fof, ex:
chuting nfitteen-twhucietis of My wine
Ulation of wating ise, from the exer=
else of the suffrage thier the absurd
pretense Gi enforcing an Danish tw
FGihiel vw shectflealiy’ provided et
fit should des abrosbed in 117—the
Wry sear when tee navy tank aver
ihe aditinistration ef the isfiands
Freemen, Rights Outraged
Under the naval offielits, the mist
siementary rlebts of ffecmen ina
Aemeeraey, haves teen outraged ini
‘trampled = sgn. - Kalitta have beet
fureazed fed tainted ax In aaiep
TMlath, for stioply declasing that there
sir tn eH oveenon Hh te Hat
“iW Gor mildly Somes the that a toratal
iltee Aftieer iwhw Nad tolinientsty a
Saufied a ley should sitter the bait
pealaltes. for Ils eawardle erimes th,
sosne es tie deymatatinny the Naval
Provest Aarshate court has exerityed
criminal Jurkatietion despite :th® eon.
Hest there 48 tw “naval resume.” Jn the
arate, the ponte of the Wie
EEGMaine tala “he sie pete pioiauets
Shavit that Mey arenet citizens oF TF}
tnlted Stites althoush thelr suns were |
congeripted fate the army” amd nes |
in" war time and thelr joperty Gs)
Nee) Inpeace time, just ax stew |
they were citizens. *And certain eaves
fully selected portions of the Congtl- |
nition aml Laws of the United Staten!
like the Ith Amendment, the Vole!
seul Act and the Tariff Tawa, ave!
pansttied ax applying te ghem,
Islands Economically Ruined
Keomomically’ the fylands have been
vckedl and ruined of set purpnne.
Nexlected and impaverished with x
Killing drought whieh lasted for three
vrais, with, wages stay te thfrty cents
ner day -and a “workin poojnlathin
Soe tre Merete cent Sete ee eee rte
from-treland after. the famine of “48, 2
(ix.was clapped on thelr land which
five’ fimeg-an fildh am the tand tax o
proprerous Ports Rico. When the out-
raged .cltizenry “¢those. who “Wad. .the
vote) elected to the’Cofontal, Couwell In
it. Croix natives who werd pledged to
undertake such limited reforms as
[were . feasible ..under °their cuplounly
curtailed legislative rights, the naval
sovrrnor attempted to, folst’ upon the
Counsell, its members, to curry ont hix
autogratic wit, foreigners who: were
neither nativer, of the Islands noreelt-
zens’ of the United states. To the
Counett's retueat to"admit these aliens
an members gf the law-making body
the Royernor replied by diswolving that
oily + we
‘The Virgin tstanders in edisequenee
demand ¢he abolition of thly Naval
government ofa tropleat Yependency
and venture to point ont to Conaress
ue duty consistent wits [ts.own dig~
nity, urging the fact, that ‘when "the
present ofeaBie act under-which the
Navy rples in the finds wase spect=
Heatly: wtutiad, hye the -Cangress-te be a
feuymrary makeeshitt that-body bound
iiaeg¢ tmplieitty amd explicitly te take
up the setoeras lark of tegishation for
the Islands ane providing 'thew with)
dat “Repubtican farm of goxeramenc
whieh the Coustiution declares, cnt
every Inch of the United states is en-
titted to. That. of couggg, will pat at
ot Naval oftleils ithe stands and
the sek, paliticnl and econemte
buses whlch flow from that faet. Ant
Tt is the reason why dhe‘personnel of|
the Naval rgime tusists that doesn't
existe 2
Tn 4 rayont issue of the “tatimete
sun SF Goorge, Washington Wile
ams, a Nawal otfivkat. whose plays
faunliat grdoe tuo not heen “abated one |
MC "hy hie elevation to. the highest
Jridietal wiltier in the Iskinds? goes on
Nike “Little creminy ‘Tueker™ to sim:
ie We suger and ascribes all those
S41 scin Anh dermtedies whntt taboo? fered
mnider ths American (hts 1e “suckafistn:
ramunigs, and parlor bolshedaks.”
In fet, he calle they everyting ‘Int
childven of Gor. Wagh, that ix perfect-
ie rataray tat, one teh. suacent
Mr. Willlann’ Ssuperiers ghat In the
interest af tisir en, iGfotatban’ they
Shoukl curls'the exuberance of his pen
for it will damage the credit. abrost
vt of the: Navy Departinent atone, Wit
of the entire: American upeple ie it
Shiaht came tbe uiverstend ” that
hose whe desive that the Constittt att
atti Aalipad staten edit tbl ngeptineh
fo thie in Ia eitthiety are Tivaiy sense f
indesitable human materials for in-
‘orporaibenmdyin the Amerteah Com=
rosinvealth,
Virgin Intanders nina. vagpocttunty |
efuse to acrept Mn, Williams's quer |.
Xegetieal glosx upon Ameriean deta |.
ravy ax the true Shnon-Pure author |
fed version of the same, ‘There 1x a
wuireemtnleed twee sotrene= at inter |
wretation hehe up the stream, to wit,
he. Congress and the “people of the! }
“ited States" And ta them we con-| |
jlently appeal In the Interest of tatr|
ay, decenes, and democracy to rid!
ha-people af the, horrore of this Naval |
uverdinent which I and isn't at one| &
asthe Mania ‘tne: ree
SHAME OF FRENCH
“DEEDS WN SYRM:
APIS TOVEN
Ree pepee Mee were nae eT aan Ue
siexpite n solemn promive te stay oll
deapite she bitter protest ef the Rpt
teoble.agulint ang form of French eon
Tal Whatever: naa dectite wheelie an
Lact warnings wf nira ealuat ih
a hae now Tal worste w large part of
Brent ely, ond sieaieeyed at Jniat
Thesinaat liven There wait he ay po
Albis doubt on any cofetioxe polnts
They pre weltien In the record,
ira, the uration uf rence pret
trex! et
“Franige and Pedtate, tabi stoning
waar angnin the Turks In Western Asi
and dleeperatety Inurl jiscenbl tor ate
tough to bring fie auitive populates
of Syria. Palestine and» Mexopotnmis
Hints the war upan le AlHes’ side. «Te
Mo this, they proiiised these matlye pen
“nlattons indeprrtences Ht Was write
fet Gramve arid 1 revel 4 falloens
The aim which Fraate and Greet
spetecihs tinee’in gvtese de peesqenetnes: ta
the East the war let Juese by German
[ambition be the esompiste: and. tlnat ibe
oration’ of the peoples se long oppressed,
ie the Turks amt the estalijxhment of
Natoma Governments and Administra:
Stmnarriai theiy suntinrity, ten te
Ils lee sn -Te¥ 0" ehiiew atin heute
twats .
‘Ae it "Nuthonal Governmente a
steve cluaeo™ wore Bot sullen eft
jte terns thle atatement of alm sett
tin tn eat
“ln Giler 46 gife effect tw there Ine
Tentlons,. Featies ju (levat Retain
have aerend do encourage sand assist
the establishment 46S athetal Gavarn=
HAL ail cAnibaTsivaftoan ia Moric
and Stenupatunita and tn the tergltorien
‘ehiln thoy are pmiveeding tv liberate,
sid thoy haveasro¢d To Fetuxiize sult}
Corgrinwontn an wian nv they aPe ettecte
ively entalilghed* :
Fiespiter-thrae explicit wwmaiaek, a|
tfonh. nem marched. ta. Damier
within Cour ssbniie of Wie formation
the first Syrian’ Government and de+
strayed Ht
stern Ne UC Near SANT one
nitter ts Ueomel| contra
‘The -Byetan eangeens. whitch met at
Damascus wishin a feb months after
is enn nf the wae was a otfletal aa
ts Tepreventitive ds any Government
i) any of the new athten made by te
wun. “IL wie cievted by those clectore
Swosen hy. the ‘eyrhine.themmelven, It
ie old days wf Muelle le a thet
chresentatives In the Turkish Valine
nent, This cungeras nat only alfemed
he’ lnfepenitence of Syring M0 1K ny
loved Mat it Nad reason to fear French
inheriting tnskedt in the nronerad fa
emitted ti Ha declarations off
jay 2 TB. aL atthed this) mani
TU i i ATR ap ela
jalniet by the emer toverneanit bi
ny part whatever af mur Syrian conn
Pe AN refane Cet he hou weate
or busch, ana TH rium tee
ny vircumstinces or in any place. ‘
Necretheinat, dernite. this, maniterio||
nid despite French prambies te con-|'
nit the “ftee shelve ef the. native]
oputatinng.® France moved Inte Bpein|
‘Third, the auestten of a specific aad
(ficial warning: | . ¥
‘The Crane-King commission wax an
{ficial commision sent to the Near
ast at the time of the PéaceConfer:| ¢
pee and with the indorsenicnt “of the|
race’ Conference.” ‘The Cranes King
rmminsion made an Independent pel
r'sytian sentiment and invited. ex-
rewians of Sytlan opinion. ‘It ree
SUN ISTHE IMPROVING AGH PARENTS
SHOULD TEACH THEUCCHIGDRAS CHE
RIGHT WAY AXD NOT CHE WHITE WaT.
NEGRO enijdrem should play with Dolla Yh
Bature aigutte, PRETTY SENG GOL
TuEY CAN TAKE ANTWHMAE AND KE
PROUD OF. CMARACTER DOLIS WITH
Beer ri, conte nino.
aa P F in
rg Se SE ae my ao Be 7 “a
Ws your AYSTED eva-dowg, weak, tired? + to ony
tS Four MUGOD pale. “peirened” thin: watery? 2 Tay MEQOB RED, MEDICINE TONIC.
ee See ots aprins ent in rece enay tars _- Wis Sie amanietah imate ober, sala SeettsSelar )
WEAKNESS INDIGESTION of NW, SAMRON. nas a2. 4
: 2 2 OF MRR MMESS BE ew rare tnd :
NERVOUSNESS RHEUMATISM | peered mee Rae irest ea Ateatcing Tenia, when
ANEMIA coups) Pals Saeed teakene fil eaten ees |
4" TIRED FEELING EWTAR RG, B Reg Le Ma See ecae iucaracae a0 easy
_ NEURALGIA + ‘RUN-DOWN .- ae me ee vate ia
Are.you losing WEIGHT? Are you always TIMED ovt and SSNS SP SPRDERTAERNSE RE DRN AEE RATRERE STROM S Oe
ee ee eee ee ena euncur, tay COUR, ¥ SO4OD -seasesecsseessernssnenssnssccegbovenseonnsanarnsmen:
AGE, AMBITION? Don't wait antl you are gonsh improve GOW ss akesinscedsgusgignisddiosscaipecwsneageoanteveecses, |
Aim aminiaors, Dents an, in Yon cov womtls Saree eve. iceseasecyeeerncieetiareat sts
| ported to the Peace Conference that tt
j fond “prnetiead unanimity for the in
Mepenience of a united Syrias" lat
Aaxtiming= that the powers were net
yeu ready to grant sélf-povernmerstt
Syrie, i webt on te poljthe Syrians
for gt brStevenee of mandatory nations.
Not’ one Syrian in six, Ie found, -was
in favor of a French inandate (the ae=
[tal piveentine Ht estimated at 14.66
Tamed! an the petitions it reesiveds.. On
the esntrary. more han 69 pe cont
“of the Serians potted Mul taken xpe-
clathrin ats tn
protest aanlist amy Freeh mandate.”
Thix situation. the cimmtssion felt
inde, It steqossite | te recommentt
Franee ax a mundatery jwower, ‘Phere
followed, then, Us warning: *
‘The footing sf"the Arabs f the,
Kit fu puirtioubarty antrum aiainst’
the French. Aud there ie geave ©
revnssin te believe that the attempt
» te enforce a French mindate would”
provapitate war totween the Ariba
Liat the Beene oe
‘The French moved into Seria. XEhat
aye “Dies dunes since? They have
fanght tw stax there, “They cdutd 1
even estublivt their first Govern)
Genel in Damascus withont fighting
their away te that wig. This was In|
Sus HER toe ingrid ot
chit net was te Cine his capital ity
1W,In0,H0N fewnes. wins a sianiflownt
Inauguration of the Pyench resime,
Since then there have followed stte-
eensively an natige, ya ising in Mareh,
121: A native appbal te the Lache af
Nativns in Auspist, 421; pletion
Bamawrais in “April! 1922.--with lives |
joxt saul martial law “prvclalmed; ane
whe. Syrian appeal te the League in
May, 1922: 4 now war in Augast, 182241
with more tenope distatehed | fram
France: anuther appeal te the powers
in November, 1EH heavy French rez
nforcements xent ty Seria in April
828: hogeatt of French elections hy
he Syrians In September, 192: 0 new
sar segain i April, 1924; riot in Dae
naseus in AMeil, 1925; aniother wa he-
su in” August, 1225, with French
Hanes bombing native villages: “mars
fal law for fifteen years proclalmed
Wy the French In October, 1926: ap
wressive measures increasing], severe
nd follewinis ne jnetiier in a hanes
ney ehrele: casualties gradially mint
ng to G26 on the Frowh whe. and
olds: knows how tnany. om tie Arab
ide: tind now this “parade ef
epsen" through “Damaxete — dead
rales stripped ta camels - falloweud ds
resht prising. «cordon drawn arauiad |
rehelllous-auarter, guns turned loon |
nd disaster ona major scale.
‘The record of these nix years tn.
ria is“ recard first of broken
Indies, then of utter heedlessness ta
wnings and finally ‘of disanter. Nel
he: series of events in one awn time |
a5 done so much to widen the breach |
siween Kast and West amd ta display
y much dogged br tality, far so tte] |
to
POTATOES AT WAR PRICE
CROP SHORTAGE IN PRODUCING:
STATES ENRICHES sUc-- ”
CESSFUL GROWERS
CHICAGO. Get, BR (AL P)-Potate
prires were about oven with war-tlme
levels, according tm a report taday Wy
the United States Rureau of Axricule
‘ura! Economies. Latest shipping point
quotations, throuhout the chief pro-
duction States are $2.20 to $3.30 a hun-
red pounds, wholesale, ax agaliat, 5Se.
to Se. a year ago. s
omees who Hawt fb seed oop
are congratiiating themselves “and
many-an old debt is being paid with
the money received from patatnes.
Crop shortage in back of the price ad.
vante, which hax been accelerated thts
week by-wintry conditions North and
by audden falling off 4n the volufne of
shinments. to. distributing centres’
SKINNY MEN
ot Sl
one hepa eens
op ES ey ae
See
Brees
Bw astlierayikaa C
PS el Die
Cn MYST ’
Wes
Tend tae eee as
[E2-=-2- "
ile a 8 to Sie Willan Shecrill in rege’
io, tis Soegetiodal” sally iter vagy ann io
te Weak of get eS ar
fia se te tinny sree 208
[is Set eel: leniency Beene aareto- clasts
sachetoretev ele pansun ariel E
Re eee Nat eye en
eer RRR ee 7 lees
AFRICAN CONVERTS
START NEW MISSION
send’ NATIVE PREACHER INTO
‘THE JUNGLE B
‘The Roard of Foreizn Missions of
| the Methodist Ehuireh, located ay, 156
| Fifth Avenue. has just been Informed
of a self-help*potiey Inaugurated by
Jxome 6f thelr African native con:
verte, ‘Thexe Atvigun Chyisthins have
raised a ‘sum of money’ sufficient to
cover theTexpenses of sending one of
{their own pastors to a distant ontyort
| a tection of Angel, whore thé
Znurch te not at present working.
They propoxe to continue tohely xen
Jerse otter tome missionaries hy See
Awsome es
| Pew care comin to us Fras Tons
Iasstances actinige for (owehers “and
Epastors’” sase Mrs R. 1. Kin, wht
[in chanke of the Quessina MFFsien
[This last week Ne men came a diy:
[see wf Rae maton with the ne tt
[130 of their fellows haul-riven up their
Hots and want Soni one thorg te teste
them. ‘They say that if the piésent to~
the mlsstonarios they Will Inte ate
other to. whieh thes will move. AC
another paint where there ix’ cluster
of small native villares whleg have]
Ditiwite" hoon coutlered heathen |
Awenty-ons men have promised te te |
‘gin buiidine aC once a house for chapel]
and school 1f we will send a. tedeher.” |
Explorers Report Rich X
Find in South Africa “i
JOUANNESEURG, Get. ~35--- Baek
from tin expedition tothe dried-up kates
region of the Kalaharl desert, Profes:
sor Schwartz states that he discovered
towne hitherto unknown to the work
and stretches of fertiie land. -
The etlinvfogiett museum, which
made a reconnaissance along the Zam-
host to where It Joins the great Neaml
‘depression, atte “UN! ie “dtl
Lake Neami isa vast expanse of gras
containing quuntiess herds ,of eattle
The expedition followed the Tetlett
river for 200 miles in duxouts.
‘The fwest Ix dying and ty heime re+
plied by thorn trees, Aton he tuanke
thy predominating peopte.are the Mak
slakas, a bis nation whieh Is not Att,
van, but probably a brinch of tie
Madagascar Sakalesas,
“These other tiehes possess Innumer-
able towns.and vies and vast malze
fielts. ‘There are inrportant towns of
which no one hax heard: One formerly
was the port, af entry to Ngamiland.
from which big Iuegex once plied to
the driedsip Lake of Neamt,
American Indians Increase;
Total Now 349,595
WASHINGTON, | Oct. 28 A conse
of the Indian population of the Urtted
States, not including Alaska, announced
by the Censun Bureau today, shows
that tho number of faking is Ineras-
ing ‘The total number on ‘Sune 39.
1995, the censua date, was 319.505,
gain of 2.69% singe Hine 30, 1924, and
a gain of 18,976 In "tHe last twelve
years, B28
hina, camprising the former
Indif{n Territory, atlif'has the largest
Indian population, with 120,363; Arl-
zona is next, with 43,950. ;
New York's Indian population on
June 30 last was 6,135. :
* Formatdehyde Germ Killer *
Formaldehyde ‘gn: used in fumiga-
tion, Is highly eMctent against bacate-
aia, but does not kill animal vermin.
Where Residential . -
Segregation Must
eo Always Lead T:
Lespite repeated judicfit deetsion
uasainst fare-sexregation Jaws, the G+
fort te cantine Negenos within fixe
reskieggiat mits dx continually eto
Fie efecin or ition OF ite the
had rhoneke. hecenivus forms. “Thero
[pending fefere the’ Bedgrat Suprem
Court a suit to getermine whether on
expedien? » segivzation by a property
owners’ axrerment-—can be enforce:
At iw. ‘The case ix brought by thirts
Washinton taxpayers who are tryin:
to reatdin, a nelzhbor on S_ Strom
fro breaking ber pledee ti eelling t
a Negro "wencin, Tpen the-enurts de
cision, eqns the fate of slmilar
eases WHT fase -nabci in St, Lots
Los Angeles and ojier eittes,
Witiiewerthectetat niceties of the
Issue, the sortal iinpaliey*of permitting:
property-menere tw make the court
cntwre® am igeonment not to xell to @
partiowiar rue is clear. Such agrees
ments misht easily hevome sir general
in mang Iwatitios aa te restrlet ser>
lausls the right of amauiring preperty.
Written inte a¥ets “descending from
buyer tw layer, they mht he enforced
agginst German or Hallan, Jew or
Tenttie, “Catholte “ar Protextant. and
mittht afent every hint of realty. Tt
Iz plain that thelr siporation must con
fiet with the wide xpirit of Amerl=
can fnstitutions and sortety, The con
Sequenues oar? xegrrection-are-eri
dent to apy our who looks inte the
hixtory of the trish “pale” or the Jew=
Jeltchettes, It was hieped that the St=
brome Court decision in the Léutavitle,
cae ins EST had pat an end to the
more flaztunt attempts “ef this sort:
We cannot afferd te Tot Che spirit of
tend dectsden fe ecpeelated, i
Bird Enters Crocodile’s
Mouth to Clean Teeth
"EP. James of Wembley, Englantt!
writing to the London Mill, says that
Dinix that protect animals are coramom
Jn. South. Aiea. aud_adds:—.————
Situt ealy one bird performs the duty
for each animal. ‘The crocodile has &
bird whieh enters its moutl:to clean
the teoth of the brute, Another bird
nels ax entity to the rhinhcerogsand
werrme it hy creamina in the creature's
car of the apprmeh of an enemy. ©
mynelf dates witnessed these things in
au (eesece” pase
Be ee \
Carnegie Hall Fri. Eve”
Colored Tener: » Nays 27°
ROLAND -
HAYES
WILLIAM LAWRENCE
ecomensit
NT a ee Ree el
(IF UDONTC |
CONSULT ~
The Eyesight Specialist
EYES EXAMINED FREE
- 831 LENOX.AVENUE
ee ee
Spanish Section
SECCIÓN EN ESPAÑOL
vor La Asociación Universal para el Adelanto de la
Raza Negra
54-56 Oeste, Calle 135,
Ciudad de Nueva York, N. Y.
PROP. M. A. PIJUEROA, Editor
Parece fracasada la tentativa de M. Calillaus, el sensacional exministro de Hacienda de Francia, de concertar las realidades económicas y financiers de la situación de su país, con la concepción deliberadamente falsa formada alli, entre el pueblo, por los políticos, acerca del problemas más urgente que gravita hoy sobre la nación.
Un gran leader reducido a encarcelamiento; un país de la raza vendido al hombre blanco; pero nuestra causa emancipadora ha de triunfar—Apelando a nuestro elemento universalmente para soporte del gran ideal—Todo no se ha perdido aun-en la república de liberia; su pueblo dejará escuchar su voz
El gabinete Painlevé al caer, cualquiera que sea la solución que se dea a la crisis, ahre una nueva brecha en la confianza universal en el crédito francés. La enorme publicidad dada en todo el mundo al prestigio financiero de M. Caillaux, y la fe ciega depositada por su pueblo en su gestión, llevaron a todas partes la esperanza de que el conseguiria imponer la razón en la conducción de los negocios financieros de la república.
Lamento ser simplemente un observador cuando acontecimientos de gran signiftección y posibilidades se presentan; sinembargo, he de hacer todo cuanto pueda para indicar el derrotero donde nuestro verdadero interes descansa. La era de redención se aproxima; sus indicios se notan por doquiera y todo cuanto es necesario de nuestra parte es prudencia, paciencia y perseverancia. Reduzcase a prisión a quinientos Garveys y nuestra causa permacera intacta; nuestro esfuerzo no ha de perder un sólo átomo de su efectividad.
Hacerlo significaría, ante todo, aborda fria, desmida, bruialmente, la tremenda situación en que el tesoro francés se halla. Todo el sistema económico, francés de la post guerra ha sido viciado. Se ha basado en dos esejismos absurdos: uno, el pago por Alemania de cantidades fantásticas, suficientes a contrabalancear y superar los gastos ingentes hechos para la restauración de los departamentos devastados y para sostener los armamentos actuales; otro, la cancelación de la deuda norteamericana, base del reajuste o cancelación total de las deudas intercaladas.
Me preocupa un tanto la actitud de dar a veces la apariencia de subordinación a nuestro objeto principal por causas tribiales. Discútase en nuestras divisiones, debátase en nuestros meetings, pero siempre retengamos en mentis que la causa que defendemos debe ser invulnerable. Ella necesita nuestra más ferviente cooperación; el Africa reclama a sus hijos con todo el buen deseo, por cuya razón no debemos permitir que pequeñas diferencias entre nuestras filas, impidan la ejecución de nuestro asiduos esfuerzos.
En esta peligrosa ilusión, los políticos puñero; y el pueblo después, han llegado a la ciega suposición de que el norme délicit que iba aguilaránlose de año en año podra zanjarse fácilmente una vez realizado el prodigio esperado. . . . La realidad, con todo, es muy otra y esta impiñiódose con creciente firmeza a las más habiles maniobras y los más patrióticos esfuerzos de los inmanceros francés.
Uno de los puntos que más esencialmente debe ocupar la mente de nuestra raza y de los miembros de esta organización en particular, son los recientes acontecimientos en la república de Liberia. Las actuaciones del pequeño grupo en el poder de dicha república, han resultado vindicadoras para nuestro movimiento. Ellos consideraron nuestros esfuerzos para el establecimiento del negro procedente de este hemisferio en la costa occidental de Africa, un sueño irrealizable; pero a esta hora deben estar convencidos del gran error en que incurrieron.
Hay que pagar. Hay que hacer frete a los vencimientos del tesoro con recursos propios, con sacrificios del pueblo. Los que han convencido a este de que ello puede hacerse sin nuevas contribuciones, sin someterse a una tremenda carga trilateral, como por ejemplo, la que Inglaterranea seportaudo hace más un año para cumplir con su compromiso, tienen ahora el durísimo delder de desgracharle. Y eso, que no es grato ni ventajoso para los políticos, es una cosa esencial para el "business-sian" que haya de arreglar el conflicto algn día.
El hombre blanco, el blanco norteamericano, pronto establecerá en Liberia. El entrará en competencia con Europa por la riqueza del continente africano, y la producción, de la goma no sera el objeto principal. Todo cuanto sea considerado de valor bajo aquel suelo será posesión de Firestone y sus ascuaces. Por medio del control en la vida commercial y económica del país; el hombre blanco se colocará en posición tal que impedirá al negro el ir muy lejos en el camino de su nacionalidad. Lo que el patriota filipino combatió, ha sido aceptado por King y Compañía. Aquel pudo ver que si permitía a este país o a sus subditos interesarse en sus campos productivos, la independencia de las Filipinas seria imposible. La misma consideración no fue tomada por los que rigen los destinos de Liberia; pere lo voz de su pueblo ha de ser aun escuchada.
El gobierno de los asuntos del país por políticos profesionales tiene sus limitaciones. Francia se ha alora ahora ante un problema que sólo la pericia y la preparación de los financieros, de los hombres de negocios, de los verfaderos economistas practicé, puede resolver. Toda intervención que se le de en su gestión a la política, lo complacaría y dificultaría. Es el momento de decir al pueblo cosas duras y de pedirle sacrificios. Y los políticos no encontrarán eso grato ni ventajos para sus calculos. Pero la realidad se impone sin contemplaciones. — La Prensa, N. Y.
La corporación financiera en referencia ha ganado su segunda victoria. Haciendo uso de su capjtal y del poder del gobierno, destruyó los planes de nuestra organización en aquella república y contribuyó a mi encarcelamiento en este país. Aquello que perseguíamos para nuestro elemento en su propio país, ha sido arrebatado por el blanco debido ello a la perspicacia de esa corporación y a la malicia de los enemigos de nuestra movimiento de emancipación. Estos elementos de la raza prefieren ver a su propio hermano en el purgatorio a verle en posesión de su propio país y disfrutando de todos sus derechos. Tarde o temprano el espíritu del remordimiento ha de posesionarse de ellos; toda vez que prestan su ayuda para traicionar a su propia raza.
Apoyo a una aspiración
Españoles e hispanoamericanos redacían en Madrid un mensaje para presentarlo al pueblo filipino, como expresión de simpátia y apoyo a sus aspiraciones de independencia. Les declara capacitados para el gobierno propio; pide apoyo para sus nobles deseos de libertad; dice que es reclamación franca, justa y respetuosa para la gran dación que rige sus destinos, que guarda gran fongo moral de extraordinaria atracción hecha los puebios que habían nuestro idioma.
Todas estas artimanas son prueba más que convincente para realizar quienes son nuestros peores enemigos. Hemos tenido que pagar muy alto precio por la experiencia obtenida; sinembargo, no debemos demayar un sólo instante, no debemos perder nuestras esperanzas en la realización de la aspiracion de nuestro pueblo. Bienaventurados los que sufren con paciencia . . . La masa de aquel pueblo no ha tenido aun la oportunidad de sentir la influencia extranjera; cuando ella ejerza su presion sobre la clase productora de aquel país, el grupo explorador tendrá que elevar su ancla o disponerse a sufrir las consecuencias.
Me abriga la esperanza de que el pueblo blanco liberal, tanto de Europa, como de America que ama a su patria, conceda al negro el mismo derecho de amar a la suya. Hora es va para que los poderes predominantes supriman la influencia del capital para someter a servidumbre a los pueblos débiles, perturbándose de ese modo la paz que despira debiera reinar en el seno de la gran familia humana.
Tengo el honor de ser vuestro obediente servidor
España, dice además el mensaje, no puede olvidarse. con su silencio de la que continua llamandose hija suya por, tradición y-cultura. Sus redactores confian en que el progresivo, potente y democrata pueblo norteamericano, el cual tan ferviente culto rinde a la libertad, cumplir lalemente la humanitaria promesa de conceder lo tan anhelado para el pueblo del archipielago. Sera un acto de justicia el que muestre al mundo una joven cultura y civilización latina.
Se invita expresamente al rector, profesorado y estudiantes de la Universidad de Filipinas a nombrar representantes para la asociación universitaria hipóamericana, con el objeto de dar mayor significación a sus deseos. Dirige cordial saludo a las camaras de comercio, centros de cultura, superestaciones políticas y a todas las fuerzas activas de aquel pueblo. Firman el mensaje asociación, culturalidad, reducción de perfección y otras personalidades.
Abd-el-Krim y su ejército
Comentando la situación en Marruecos, *El Liberal* de Madrid observes que el Macizo de Senada y el Monte Mesaud constituyen actualmente la preocupación del alto mando francés. La presencia de reconcentraciones rebeldes en dichos sectores, ha causado inquietud entre las cabilas adictas a los franceses, retardando e impidiendo la sumisión de aquellas todavía disidentes.
La capital del protectorado francés se encuentra, según informes, fuera de peligro, pero el rescuecimiento de la rebeldia en el sector del centro obligaria a los franceses a retirar algunas de sus tropas, que cumplen importantes cometidos en las regiones extremas de la línea.
Informaciones de la prensa parisiense manifiestan que Abd-El-Krim dispone al presente de diez y ocho mil riffeinos, veinte mil gherreros de Gomara y Yebala de otros veinte mil, número a que puede montar los miembros de las otras tribus adheridas a su causa.
Las tablas de la ley
Debido al esfuerzo, paciencia y diligencia de un sabio epitoLOGO aleman, aseverase que la existencia de Moises, el gran legislador hebreo, es un hecho establecido y que, según todas las apariencias, el origen histórico de los diez mandamientos es cosa determinada.
El profesor Grimmue, que es el erudito del caso, ha logrado describir las lapida shebricas que el arqueologo inglés Flinders Petri en contrato en la Mouche Sinai en 1905. Declara Grimmue que el conunto de las lapidas describidas por el consiste en las gracias de Moises a la princesa hija del Faraón por la haberle rescatado de las aguas del Nilo. Esto, de ser cierto, acarlaria mucho del misterio en que muchos han considerado envuelta la vida de Moises.
- Muchos eruditos alemanes conceden suma importancia a la obra realizada por Grimmie. Hacen notar que si Grimmie ha descubierto la clavel del idioma que las lapidas y las ha relacionado con Moises, esto evidentemente, dispiña la dudas que han rodeado el origen historico del Decalogo. Los caracteres estampados en las lapidas halladas por Petri asemejabanisce intimamente al hebreo de la Bible, y serían clara indicio de que el Decalogo fueco al de Moises.
Los sabios, sin embargo, convienen en que la clíninación de estas dudas hace necesario más estudio de las lapitudes del Sinfer. Como resultado del annuicio de Grimm se ha propuesto una expedición al Sinai, y hallándose este territorio biblico bajo el dominio inglés, no se espera que Gran Bretaña ponga obstáculos a semejante expedicion.
Nueva Inventión Impresora
Ha sido presentada ante los delegados a la convención de la United Typothae de America que se celebra en la ciudad de Chicago, una nueva invención impresora que combina las propiedades de una maquina de escribir con las de una camara fotográfica.
La nueva invención consiste en una maquina que funciona lo mismo que una de escribir y retrata las letras de una cinta matris en otra a base de negativa fotográfica, la cual al ser revelada sirve de tipo para cualquier impresión. Esta fue presentada y descrita por el secretario de la Federación de Maestros Impresores y Uniones Alidas de Inglaterra e Irlanda y por el editor del Caxton Magazine de Londres.
La proyección de los caracteres cifras o letras de la cinta matris de este nuevo mecanismo imprésor, puede ser ensanchada, alargada o reducida casi instantaneamente, produciendo así todo tipo de letra deseado en la columna de impresión. Sus inventores dicen que tine la ventia de poderse adaptar a la telegrafa sin hilos y una ohema central, podria componer o imprimir periodicos y libros simultaneamente en un gran número de ciudades. al mismo tiempo.
Noticia importante
Todas las divisiones y capitulos de la organization son por la presente requeridos para emprender una campaña, con el propósito de obtener la libertad del honorable Marcus Garvey, nuestros leader en prision.
Todo miembro obtendra del presidente de secretario de cada division o capítulo, una petición para ser firmado por todos aquellos con el buen deseo de cooperar al exito de esta iniciativa.
El Hon. Marcus Garvey debe gargar de su libertad y depende de nuestro impulso para obtenerla. No le abandonemos en esta bora para el de ruda prueba.
*Firmado:*
Magazine Section
DERELICTION OF DUTY IN NIGERIA, AFRICA
How bitterly cold it was! This change from the temperature that had ruined at the time of our starting (not more than four hours before!) to what we were now experiencing, was like being thrust into the heart of winter, after a fervid summer! I felt sorry for the boys; and I saw that poor Hardacre's baggage was all awash.
As Comersall had predicted, we passed through the tornado inside half an hour. A drizzling rain fell still, but we were able to alight from the loopy, and to look about us. What a scene of desolation met our gaze! Water streamed from every leaf and stem; and the ground was a river in miniature, into which a hundred channels converged from the fields on either side. An oozy sound, sibilant and soilden, filled the silence; and no living creature could be seen anywhere. If naturopath had gone back to the period when land and water were one and the same element, the earth could not have looked more/depressing! The light was that of a late English glaming in early winter—one could have thought that the sun had been washed away.
Yet even while we lingered there was a change—a vertible transformation scene: The rain ceased. The sun came out. Nature took back her colors, and with a rarely intensified power.
"Look," I cried, "how deliciously green and fresh and height everything is now!"
Into our posnirs poured the fragrance of a refreshed soil. A noisy crowd of brightly-plumaged birds seemed to spring from nowhere. Aerosols the road, sailing higher and ever higher, passed a flag of wild parrots. They cried raptively, and withal joyously, as they disappeared from view. Then a still more vivid splash of color was added to the picture. On a branch of acacia about thirty feet away had settled one glorious kinnessher.
I remembered then with a deep penchant a remark of that great naturalist. Hudson—"Could we but reach the godlike calm and contour of the birds, man's life might be made perfect?" 1
Courier: Oh, the dazzling history of that kingfisher's blue, and gold plumage, as it glittered in the newly awakened sun. He was like a living jewel. Even as we watched, he started away, and we saw him sweep along the course of the road, toward where we knew the Orlo creek must have first emerged from its stream-ambient hills.
All that we had time to see of the last-named town was a series of well-trigged lawns, that might well have graced a country-house in England. They were studded with brightly painted bungalows, and in the distance a stone tomb a tiny Mission School. Children were playing in the fields. Their treasured vines rang on the purified air like a pool of silver bells.
Our course was a semicircle, because we were still stepping around that disastrously hidden bridge at Emilia. A hundred miles now lay behind us and our stopping place for lunch lay just ahead. We came upon the ancient seat of the provincial government just as our watchers pointed to halt-past one.
"Excellent!" promised Gomersall. "There is plenty of time for a snack and a wash-up. We will all be the better for a chance of clothes. Let us allow the boys half an hour in which to obtain water, and to refill the tanks. Meanwhile, I will ask the Rest House steward to look after making a fire. We have not more than seventy or eighty miles to go for the second half of our journey. We should reach Blake toward dusk, have another cup of tea there, and then speed up every ounce of power we can from the cinnies, to put Hardacre aboard the Oshogbo in time for dinner."
"Suppose the captain should refuse us hospitality?" I asked. "After all you and I are, only birds of passage. Hardacre, alone, as a passenger has the right to demand a cabl."
"Oh, then we will sleep on the wharf," decided our driver airily. "We have two camp-beds at least, and not even the police dare stop us from camping-out, if we have no roof over us."
The Rest House proved to be a mat-roofed structure, built of clay and wattles. All the interior rooms were locked. The government steward reported that the D. O. was out of town and the keys in his private safe. But as our visit was to be of the briefest duration, there was no occasion for complaint. We soon found a crude form, fashioned of oroko wood, that would serve as table. In one corner of the veranda stood a huge pile of sun-baked clay blocks. I thought of that famous Oxford line, "a rose-red city, half as old as Time," remarking to my companions how wonderful a feature of nature it is that material of the most suitable kind is always provided on the spot. Why import bricks, tiles, or any kind of stone, when the indestructible ant, labor, night and day to convert the soil into a rich red clay that is unmatched for durability, and usefulness?
While the boys were busy outdoors, and about the kitchen, we opened our lift-bags, and had a rebenishing dry shampoo. Our clean garments were gloriously fresh to the skin. We felt like new men, when at last we put down our primitive board. Laughter was to consist of crab sandwiches, a mind
HOW TO ACQUIRE
RACIAL KNOWLEDGE
READ
THE PHILOSOPHY AND OPINIONS OF MARCUS GARVEY
Edited by AMY JACQUES GARVEY
Know what is really, going on in world politics to affect the Negro. This wonderful book gives you a world of information and a life of inspiration.
It is being discussed in diplomatic circles, and treasured by Negroes who love their race.
Order your copy today. It costs only
CLOTH BOUND, $1.75 PAPER BOUND, $1.25
Enclose postal order or mailed money order to cover cost.
Address all communications to
MRS. AMY JACQUES GARVEY,
Box 32, Station L
NEW YORK CITY
of hard-boiled eggs and lettuce, a tina of H. & P. Marie Blaucus, and a morsel of Dutch cheese—not to forget the cup that cheers!
While rooting around for something clean to sit upon, apart from the dapp blocks, Hardacre had discovered a weird old chair, carved from the trunk of a small cotton-tree. There were rudimentary arms, and a very comfortable seat. Despite its bulk, the whole contraption weighed so little that our friend brought it beneath one arm to the corner where our repast was waiting.
"Something like a portable chair, this," he chortled. "The sort of article a child could carry about. I have always believed that the beds in Judea were made of bamboo—the same light structure that the African uses here. When Jesus told the sick man to take up his bed and walk, he was giving a command that required only moderately healthy limbs to obey."
"Quite so," I agreed. "That chair of yours reminds me of Muriel Stuart's lines:
- The coal that knew the flood; the chair
- Remembering when it was a tree:
- I dare awake your treasure-trove was merely in its infancy when it was modified into a chair. Yet its life in the present form may be as long as it had remained in the forest. Cottonwood is practically indestructible except by fire."
(To be Continued Next Week)
Fifty-four Egyptians Killed
When Police Cause Panic
LONDON, Oct. 25. Fifty-four persons were jailed and forty-three imaged at Tanta, Egypt, where a great religious fate was being held, attended by about 1,000,000 persons, when mounted police created a panic in their attempt to clear a passageway for the automobile of the minister of religious foundations. The natives thinking that the mounted police had come to break up the religious demonstration as is often the case, were thrown into a panic. All rap for the bridge which was nearby in order to escape what they considered an attempt on the part of the police to take their lives. The weight of the thousands that had rushed onto the bridge caused the bridge to snap throwing hundreds into the water, where many were drowned. Some were trampled to death.
Tut-ankh-Amen Tomb Opened;
Inner: Sarcophagus Revealed
CMIRO, Oct. 26. Tusahachi Americans bomb promises again to be the centre of attention for American tourists this winter. The bomb has been reopened and the threat of the sarcochinus lifted safely, revealing inside the presence of another sarcochinus whereon reopened a thin covering of lumen and several bouquets of flowers in a wonderful state of preservation. Mr. Burton of the Metropolitan Museum has taken photographs of the sarcochinus.
Footbinding in China
Varicusly Accounted for
Appropriate accounts, are given of the origin of the Chinese custom which demands that the feet of gentlewomen shall not be permitted to attach their natural growth. one is that an Emperor was so extremely zealous of his wife that to prevent her gadding about he put her feet in iron slippers, which reversed their growth, says the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Another account is that a certain Empress, Tan-tie (B. C. 1100), was born with stifleria and that she persuaded the Emperor to issue an edict, adopting her feet as the model of beauty and requiring the compression of the feet of all female infants, as a conform to the imperial standard.
A third account is that the Emperor Leucyh (A. D. 1961) was amusing himself one day in the palace when they thought occurred to him that he might improve the appearance of the feet of his favorite wife, and that he thereupon caused her feet to be so hurt as to rattle the instep into an arch resembling a new moon. The figure, it is said, was much admired by the courtiers, who then began to introduce it in its town families.
Subject: "The Supernatural Powers of the Soul." Text Pe. 3: 4, 5.
I. Here, then we are face to face with a future order of objecta, mana relation to which enhances the value and defines more exactly the position of the soul. The facts on which we have already dwelt are, for the most part, God's revelations of a moral order, enriched and fulfilled indeed by Jesus our Master, but in their immediate teachings living man, but a general view of his duties and a vigorous anticipation of his destiny. To put him in full possession of the place that one should occupy who is but a "little lower than the angels," is surely in some sense to unfold before him with greater distinctness a more accurate chart of the lapid to which he is haustering; it is surely to spread out within range of his observation the realm of mystery to enable him to realize his place in the order of supernatural life. And here it is note unimportant to remember the fact of its existence. For you, perhaps, with the sensitive straight-forwardness of a practical age, will bur my further way, my brother, and demand of me what I mean by mystery.
Well, at first, when such questions are urged upon us, the difficulty really is to say what is not mystery. In one sense mystery is common enough; no common, it is a more truism to insist upon it. The rising of the sun, the setting of the day, the rushing of the whids, the gathering of the clouds, the growth of grass, the change of season, the insult powers which yield with reluctance anything of their secret to the analysis of chemistry; the whole wonder of the visible universe this is a region of mystery.
We ourselves, I need hardly repeat it, in our greatness as well as in our littleness, are mysteries—deep, insoluble, from the cradle to the grave. Man knows just enough of the world he lives in and the creature he himself is, just enough to familiarize him with the fact of mystery and lead him, if he is loyal to the teachings of experience, to expect further, deeper mysteries as he travels further into the realms of the graver questions relating to his life.
For by mystery is meant neither a dream of the mind in reverie, nor a slight sketch of the fancy, nor a vivid picture of the imagination, but a series of real and external facts, with all the value that attaches necessarily to anything that is, but which are of such kind that they belong not to the sphere of mere natural experience; nor come within the cognizance of the unpaid faculties of man. Mysteries are facts shrouded from ordinary observation, facts in whose reality we have sure grounds of belief, but whose roots are so deep we cannot reach them, whose causes and laws so hidden we cannot trace. Such mysteries may be expected with increasing certainty on the spiritual side of the life of man.
Now, to say that there are each and that they have a direct bearing upon man's character and destiny is to speak of what is called by those giants "the supernatural order" what is felt by every believer to be a supernatural life. And here my friends, I contemplate seriously and earnestly to enter my protest against this sort of fashionable altercation, at my rate an increasing habit, of discarding the word which has been want to represent the notion of this mysterious class of beings and relationships, and instead of speaking of the supernatural order, prefers to include all that is under the name of Nature.
(Continued next issue.)
The Literature We Read Is of Much Importance
For the last half century we, as members of a downrodden race, have been reading the scripta, patches and books of the other person. Reading that which has been done by his kind and oftimes glory in relating the anecdotes of the life of this or that queen of this or that empire. The putting aside of funds to purchase such writings or works is up to now a custom in many Negro homes, especially in the West Indies. It forms a part of their existence, as it would appear, but alas, it degenerates their prestige.
No race will take pride in itself says it is compelled to help or read or speak of the praisesworthy deeds of its ancestors. Ever and anon in our daily walks of life we are compelled to hear of the "dark continent" and in no other term other than degrading. We hear that all Africans are savages: Savages! The word comes back with a juvenile sound and says: When we were putting forward a civilization to the world the white men were spilling the blood of their brothers on fertile soil that their respective households may have meat. The same voice which is struggling to keep back the murmurs says to us: Enter the gate track of life and rescue that which has been wrecked from you.
There is no time to lose. The loss of the world are now fixed upon us to find out what we are about. We have to survive by the material, and we cannot survive by the material save we have the material. And we cannot get the material by sitting down. We have to gird our loins and make joyful the graves of our ancestors. The time is fast approaching when the world will demand of us a civilization for the benefit of this vast human family; when we will be called upon to rule ourselves. Then let us save the path of our destiny, since it is, bur hands. We have to down the obstacles of today that tomorrow we have them not. We have to blast the ridges and storm our way to glory.
It is quite obvious that no one will do these things for us. Not that the other fellow hates us—but he is about his business. And he doesn't care what takes place so long as his way is made clear. We have to climb the same stairs and mount to the summits of our ancestry. Too long have doors been closed in our faces. Too long have we been succumbing to the ada-
The Negro Year Book for 1925-26
JUST OUT
It is an annual encyclopedia of the Race. This book should be in the hands of all of our people. It gives information that no other book gives. 640 pages cloth bound.
By Monro N. Work, Work, $1.50
Send All Money Orders to
HAYES BOOK STORE
Dept. S, 618 East 43rd St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
If you are troubled with constipation, liver trouble, stomach trouble, skin eruption of HOLY-BARK GOMPOUND, a notice and take a dose mornings only and notice how your food digests better. You any more. All indigestion distress after your stomach become chronicle, because once Send for a bottle of this Godsen where.
Price $1.50 in U. S. A. $2.00 in For
If you are not satisfied with it return of your money.
MONEY MUST BE SENT
THE ETHIOPIAN
113 West 143d Street
If you are troubled with constipation, biliousness, indigestion, gas belching, liver trouble, stomach trouble, skin eruption and weak bowels, ORDER a botulism vaccine. If you are not troubled with constipation, once and take a dose mornings only and you will be pleasantly surprised to notice how your food dries better. You are not troubled with your stomach any more. All indigestion distress after eating is gone. Do not let neglect of your stomach become chronic, because the results are dangerous. Act at here. Send for a bottle of this Godsend medicine this minute. Mailed anywhere.
Price $1.50 in U. S. A. $2.00 in Foreign Countries Including Postage
If you are not satisfied with it return same and we guarantee the refund of your money.
Full Directions How to Take, With Each Bottle
Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower
THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS MUSEUM
A NEW WORLD MUSEUM
AND DISTRICT FROM
P. G. B.
An old-fashioned, true, and honest hair grower. Try it. Ladies, let us send you a full six months treatment for $1.00.
Hair Seed is a powerful stimulant, it excites the scalp to a new and healthy action, Kills dandruff and tetter the very first treatment stops the itching of the scalp and at once the short temple hair begins to grow fine. This compound has the endorsement of the Medical Profession as being the best grower ever offered to the public. IT GREW HAIR on a hand that had been held ten years. We can prove it.
10
```markdown
```
maintain effects of time, and no reward
but serfdom.
I am at a loss to understand or see with my brother when he says that he is a subject of this or that empire subject. How belittling it, sound. You are never what you are. You are not what you ought to be and neither will you be what you were willed to be. We must strive to be subject to ourselves and resolve that we reach that height. Let us co-operate that we may be strong; unite that we may be bold—and line up that we may be 400,000,000 strong. Life, is not built upon luck. Our fortune is in our hands and by resulting that two paces today will be six tomorrow we must be up and doing and our night of servitude will be the morn of an empire second to none in the world. We are in a state of unrest and our minds will never be at ease until Africa is redeemed. Our minds will never be at ease until we have a government of our own. The world will cease to hear "Africa for the Africans" when 400,000,000 Negroes are extinct. We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association have resolved to face all odds for the redemption of Africa and we mean to redeem it, with our lives, if need be.
P. Alex Higginson,
San German, Oriente, Cuba.
Even as Marcus Garvey
To the Editor of The Negro World:
It is my opinion that we are not born with two eyes, but four. We have two eyes outside and two eyes inside. Our inside eyes are our spiritual eyes and they ought to see many things that our other eyes do not see. Our spiritual eyes ought to be all-seeing.
The future success and progress of the Negro will depend largely upon his ability to view our problems from a correct angle through his spiritual eyes. We must see all of our dangers as a group and prepare to overcome them before they overtake us. The Honorable Marcus Garvey has been sent to guide and direct us. He is using all of his eyes and he is trying to teach us to use ours.
The U. N. I. A., with the leadership of Marcus Garvey, is bringing to us a message that cannot be mistaken. Negroes must not fall to grasp the opportunities which are now before them. The Honorable Marcus Garvey is doing his best, but the program will not succeed until we also do our best.
Africa Is Ours
To the Editor of The Negro World:
In a current issue of The Negro
World I saw a message which was
sent from Washington to the Amer-
icans who have joined the French fight-
ing against Riffa in Morocco. They
say that the Riffa are not a nation and
have no rights worth respecting. This
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 abbing the HAIR SEED GROWER by the scissor. Do this tonight; watch your hair grow, it's a mystery.
Price 35 cents.
message is not only to the Riffs but to the 406,000,000 Negro people, of the world. We are of the same African blood. The Riffs are our kingmen and women. This message should sink deep down into every Negro man and woman's heart. The Negro is not a "nation" and we have no rights worth rejecting. This is what the Honorable Marcus Garvey has been preaching for seven long years. It has come out in black and white so that every eye can see and every car can hear. If we want respect, if we want what is due to every race as laid down by the Creator Himself, we must get together by joining the Universal Negro Improvement Association and support it at all costs. When we are united and have a government of our own, we will not be but demand the respect which is given to every nation.
The white man seeks to confuse the Negro by giving, conflating opinions about it. In one breath he calls Africa the dark continent and in the next breath he calls it the cradle of civilization. But we need to realize that whatever it is, it is our home and we must reclaim it to establish ourselves as a national group. Civilized or uncivilized, we love it and want it for our own. DULCIE VAUGHN.
Hatuey, Cam.. Cuba.
League of Nations Only for Certain Folk
To the Editor of the Negro World:
An editorial in a recent issue of The Negro World, under the caption, "What Has the League of Nations Accomplished?" has won much praise and great commendation among Negroes in this vicinity. I believe Negroes in all parts of the world who have read this editorial are as much delighted as we are. The Negro World has given to the world at large and to Negroes in particular the conclusive convictions and truths about this yearly farce which is now in its sixth year, at the time when we were speculating as to the result of achievement of this year's Assembly of Nations.
When we look back over the course that the League has run, we wonder if anything has been done. Has any effort been made to reflect too sorrowful situation in Morocco, Syria, Africa in general and elsewhere, in spite of the very apparent necessity? The oppressed peoples of the world have come to realize that this League of Nations is only for certain people or nations.
To the Editor of The Negro World:
I have always been interested in the welfare of my race, but since becoming a reader of The Negro World, my interest has increased. I feel it my duty to send you a word of approval for the U. N. I. A. and the splendid work it is doing to awaken the Negroes of the world.
It is fine that some, organization has come among us which is awakening the Negro from his long sleep and causing him to view with a seeing eye the past, present and future. Reviewing past and present conditions among us causes us to realize what is required of us as a people in the future.
We must watch, fight and pray. In the past we have prayed much. Now we are putting more emphasis on the watching and fighting. We still believe in prayer, but we know that prayer without agion availeth nothing.
One of the greatest handicaps with which the Negro has had to deaf is being burdened down with sellish and
Chronic catarrh, no matter how bad, and cases of bronchial asthma now yield instantly to the amazing discovery of a French scientist. This drug, called Zanax, is given in three minutes, yet is positively harmless to the most delicate tissues. Your head and lungs are cleared like magic. Sufferers are relieved in a single night. It is not it and to introduce Lavex to a million sufferers in one month. I offer to send a treatment free and postpaid to any one who will write for it. No obligation. No cost. If it cures you, you can repay the favor by telling your friends—if not the loss is mine. You must give your name and address for this generous free treatment and prove that you can be rid of catarrh.
W. R. SMITH, 741 Laven Bdg., Kansas City, Mo.
WORLD FARMERS' BODY MAKES WORLD APPEAL FOR GARVEY'S RELEASE
The following manifesto has been issued by the "Peasants' International," a worldwide organization of farmers of Europe, Asia, Africa and America, with headquarters at Moscow. It calls upon the farmers of the world to agitate for, the liberation of Marcus Garvey, president-general of the Universal-Negro Improvement Association, who is now serving a five-year sentence at Atlanta federal prison. It also contemplates appealing to the workers of all countries to unite in protest against the outrage.
In 1917, Marcus Garvey came to America, and founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association, whose aim was to form an independent Negro state in Africa and to return to that country the millions of dark-skinned slaves from America and the colonies. Taking advantage of the indignation accumulated among the Negroes against the British treatment and deprivation of political rights, against the degrading laws and lynchings (for Negroes in America have less rights than the Jews in most Russia), Marcus Garvey established in the course of three years a tremendous movement among American Negroes, gaining four million adherents and establishing fraternal ties between the American Negroes and their exploited countrymen in Africa and other colonies.
The capitalists realized that the movement led by Garvey, the movement for Negro independence even under 'the modest slogan of "Back to Africa," contained the embryo of the future revolutionary movement which, in alliance with the workers and peasants, is to threaten the reign of capital. And the American government decided to smash Garvey's organization by killing him politically as a leader, by drowning him in a flood of mud-silting and calumny. The American capitalists did not shrink from staging an outrageous judicial comedy, accusing Marauc Garvey of grand larceny. Marauc Garvey was sent to jail. The whole of his trial was an怒ry of revengeful capitalism bent on destroying the man who had ventured, to raise his hand against the
blind leaders. Blind leadership is a thing hard to define and harder to overcome. If our leaders are blind, and they are the watchmen of the race, how can we ever accomplish anything? Let us wake up and remove these blind obstacles from our path, and victory is assured.
JAMES E. BRADLEY.
Chicago, Ill.
Negro Universal King coming to rule the World
Rev. Webb
"The Kaler and Napoleon failed in war to be Universal King, the coming Negro King will not fail. A reference book to the Bible tells the facts and a picture of this King is $1.00 for both.
Negro Characters in the Bible
Four pictures in two forms. No. 1, "Negro King Solomon" and "Colored Queen of Sheba" and also "King Solomon's Temple" No. 2, "The Negro King Tut and His Treasures." Price, all for $1.00. Agents wanted by sending $1.40 for outfit.
Write Rev. Jan. M. Webb, 3424 N. State St. care of Bailey's Office, Chicago, Ill. Send money order or letter.
Chaua and friendliness whom you look up to. Women's secret methods. plaining everything, only to b. (gumps.) Confidant, plainain friend. Can be regarded elsewhere in the world. Napping, off-to-South America + the lower lovers. Madres: 47 Paule Barrette Don't use coke.
robbers and who has organized millions of colonial slaves.
The International Peasants' Council (KrestiIntern) has proposed to all Negro organizations to take up immediately a campaign for the liberation of Marcus Garvey as the victim of political and racial revenge.
But this is not enough. We appeal not only to the Negro masses, but also to the peasants and to their faithful allies, the workers of all countries, to join their voices in protest against this contemptible outrage perpetrated upon the Negro movement, to demand the liberation of Garvey, and to put an end to the indignities to which the Negroes are subjected.
On behalf of the presidium of the International Peasants' Council:
(Signed) — Dombal (Poland), Renaud Jean, Vazilles (France), Otto Rydle (Czecho-biovakia), Gorov (Bulgaria), Richard Buergi (Germany), Orlov (U. S. 8. R.), Leng (Norway), Hero (Sweden), Nouay-Ai-Quack (Indo-China, Colonies), Alonzo (Spain), Teng (Easthonia), Ken-Hay Ashi (Japan), Knutson (Americs), Ruggiero Grieco (Italy).
Moscow, August 21, 1925.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing turns out approximately 3,000,000 notes daily, amounting to at least $10,000,000.
LIVE LODESTONES
From the Rising Sun
Mysterious rings; Sphinx charms; Sure luck in love and money. You'll be dumb with surprise. Information free.
OPPORTUNITY
Public Speaking Taught by Mall. 10c will bring you the proposition. Write
The Universal Speaker's Bureau
P. O. Box 184
Kingsburg, Calif.
Under Ground
TREASURES
HOW and WHERE
TO FIND THEM
A Secret you should know.
It may mean a fortune to you. FREE particular. Write today.
MODEL CO.
writes Mr. E. J. Johnn
Others say it brings
good luck and good luck
wearing our EGYPTIAN
of sterling silver
with green gold fin
son of Jackson, Miss
Othersa it brings it
honesty and good luck wea-
ring
our EGYPTIAN
LUCKY WING. Made
of silver
with green gold fin-
ing.
The extra; heavy gold plated, $2.75.
FREE! Your horoscope; give date of
birth. Also 'Set' consisting of
a ring with a alliary setting with
1-K Italian diamond.
EGYPTIAN-TRADING CO.
19 Park Row
New York City
Representatives Wanted
MALE OR FEMALE
for novel proposition. Must be live
wire, with good standing in your com-
munity.
Must earn $15.00 to $15.90 per day to be of
service to us. Submit references to the
Buy-Rite Sales Corporation
174 W. 139th St., New York City
UNDERGROUND
TREASURES
We will send you FREE information that may save your
person. See all of our information on behalf of you.
If you want this except
write us today. Address:
The Magnolia Co.
St. Louis, Missouri
TAKE DOWN WHITE PICTURES FROM YOUR WALLS!
Let Them Echo Your Racial Aspirations
You can now obtain wall cards, artistically printed of epigrams from the sayings of the Hon. Marcus Garvey. Real gems of racial thought.
Six different mottoes to one set. Only $1.00 per set. For hanging or framing, size 9 x 12 inches
Also that masterpiece written by our great leader, entitled "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
GAVE 50%
This is a high
purity gold solid effect
magnesium
magnesium
intermediate antimicrobials.
Intermediate antimicrobials in your locality we offer this
short time only. Write in the
Tay podman on arrival
only K72 (value at $20.
MALAB CO. Dept. M-23. 34 Doy St. New York
FREE Welchman chain,
charm and
setting in a setting
Genuine
MALAB CO. Dept. M-23. 34 Doy St. New York
CURED HER
RHEUMATISM
Knowing from terrible experience the suffer-
ing caused by rheumatism, Mira. J. E.
Hurst, who lives at 204 Davis Avenue, D-20.
Bloomington, IL. is so thankful at having
cured herself that out of pure gratitude she
is anxious to tell all other sufferers just how
to get rid of their torture by a simple way
at home.
Mur. Hurt has nothing to sell. Merely cut out this notice, mail it to her with your own name and address, and she will gladly send you this valuable information entirely free. Write her at once before you forget.
A REAL WISHING RING
We have a special offer on a real wishring ring. When your finger is pressed against the ring, it will shimmer with light over the world. On the other hand, when you press your finger against the ring, it will shimmer with light over the world. These rings are for you, and you will be pleased. Simply pay the premium bill for the ring, good luck with it.
I-O-L-C-O-T
INCORPORATED
IN WHITE
MEN'S GIRL
SEND NO
MONEY
CORNS
REMOVED
DR. J. P. BAILEY
148 West 131st Street
GISTERED CHIROPODIST
NEVER IGNORE FEET TROUBLES
THEY INJURE THE NERVES
GENUINE WISH RING
Thousands say it wards off bad luck
and through your will power it causes
your wish to come true. You'll be dumb
with surprise.' Information free; write,
PHILEMON GREENE
Lucky Glass, Send No Money
1847 West Grande Ave. Chicago, IL.
STOMACH
Mirza, Killita VanNess in very 'anxious to
become a mother.' She and Emina Chandler and her brother Jerry
Chandler, born in Graham, North Carolina.
Ness, 111 West 143rd St., New York City.
AGENTN WANTED
RELIABLE agents wanted in every Negro community in the United States to represent Gent's Hosley direct from the mills to the wearer. Become independent by being your own agent. From $2.50 to $5.00 per week, with promotion. Write for Information. In I.D. care, locate Agent World, 67 West 135th Street, New York City.
AGENTS—Write for free samples. Sell Gent's Hosley direct from Shirt Company, manufacturer direct to wearer. No capital or experience required. Many earn $190. LASON CO. FC. 601 Broadway, New York.
AGENTS—400 more active men to introduce Gent's Hosley direct from Tailored Nets. $4.95. Latest novelty, color. Dickman, Illinois, in 3 weeks made $699. Sinton, Texas, $24.90. You should do as well. No experience or capital needed. We deliver and gift. Full working free tree. Chicago Shirt Company, Seyc, 2002, Chicago, Ohio.
MALE MELF WANTED
LABORERS, FREIGHT HANDLERS,
500 MOUR: OVERTIME, 75c; FACTORIES, 430-83c; DISHWASHERS.
APPLY . VERLETS . AGENCY. . 15 WEST STREET, N. Y. C.
Fireman, Brakenman, Bagsgreenman, sleeping car, train porters (colored) $140-$250. Experience unnecessary. 200 Railway Bureau, Louis, IL.
DEPTUTIONAL MAIL. Make secret investigations. Experience unnecessary. Write George Wagner, former government detective, 2366-D, Broadway, N. Y.
MEN 15 UP.-Railway Mail Clerks. Travel your own country. Compete 15-month sample coaching lessons FREE. Write today sure. Franklin Institute, Dept. L63, Rochester, N. Y.
FOR LEASE
Completely furnished—11 room private house with 3-car garage; private driveway; all improvements; parquet floors; electricity; steam Heat. Immediate occupancy. Rent W. 12,25th St. Three year lease. Apply 26 W. 12,25th St.
TO LET
FURNISHED rooms, large and small; private; plenty heat, hot water. Call evenings. Burke, 19 West 124th Street.
APARTMENTS—New, House. All modern improvements. Three and four rooms, $67 to private; elevator, laundry, liquor superintendent, 109 W. 124th Street.
Rooms, large and small; all improvements; respectable family. For information apply at Shoe Shop, 201 W. 124th St.
Comfortable room, all conveniences, 2026 7th Ave, Apt. 6.
Five rooms; slightly used furniture; will sacrifice, 2024 6th Ave, Apt. N. Harlem 6521. Call after 6 P. M.
Furnished room in a quiet home. Call after 6 P. M. Carly, 208 W. 148th St.
Steam heated room to let. Hot water and bath, 49 East 124th St. 1 flight up.
Furnished apartment for sale or sublet. Also room. Phona Morningside 682, 129 W. 124th St.
Furnished rooms, large and small; all conveniences; $65.00 up. Power, 3rd floor, 127 West 124th St.
Let-To: Two rooms with kitchenette. Private house; electric, steam heat; good family. Apply 164 W. 124th St., N. Y. C.
Unfurnished apartment to let. 4 large rooms; electric, bath, hot water, 297 W. 121st St.
Large furnished room for rent. Elevator
apartment. 231 St. Nicholas Ave., at 128th
St. Apt. 59. U. N. I. A. members preferred.
Nestly furnished room; modern con-
temporary cell meetings or evening. 51
W. 129th St. Apt. 51.
Nestly furnished room for quiet responsible
couple call after 8 F. M. 3630 Seren-
vale Ave. Tull.
Furnished Ap. to Sublet on 71 Ave. Also
room to let. Apply 168 W. 123rd St.
Morninggale 5885.
2 furnished rooms. Ask for Stuart, 4th
Floor, 429 W. 123rd Street.
Two large rooms neatly furnished. Hot and
cold water. Two gentlemen preferred. 108
West 139th St.
High chain elevator apt. 7 and 8 rooms,
to loam. 63 W. 129th St.
Large furnished room to 14.40 sq. ft. with
Cook's Kitchen, 12.50 sq. ft. with
Bathroom in Master Bedroom.
200 West 100th St. N. Boston, ground floor.
Baptist Church.
225 Magnolia 41st Street, Boston, ground floor.
Baptist Church.
To be furnished rooms and kitchen, attic,
guest room, and office.
Room No. 100th St. N. Boston.
Room No. 101st St. N. Boston.