The Negro World

Saturday, December 5, 1925

New York, New York

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LET'S PUT IT OVER The Indispensable Weekly The Voice of the Awakened Negro The Negro World Reaching the Mass of Negroes The Best Advertising Medium A Newspaper Devoted Solely to the Interests of the Negro Race VOL. XIX. No. 17 NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1925 PRICE: FIVE CENTS IN GREATER NEW YORK SEVEN CENTS ELSEWHERE IN THE U.S.A. TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES AFRICA, LAND OF OUR FATHERS, CONTINENT OF LIGHT THE NEGRO, IF HE WILLS, MUST COME INTO HIS OWN Fellow Men of the Negro Race, Greeting: I have to tender you my heartfelt thanks for the earnest efforts you are making to secure my release from a prison where persecution has confined me. I desire to let you know that, whatever betide, I shall always treasure memories of the deep appreciation which you have manifested for service which I have been fortunate enough to render and which, I trust; shall prove to be a boon to this downtrodden race of ours. This week I desire to speak to you about the Continent of Light—Africa. They would have you believe that Africa is the "Dark Continent." Africa is today the most brilliant continent on the face of the globe. It is the continent of light. There is no darkness about Africa. Africa is so much lit, that it is attracting the attention of the world. Like the moon and the sun, it attracts the world because of its brilliancy. Africa Full of Light Africa is full of light, I say, because gold is there. Africa is full of light because copper and tin and iron and coal and everything you can think of are there. And the white man seeks the light. That's why he is going to Africa. Yet they are still trying to camouflage you about the "Dark Continent." I have nothing to hide. I have no camouflage. I have but one truth to tell where Africa is concerned. It is the land of my fathers. They never gave it to anybody, and by my rights, legal and moral, it belongs to me. I cannot argue with the white man about Canada. I won't argue with the white man for a minute in an effort to convince him that America is mine. I won't argue with the Englishman for a minute telling him that Great Britain is mine. But I will spend eternity fighting with any man who wants to talk about Africa, because it is mine. Let the Canadians have Canada; let the Americans have America and let us have Africa. Yes, we shall have Africa, or report to God the reason why. Propaganda Will Not Deter And in our endeavor to regain possession of our Godgiven land we shall be deterred by no obstacles. We shall count as naught the propaganda of the other fellow to keep us in a state of subjection. Propaganda has done more to defeat the good intentions of races and nations than even open warfare. Propaganda is a method used by organized people to convert others against their will, and we are suffering more than any other race in the world from propaganda—propaganda to destroy our hopes, to destroy our habit, to destroy our confidence in life. The Universal Improvement Association is surrounded with propa- Suffering Gladly—For Africa Redeemed HON. MARCUS GARVEY Founder and President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, who is now denied his liberty so that Negroes shall be free Founder and President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, who is now denied his liberty so that Negroes shall be free ganda that we must well understand if we must ultimately succeed. To destroy the usefulness of our organization, to prevent the success of our organization, to destroy the hope of this race of ours for freedom, for true liberty, propaganda has been organized to the effect that you will be so diverted, you will be so divided as to bring about confusion among yourselves, and in the confusion will come the success of the plan laid out by those who are organizing to keep us where we are until we are completely destroyed. Known to Be Just What do I mean by that I mean this: that the Universal Negro Improvement Association stands out at this time on a platform of equity, of justice, of liberty, of freedom for the Negro. Everybody knows it to be a just cause. No one knows it better than those who robbed and exploited and murdered us for over three hundred years. They know it is the program sought by all peoples, and that it is the program that should be supported by all peoples who know themselves to be the creatures of God. But their purpose is not to let us into true freedom, true liberty, true democracy by ourselves, because they have always held us as slaves, and they will always keep us as slaves to suit their convenience, provided we let them do that. So as to keep us slaves, so as to be able to use us as they desire, until they feel that they can do completely without us, they have insti gated, they have started, they have subsidized counterpropaganda, counter-movements, some of them having the same appearance as your own Universal Negro Improvemen t Association; movements that actually try to do the same thing you are trying to do; movements coming out with the same program you have in view. What is the idea? It is to divide and ultimately to destroy you. They know that without unity there can be no success. They know well that with division among you, you will fight among yourselves, and therefore there will never come a conflict with them—that it, between us and them. Support Negro Leadership I want you to realize this-that where your liberty, where your freedom is concerned, there should be but one policy for you, and that policy should be Negro leadership and Negro support of Negro leadership. Where other things are concerned, as religion, social life, or industrial life, we can afford to admit into association other races; but where your liberty is concerned; where your freedom is concerned, no one should be allowed but yourselves. If you haven't liberty, and you are struggling for it, you will have to get it from someone; for someone is depriving you of it. How then can you afford to accept into your association, into your companionship, into your executive councils, men who have kept you from getting your liberty, and those who are opposed to the progress you are making for your liberty? It is illogical. If Africa is to be freed from Europe she has got to be made free upon her own initiative, free from any alliance or aid from Europeans. Africans cannot expect Europe to help free Africa when Europe is the country that keeps Africa in subjection. It is illogical. And so I appeal to the Negroes of the world to so work, the propaganda of the enemy notwithstanding, that they will bring back into the fold the continent of Africa which they have all but lost. The thing can be done, and it must be done. All that is needed is a single purpose, a common will. And, with Unity as our watchword and God being our Helper we shall attain our objective. I have the honor to be, Your obedient servant, Maren Sancy Founder and President-General, Universal Negro Improvement Association. eh yi eg a ee ee ie a © silie ree ee PRE CGE a om get Be eo ge yiowe: TE 2 ne gome a eo ’ HIE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER S, 1908 6 mtabgict ot Bayh aden ta “Marcus Garvey. the Real Emanc pator OT the Negro Race a a Ba —UMISH PRINCE (NLUMITED STATES {fcenaesmnces PORTO BIHNS ARE |= oa) poxans ir conc cos couse o on ie i : ‘ : jeateri-to Death, 7 . Whites So." Right to “ai ts - © LIENS RED HOT PROPAGANDA | 2"= S50) FYSLAED TOPAE | scream) AMEMERE Um aa ca ws oat EEO TUL TRUE AGARDR | susears roc || TAL j) oceme'n_ overt" ||: GIVEN . THE NEGRO ” INTELLECTUAL ~ FREEDOM ae aes ae af] wrote center 2. unmeritutty” |[_tatatys dencive. madivea of the ae a a : Fighting in Foreign Legion. Against Defenders of ‘Their|| sre tentiring une triattwe otat [] BIG DVIDENDS; pattameatery sbnenine “ent WHICH HAS SHOWN ITSELF. IN INDEPENDENCE AND Soil arid Homes, Accuses Abd-el-Krim of “'Swelled || .c'zers Stntey Cunt con ot 7 | teanced mere rremiee eroe 1] ORIGINALITY OF THOUGHT: - re -Head”—But 20th:Gentury Negroes Can’t-Be Fooled |'] ees have tentited t0."known } 1 Thig Ig Charge Made in Protest; | * similar franchise to the. ather a ot ee New York, Noy. 28.—Abd-El-Krim tena temter, trnoransoweeded hie Piince Aage Christian Alexander Bon- art of Depiaar wld the Agpaflated Press here-yestervay. The Price sild thin rested from the THs nw sue agninat Spanish. troops” fielttjnss _{n Morocco, It Jed him: into atta#Ths Fea mimes eae banal Ponisi ween Princg, Anke, A” Captain In {he French Borie train, wie tien bens Rentines in’ Slorcece ine 2920, has come to this country on a xix monthn’ sdeive St-ateaay. ike han the BiCkost Fapect for the Riflan, feltcemea ar fighting mem ” 3 mth Riiine ‘are very heave.” ‘he said, “The thought uppermost in their mind fx that the ‘Christian daze must ie THRe_own ves “sevm to cout Mttle.”” . * Die at Their Posts . In tnaieating thie brawmey tw thas respect, he told hew a HiMan wil con? Cet imsett bentnd rock, tae ends Soe unt pepered tnawrar one intnatbe French sands Spanish. troape. When Aenovered me wil make Uncle iteenopt te encape, Hut will continue his mur- Geran ive wutit he Mimeslt te Killed, Se Galmick subaie sot dead oa satan aloe the trons bathe troone ‘ofthe Spanixhi and French must’ be Kept massed nx much ‘ae possible. AR The mash: lptarwaystoregel they see Jeresiatane fear af ezatuan, whlch they Heoiy tn uuascomen Opes a Ue weay from oye TiiéR-R’ patrol will be audtenty” Mirruumind. hy fanatten| Ciecaneay wae amie eat them eo rae : The RiMans, Prince Ause continued, aire manters of the art of hiding,. They cwenr ae reguit, enltartan, bat alter Tasdsetslay costumes Hbich, hain Tanke ie “imponaie ta cee theon? on Rittans Wall Equipsed The eaupmant of the Kimane tn ot the best; they’ xcom to lack only aire Hino anit thet, nriliery In. parties Tarlyeffertive, being medern and well manned, he aiid ~ o “Our lousex have been very heaty, particularly this yenr:" mald the prince, Pf believe ryan o€ the tribes now, fights re with fay Bini fokeon aecy ree ee ne foe Oe mes tunity presented. The attack wan so pudden, however, that the French Seopa lintiaoes thi Stenpere Siete. fa Rirons enough ite protect them, and inp itihen ware forrea either 40 Join Nisletcetim ee destroyed.” The extengtvenee: of ‘airplanes by uta Freeh Merete bond the serniuaty paevadltn, eemenioy iamurtl %o, Abe French ‘and Spanish forces and hax! meved vane nmner of teen" atealeal Attention Ie gned and the supnly dos partment are well handled, the Prince seared, Prince Ango compared the altuation to ibn ancuiotered, tay. ihe, talted States during troubles “with Mexico, Crh Ie Gran pruiga.altiaes ae Ca cature’ Ueply br AGsteAR. Bail hiding ‘in their “native country, even. thengh American troops outntimbered | thseins econtty, ae Expects Year of War ‘There .can he no doubt: regarding the final outcome,” Prince Auge de- claret, It in Imposnible to treat with Abéeel-Krim. Ie ix nothing hut a rebel, and the oily way to hindle the sitiation 4fur the Freneh and Spacish troops to push steadily’ forward und they ‘clean up’ the whole situation and defeat the tebel leader decisively. It For Weak and Run- ‘Down Men .- + t FOUNO'GLANT-OX MOST EXTRAORDINARY - “Sage & Noted Tiennene Retention. ‘br. Setune Van Ziarer saiamee=". tang Janerstorten, Tae, rae gator Hed oS ae erevmtationn <tr | eee ~ | edits ieee at comment SE BST ee ae Gaston Femmes erm salto SOS SR a WE ecaret SoS hie amice THE STARTLING EFFECT OF QLANT-OX' : Arewecs stimwlates ermal ciaed tonetiohe Burids tisees—enriches the bleed : ——a— c? i LJ a ent So aera bone. are ag ee res ee eee Gory ae oni cone yi . bar, Gon ro — ed ? A a, ial ae sere Os wey Sn oes ramets?) PT IG | a nd oe aM raearay Poa c eg poh arm, 5 = nee, eee) _ Meee ee aS ee oer Cys Ses, ARCS “ t) a: . be hes ee ne .: Sager: : a weed goat Sec ens 7 Es ek eee peor it Be. ey mmm oo” nh CEB Sle. Sal ovearwmere lS I a aes: ao <r rr oe eC mn ee ae po Rast chet ae ot ee pes Ph fake he aber a 8S net MR RET Pe: Baste Fa Will take time, though; and I look for Sennen — Prince Aage has twice Deen ofted for bravery in action: wrid -wan woilided Jwrhen a Freneh feld gun expigfed. 1e Will return to‘hia.dutted aan, captain of infantry .on ‘the Iifan front at the expiration of his leive of absence. He ix a nephew of Ube late Queen Alexan- dria and cotixin of the Kings of Den- mark and Engtaad, Regards. League as Combination ‘of Powers Bent Upon Déstroy- ing Weaker Nations * MOSCOW, Noy. 23.--Under no ele- vunmmtanees will the Soelet unten Join the prewnt League of Natloia.. Rus in, Tike. “America, firmly. intent t Mand aloot from rimlige organizations this in the. gist of a gtatement inade today by ‘Liieinor. acting commlenar of forelin aftalrs In Tehtteherin's ae Litvinoft. took this aceasion to eon- teadice rimorn In forvizn countries that the Revietn: have changed their spolletes and are Tooking with favor on fponnible entry into the Teenkue, Je wa | "We ewntinue to éonmider thet. the League In not friendly to our suntan, high a working tor. the commart wel ‘tare, but Ina mere combination of ro~ called great prwern proporine to wali the rutht,t dlaponn of weaker natlénn, on thé mala question, whieh, parties uinrly Interest un-—the quention of dae ia ues been taken ‘The romminsar ald the Savtets would welcome creation of an internatinnal organization which would. really Strenkthen pence on the -bnele of Ine Uependence and self-determination of Mt atone, ieccc HES Walannisk temas’ | That the Negro’ continues to be « ood soldier in npite of the many dls couragements Sof the past few" year Ite proven hy the recent cominendatior ot the Twenty-fify Infantry U. 8. "A in General Opter Ne 6 hy Catone! Dougherty: who Ix in command of th | roximent that has for sume time eer j located at. Fort Hauchauca, Arizona The inspection occurred October 15 1925, . The .coimendation reads: The Corpx’ Area Commander at- the Aloxs of hin annual review and inspection of the 26th fnfancry, this dite suid: Tie regiment Tas Just xiven the Pest Infuntes review Ihave ever seen outside GC West Point. It in the beat | uiniformed reelment 1 have ever een fa the Wnited Staten Army. * Thin envindie record han bean made ‘only by the-weam work of ollicers ond mon of the regiment. The reginintal commander congratulates everyent of you and in proud to have the Rood fortune te be-aswigned to the Twenty- Attn. By order of Col. Doneherty, counter: Fignd hy John A. Klein, eaptain and ‘adjutant, New Alum Rock Mineral Named for Prof. Kemp PALO ALTO, Cal. Nov. 25.—Pro- fontor A. F. Rogors, of the Department of Mineralogy of Stanford University today announced the discovery uf & mineral tn aliim rock, a famnoun deposit at San Jose, that has never before beer entered in the, mineralogical annals of the world. Ie has called ‘thin dincov- ery “Kempite" in honor of | Profenqor James ¥. Kemp, .of Columbia. Usilver- sity, New York. The riew mineral 1s ‘a manganese exy-chloride and has no nomabiala’ delet. ag How, Negro Priscaers - Are Beatesi‘to Death, ~"Is Teld in Court ~“ALRREMARLE, N. C. Nov. 26. ‘UStorlen of how’ Nesro convicts wore “heaten xo.” unmereitully” that they dled within a fow hours aye featuring the trix) here of 3. €. Crenford, Stanley County ‘con- viet superintendent. Fight. wit- nessen have textified (o."known cruities” of Crunford extending over a period of several yeain. Some of the witness white “convicts, textifled to have seen “Cranford whip two, Negroes on an. -Afternoon aiff that both men dle that-night. Dr. C.-M. Lentz, of Aibgindrle, testifying later how- ever, sald that he exanined, tho Negroes on the evening of their death: and from what he Could Wea from Cranford and the ftinrds, as well as from the exama Inatlon, the men dled from “over oats" ‘ “Did you ever hear of a Nesro In thts county dy|ng from becorn= Ing overheated?” tho juga asked. "The phyatcian aald that hads not. ANesro showed thir judge sears on hin body witch he testified were from beatings at the hard of Cihford. Evidence was Drought wut! tending te ghee that apuither Negra wns drared bo- Bint a truck for a great distance, amd_died tater. SOVIET CONSIDERS. ENDING MARRIAGE | MOSCOW, Menday.—The massen of asterens ales ne alceaiee todo Fmier 9 sent of reterenedany, the ates tion’ of whether marriuce a€?an fn: Hstitudan shall remain sr te applishes [in Ruanla. — Tie aon af he ni he Tages and factories 8 xounht aa A JEmanes forthe feissian Executive Committee, which at its last aeesion found unexpected tntarsst inthe tote fin folled to enme to a final decision fon abolition of the dixtinetion between Feristered and uinresivtered marriages Te the alistinetin were elininater, was held that nurrkece, ne andnatitus ton, virtually wentd céane to extant. ‘The recent mecting ofthe Kxreutive Committes wae hell in’ the former throne rowin of the Czar tn the Keem= Tin. The xttdled walle and pillars and the peautital arched aoors Inlad with xold are unchanged since the old days, ‘but a woolen platform: replaces the throne, while aC tIils meeting Pearant Women with red kerehtetn an Read coverk, workers in leather. jackets and Commissring in high heute mingled Aramagicalts. plained that the proposed tiylropnin thin differentiation was designed chiefly to pregert the woman and the chita, ince atten (hee suffers) if “ave tintens:? Under tha mosis he nnanrore any. such allianer woithd. be deemed a marrige. etving & woman the right te elilm support for herselt and her children, : Internal Affaire Commissary Helo- poroidoe argued that unt the State can aissime the Kuppore an eiieatlon of the childrén Jt Ix necessary to keep the family. ay sh anatittion and. Hold ie venpwomatte for the chit, “stale” marrlaza, he augRested, nflered botter| protection to the child ayd would help] Prevent” an increase in homely children, 300,000 of whom are how if the Soviet Taian, Finally i wan apeand to tet the massca codsider the penlioas Pennsylvania Railroad Chef Wins $40,000 Verdict - NEW YORK—Following « lengthy trial, the hasta of whieh was negligence and damages, Ernest Carter, 29 years old, of 240 Roman Avenue, Forest Hilts Long Island, recelved. an award of 940.000 In 2 yealed verdiet*returged to Justice Leander, Faber in the Queens Supreme Court iast week. Carter was badly Injured when. the ‘Washington Special, on the Pennsylvania railroad, on, which he was employed ax a chef, wan rammed “In a rear-end collision wlth = Philadeiphia local at Manhat- tan’ Transfer Jost: January... Dimages of $100,000 were akked for hy Carter. Counsel for the Pennsylvania moved to have the award act asite as exces- mr. PORTO RICANS ARE. “ENSUED TH AY ~ BG ANIENNS WASHINGTON: Nov. 26.—4, protes against soclal and economic condition in Porte Rico, aigned by 13400 Port Ricana., wan presented to Presiden Covltdgs today. by Aenxtor Santian Iglesias, “The petition jirdiioxed by: th Hxectitive Council of the Free Federa Yon of: Workingnien, In. Porto Rico after repiting alleges INS, asserts: shat “priviieke and incompetency have Bre- vailed for years in Porto Ica.” ant reaueata the Presklent and Congress t aproint, a joint .comminsion to study conditions tn the island and recommend ‘eeinlation toltinprove “the situation economleally aN poi @ets “The rexonrees o€ ou and are Ab: sorbed and -vontratied In auch a farm that the Porto Iican people are prac: tleally organized and constituted sunt like assfactory worked by industrial Mave.” deciaren the petttion.« ‘Che protentanta declare that Pacquec of heavy ivilends paid stoehiioldenein the United States anil Europes there I hat “SuMETnt Feventiy for education: sig) health activitien” of “the: Ghvern- ment, with the results that thouranits of children dle annually from acnemla, taberetiionin; malana and other dl- seasen, and that $0,000 children -have een ‘deprived of education. "Continuing, the petition eye In part thnt foGr-Atthi of the working popula~ ton are without permanent employ ment: that while the working people earn meagre wager they, have to bear anew burden In: the:eale-tex-lawy"in~ creasing. thelr cont of Iiving over 25 ner cent: that because the ‘rich people refuse to pay thle necessary amount for nipporting the Government. the tax imeden falta on the shouldera of the iahorers, who number-epiproaiiiately 800.000, a ‘The petition annerts that “Great out: agen” abuncn, crlmen and iilexalitien marked the Jast election .iéld in Porto Rico on Nov. 4, 1924, The right of cuffrage was practically denied to the people, The poll were controlled by yne political party. ‘THE popular sov- srelgnity could not exercise ita rights and franchises and the Legislature In not the true expression of the popurm. wilt 4 . * ‘The petition relates that, the dw to hallenge ¢lectionn before the courte’ ff Porto iRico hax heen repented, by nenna of which the people have been leprived of any legal remedy. Culling, the party in power a “polltt- al oligarchy the petition meen thet It 1m trying to obtain from the Congrean ff the United Staten the right ta elcet he Governior of the Island—now ap- Jointed by the Proaldent af the United ‘tates—to obtain power to impose ari duties gon tmportatlons: io tanga the Federal Court tn order te nfluen=9 or control {ta decisions: that <, to Kot abolute domain upon the nmistutians, Ife and property of the ‘orto. lean community, ‘Such an idea hiecomes a new form to ever Porte Iiea from tho national fo." the petition continues, “and 6e= axionally: creates the theory to divide ne citizenship Into two classex: ltt ens eninving all the constitutional ixhta and colonial citizens without due onatitutional rights." Declaring that Porto Rico has suffered four centuries. fa colonial system which has bur- ened us with bitter espertence and ufferings." the petitioners ask 4 be onsidereid as part of the United States stl the: full Fights of national Ife. . The final statement tn the petition: te nat Porto Itico-rhould be under the rotcetion, and administration of the repartment of the Interior of the, inited States and “not continued an a \iftary possession under the War De- artment.” ‘| Efforts to Curb 5 Brutality in Georgia . WASHINGTON.—Flogging of. pria- onera in Gennes was abolished by the Iegisiature gome.months ago, Nut ihere appeara to be'a desire on the part of the wardens for a return fo the Inah, One of the present Prutal methode of convict punishment ts to fadten a pria- qner-in-a-shallpm_byx_and to smear molasses on hig@&xposed face to attract fies. The arms of the prisoners are bound to prevent brushing the insects away. It is reported that at other con- Vict.campe prisoners are backed up te & post with their arms chained behind them. - ‘Their arms are thon raised as high As possible and then fastened to nails, the prisoners being left im thie position for howrs. Uniform pantshunest moth- ode will be sought af a Decstaber méet- Ing of the Georgia pricen comminsion and members of the State Beard of Heakh wil puss en Spo-tumsnsnees of ye prepieed Geckyfinary mmttbode Meter’ Heieco Fancrals Whatersieation of Furtey Seo a funemel vies, Fhe Sarin tes bom seats Be ¢ Feces ce commantiongh poryory ad ees, eae ‘numer Gutiie, 3. Natives Will Outnumber Whites So.” Right to Vote Is Taken Away SMITHFIELD, Orange ree State, Nov. 16-—-A decisidn to totally” deprive natives of the |vcape Province of thelr exinting- /Parllamentary franchine in an= nounced here. Premier Herzox aeclared-It fx Imposatble.to extend a similar franchise to the ather provinces of the South African Unlon, for ‘this would mean tho ruin of European civilization, Experts, the premier added, sfiguire.that_the native’ voters “in the Cape Province within Arty | yeara would out-niimber the White voters and the change was necessary. | st _—_—$$$ Germany ‘Now Under Influence of Britain—All Is Well Until -the Next War Flames Forth . ” " * pom the Daily Worker An we expected, the Britigh Parlin- ment ratified the Locarno “sretirity pacte." In every onso of the Word they were “security” pacts for Britain, The new alignments Krowine om of Locarno’ bring Germany under the in- Mueace of Britain, In the xteusete ainst France and the United Stater Yhieiy a distingt advantage and, con- slderinge xe composition of the Frltigh Triana neat Wa" Inev- table, s Moat signifiernt were ‘the remarky of the British forcien seggetary. Mr. “Austen Chamberlain, wii engineered the Locarno conference, In relation to Mr. Ramany MacDonald. Opening the Getate after Ms motion for ratifiention Chamberlain praised. MacDonald, say- tn that laterite had paved" the. way: “in prepaiini...he_Kureneanntmon: phere, which made the aecomplixh- ment nt Locarno possitie. ‘Thanx Mae~ Donald, the pncifiat laborite. 1s openly ‘weciaimed by the imperialist conspira~ tore who are creatine neve allznments Tie EROS PAPAIN TO Ce TeX worla elnughter. When) the next war bureta fn all te fury upon the world we may fikd MacDonalt bemoaning the passing of paciiixm. Rut the damn- Ing fact cannbt be effaced that It war MacDonald's leadership of the*Tritish, uboriten that blazed the path for Chamberlain and Ualdwin ag that his. defense .of empire whiltFirime min- later waa more effective in protecting the interests of the imperialists, par- tlewlarly tn the olopten get semi, colonies, than even the avoweil repro= sentatives of Imperiatinm now in-con- trol of the Tory government. om French: Repel 4 Riff Attack * . TAZA, Morera, Nov. 28.—The Atif today Intinehed « torrie awcenit on the Franch troops at AM Bou Rekba The tribesmen are reported to have been repulsed with Neavy Joss of life tut the ontkome of the battle is not yet certain,” a PARIS, Nov. '22—From Perpignan, 1 Froncit town near the Spanish bor- der, come now. reports of plans for x military coup de etat agutnat General Primo de Mivera’s directory. ‘Tho tatest advicen ‘kay Word has reached “Perpignan from’ Madrid, that miliary element dixsatistied wlth Bie Hivesa'a—titontion tara store civil government are reajfonsible for tho cabal against him. ‘ThéSnill- fary leaders are sald to be dissatisfied ‘wecause they will be turned oat of the high posts they hold at present In Savor of vivillane, Eniphnals is latd upon Inereaning hos- Uilkty hotween tho military ellque and the patriotic unton ‘with which Gen- eral De Rivera Ss allying hiriself more clonely than ever. ‘the Preaident of the Directory retuned to.make him Minister of Foreign Af- faira in the new clvil cabinet, told Count Romnonoes that ho expecta to Femain only & few daye more aa 4 member of the Direciory, it in report- ine abe: Diregyo Ten Million Doliar Stock Tssue ‘by Firestone NEW YORK—Adaitional tacue of $0000.00 7 per cent-cumulative pre- ferred stock, par vilue $100 per share Fwith-aividends accruing trom Woven: Der 16, 1925’ has:been made “by the Firestone Tire and Rubber Conbany, of Akron, Ohio, “the. proceeds of which,” mtatea the compayiy, “willbe “weed asaddttional working capital” TA Seancial ciretes i is presumed that thie tremendoes iseve te for the Derpese of financing the:tigantio .rab- Ber. project which the Firestone Com- pany fe about to estadtion and qperate mm Unerie.—c. P. B oes Terk “Gembling’Hell”. For. Foreigners Only ANGORA, -Tertey. (a. P.)—Torks aS aes ane tee 3 < hao.been penverted, @ = bil ietre- @usct' tm; tho ational: Acmeanity fu ‘he “Dan sestes’ tant Yes Potee: @ the Basgheres wil to haga meses Jat steal be’ per- at a +S tetas as cere ats SO DECLARES BISHOP GEORGE McGUIRE IN COURSE OF ABLE“LECTURE IN: LIBERTY HALL—GARVEY HAS | GIVEN . THE NEGRO" INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM WHICH HAS SHOWN ITSELF IN INDEPENDENCE AND ORIGINALITY OF THOUGHT:.§ The U.N. 1. A. No Longer Considered a Joke—~ »' Great Excitement in Europe Over Garvey and "His Organization — Movement Has Extended - Into the Very Heart of Africa and Made Mil- ‘lions of Converts a ‘. y GARVEY’S DOCTRINE OF AFRICA FOR AFRICANS THE CAUSE OF HIS OPPOSITION AND PERSECUTION Members Are Exhorted to Banish Alny Signs of Internal “Division and. Strife—Keep Their Hearts and Minds Set Upon Attaining the Goal—Prof. Marralet. of | _ France’ Talks on. ‘Africa and Displays’ Handiwork of Natives . - | LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, Nov. 20“One God, One Leader, One Aim, Gne Destiny,’ was the subject of a most inspiring’ lecture delivered to-night. by His Grace Bishop George -Me+ Guire, of the African Orihodéx Church, to a_packed aitdience of fol- lowers and friends of the Universal Negro Improvement -\ssociation,’on the occasion of tlic usual Sunday night mass meeting. ‘The -bishop, whois recognized as one of the most erudite scholars of the race, was at fiis hest a$ he usually is whén discussing the affairs of the organiza- tion (of, which he is one af the staunchest advocates). and in his tréatise LTauded: the high aims and purpases-of. the Universal Negro Improve- ment Association and ‘the divine motives whicti inspired its great‘leader in giving birth to the organization which, he declared, was no longer considered-as a joke, if we are to judge by the excitement in Europe over Garvey and.the organization. 0 Nobody need think, said the bishop, that this movement is collapsing: its ramifications have extended. into the very heart of Africa and mil- lions are being added annually to the converts and disciples of Garvey. There may be temporary setbacks arid embarrassments, but they’ are all parts of the program and they all have théir prirpose. “He exhorted the members to banish any sign of internal divisiin and strife and keep thei? mjnds, their hearts and hands set upon attaining the goal. In warn ing his hearers, however, not to fail to recognize-God in the movement, the ‘bishop said no hijman institution ean Hope to floirish without ree- ogrfition of the Deity, but, hé-added, Yhat Negeoes-muse think of their God and Father as like unto themselves. The new Negro, he’ asserted; ‘declines to accept his theology from alien teachers; religious freedom is ihe very basis of all freedém, and the member of the Cniyersal Negro Improvement Association who still rege'ves weekly, monthly, or annual doses of religions teaching or preaching from any but a Negra does not understand the fdidamental principtes of liberty. His erced, he said, consistud.of, two brief articles: “I believe in God and [believe in the Negro race,” juidl, he continued, “the Negro preacher who Sunday after Sunday has nothing to say about Negro welfaré, Negro progress, Negro achievement, Negro co-operation, and Negro destiny, does not meet the needs of his people.” . About leadership, the hishop stregsed the necessity of human leadership and said that Marcus Garvey has beyond. doubt demonstrated that’ he, is the outstanding leader of the Negro people; he ha’ proven the great- est emancipator of the race in that while others had given pliysical free- dom to the race, it was Marcus Garvey, who brought to the Negro the new freédom—that intellectual freedom which has shown itself in ine dependence “atid originality _of Thonght_among Negroes_everywhere,_ whether.they give the credit to Garvey.or not. Garvey's doctrine of “Africa for the Africans” was, the bishop said, the underlying cause of All the opposition and persecution from the white nations of Europe and his black foes in America. ‘The other Speaker of the evening was Prof. Rete Marralet. of France, who spoke briefly of-his travels throughout Africa during which he’had observed the habits and customs of the native Africans, and displayed simples.ofthe handiwork of the natives to show their original art in the manufacture of fineries and other materials. that’ called for skill in execution. ne = the benefits: receive in renewal of health, shrengtis ee: S i ‘ae 8 i < * 2 7 & 0 ee Se we ee ers a | Yo bial gitag cotiner is capa oe. 2 Seteniy net sab taser weit nt Se a a : pel cena” Sale" scqutatent ir eis tea tuna £. ES =a. = sid an a cig F Following are the speeches: ~ BISHOP McGUIRE’S ADDRESS Fellowmen of tho Nexro race, follow memberg of the. Universal Negro Im- provement Association, I propoie tc Jecture on our motto, with a: tively amendfient, ao that it reads, “One God Ong Yeager. One Alm, One Destiny.” Let uy whhour wants of words; plunge At once lato the aubject. No human inxtitusfon ean hope to flourish without recognition of: Delty. Empires have crumbled, kingdom have beth mnihilated and nations din- Integrated just as egon a thelr pros- perity led.them to believe that they could dispense with God. It lx an true today as when: the Hebrew peaimist first wrote ft: “Bucept the Lora bufid the house, they labor in vairethat bulld itz excent the Lord keep the city, the ‘watchman waketh but in vain, Tie Negro han never wandoréd tar away from, God. Deep down in his heart he bas the: utmost revérence for God, ‘and it tz my conviction that: as in pre-Christian times the Hebrews -were-the-choxenneonte-of, Goto Mm theso Iant times It har pleased Provi- dence: to pelect the Negro: race to be His instruments, for “promoting -His kingdom here on earth: Wust Worship a God of Our Likenese But a6 to God's: personality and at- tributer, and an to. His plans for the human race, we New Negroes, have our own ideas, The-God which the Caucastan has erected for his worship, ‘and ‘incifentally has held up for our The Negro World does not knowingly accept questionable or fraudulent advertising. Readers of the Negro World are earnestly requested to invite our attention to any failure on the part of an advertiser to adhere to any representation contained in a Negro World advertisement. LET'S PUT IT OVER CAMPAIGN TO SECURE FREEDOM FOR PRESIDENT-GENERAL GARVEY THE campaign launched several weeks ago to create sentiment throughout the country which would urge upon those in authority the justice of extending a pardon to President-General Mareus Garvey, of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, has covered a wide sweep of the country and has borne good fruit wherever the appeal has been made, and we are sure it will continue to do so. Mrs Mayme DeMena and her co-workers have made an eloquent and convincing presentation of the case to many large audiences, which have heard them gladly and signed the petition for pardon with an enthusiasm which showed that their full sympathies were in the act. Keep up the good work all along the line. Every local should be alive to the good work of securing a pardon for President-General Garvey, and we believe that it is, but being alive to the work and doing the thing necessary to give vitality to the work are not the same. The necessary sentiment in favor of the pardon must be created, but the petition for pardon must be signed and filed with the proper authorities. Agitation is one thing; backing up agitation with effort and cash is another thing, but they are complementary and necessary the one to the other. We are all saddened at this season of the year, when the new is crowding out the old, by the absence of the President-General from us. We miss the magic of his personal, touch and appeal, and we go about the work of holding up the organization more with grim determination than with the resolute enthusiasm which moves mountains, if necessary, because of his absence, and we feel on that account to labor all the more zealously to secure his pardon and restoration to the big work he created and fostered and loves so well. DUTCH TYRANNY IN SOUTH AFRICA THE Dutch settlers of South Africa, who dominate in the Union of South Africa, are so shaping matters under the premiership of General Hertzog, as to create a condition of desperation for the native blacks and of imminent danger for the English-speaking portion of the inhabitants. The Dutch have the utmost contempt for the native blacks and their rights, and have so legislated in the union that these latter are really reduced to a condition of involuntary servitude. There are undercurrent mutterings which portend that the black mass is seething with desperation, and that is always a dangerous thing, especially in a situation: where the oppressed outnumber the oppressors twenty to one. The Dutch of the Union of South Africa are a fat-witted, onetrack minded, selfish but who believe that they are the salt of the earth and that if they want what the native blacks have they have only to commandeer it by appropriate legislation, which is easy by reason of the white minority rule which they have established. The President of the National African Congress of the Cape of Good Hope has issued a statement to the effect that the Congress will strenuously oppose Premier Hertzog's proposed policy with regard to the segregation of the natives of the cape and the abolition of the native cape franchise. Meanwhile Premier Hertzog has gone ahead with creating a self-governing colony out of what was once German Southwest Africa, giving them a constitution, as far as the white population is concerned. It is an astonishing fact that there are only 20,000 whites in the colony, only the 6,500 adults among them being entitled to vote, while there are some 200,000 Hottentots, Bushmen and other Negroes in the colony, who are given no part in the voting of the government of the colony, and those who enjoyed some measure of representation in the cape-colony government under the English rule are to be disfranchised and segregated, as they are in the Union of South Africa. The African-National Congress and our esteemed contemporary, The African World, have a big but imperative job in hand to educate the 200,000 native blacks in the new colony as to what are their rights in their relations with the 20,000 whites, who have usurped the lands and destroyed the liberties of the native blacks. We feel sure that our contemporary will buckle to the job and make a finished one of it, although it may take many trials and tribulations in the doing of it. Organize! Agitate!! Protest!! Fight if necessary and when the time is ripe!!!! It is the only way to conquer. And the world does not grow any better in this matter. It has been that way as long ago as we have record. The moral is, of course, have something of your own and be above asking favors of others. How? Deny yourselves and save something, however little, of what you earn, and place it where you can get it when you need it. (From The Washington Tribune) However good our schools and colleges are, they can only refine—make into the greatest usefulness—the raw material that parents send them in their children. It is a debatable question, yet there is much evidence on the affirmative side to prove that man and woman can produce a child with the disposition they desire. It to have, or a genius in the line they have selected for it. These are the men and women who have given the world those who have led it on to bigger and better things. They are the ones whose homes are sufficient—though poverty-stricken, they have built character. Do you belong to a Christmas savings fund club? It has come to be a very popular and convenient way to have a dollar in the Christmas holidays, when everybody wants a spare dollar with which to celebrate. And some who save money in that way do not spend all of it to make merry and to buy necessary things, but reinvest some of the money and let it grow, by additions and drawing interest. It will interest the readers of The Negro World to know that it has been estimated that there are more than 7,000,000 members of the Christmas savings fund clubs in the United States, and that some $314,154,800 will be distributed among them during the present holidays. This is $70,000,000 more than the sum aggregated last year, showing that the club is growing in favor, after fifteen years of trial. Some $35,000,090 will be distributed to members in the New York city district. More than 6,800 banks in the United States are participating in the distribution, of which it is estimated $141,369,600 will be spent in Christmas celebration and $87,963,344 will be re-deposited to savings accounts. It is indeed hard, we admit, for a man to rise, once he has fallen; but, in arising, he proves his worth. We know that economic conditions, of themselves, are not such to promote quietness of spirit nor mental repose. In the poor, struggling homes, there is nothing lovely, nothing secure—fear of landlords, fear of duns, deceit (because deceit is the sole refuge from instant trouble), lies even jettily, theft, if life is to continue possibly. It is these turbulent homes which demoralize the young and handle them, in their seeking of a successful and honorable cagier. Everybody should save something of what he makes. A poor person has lean years all of the time, and the only way he can have fat years at all is to deny himself the pleasure of buying everything he thinks he wants and to buy only the things he must have. It will come hard at first but it will grow easier the longer it is tried and found to be good. Find the way to a savings bank and open an account, however small, and continue to add to it, however small the addition. THEY WANT THE PRISON. LASH RESTORED Yet, it is in these very insufficient homes that an imaginary standard of perfection exists. It is in these homes that parents teach by precepts, not by examples. Christian peoples has been to lessen the horrors of prisons, and to humanize treatment of convicts a great many people are still so savage at heart as to advocate the revival of the whipping post in the North, and the lash and the bloodhound in Southern convict camps. Both may be necessary, but we are unable, to see it because we believe that justice should not be brutal and unusual in its treatment of those unfortunate persons who go wrong and must be separated from their brethren and punished for their criminal acts by the State. The State, meaning the whole people, is the supreme power, and it should be just and not brutal in its treatment of its unfortunate members. Politics-ridden, insincere and time-serving, utterly heterogeneous in their racial mixture and seething with mutual dislikes and distrusts, these insufficient homes do little in creating spiritual communion, and fail utterly to teach that self-rage so vital in the development of that moral sense so essential to the child in enabling it (stand on its feet, face the world, treat others as its equals and to do the right because it prefers right to wrong. Penitentiaries are bad enough at their best, but there is no excuse whatsoever for the convict, lease system and camp. The convicts of the State are farmed out to private persons and corporations, which have no more interest in the convict than to get all of the labor out of him they can. How much labor they can get depends upon the health and disposition of the convict and the lash of the driver. When the convict, white or black, is too sick and weak to work he is whipped to his work until he drubs dead, and then he is dumped into a shallow grave, covered over, and left to rot. This has been shown in the courts to have been the methods employed on the prison farms and the convict-lease camps of Georgia and Florida. There was so much cruelty discovered in the conduct of these prison hells two years ago that public opinion compelled the legislatures to abolish the lash in Georgia and Florida. Just now the lessees of convicts are clamoring in both States for a restoration by the legislature of the lash. Let us make our family life reflect the high ideals of this great republic. Let us cultivate the confidence of our children; create in them a greater willingness to be advised, more diffidence about entering new fields of experience. Let us not do it so as to cause that ridicule, that harshness, which may make them brood and turn against us who have wounded their self-esteem. And finally, let us realize that parental functions are not meant for the bills of the parent, but primarily for the welfare of the offspring. It is our duty to prepare wisely and patiently, our child for an independent life as an individual and a decent moral life as a citizen. HEALTH TOPICS We are still very far from "doing unto others as we would that they should do unto us," There is too much selfishness and greed dominant in the relations of men and of nations. But we must keep on fighting for what is right and proper and humane as against what is unjust, demoralizing and brutal. If we do not, we shall ultimately be submerged and brutalized. The sanic condition prevails everywhere. The good front those who are back and the good should win out in the end, or chaos will come again. By Dr. B. S. HERBEN of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association Pretend that you have put some chicken eggs into an incubator and leave them there at a constant high temperature for forty-two hours or seventy-two hours—two or three days. At the end of that time you carefully remove one of those eggs and with the gentlest striking of the shell, you can imagine, you break the shell into tiny pieces over one spot and carefully lift the shell from the white membrane beneath it. You must not damage the membrane. Then you very skillfully cut away that membrane from a portion of this surface and lift it off. Underneath you discover the embryo of the chick. It looks like a thin rod-pole curved into a semi-circle. It has a big head and a long tail you say. If you could lift that tiny embryo on to a piece of glass and lay it beneath the powerful lens of the microscope you could plainly see the heart of that young chick heating before your eyes. "In forty-two hours," does NUMBER OF FOREIGN BORN IN NEW YORK CITY IN getting around Greater New York we often wonder who are its 100 per cent, Americans, the natives or the foreign born. It is a problem to get at the answer, as we come in contact with foreigners or those of foreign parentage at every turn, in all of the occupations in which the population is engaged. The foreigners have a very large part of the small business of Greater New York and a big share in the larger business, of whatever sort. They make themselves felt and heard in all of the life of the great city. The Foreign Born American Division of the Episcopal Church has found that there are forty-three separate groupings of Americans of foreign birth or parentage in New York City, speaking more than a score of tongues, and totaling more than 4,300,000 of the population. Negroes and Jews are not rated as foreign. The Italians lead with 800,000, the Germans with 670,000, the Irish with 616,000, and so on down to groups too small to enumerate. It is interesting to note that the races are grouped and that they are instructed in American ways and given all sorts of assistance, there being strong societies among the larger groups which make a business of looking after and caring for the interests of their members. Among themselves it is possible that the Jews are the most numerous of the race groups and among the wealthiest and most helpful in looking after their own, $4,000,000 having been raised among them in four days recently for the support of their united charities. The Negro is just beginning to get the hang of organizing and helping his own, but he should grow in this vital matter, and we think he will. Sooner, probably, in the chick and at least in the third week of life in the human being. Life begins you know the moment the ovum and sperm cell unite. Can you imagine the swiftness with which nature must work to accomplish the making of the wonderfully complex human being in about two hundred and eighty days? The human heart begins as a very simple tube-like organ and gradually develops its four chambers. It commences its work as soon as its walls are complete. In other words, your heart started beating about fifteen weeks before the physician could detect the sound of it. The sound of the heart beat can be heard in about the fifth month of the life of the embryo. It is a mistake to say that the human heart never rests. It beats and then rests and beats again seventy or eighty times a minute. In a person who is resting. WHO ARE OUR BEST FRIENDS? Stop thinking that every time some one entertains a different view from yours, or opposes you for some honor or office, that he or she has it in for you, or that they are your enemies, for they are not. But in most cases they will prove in the end to be your best friends, for they are open-minded and not eaten up with deceit and hypocrisy like most of the supposed friends prove to be. They also are found to be the most useful members of any organization to which they belong, for they are not afraid to speak openly and frankly of them and measures. If the advice of such people were needed, a number of our prominent and influential organizations would not now be losing everything worthwhile but their names. The minute the jumps up or undertakes severe muscular work the "great pump works faster as though it knew that the distant muscles and the brains had work to do and must have more blood." THE MASSACRE OF THE OUERGHA Written for Zip, Needs World BY J. ELMER WORRELL. Ear, far away, are you, La France, From standards you profess. When, clothed in late progression's dress You murder innocents. The blood that round the Ouergha flowed, Shall never forgotten be. Till that grim day when earth shall see You, France, upon your knee. Paying in blood your debtor's bill, Drinking in dregs your crimson fill. La Liberté, Fraternité, You know not of La France, When Freedom strikes for Freedom's ch In blood you make her pay: For in her path stand you, La France, With burnished brand in hand, With fire and sword you waste the land Where Freedom takes her stand. La Liberté, Fraternité, You know not of, La France, When Freedom strikes for Freedom's chance: In blood you make her pay; For in her path stand you, La France, With burnished brand in hand, With fire and sword you waste the land Where Freedom takes her stand. Shall Christians dare yet speak of love To Allah's children brave, Then offer as foretaste of heaven, The yoke or foeman's grave? Speak on, you Christians of the Cross! Yours is the gain, another's loss; Speak on, till, on some glorious day The Crescent, rising through the clouds Of murder, hatred and rapine. Shall reign triumphant over the scene... And Onergha*-be avenged! *The Ottergha: A river in the Kiket place was recently born numerous casualties. AMERICANS SAID TO BE ENSLAVED BY LAW Kansas Attorney Tells Bar Association Nation Has Become Police Ridden—People Confounded by Multiplicity of Statutes From The New York World *The Ottergha : A river in the Kiff country near which a Riffin market place was recently bombed by French airmen, causing numerous casualties. EMPORIA, KAN. Nov. 24. - The once proud, free citizen of this Republic is now slavelike, cowering and eriling from the police power of the land. We are a police and inspector ridden people." Thus spoke Harold C. McGugin, veteran attorney of Kansas, in an address before the Kansas State Her Association today, which took the form of a sweeping denunciation of the tyranny of the law. Mr. McGugin was one of the first lawyers in Kansas to wage a fight against the Ku Klux Klan. He is a Republican, but in the last campaign he supported William Allen White for governor. Every man, the speaker said, fears each stranger who approaches is coming to enforce a law. "The citizen of today no longer cries, for justice or right when faced with these governmental agents, said Mr. McGinning, but his hands are up, his pockets are emptied and he is willing that these collectors and inspectors take toll as they demand: if only fines. "I make hold the assertion," he continued, "that there is not a police force in a town of Kansas of over 5,000 people but will, during the next year, use a raiding warrant as a mere subterfuge to raid, humiliate and terrorize some citizen who has gained the ill will of some petty policemen." This, he said, was not only true of Kansas but of every other State where "mallocious raids" can be based on some law. In opening his address Mr. McGuffin pointed out how congress has been grinding out legislation almost continually since 1948. There are now, he said, no less than 15,000 sections of the EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS If we would be really thankful we must be wise enough to look beyond the moment to the needs of time to come and use every God-given once-faculty and opportunity to that end. What have we done with our time, minds, muscles and opportunities during this year under God's guidance to relieve ourselves of the hardships or handicaps to which we have been subjected.—Boston Chronicle. Justice is justice, but certainly injustice is not. It is an elemental principle that all men are entitled to it. Justice, real justice, never permits nationality of the plaintiff and defendant to affect her consideration of the testimony and her final verdict. It is simply a reiteration to say that the colored man in America only asks for justice.—Louisville Leader. The Church has a wonderful opportunity and a tremendous responsibility in shaping the dealing of fifteen millions of American people who, as a general proposition, have chosen this avenue as their guide. This is altogether complimentary and encouraging on the part of our race and the spirit should be cultivated. Warning should be given and counsel should be bad that the highest and best expressions be made from our pulpits and through our church agencies — Birmingham Reporter. The wisest man may be wiser today than he was yesterday and tomorrow than he is today. Total freedom from change would imply total freedom from error; but this is the proximate of Ouandaegoee alone. — Madhville Church. Every mortal has his vulnerable spot in which he may be mortally wounded as to his moral character, which he would push all over him absolutely upon the limits of ethics, urging him to show themselves an action. He is public, not private. Knowledge of the State is obligatory. United States statutes. Coupled with this there are 11,000 sections of the State statutes. He said in part: "These various statutes are so complex that no two courts will seldom reach a like construction. The Federal statutes reach such great numbers that no lawyer in America has a comprehensive knowledge of them. Some lawyers may be expert in finding them in the sense that some birddog might be expert in finding quail but these lawyers no more know the statutes than the birddog knows the number of quail in the cover he is painting." Mr. McGinnis deplored the legal maxim which sets forth that ignorance of the law is no excuse. In view of these volumes upon volumes of law, many of them beyond comprehension, he said it would be an absurdity to invoke the maxim and it does violence to reason. 4.300.000 FOREIGN BORN IN NEW YORK There are forty-three separate and distinct, groupings of Americans of foreign birth or parentage in New York city, speaking more than a score of tongues, and totaling more than 4,300,000 of the population of the metropolis, according to². Finding of the Foreign Born Americans Division of the Episcopal Church. A glance over the list of foreign born groupings here show that, excluding Jews, there are in round numbers 800,000 Ballots in New York, 670,000 Germans, 616,000 Irish, 150,000 Poles, 137,000 English, 89,000 Meyagans, the game number of Czechoslovakians, 50,000 Russians, Esperant and Swedish respectively, 29,000 Syrians, 16,000 Chinese, 8,000 Armenians, 3,000 Japanese, 2,000 Turks and so on down the list to 345,000 smaller nationalities unassisted, all of them either of foreign birth or parentage. An interesting fact noted by the report is that of 837 reports received from the 1,500 parishes in which the Foreign Born Division is at work, it is found that there are 252 Greek groups among whom the division is working, 142 Italian groups, 109 Swedish groups, 77 English and 25 Chinese. The Black citizenry of this country runs true to type and asks only to be given an opportunity to live and be royal and receive the full protection of the Constitution, which is his as much as any of the rest of its citizens.—Pacific Defender. Yet there are, and always, will be, a large number of people who, on account of the public notice they would get, would sacrifice their future for political office; but we discern that the number is growing amazingly fewer as time goes on, and the race group grasps the idea that in union there is strength, and they must make the best of the situation—Newport News Star. We have a species in our group who are sometimes designated as "the big Negroes." They are more outstanding from the fact that the biggest thing about them is their utter lack of vision to do or bring to pass anything at all for the forward march of the group with which their destiny is linked forever.—California Eagle. If the statemen, artists, soldiers and captains of industry throughout America should answer honestly to the question "colored" or "white," if one drop of African Blood ten generations back should make one colored and if the rage designation of "Negro" should then make them social parish and political entente, America might well forward with grave condemn to her failure. Negro supremacy is standing on the brink of a grim future. It is being guess the Major, would and let the former to try Grace with what seems of what are of both type and character that Major was able to give to Grace my and all encouragements. The personal life of Grace should be known by an acquaintance with her life and her work. MUCH IS ON TRIAL IN WHITE PLAINS SUPREME COURT Heywood Broun Strikes at Crux of Matter, as He Comments on Rhineland Case Which Is Drawing to a Close Comment has been made on the failure of the Rhinelander lawyers to bring about a settlement in secrecy. Certainly from the point of view of their clients this would seem to have been a better way, but I cannot truthfully say that the emergence of the case into the newspapers is a public calamity. Still less have I any sympathy with those who deplore this fact that the trial has been painted in such detail. I will, go further and say that I believe the newspapers fulfill one of their most important and useful functions in reporting the story. Let's grant at the beginning that the "papers," are largely influenced to give space to the case because of the public interest in the proceedings. And I may add here that there is something of hypocrisy in those who say that the news should have been surprised or greatly curtailed. At any rate I have found the people who said this in nowse backward in their own study of the material-made available. They have felt that it was all right for them to read and follow, but that there might be TO THE T. B. Donaldson Medicine Co. 2045 South Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. THIS IS TO COURTIFY that I. Robert Brew, was suffering with stomach trouble and phthisia. General Hospital for treatment for quite a while and also was treated at the hospital, also treated at the Howard Hospital and still I found. I was very valuable of an kind without making me sick. I was told by T. B. Bonhamon, the nurse, that I would not live. I benefited and that it would cure me. But when I had taken 2 bottles of Life Renewed well and sound and I could enjoy it. When I first started taking the medicine I weighed 180, and when I commenced eating weighed 220 pounds. And now I weigh 236 pounds. I am an anx- vice-president of the Life Remedy Society. Life Remedy to be the most valuable medicine a sick man can take for a sick and rundown system. I washed my stomach in my hands, vomiting at times in the street and had blind stigmatics to catch me at times. This condition lasted for more than 12 years. testimony in any paper ROBERT BREW 2020 South Street, Philadelphia, Pa. T. B. DONALDSON'S New Life Remedy For Many Years the Favorite Blood Tonic of This City and Elsewhere The greatest thing on earth for the people who have tried the different remedies which have failed to give you relief from Liver Disease, Stagnation, Dissolved Blood, Seizures, Neuralgia, Anaphthic and Dopical Conditions, or removing Spots, Splottles on the body—after you have tried every kind of treatment, or Professor, even herb Specialist—that is the nearest Drug Store and a bottle of Ramen. It is one of Philadelphia's reliable standard remedies such as used by our forefathers, they are the most costly herbs used. 47 articles blended together, fathomed out 4000 Now compounded by an experienced registered man of ability. It is guaranteed Medrines on Barth, Clears the Urinary Organs, strengthens the Bladder and gives Uricor and Vim. Therefore restores manhood. Price $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 These remedies can be secured at your drug store or by sending directly to laboratories in South Street, Philadelphia. Pa. Send price. By Post Office Money Order, Check, sts. others who should be shielded from the ugly facts. These facts are ugly, if you please, but they are not trivial or unimportant. Certain English dreadfuls make a practice of spreading through their pages vast detail of divorce cases, regardless of the issues involved, and merely for the sake of evidence. This is not the situation here. It would be foolish to accuse the papers of having fomented a sensation in the Rhinebender case. No fictionist could have created a trial more calculated to hold the attention. And I deny that this public interest is merely morbid. There are innumerable factors in the business which concerns us all. Our laws and our customs and the economic structure of the community are all on trial, as well as the individual parties concerned. For instance, we have set up certain legal assumptions which are now being fiercely tested. It is well that we should know, whether these assumptions are true or false. To be specific, New York State has endeavored to say in its statutes that no discriminations should be made within its borders against any one on the ground of race. Every politician running for office assures the Negro voters that they stand on a perfect equality with their fellows and that discrimination of no kind shall be permitted against them. Do we mean to? The most casual analysis of conditions will show that the custom does not follow closely upon the heals of law in this matter. We really ought to decide sooner or later whether we are to be governed by what we say or by the various finger crossings which accompany the protestations of complete democracy. To a non-legal mind even the main point at issue in the Rhinelander case is puzzling—and I don't mean because it has been so much obscured by irrelevant testimony. The Southern States have laws to forbid miscognition. That may be wise or foolish, but it is at least a frank and definite expression of the point of view of the community. But no such belief in the danger of mixed blood has been expressed in our local legislation. And so I wish some lawyer would tell me You Should Burn Oriental Luck Incense In Your Home This increase, was used in all places of worship in an attempt to work with it, the bodies of human planets. A booklet inside the box will tell how powerful it is and how to use it. The upper Egypt, the city of Jacob. ORIENTAL LUCK Incense This incense, was used in all places of worship in an- cient days; it works with twelve, that is, of his hand, in his planets. A booklet inside the box will tell how powerful it is and how to use it. Made in Canaan, upper Egypt, the city of Jacob. Size box, 4x2½; price $2.00 SEED MONEY WITH ALL ORDERS WHERE AT ONCE Asia and Africa Remedy Co. Dept. C 260 W. 129th St., N. Y. City, N. Y. I am going to send Free to every reader of this notice, my work, entitled "Key to Progress, Success and How Attained". Also a three-page Astro Psycho Analysis with Planetary Chart. Send me the date and month of your birth and 10c (stamps or coin), to cover cost. This work will reveal life's general affairs and treat upon matters that should interest most every one. Write your address and name plainly. Address Theo. White, Publishing Department, 8662 Moneta Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.; U. S. A. (Please mention this paper) why a failure is the fate of Negro ancestry ma- nualment, here. Could I be sued if I kept to myself before marriage the information that one of my grandfathers was a German? There are, and certainly there were a few years back, many who regarded a German inheritance as devilish. There was, I remember, a belief that on account of one drop of German blood there might come a baby holding in one hand a stalk of beer and in the other bombs designed for hospital ships: And in the Rhineland case we have, too, a test of the capabilities of the courts to handle disputes between the very rich and the very poor. As it happens my sympathies in the present action are with the defendant, but I will grant that I do not regard her as wholly martyrlike. That makes no difference. If a vast fortune can beat down the claims of this defendant the same process, could be employed against another much more worthy. The contrast between the financial status of those concerned makes it highly proper that this case should not be settled in an obscure corner. Any such procedure would set an evil precedent. And again, I think that the course of the Rhineland case serves to bring to acute-public attention which that rilly and cumbersome in our procedure. These courts belong to us. If in our taxes which go to pay the salaries of the men on the bench, and speaking for one contributor to the public funds, I must say I am appalled with the clear frivolity and waste of time which is permitted. I don't care what the legal precedents and public procedure may be. If it is sound law to let counsel go so far asfield as both have done in this case, then the law should be changed. When I paid my taxes I had no notion that I was being called upon to contribute to a fund for fireworks. Aside from its meanness, I can't for the life of me understand what purpose Judge Mills had in inquiring into the early transgressions of Mrs. Jones. And likewise I am equally at sea as to the importance of the question, often repeated by Mr. Davis for the defense, "And do you consider yourself a gentleman?" The case can hardly depend upon the problem of whether young Mr. Rhinolander is a gentleman or even whether he considers blimsn to be one. I'm not saying that I have no interest in the question "What is a gentleman and is it a good thing to be?" All I am contending is that this is hardly pertinent at the moment. If Mr. Davis arises to debate the matter with Mr. Rhinolander after hours I should be much interested to listen. Among other things the institution of wealth is being tried in the Rhineland case. Opponents of socialistic theories contend that if the possibility of great rewards is withdrawn from competitive life we will develop a sighful and flabby citizenry. Naturally, it RHEUMATISM A Remarkable Home Treatment Given by One Who Had It In the year of 1592 I was attacked by Moulaz and Sub-Acute Rheumatism. I suffered as only those who are thug afflicted know for over three years, I tried remedy after remedy, but such relief as I obtained was only temporary. Finally, I found a treatment that cured me completely and such a painful condition has never returned. I have given it to a number who was terribly afflicted even behind, some of them seventy to eighty years old, and the results were the same as in my own case. "I Had Sharp Pals Like Lightning Flashes Shooting Through My Jolts! CONTRIBUTORS TO BLACK CROSS RESERVE AND OPERATING FUND CAMPOSTELLA—NORFOLK, VA. W. H. Wiggins. $9.00 CAMAGUEY CITY. CUBA CAMAGUEY CITY, CUBA Arthur Kirkwood.....2.00 Arthur Farguthason.....1.00 Arthur White.....1.00 Herman Angus.....1.00 CENTRAL VELASCO, CAMAGUEY, CUBA Daniel E. Stewart.....5.00 MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY Ernest Blink.....5.00 JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY Charles E. Mercer.....5.00 John McMillion.....7.00 Frank Harris.....5.00 would be unfair to generalize too much on the basis of one case, but it may be that out of this Action we shall draw some increased Information, how- ever slight, on the use and value of great individual fortunes in the con- mutility. We may come to know whether it is well for us to encourage or discourage perseverance by which accumulated money shall be passed down from father to son in order that culture and enterprise be conserved. And back of everything else the Rhinelander case deserves its space because it is a simple and singularly convincing proof of the soundness of much which has been offered to us by the new psychologists. A medical case history is spread on the front pages. We ought to know hereafter that escape is inevitable and necessary for all who feel inferior. One of the pities of the whole business is that the community and the family of the young man concerned did not let him alone. This awkward boy who stammered and stimbled appears to have found an case and security in life, with those who seceded, according to his traditions, beneath his station. The nervousness which may well have afflicted him when he served as head usher at a fashionable wedding was not in him, as he dined with Alice's relatives in the rooms above a garage. THOSE WHO TALK MUCH THINK BUT LITTLE When the great mathematician Agassiz was to deliver his first lecture as a professor at Harvard, he had grave doubt as to his ability to occupy the prescribed three-quarters of an hour. In recalling the fact some years later, he said: "When I had spoken a half hour, I had told them everything in the world I knew, everything. Then I began to repeat myself, and I have done nothing else ever since." Everything has been said before, and said over and over again. One must agree with Gay: "My tonrue within my lips I rein; Who talks much must talk in vain." James Tussell Lowell observed that a man must be a born leader or misleader of men, or must have been sent into the world unfurnished with that modulating and restraining balance-wheel which we call a sense of humor, who in old age, has as strong a confidence in his opinions and in the necessity of bringing the universe in conformity with them as he had in youth. "In a world the very condition of whose being is that it should be in perpetual flux, where all seems minig, and the one abiding thing to distinguish realities from appearances, the elderly man must be indeed of a singularly tough and valid fibre who is certain that he has any clarified residuum of experience, opinion, or, if he had, feels that he is justified in holding mankind by the button while he is expanding it." And in a world of hourly journalism, where every clever man, every man who thinks he is clever, or whom anybody else thinks he is clever, is called upon to deliver his judgment point-blank on every conceivable subject of human thought, or on what some things seem to him to be very much the same thing, there is a never ending flow of banal commonplaces. Under the circumstances, of course, there is little chance of "beguiling a new tune out of the one-stringed instrument upon which we have been strumming so long." Old Railroad Caboose Served Peary in Arctic An old-time Erie Railroad caboose that has been in Arctic regions for four years sits on a siding alongside the Erie station at Susquehanna, Pa. On it is the following inscription: "This caboose was loaned Lleut. Peary by the Erie Railroad and went on his expedition in 1889; was used as a deckhouse on the ship Windward, and it is the only railroad car ever sent to the Arctic regions." While Peary's ship was being fitted out alongside the Erie dock in New York harbor, Lleut. Peary caught sight of the caboose and asked for the loan of it for his trip. It was, in the polar regions for four years and recently the railroad had it returned to be used as an exhibit. WANTED Thousands of Persons to Use MILK. WALKER'S TOILET PREPARATIONS and vote for the D. X. X. L. A. candidate. Mr. P. L. Browne, dkd. Bury Sdn. Shed for prize list and get your Tissue Cards and Cigs. E. M. COLLINS, Agent city of 10 W. 100th St. M. V. City FRONT VIEW MEN AND WOMEN WHO HAVE SACRIFICED FOR THE RACE NEGRO PATRIOT 1925 BACK VIEW BLACK CROSS MARITAGE AND TRADE COMPANY S.E. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON The above is a facsimile of the medal which will be awarded to every Negro Patriot who contributes $10 to the Black-Cross Reserve and Operating Fund within the specified period of ten weeks. Send for Medals Now All persons who have contributed their $10 to the Black Cross operating and reserve fund and have not received their medals are requested to forward names, and addressed immediately to the office of the Black Cross Navigation & Trading Company, 56 West 135th street, New York City. Parent Body Headquarters. Negro Bellhop Climbing The Ladder of Success as Broadway Playwright (From the N. Y. Daily Mirror) A man can make anything he wants of himself. A great, many people make day dreams a substitute for work. They imagine themselves winning their ambitions, instead of getting down to business and working mighty hard. Garland Anderson, the bellhop from San Francisco, who was the first colored man to have a play produced on Broadway, dreamed his dream and then, never losing sight of that dream, fought with everything that was in him to make it real. He's still fighting. The play, "Appearances," closed after a three weeks' run at the Froyle Theatre because of insufficient funds. But Garland Anderson wouldn't give up. Armed with a subscription list he is patiently making the rounds in an effort to raise the almost impossible sum of $20,000. This gum he says, will be sufficient to give the play a chance, it deserves David Belasco's name heads the subscription list" with $1,000. Channing Pollack and Al Jolson have pledged a like amount. Anderson's philosophy is: "It's up to you. A man can make anything, out of himself, he wants. If you want to do anything, hard enough, why you just can't hard doing it." That gave Anderson an idea. He decided to put his philosophy into the form of a play. At night he tendered switchboard. And for three years, between putting in calls, he rebilled. He wrote his own story—the story of a bellion who influences the lives of the people with whom he comes in contact. When the play was finished he took it to New York and, after months of discouragement, found a producer. On the opening night, a sophisticated New York guy up from their seats and yelled. So Garland Anderson made his dream come true. And now, in an obscure little rooming house at No. 318 W. 53d Street, he is writing another play, and he intends to keep on writing plays. IF U DON'T C DR. KAPLAN The Kyight Specialist RELIABLE AND MEASURED EYES EXAMINED FREE SM LENOX AVENUE NEW YORK Safety Knife League These beautiful unobtainable PEARLS make a more appreciated gift for Christmas. They are two inches wide, beamed perfectly with white pearls, and they are in a beautiful, both lined gift box. This stunning silver Chinese knuckle. It is known for its beauty, long wear and good condition. These pearls sell regularly for £10. We are now offering them for £10. The points will be tollled for 100. We are now offering them at the rate of $100 per person. Anyone who may get both the points and the trip, will receive $100 money. "Civilization must hit on all four cylinders—the school, the church, literature and the arts, and the public press—if we are going to preserve ourselves from the rising tide of vulgarity which has engulfed every department of life." Channing Pollock, playwright, told the Women's Press Club at lunchroom at the Waldorf yesterday. He added: "Of the four, only the first is doing its full duty in the world." Mr. Pollack said, "no more terrible comment upon the state of the newspapers can be found that the handling of the kibbutzlander case." "The very newspaper," he said, "which last year was making the great outtery against dirt in the theatre is now printing more than any other on this case. But for the excuse borrowed from the theatre that We are giving the public, what it wants," and I think that a far better excuse for selling opium, there is not the shadow of a gentilization for any newspaper print more than ten lines on the kibbutzlander suit. "Certainly there is no excuse for printing columns and columns of its vulgar and sordid details, which are being lapped up by the public as a sort bumps up its creem. "An official of the Western Union told me that more than half a million works had been telephoned out of New York in two weeks to tapers throughout the country on the Rhinekaup case. Certainly as much again has been printed here. And not one one hundredth of this space would ever have been given to a fine book or the play or to a man who had invented a cure for tuberculosis or cancer. It is a comic thing or certain papers to comment upon how much money I made out of my plays while they make money out of that kind of thing. They talk, too, of my going out to try to get good people back into the theatre, but if the American newspaper for twenty years had devoted the same space and attention to literature and the arts and to cultivation of public taste as it had devoted to the prize ring and race track. I wouldn't have to be talking about a better theatre, and how to get it." Mr. Pollack said his anger was directed, not at criticism at himself, but at the painting of art by civilization. Creative artists, he said, would always give to the public what the public wanted, and it devolved upon the public to the careful what it wanted, and demand it in no uncertain jane." GEORGE BERNARD SHAW LONDON, Nov. 26—Deduring life in an ideal Socialist state, George Bernard Shaw wound up in the English Socialist annual popular lecture course tonight by declaring the standard day would be 'four hours' work; eight hours' sleep and four hours for drinking, dressing, undressing and a little resting. That would have eight for leisure. The first postulate of the Socialist, said Shaw, is that everybody must have the same income. For a person to get a penny more or less than his fellows would be a crime. He declared every child should receive Communist education, and defended birth control and divorce, asserting that marriage were happy. O Larged variety of POSTVY MEDIA BROADCASTS, good quality, good speed, have changed, have increased in many styles of production, and have made more have M7*. Made with human experience, and made more and more, don't be mixed with already made and infinitely harmonious with them for beauty, beauty and永恒美. LOOK FOR OUR GUARANTEE TAG. Every well read child should hire one or more. Regular bargains to the reviews of the best books of the best books of the best books throughout the country at prices the pritition cheapest and best most OUR SPECIALS LONG KIMAN CURLS LATEST CREATION INFANT BABY "CUTIE BABE" only by the method of trial and error. He advocated a new Western religion, and an forcible everything proves- tive. He could think of, seemingly en- joying himself thoroughly before a crowded house. S SPECIALS Stable FEARLEYS make a most appreciated and are two inches long, perfectly and they are good in a very attractive look. A safe gift that will always be known for its beauty, long wear and good only for Birds. We are now offering them is specially provided for Nuns at $1.80. You and the rest I will send money JEWELRY CO. 2nd Street K, N. Y. OUTFIT Osteic Talismanic ring. Solid sterling ward of cellul acetate, business rings. Also des. amuang, I. Amuwer, h. hate, ene- phed, family, home and plan D. D. on de- Fail to Grow Hair Root Hair Grower THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N. I. A. DIVISIONS _ we HAVANA, CUBA © [5,280.06 mentors ht tic —<—<$<—$__— NC) — ; gg. DEReer=: Hemeenmee. Be SAEVES te oft go down:in,histity. for We. itavan; Division No. 24 of the Us N. 1. AD On Of Qe digKert” mass inectings eve (etaged in honor of the great Nesr eter, the, Hop.. Marens Carve, wo: wecordéd on’ Stiriday, Neveiribér 1 Negroes camo’ from all corners, 0 Beautiful Havana to endorse the’ fre: Sigram’of the Univeinal Nekro Improse- bient Association, and to, tell tho wel [that the Hon, Starcus Garvey ts the Zaccepted leader ef the Neyro zace. Never” has moro enthisiosin’ bers ahown'at our Liberty Halt Nexcoo of, Havana: felt ft waw tioir duty te Approve of ‘the resstusion Kent to. Department of Jus’ “racing Ws Wwaht no other lender bat /Mei rie Gai vey Te inoiir etiamon” date to up: hold the principies of the U.N. LA. and support same as iniich as we pose “sibly ean for we are aware of the fast that the time Is not far off when the Negro shall hold his"own avespyetive Of ithe many obstacles rid _cmbarras- ments. The offlecrs, gnembers, well- Liners and. trlendaoBQhe Ren. Mare ‘cus Garvey ‘and the Universal Negre Lmprovemeni. Assockatenyy edged theit fal) in all to stand Tain and hold the banner, igh. unt\! Afelya x redeemed ‘and 400 rallliuny of Negries are free, In xplte of, the heat, everyone sit patiently with rut attention fren, the pound of the grace! at 5 p.m. to Hd Dp. m., to Iixten to the doctrines of Gaxveylun, Addresses were dellverrsd Ain—fiveeister The acne birds. of, the Alvision gave Reversal sweet: solmetions. But, the chief owints were those af the Tuvgniten with hele" reeltstions and Gemonstrations. © Sétected mleces were! ‘rendered by Messers Booth ane Mace | Kenzle. Inspiration front the Hon, Mar- eus Garvey ran wild and hist. His spiritual ‘self owas present amd from the eloquent und Aysiraetive addresses ee erlue ihe avennisnc te oat be een that the gpeiikeramwere ten Of the great Noxro tacher. * “athe mpeakerR {rom time to time-out | Tinea the alms and objects nf the axe | pociation, and the cauk of Garves's Imprisonment. The must xovere critics were compelled to charize thele xnntle ments in favor of Garvey and’ the or Taunton. “Pram. the. teane of the| Meetlog, the reporter has every reas | pom to believe that a new star Is shine} tng over the Havana Divixdon, and ere | Jong the harvest shall be reaped, al large number of the people piesent ont thin Season WATE TeMToMeTT Pert declared to Keep away from Taberty Hall would be duing injustler to the Hon. Mireux Garvey and the rack: They hava fully endorep the prosram and’ have promised ta ecnne active! members at the earliest opportunity. ; “SMoreux’ Garvey in the man of the hour and every, Negro sliould stand by him," were remarks heard during the meeting. ° -The pronram’wax well rendered. Tht: nurses under thé lendership of the ludy | prenident, Mrx. U, Johnson Brown, ant Mra, Ethel “Myers, typestdont of the | unit. The. Hoy Seats and Gtels and’ Private Rennle, with the exert: tive officers, inurched from “the attics! to the hall while the ProceSstonal Hymn ‘Shine Qn, ternal Light.” Wits ung. This was followed ta the sing: | ing of the openlns aide, “Kran Greens land'a Jey) Mountains,” and the reeie tation of the 23d Psalm ‘The rvtisions | part of the program was conducts by | the acting ychantain, Mr. Sutitet | Greenidge, whe tok his text from St i John. Ils errmon wax brief, Init eer | Recltations by the. Juveniles were! delivered, WIN MVirked —elonUeNee.| Demonstrations by the Seaute were of netven like, veterans, ‘To mention any Spectal snes of the Suveniiey rela | to their performances on the” platform See aniaie ee eee one, dik ected best. and’ Were Murh Appinwled and | = aia | Sr. Juan Pravo WReetiateman of the | meeting. The executive soeretary was cho chief speaker. “Hix subject was! "Facts and Ideals of Garveyten,” In part he aald, “Garveyisny calls for true | leadership, men anst wéihen with vision | - ami purpose, honesty of purpose, sin] erity, xervices, . sacrifice, loyalty, || ruthtulnent, perentive enerxy. wvisl || mating force, . love “and substantial iriving power 2% porsessod by the ! fon, Marcus Garvey.” Mrs.Latozenc | | Tennyson, of the ‘Guanabacoa’ Divi-| | fon, spoke: of. “The Value of Negra)! Womanhood.” Marked Intellizence | yan displayed in her’ arkument.| | Vomen of her type will always be an}. saet.to the Negro race. Hymn, “God | * Sess Our- President.” was sung, atter | * vhich the ‘acting chaplain introduced | ir. Juan.Bravo. as chairman of the * vening. At this juncture Sr. Sravo| © nade a few remarks In English and ¥ panish, explaining. the object of ‘the y jeeting after which a lengthy program | | ras rendered. ‘s z s Fee prenident prevented-a resolution 7 » be ent to the Department of 3un-| joo at Washington, D.C. It was reud] ® g bim-ta' Engilan and by Sr. Bravo| ¢ Spanish as follows: 4 Facet Ones ax weprees tad agg: - eee fee Wns are a Pens = Ing and to the members ghd friends who cuntelbuted to: the proztum-ana ye wisn nin batten bing-tre treieren aiid gpvysiasnt shown Yuring the mecthige The ineetins caine’ i a clone ly the singing of the Ethloydin “Na- tonal Anthem and prayer by. thé det- Ing chaplain, Thus ends a perfect day. 8 OW. ELLINGTON BARNES... ‘ + Reporter, ie es 4 . i . . DETROIT, MICH. -. ; | AL very centhusinstte ynassi, meethis | was held on’Sunday, Noverher 22, 43 i grty Hall. Many Iugeresting aid: Jaros tes secew deliverat by-membees af the itvizion, Meeting sats upenct by Lite ehaphan, Mev, A> be Maertsen ‘ne Tit” pstead FSET Ane Negro | World wan read by te (ard buy’ vire- | resident, Mes. Degsie Metaterh, fale | wet bya sheet adress by Mr. Henes Alfred, mecunul Siowspteident, At this J paint he batted played a xpeckal selec Gon," Honze\tterney Mion Vann Lawe Fpreaitent, Hon, Reed. i: Johnsen. AtZ Htoraey, Van Lune angle a scheelnig: ade ralpess In startin tie sachs ME am a wavs smred ten featee baile 9 Ital Pam and wall always We interested st piirent af the U.S, bel. MY whole Send Ix ti thin orazenigation, M18 ge uphet to hutivanity wand tue ease. tn Working fer the eranization 1 am working for my race. Te makes ty Yery soul bail when Feame in eoniaet ith enemies of Aurelne Garvey." TUAG Ute, clones ef My, Van, Lava aul ewe he presented. the prmeipsal neaker of the evehinz, Hun, Jo Ae Craigen, whe suid: The (LN. UAL is the best thing fm the worbl for New yor, Marcus Garvey: has convinced the wile Worhd GE veal the White Fae | intent to dls to the Neen. “the U.N, LA tasking sineere members to Keap up the tight they hiwe stitrted.* = Shwigt autres wind given by Capt. Te IL Dente Mess Bent ald: 'Nexrocs have come to the conclusion that Afrlea ig the-only hone far the Nexto, Gave sortie Inte the heave of those whe have Men x appesed te the move- ment. The black race.ts going to fore Kot tie prejuuties amt malleg Wien ts in ele hearts amd amine std ory stoud ‘four mittion string In ane volee Mat af women af other races are ace curiad the respect ty the nations of the work, my women must be accord. | the same ox we wlll ales mtn tent tt Bivision are diins great things, ‘They | and generis for develaing and eam jtaitets ean br sent them for centiden- Hat adtsiee, “The meeting clored-hy the dnaging of the National Ante. MRS. FRED E, JOMNSON. Reporter. CENTRAL MACARENO, CUBA On Sunday, November 1, a very ens Jnyalle evening was spent by the members and friends af Cenival Maca rena Diviskh in celebrating Garvey Tuy and witnessing the reopenitis of Literty hdl. ‘There was a great rally te eplarge our ball, ‘Thenah there have been many disargelntments w have reacted our Aol We ave gtand. ine wholigsdrtedty. tohtyub,zhy parent lady and our bebovod presitent, Gen eral Hon, Marcus Garvey, ‘The meet- ing was apened with devotional sere~ ieCeanducted hy the chaplain Mr. N. Willuims, after wineh the qrestlent Mri, G, Fuller, save a hnet but cor: fal welkame address, He then turned the ehaw over to Mr. J. Mattes (eon the Guantanamo Division. "Phe: ott nentlonian ave a anasterful address, whieh received great apphinse. ‘The nent speaker Was A representative frome the Branches Diviion, Mr, NO Hams mif, whe’ hept the andience spellbound ea ROSA Ye TM ATE FN TIRE members, Adddveswes were dotiveced hy Mesert, 3. Johnson, O. AL Hrowa, 1, Gorton, B.S, Alison, Athen BAL Kove, Taudy peesitént, amd Mise A. Thomas, ‘Lhe proxram, rendered was Ha follows: A duet by Misa Puller ayd Mist NT: selection hy the choir; sole by Mine Whitley: reettation by: Mrs 1 Karis: sede ny Migs A. Thetias: selée~ tun by the choir, entitted “They ‘Phat ‘Trust in the Lord"; sale hy Miss Full- ler, entitled “in Perfect Pence”: veet- tation hy Mise M. Afflick entitted “tft Were a Valve"; duct by Mle 1, Borehs and Misy P. Morton: elo by) Mrs, Gary: recitation by, Mr. Hailey, selecs tien By the chofr: mile by Mr. Mec] Nalne: trlo"ley Mise Filler, Mixs Karl and Miss Whitley: ole by Mrs. Rose: welection by the cholr; revitation. by Minx M. Afflick: solo by2Mfr. T. King: colo by Mian Sweney: selection by the shoir duet-hy the lady president, Miss, RA. Kerr and Mr. 0. A. Brown, firat vive president. Much vonsratulation ix due the choir manter, Mr. 1. Callen tar, who pit Kuch x fine program over. The presktent after #lying-aneunces ments thankéd the audience for thelr attendance. The mecting came ‘to a clone with tffe sinking of the"Ethiopiah | Anthem, _WM.G. HUNT, Repo?ter. rp aurecra. . : CEN. FRANCISCO; CUBA. aE p 5 tt " sree smombare “snd” itiends "66 ine} Franciscd Division are not. failing -to| s show thelr determination to keep slivers ; this great organization which the Hon: | cradle Marcus Garvey has sacrificed | ; esemnch to balld wp. The aflutrs of the } division are in avery active and ae- | covieging coudition. ee ft & apecial com ‘ ‘Thesp a cheertigl response to: thin wp f' ccwmdet. oe RATER “pba | 7a Jest Why, Ci winnay.abegytetin ot | 4 i igs oa ods Sony ea Ae ¥ i tame ernie, Tre Baty, a Fa POY AM Dini a0 coi re SS Bie Cs Poy = an ae Ba 2 ___NOTICE —___ + All, private ad personal’ comniunications intended for Hon. Marcus Garvey: should be-sent to’ + = . 18S West 12th, Street . New York City. - Care Mrs. * is Jacques Garvey." > | voitisifed by the enthusiastic talk giver hy Mrs, MeNalniady at the macting or j time day, . + oe . | Qh Sunday, November's, a hasee amass | iseotinte was held anid, «special pro "gram rendered, ‘The prinelpal speaker [at this necting wax Mr. GoW. Beha speclal representative of Central ran- cisco Disiafon wt the Coriteronee held I Cole de Avila for the inyprovement of the indatrial condition of Negives ‘In Cute, Many members of the division whe had been absint for many meet- ines came to hear this message. On thin occasion «an interesting Iterary piugrain was sino rendered. Mr. Na- than Harelson acted as master of erre; funniog. ‘Yhé program was, as follows: Re Tigious wervlee; address by “Misa Kr Lnektey: reading of the president gen erit's’ mexsage in the Negris World: aidvess, Mr. De N. Hammil: sate, Mex, ‘V. Mason: address, Mr. William Pitter- xin: nly, Mr. A. Velvet: address, Mr. 3.8. Regan; address, Mr. Shneon Cros date; ole, Mis “dane Farquarhson: agliress,, Meee Jo Bef; sole, Mivt Whindie dackesoirs aRTFems, | Me RV Roberts; solo, Mist Martha Fuller: short talk Mise K. Buckley: address, Mro€. W. Budhdl: sole, Miss Cath- crime Spence: addrgxs, Me. David Ma- von, After a Vote of thanks was ex- tended to the participstnts on The pro rai, the meeting cloxed with priyer and the singing of the National An- them, ©. ISAACS. Reporter. ~ NORFOLK, VA. _Nofolk Bivinlon held a mass meetins st Fisherman Hall o Sundox,, Novem: her &, in the’ Interest of the’ Marcut Garvey Release Campaign. A great crow came ont to hear Mes. MeL. T. Ne Mena, hethant. erater of the IANA. (Mrs. De Mena spoke elo. auently idl aroused great onttiusiagmn for the work and for the release of Our Imprisoned leader. ‘The division hax Eaten Gin WOW TLE Sieg THIN HeTTINE, We are ir the fight to'siay.—* JOUN ROVERTSON, Reporter. HATUEY, CAM., CUBA One pf the largest. crowds “in The History ‘of thin aivinion attended Lid- rty Hall on Sunday, November 8. 3 S.-C, Alexander, president of the Divi- ion. presided. ‘The religious ‘sere [far cmuctot by Me. Se Gayle cha tain of the division, “When the meet [Ing wax turned over to the presklent Mr SoC. Alexander, he addressed! the untience on the subject, "Unity. an Govopertion:” "Then wns Reeat ens thustaxm oameng the people, whe showed thelr spirit of determination to suck to the UX: 1A. and: its pro- Rramme. We realise that the. Uni versal Nezro Improvement Association wna Very meri organization amd nist tse all our energy ad fight wil insis 19 RL aver the programme of Atriea's redemption. ‘The prageamme for the evening was aw followne Ane them by the choles addrows hy Lam- her, fst vice presitents aang hy Miss E Gordon, serand lady vice president: feeltation. Wy Aira, H,Dohanoy: a= Siresn by Me D, Morrison: address. Watson: duct by. lady prealdent snd Miss Gordon: Address, lady presitent, "Stand y Our Ltert son by “he children, “Afrien Must Re Redeomad'’;, Tureen by Mr. Roggers. The presl= dient delivered’ the closing aaron. He thanked those present. for helping tniehe he meeting. A aucceds, * The meeting closed with. the singing of the Ethioplan Xatlonnt Anthem. "At the conclusion of the program, Mrs, S.C. Alexander administered the cath tg the following newly elected wificers: Me. Eugene Tambort, frst Mice “preshient: Mr. David Morrison. second lee preaident: = Mr, Joseph Watson, hind” vice. presidents Misa Duce Wauahn, ed erin: Sor Micelam Duncan, fieat Indy vice prene ident; Mise Fina Gordon. wecond Indy vice prenident: Men. Henrietta Do- trines. third Indy vice president: MF: Aaron Poart, genéral secretary: Mr. Edward E. Vincent, execitive’ secre- tary: Mian Estella Allinon, Indy. eere (ary Mrs Nathan Gaylte chaplain! Me. Alexander Brown, treasurer: Mina Theadorn Te: raithwatte: dy “treaa= iret. After the Installation ceremony, neveral new membern enrolled, The mecting way cloned with prayer. SHWARD ES VINCENT Ronsctees The-Alliance Division held @ special masa meeting In thé inienat of the Marcus Garvey Release. Campaign on Bundes, November .§. The: principal speaker was Eider J. V. Barber... May- er-tegW. Stephens was‘ also a visitor and speaker. The meeting opened with retigions service and tie reading of the sims and object of the Universal Xe- gro Tmpravement Association... After @ .cong "by the ohpie.:the front’ page manage of the president general in toe Ee tybatedl a cme) wae re~ eo oe Se oa ‘ -Senoaas,. ie. ie aS ears Ca wR ws eS S- peg a’ wesatteg cere SRR ei ae oe ann eh er “CHICAGO, ILL. The. development of Chicago | Divi aon duting the past, few. week Ia particularly ‘noticeable in the increase Intorent belig, manifested Inthe, vir! ous -austlineies, ‘Tho. Legions, unde the Kuldifhee of CHL Leonidas Me Dgnald,, bile. far to decime one o the post outstanding sinilitary-organ iactinn inthe, ivergal ogre tm wrovenent Ansociation.. - Our masse: moctligs have been -wel attended, Sunday. we had an unusifath Jarno ationdance. Present Hon, W A. Wallace alivered aff Ingpiring: ad Uregar with hig usual eludtence 1 waa filled with whotesume instruction find velced hig iiswerving falth I the ultimate success. of the_presram of Our beloved organization, laterest- Ing addresnes” were also’ delivered Vy Mrs. Ada Hogues and Mrs, Lula White, Specific mention should bo, inade of a Very Commendable feature. of ibe Frogram, witch was the musleal and vocal selections “rendered by the Juveniles. They were enjoyed by All present, te The president general's address pad from the columns wf ‘The Neevs World by Seconi? Vieé Lrecident Brink Fare Pell xeement to lye more enjoyed thya ever. “Htixeryed ar mo vepy alot! ase couraxenient. a bickering ai petty jeatoustes. wevasionally crapping ot amonE some .of our over-zealous Iesul- ers, And We “MurKeAt here that the members and friends of the Universal Necro Improvement® Asanelution and Africsin Commniditien- Leas. syaiteh he columns of ‘the Negro World more -lo¥ely: In order to sierive the fall bene- it from the wisilom aad. news cone ined therein, ‘The information in it} ¢ wartliy of your most serious con sideration, : Next week we shall send special ews of the activities wf the Blick cross Nursexof Chicas Division, We} vish ty announce the coming of the weretaryereneral, Hon, G. 1, Carter, i December 6, and Mix, Dedtena on Denember 13. It has heen reyiorted hat our ex-president, Hon, Dr. fed, rotors, whom, wa, are alwitsx glad 10 ave come among us, wil be passtm: hrowh the cityaiext week sonic ume, Ve are pleased to hear this, . BR, KNOX, Heporter. WINNSBORO, LA: - __commistonee 8. V.Robortsun_ ws the honored guest of the Winnsier Division on Siihtay, October 2. Te detigered a fine aldvenn which Fesslted In the aAdition of several new members, This alviston ie not tarse, hat 1 hs tery much, ative, "re, Relertwon nes Foeananted ner Badhapd ane lis abe ii very snithdia talk. “The division was much encouraxed by. the. work of théne Ardent: advocates. of the program of the UA. N& ROWE, Repowter FORT SMITH, ARK:. The Fort Sunith Divialon held mse meeting on Stnilay, November 13, The peekident, Mr. A.C. Curry, presided. The principal speaker. was Father Sefler Sulmon, vicar of St, Augustine Church, this ity, Father Salmon te a very staunch -frlend of the Honerable Mareus, Garvey and he sald many tf and encouraging things about Mr. Gar- ey and-the aauocintion. His address Fevelved mich applaime. A. abort it crary and musical program was aise renered. EMMA MeCRARY. Rep.- On Sunaay might October 25, ue. Indiana Harbor Division was ‘honored with several dbitinusichod—toowlaiel- tors. The following program was ren- dered? The meeting wax opened ai 7:45 o'clock p.m. by Second Vico- President Mr. P. A: Simpson. . After singing the oilt and reading of the pre ambie and prayer. the Ravel was turned over io the president, 1, Sf. Brown, whe delivered the “Introduetory reniarks: reading of front pugo of Tho Nesra World by Col. A. E. Poansjoc: selec Alon. by choir: remarks on “ho Prog- ress of tho Negro Race." dy Mrs. b. ‘Shelby, Messrs. Timbleltke. J. Green. ex-vice-president; and W. 3. Daniels. A Deautiful saxophone solo was ren? defed by Mr. Willle Richardson, ac- companied by Sirs. Blanch Smith..- Mr, G. W, O'Bee, manager of the Southern Undertaking Company, dellvergd an in- spiring address on “The Welfare of the Negra Race.” Our hearin were made to feel giad an wa Ustened to much en- couraging rerharks, We are always glad io have intercnting ylaltorwweith us. We Invite the publle at Iarge to visit us on our regular ‘meeting nights, Wednesday and Sunday at 7:45 p. m., 3889 Penn avenue.” ‘Ont of the largest crowds in tho his- tory of Indiana Harbor Division at- tended a masa meeting: held in Lib- erty Hall November 11. The meeting wis supervised by the military depart- ment, At 7:45.p. m., while thé crowd wae acsembling,” the orchestra played two beautiful seleguions: After which the meeting was apenet by Lieut. Col. W. M." Daniels, master of ceremonies: ‘The opening ode Has’ sung. followed by prayer. “Lieut. Col. Daniels gave a talk: oa. “Preperefness” fie outlined the Sutios of the military Gepettment Sed exptgined the meceautty being prepares... President 1..24.. Brown ‘was intredaded, to. the autlence:. He ae- Bvered the adérdes af welecme: Mr. Prank Vorrel, coven. vico-westient of amd chfests of the atevement. Bis wos “aaqensnnn 35. We Waller, pret, ; ‘aE Db Dpetaten We, ‘wtp aie sanity A symetes UR S ree. i Sieh Irae Pre aa bey, B = | = Ue-rear WR re-down wien, ese t a _ BLOOD RED MEDICINE TONIC ° Ip your BIDOD vale, “poledied.” thie, watery? {2S most wonderful treatuiant ever “sold | sDew't delay 1 1h your BOSE-MARROW drying Gp] In your body mare —. Wrersday esumtel al! the eepos Hight new! yee and areyou wuttefiog with + geeverreerecoseererreseses eestor este ee “WEAKNESS INDIGESTION SM. W. SARSON, Bas 62 toe x Tnmilien range Matton. Now Tork Chy, NERVOUSNESS: RHEUMATISM .. qattonee, sone ie CU bu tan Blood ied Medicine Teale, whew ANEMIA coups Pieter Bie sm (ie ntckates fort 0h ive ane ts aout ” sec ancen AA ae ae ay Facade vou! saa 7 Are you toring WEIGHT? Are you always TIRED ovt ané eee ae AOcieD sty "De soc wale cround without any COUR: - $ ,AGGr~OO scsesepeesesnescessessDtecesssequunseassseaqeomumns AGE, AMBITION? Doo't wait uatll you are gone!’ tmprabe So Towe ..ccssctececsesscsessepsesseesesrceeseecsseeuteneaees Yourself! Take = stepramar (rom the grave! Don't-miee-thle $- Do wot wosisct Jo and conte for each order, —2pburlusttyT “Comme ont Tine Bieat Onder the Poesia erame Subs SF giuie “aswerice cond tobney wie one Universal. Negro. _. Improvement Every loyal Negro should donate to the Fund to hel tion in the World. Serid us: a Five-Dollar Contribution for this Fuad. AlL-donations will be acknowledged in this ‘paper, and more by letter. 5 nea "The Parent Body, Universal Negro Improvement Association, now makes ar appeal to its members, divisions, branches, chapters and friends to rally’to its support in help- ing -te.raise Fifty-Thousand Dollars for hquidating, urgent. demands on ‘the Association ' for the promotion of its. work. : : fous i oo ~ ‘The expense of running the Organization for the good of the race is. tremendous. Expansion work cust be doue and cerrent demande must be taken care of. The fight fer Afrie's redemption ts & costly,cne, and must be bores by members of ow rece jo'mecd: momsy. bow tore than ever to car? arent Marces Garvos- founded for tee redemption nnd mivation of ioe moet Ereryiedy sola hoe, ie SHH be, gratefully theaked for thei patrietion and loyalty. ta ce aan ean, SEN ox eave shesld, cand ws thle for insertion ia: this paper... All donations’ Ms aan Varn Nejee prove. Sie Ancdalion 85 Was 1800 Str Rew Yon Oye ne “: ‘Legal members wf the Universal Negro z ed ove eaker clues sroene taal tice heaps terptoremenie cerigten seretd ois soe Soles: Teens os y pale, | 4 ‘ NotegamiaeeaAint, rose amid appliuse a dopa Seare Wvod Masala tally t6 people for amusement, . MICTORIA dM. EROWS, Rewoites HERMON MILLER | DIES IN BROOKLYN | It Is with regret “that we note the death of Hernun Alpheus Matter at the Methutixt plscopal Hospital, Brook lyn, on Noventer 1M, 1933. 0, Mi Miller wax hurt ty a isutome- Miwon October 20, 1923, reeelving ‘compound feyctare of the Tet tes. He wine taken 10 the Coney Islnd Hox? pital where he reiained” alum 19 Gays and wax! later remeved ta the Methodist‘ Hoxpital, «where he” under- went an operation. He was eatled rest Hne diye ale ‘Mhemmperction, He was the son of the late James Thomas Miller and Catherine Miller, elt the oldest of eizht chibiven, He ig survived by A muther, four rativers Jind three, pistons, Funeral “sorviene “were held at the vesidenes af hig mother, $51 De Kath Avenue, Brooklyn, on Monday event, Now, 16. Rev. SK. Moveis, former MGV TIRE Te Fat OL Trinkded, oeinted. Interment was at Everrraen Cometery.. Brooklyi, ot Naveather 17, A large number of rel- atlyes and frietids ofthe deceased at tended the funeral xerviees, amehe Whom were te -Immediate family -of the deceased, numbering twelve very sons, and over two hundred others, Jyhose names are too numercts ty tnention here. . The nidsdrews hy Rev, Morris war botly inspiring and instructive. Me Siler Mak Ac hiemhiycon ane | NEW: ORLEANS, LA. | he AI. Commientoner smd Mrs. Htoh- ‘ortxen returned to New Orleans re- Sunday, Nevember & Members turned Fane taiver tgibe divixion. *Sin ana lection hy the choir; selection, by the vand; address, Mrs. Grace Davis;-ad- ‘Kast Brooklyn Chapter of the Uni- + New Calendar of “13° Eeual Months Sought . |. SaaRReNtlonye: far HAPLOS INR Ne Site phdar’ now in use,are tnvijed- by the egmmitice.on calendar. sinipliiestian of the Merehanta’ Aswuriation, wlileh wil holt a public hearing on that xubjeat In the assembly room of the assoctation in. the Woolworth building at 2:15 winhrekminetire nf terns ne Deealone in a The Merchants’ Assocttion treads lias zone on record an favoring a xed date for Easter. Up further sug= ‘eat tht the calendar have four equal quarters -Af. the year, each quarter, in- cluding three months of thirty. Wilety and thirty-one days, Andther proposed change i a your of thirteen equal months of twenty aight’ days each, with each: month bexinning on the xame dag of the wk ‘+ Ss" Calro.. Egypt. Mr, Rahim discusse? the éilucationsl movement among ¢he darker races in a very able manner, ‘Tho band rendered xeveral Very plens= Fins: xeleciions. New Qrieang IMviyion Is active anil we are adding new momn- bers weekly Stee ms PHILIP CLINTON, Reporter. . DAY t. “Choking Catarch and Heal Noises left the Ficst Day” is the amazing, “giatement” of Migéour) “> Resident Hawking. spriting, chaling “Catarch and aiuachint aZfinnne Med Nolgen. aa, ‘Um is ibis Nerd fest Raenad ent Nem need! mutha dread any tenger.. “Now We eau fu thon “tia lr fen tha Ngee tigen ur stays wete teaues often tn fettay time with the Well Forint: a tthe nina sings orate ment wf ane avho haw taken thin new. trentipent. cfitze fameve. Roemmin in Bringing poymus turw health and freedom From dread ‘ratarth to thousnnte of" peopia Iherg everything tle had failed, Poof want tm tay aint ange CaNgrED was Abe pohiscly "stapped the Gent dag. aye TAL Rtontue, “iiehure 1 Rusttent tokine’ the treats nent, imy_ noses war canununtly ‘iledown Causing ry: hea tobe mapped. ups we Soy atsee wad my friemute had to shout T Nae cumingaits! hawking” aut spitting. amd woke Seo geout enmiremaninent tet Peanin tn nay. nothing wf the canennt. mut Eeetne and unery Mut enn me ont Nasticnily nays thet mil” thease trnubtew te frost fgedieek atten tablae’ Us PemAK> Bie neve “trectvent rattled Welt aemnuts, Bhd Wecet teat amy cure fy eemplate and Permanent. ‘ocd dlege Set." This wonderful fornia Je peanured by one ot the inneent tatebaterien ta thie, ware and Reneratly ‘knew ne We cloy Porinala, te eanily Great hone, ane anus V9 werk Tike MARIE ina asliyry om pewnin of all mes Nev uatier war bad your condition, Wo miter what jwur axe or sicupatinn. nn aat= Tie what sou have tries, He yee nfe Numer Fram eatareh, hronekial aati, Meath notes: hen TP mmyces entire that Ace Rest, Si’ end’ these ‘itouiliew that loiter to" nend Sou, my requine $2.50, treatment fae tnty" Bi35 in 18 Gham ein “ae ts rent nee nak rilsrartorys and gnu mre no: amore Ginn Pleared Inevery was, ft costa: you nothin, head ne toney iets vente nate. Wea dzeen tort. We Tech 414 Kurd Wide, Ration Chis Ms andthe big Geeatment will be nent Bt once,” Simoly: pay “portman on: areival. Tae “accoring fo, ie slumple direetions, Te'at the end of 16 singe your cataren Troubien wra°nat ended Sust send Rack the Unneet partion mer sie mynmey wlll he ree fonted withwut question. “This offerte <ully Ruarantsed no write toviny and ive thin To eee tareteret a wk SOR WORN il WHAT THEY THINK iti = © FERGEAT SAND MB, GIBET sangeet ered STL INTER | 4 CS . e : Revelation Mee American, * Women ae “he ~ - * wa Mrs... Peal hc hldee tt Ces ne Fl waee . | The. haves sie oa FACE B EAUTIFIER cE IT al DUE a aca a PUI World-Over: Madame Rhoda’s' System _ DANDRUFF, FALLING, DRY, THIN HAIR, BALDNESS for He $1.60 vals, Rusti, don't wallewin't test tone. Teter Heiney age a hearer bette tnn, Geedatnaa Pals fake Map ne SI afta: Sioa 1ngtoate, Ceealmemt and Glory OM, 2. mata gee aati ha Es EN heen lt Aad helena : Ora LUE wit ae weartnagtarcene se Wore Cs 1 anh a eet ire : ' J. DU JAJA- A Mohammedan Scientist: whe: recently arrived from 2. eee ee _ “Crystal Saronic Reading. ‘Adept Busines Counsellor, Medion! preparations in, all Forme. Blac “Oriental : ‘able'te Gissover and utilize, ‘ething Yo imrcnsibte to him. Call or writes 2 i ‘Dept. B, 260 West 129theSt:,.N. Y.'C. rear ee tat. Morningside 8106. ; | PS ciel tia Bia Shak tio a rt tM Mem, M. L. 'T, DeMenw ct New Yérk Gy etivered an address we bundreas of peuple, Her address was musterly And she did not. fall. torsstiow dis y Nearnes, claim for the relwase of thetr erect Chet, Mareun Gaktey, 7 Mrs. T, DeMeme said in qirt as follows: 7 Air. ‘Uresident, Onicers,” Mentors of tho Catversd Sear tmprovement As foctation, Ladies and Genttanen: My subject to, might bx, “Let 1tim @go—Free hin” Tiere ds ne ase in “all the would yecordead ia Bistoiy Unt Jwaders ket pot have to rke ti cone tritertton’ to beilg ap aintions wnviids The frodins of onpressed ponpte, Ts Universi Searn layerovement Awe clition was orantend Just seven year ago In this ewimtyyy Sear the tarp Of awwuhentys Interest ii the becom ef the Mack may foward a new rabial conaloustess that wouht make them foal.-regardleas. 19° eoler” sf skin mil texture of ttt that hy is just me ood ax any uther ree af poopie, My dear fgiemts, tonight, vig here As overwhelmed ae L thinks of the Mune Jilack Maa, whem God chose “seven, years ‘age wey down on Ue test Of annllew. | Yes, Maren Canvey Satennind out bike ws stone ring ot Of the mntntaine ber mae hls. Way. ty Kinestan, Cat let nee toll yeoh when Gow hay elesen a MEN, ne Ae Weed tey te defeat him, Me antet In the cltyaot Saye Vane ttid Bean fer syste So ees ig toerienee 1a inte and wowlorcut devedopment that syast come (# tie Nesen pants, Me tot the Negroes in Hiavteny that tizey. 1H speep: hnived-vinwan white aulstas lagarts: long enous. uf é Marcus Garvey tells yuu, yew need! not be aaivined of yar ender, Te tells Sou that the civilization mat thi white “nia ix emluying jtediay was ones yon | clvilizajiny What i yo pwiply ai or provement on your toretaie rss | “That te wiute mn ener Heed in} ceaven wnt Bis Boots fttens Worse gust the samme ae sotcens. Aon trated voallgee Usat the: Nevrecean ado ervey! thinee ay wel as dhe while man, Ptah yun, fepsieds | Sitter thie urmaniaeiven of tes Universal | Xegra Improvement. Asweiation the} Necro has bech educated to this tet. | and his Ufted up hie tout and | Straghtened his steutders, cund has | toly the white mgm "Edse wier eare ast foil equality, Wat rive me cata ope | Portanity. fag desebampentc” The Steere twits the whttes ana Hat ee Eilers a Att. Chie tLe amy Die ywtiet Het due ee Wes aie tellers | the weehd ate plas comaunce, Ve hey diffused “thie peters et Mores Garey | Ratiwily be hia qa hatetter tam Beenie we slost want han dewertd 2 Tie cnet nia here tse entey ate AE work i Mares (arves teke gen par pee! mart Htt,oy geese begets ated AL sot fornia wkehty sevnie: gutting a ene! elvilizatinn +f yonur wane Chat Son tse Biot fie echeciond af T Atstton Marais Garvey in-Atigntc peti last Angas! We did net find a mam eryime as iT were uer a lead uf Suprema cowed down hecuise eC perseranign but te the-eontrarss we fount Maren Garvey With isebeeed yeheted soa dvs [yes sprytting tke tells of te Me Ie Touking betor fran hy aid whee “ AgentsHairdressers Se See ae BOKHARA PERFUME CO. 305 West 117th Street : NEW YORK CITY = hot in prima. We fmatin’® ahe ap ivy of his wind b innaiine new phihs orale. Me. Garvey ts “his followers es ad part tleeunteoed, “ESetapbe aa Eset atts Gerth her hands te, God cn Rite Me METRE that our extiss In Jest aiid ietory must wots, He ‘Is Ghe diy man thet fies rduaht to our group a presram, Magens Garvey bic trattt et gortuicipie: Be was fruned ty a few Nevroes whee ated to Hee bin arceanplleh hot they couM net. He i a ebuan Werden, « He Would have been wut of gil Ge mentine sy uel walfdig the sbigaty “withe his Wife, had he Falta the prinelnles fur whieh Me ostools dine the wettld rather ais apap gree UB hie teehee avd grit aid she peineipeles of tae ase sowmdons He tats the wertd That “Negenes mast be ndependent, free that the Negew must Wit a Rovere mente where they van be prvtes tek, The Universit Necre hapeovenvent sAstactaten is fesk gn for sc eteann eae to vide dn, eomlly as tied upoas teat kiven ty Use white man or the Sent, Priee Wo favthQeaak that he xive iis a heat to xtoey iy Foun New On lesane te Nee Voit, beater we ane bya We ste tat aah fora berth inser ar iibote thes white weno oor wetnan, Bat, Werte Bat te ent anal abeep jst os thew. Qe. Sle, Garvey taibe yun yen need HMR ye SeseaHT sc nd eee ce apse t qos MAE a what person, They wi tyne pen dst my atch tn Ned Ver as they, will an South Care ina, Tabe is the white man's sent | Bp. tind he sinaply gives yete a join Mini eeeee nae | Wingy fe caitsie hie de Seane Wine fae wpenedsace yrs. La Bim sya, faves tienes tase Rtante tee atesid Let Win es! hevatiste He tetle you fs fer™ghee whlte woman slain get your “oxen women. Let the white men see that seu stant fo plicit dignity. Oh, pes, Maree Gears ves yiviilrec be nit tote bias a iptick: taeked ffaine of Mus workhe Vea ve? wet te Haver a Blas he Mttsts oof thee seer rates th anatae tT vee Ibe. Hi Net be Ist are, seats oe GEM ace toy foo: Uae at, é - stot thin gee feet dann Nearoe | lige ne te cot tos thls, Fratlaatin, Mavens Garvey wali Wake up the civie! izution of the Neste, Lam here ta gent! you te stlel togethers Stay in the savbites and tara aeith¥e the rhe | way Fete There obs 9 aiilety: aneverent ay hated, Mtn tales net need Sit eranvalen fh. Mowe te awaken here: ctf 2 he Negri the wet baw sataine | citiren it Aimerios The Nera tet ier are a sitaatead q Prnnddet, Vent ate ex caleddnn #tttet cana Nook ab tented fie reeune uf Mearetse Gerken. ey fete ue we Had op foe Neate we yt inet fein besarte te bad Grit atel be ke cingte Gy stand te bbe gute and Aft et them heen thet the Necw ra! Jeoah all Ritole oP yon wig fou Cae geeatenate cK nett gant awatinbial welts at wear yee deg atl weet ete World & i Popray: tice Cad wath feed deer and Sete you, and rei tee te our eb ke mot fee bss. si Medee UHS ass aot at att Kies Bieratise aiyety? totes s saver, hath white stat eodeted, wall han ever, “ile (etn satevear sed tnions UE an telling Yet te stk Letether, Guid mit and tell sour Giemds, Tet te Sesto prearlien s tee siege hanibting: Ste ! Wn) churches, and take one stalf or te maney te help establish factwnes fer { he qoonpelss ‘Pet then thar tars ch the f iurpnxe af aur, dani eiaent.” “hed Hs wong Kite that goon steand for sight t 6 peat inka dal i We Want.1,000 Agents --... Te Gen Webs Fewoye - HAIR GROWER eas core eg ne om ‘a. “SEND $1.00: Sear ger oe pe Rn ND Retna Bethe a ee ; ,, Bore jehie Rimatuctartes Oo. gn Swarr : VIEWS ON RELIGION Christianity: “a Phase * of Revelation | : os RebincA Wine full of worshippers “kneeling tn atte Catieeud iteration th from of an altar, Bieri car vavdtiuly ty alien “the vers cole cof power ahd majesty. abuses Dituself before a exts.on whieh thers anon Halk than who wat pbs, Angt SANGRE GM fekeink cvs aye coin: Dele exutenslon of #geruain Kau of auichuat Idea: that eait, btrueadé. Into Bobi ony oie acpret at a time, (ehst Te Wiha on Ciera ot Tahz, ON, heart, he a shave to the King of tie Work and two at Kine" write ike a fageit Sr Myhtning ane spielegal teal iat if onin-ts tordive with dhenfty one fen. lew ene SUL te puree thersthan one's awn weeltletng, Tint the riud in the Chucely sayg at bet= teqeaqd Mt basmemoic 7 SSoverthelew, | felt that Christianity mint he reggrilad not av a gaat rover RTC aN a pine ot Sueur: Tires greative, smptelt. tnfornstne. the ordi ental fou mune engl tof opan Me, ‘prntied Christ ta sates the Fntitinal eke. a mich's be naw dure tng thes coutatien hen reel tn the eualdisiiment ef sivas Earepes | He eke SHOR, Gor Abie hater re wey sresrd.-wiieihor: ye tanya sur Te akosctathed (e Alstieea: wile We eouhE PR understand; an unercantzedt mecsauinbe bpetoan oral nek st rip Ga eaten Whi panic nd an “unresalyed politieal syttem ine Solin Din. aHienetant Seartiates Te Soh teteedh ted oetited woorhD: te Thighs well lett ctf the 1aw ot the the af he bltteent Christ eae te eetifert Ita aon tinsn addversition He pied to hin, Tun: DOVER. BL AerEE CUT Ie fringe na Reecily tint es: cqaltesd a age aes ru pda won richest Wib: Hee. tiie Tew stone of tte Beaty of ports, Mer ikuend men that themh He new “he mest pas fer it ith itis hze, | Trot sites: Gorme Christhinhty had Gaudin eanlatg thes Reese Or AN salah uf, tbat te, ate ciated ta times, fhe dbuetivae of ghee, Viet et Phe: ntnare poche tan! Ian ae Get ler stetamed: te the: tes | bf eral fewer UNstuperted ley fares, Ty: CMIKT Indie ish upon tenes Vite hime that a mun Wer divine) Niels, heeavan be teleieior "wae hwantefit, "hereto, Chrlet shad to ho Coveted 44 fia Be ve ames ebebiiie wie ina plete tie SLE WIG HEME Won. eee hye ABE Ae HEA Hi al Cac Ie ote alee ica tease SP ak eae sn a can bo x tbe sta FBG GN tvtga tor Ua ohn tee Prete Pigs cote et Dats seen ass an sintee ta ates stevie pees whee fetieved thot! veto MBit tie tne altimate kaw of 1th Tee wk trae Lown sve the (hte echiie ie fe Pe tmeneare Maa sete dace ater, “ange callin ts made tina, “Wie aan Reed foe too nf Vitae place ie chesniat andl oan nat Laon, fer aur datierrew at dastien aby i-| panutinn whiek is Cnfber tre ioe aitnstonmanei. . | Recipe for Popular | Newspaper Novel”. Framer wig eitttal wich one hands wine youn man, several assorted vile PAM SP vermtepdecrd ventures, sprink= Hine well with ehulve phrasie, eb as [primitive passion, exetie "emtion, Sousid elmer” ot : J Seaser with peerivks PE Uurltnc ada én eqn yes) Te “murethey are well beaten, by the here Grind out “several thebgand wor ts per slay until son have enough ‘tor many “installments, . 7 Xorve hot. ta EY C.'Rrien in Judge. Tax on: Women. Urged . To Give:-Farmers Relief VICTORIA, B.C, Nowe $54—Tixing wonten, to relleve farmers was propoxcd yesterday. by the Agricultural Com- mittes of the Provincial Legisiature in a recommendation made to the Hon. Dr. DoJ. MgéLean, Minister of finance. The antleulturiste would Impose pall ‘tax on women earning more than “the legal waxe under the minimum wage act... Pe, Hand niade Christmas gifts: always have @ Yttle morg’of the spirit of real giving’ about them, #0, those.of us who are forced by oor pocketbooks to make oar own gifts need never feel back- ‘ward stout. it.: Sp-long. ¥S they are Gataty aad” pretty, : or ;sonetble, snd practical. af the.onee‘may ba, théy will ‘be appreciated quite as much. 22 would: © larger and. more..cxpenstve itt trem the wealthier irieed who ts te, go to Gee apep and Seder what ) wate oles, from the obep with J ANTEFAT CRUSADE Amicrican, » Women _ Seek ' Slimness The: intrest: fasbions gre isccing wat scone {0 rorort. to every meAne th ivine within the presertbed size. “‘Ehe falowing are very Snterest ng aiteow ‘ions froin’ duck €'Brlen of the Anti- ms Crude: ‘ “No. potatoes! ne whie bread, no rQWS. to pastes, fo ‘pUddlRs senta:e [ind starett, no cake, so butter or vreain, ho pork, Inco or ether tap meats, af stinan, candy oF, chocolate,” | 1," Hus xuadness, grachousd what elon te NES Ov eat Tatianna 285 potinds, Sho eaty't how hess ke daet nese tried cities is JS nivhe, plenty ef tlre. Lock etapa leheekene Eehe fern teal be ee haat Fins vege tsar’ Muitadetpiay Jak entanerated, report te aa fee vihnga’ finde opewergst Rarzike © nnn. ot senna ano pips. SY rrveet Me west Ye xemetDhne Lake is, tenets pai. 1 tual shy exthe tees ot teen fot Piteskfvet and a die ton sreani” she ‘coagaiued wiih glistening eves. oe, POP ent de avkthyast e Nes chat bast [anisiad gutters. eanatiier stab ke anit enn ve withont asetigh pon Dba sae gonna te aver Be ate exer dant. want ta ben diy SreHeth, Tt vither he Hienttay an foot Rood tein te bo thin and weve sayeth Hatten. MY Tuchatoh ies ane dikes Lma't de tay sates” dtatetelates Ask annie. MAnd daw tee cre site Sei are Tealthy heesnse sven ates Aetump, "The afatistiog janis amir Wie The tid wie law agin ea, stirain ated dave Foangers Aad lw cate ter vaat pet tie teanter He ea be hat Shades, is ge tntieation at, heath, Vather, fone st eases ia 8 (ite se, Vout aets't evens aula seer ey Shest pae tatgrs after a few an ken cat nen teat goavend Ame fonts Ait ony oh eatin oregtnarh.” @ Tee mineh harder for consis fo te deo tte9ne gains, QiEve8 woe oh AT fot haat feces ae bs Timon sans “hoe sonst ahhh nines eet fore thuey hasan gettin vee Coed CaMtbapeed oy Blin © oe ange fs Nereise te teatih watts, ‘The dattionty ee rede mg Mealy IS hed tgs caniantase ‘Then hw gene thee and otopsted, hirty minnesy of eacteline was salerent for ‘te thest day. has! wilt Iie tneveausod tem mitgnites a da and there wlll, im addition, be Berths, Paty own aud lletins, of vutiyses Inv tie ania biwe ser, diet ated eyeriise azn! aL Rist be heessstt. aid, ot Galleagond vunmintentis. WHT teste any fat ety fant fie, at ote ete toast md vo on tt ite ene wu “Mowe nti ole Senate. sone fo shina was whee ee | At dant bon, ome renan! “aie Hy Uh tfewtoa toe toe oeqaesnidtnd goat ate f Insianee, Me. peter a be poate WHTENY NEL thine Te tit ten a 2m sted then ss etd Hong! eS alt oe el Se abr HR fi a dt Sl ate ft men. Aer Ut years a few, protnus anders urht as heeey Bhan a fev: pusindy aves weetts SMILES A traveling satan wrs_inn tie Taide of stenigng at ae partic lan hotel sete re thes debe tue ery Be Innes’ ot the tide “The sabernute was foo oo thes eos canal Cob nie wife se ay he want ol aero age axiom with iin; sen aie: foes enntdl Have: wenn af ther bed bones Win thes sere seated at thie tate At the hotel, the stleuniin sind to. the SWheres ay jumey (odayT “OWE Sal the Matter, “she don't work here any. mere® ater Masculine, Metical Ottiver Haw dit yon, meet with this aeckdent? 7 G.OMOT. Cott saan any acestont: A ttle Kiekeod pne, Spat don Pon ew thet any neol- dent gc SNe he Bid Hoan piensa” 2 Lafayette Lyre, Look It in the Face - Judging trom the steps taken toward allowing the Chiness to fx their ows Axepl- polleies, the powars' are hegin- ning to realize that the time has wonte Wheh China ean no Jonker be atiecess= fully contrdtied. In regard to the re- maining pointy the same attivuce wil, Flow or spon, have to prevail. + ‘The Coarts will be the guestion that, plong with dis tari matter, the Chi- ‘nese will stand by “most flemly. The gold tenth Ie that henceforth men who 4o-not wivh: to trust Chinene courts shoilld do their husinege ehewhere, *Nobody chan a “God-given, right to trade in China, As a matter of fact the extra-territorial courts exist ony fa jhe treaty porte and slong. the Yangtse river. The Test of the interior trade has to depend on mative courts, and those who know niost about China, such .a8:.the missionaries, with their Marge, property’ soterests,, are satiated with them.—Washington Herald, --~ LISBON.—King Mapucl of Portugal, king te aboantnc—witt—ebrttcate—te favor of hie conata, Pring . Duarte Nuno,” aceordiig “to:. Spanien * news: papersn, * =. Cg Ott * 3 iN . am we f fee sy tg Seta Stake eka : a +-1t your TACK is sallow of Mark. if your SKIN is full of f = an ae am cp aun as am om a® aman) eieehs, Eel Grove gonieu? Fas. waeeme MARAMY. ANSIE_W. HANSON. Bea 43. cd Huoreis: i sou wot co CLEAR and BRIGBTES unt Batten Cremer Sintian, NEW YOMM OFT, Nate: {t sou ate ansiour to BRAUTIE® your coiplede: Flonase send ie your Baclety Puce Waastiber, "Omer Lobe No ‘Times Order's far ut ; silat ech ihe Bollnent Steere fee: guegee =A a | ‘ TGs Stim one tn your trondt” S nclas “8ee “ews | SOCIETY FACE BEAUTIFIER V Siren iS Sott? toy Sinden tale Gluctiaer SQ + | = fy SSSR Seah aes TRG Sorel Seta | rin Fut ofreautn j FiAbe STAVE Wow SANT TaeRT OL Too" WaRP + ands east io arriy. ude cy ani corp ‘ene, E “teat Ce’huuner stan the temmrtaute’cnamee ceamtety your Darcey TANI fate otaettes tines heiet sou ok gastos, HOY sescasasonssengnasecnnecaneccgneconsscsenessowets 2. Srinidnd sy sheweleds sacea faced? FILE ser COUPON ail [oy ‘ iba ances are Tr repay ar Soo SSSR aa eta aS EN aaa aa ‘ - 4 “PROVEN WAY -TO STOP FALLING HAIR end DANDRUFF i by 5 & Dandruff, falling hair, itching scalp f Mis Vand baldness are enemies to scalp | £ “A health and the growth of long, | A “J lustrous hair. Scientists admit ~ «A H they are “germ” diseases and to |. WAeseonfoure them the germ must surely | Reig be destroycs. H. There's no longer reason germ life, that they attack | for having poor. unhealthy only diseased tissucs, tend scalps and dull lifeless to keep the scaip free from. heir, Jt has. been proven dandruff and itch, alley * that MADAM C. J. WALK- falling. hair, enrich .the’ ER'S WONDERFUL ‘HAIR ecalp,. stimulate growth PREPARATIONS are di- and make for long lustrous | rectly. opposed to harmful — hair. NDE? HAIR foe. : : ) tf’ oe 4 . Wampapew’ | ONES ie ° + gece and Mane. G J. Wellearhas: 4 SS ee ‘Shae Preperestensievesteby > (S cn Z agente, Dyay Gravee ont. bey sma Cag Xv - ede Ct Water pe se, , we eines A ey bee | Peculiatities of Chitdren : BRAS BLACK “CROSS. NURSES “OF NEW yoRK - Nevveusieaa’ may shew isett. bs tittebiee mavemegggeeat hyndes ana teats amd a nls. nmeveng child fe capt tee fhe aintatesiticnmtty einnsy, Po itel Stag sshd serine wsaie atten shew tls bee Stanang of St. Vatus's daneg, aatnd eile Aish are apt te ba@punishead for tear ditt Inveduutary peeulianties, Sth Tastehenent ani aggeavetee He eso Gite. Gebanine an every wcestati, drew ever, shtavs a Wirt af curr eal aver The muscles of waytescton and. inde cates a lowwertane Mrain, aatd inensslty for carey upiiingan, Convulsions in young eileen Gere dae ty anany cesanse ocd be penta pe otis AS eats is thi ease cthiey"Tonsn a genes Sven Shem, wICiegeh ame meas eo snciven fie Aesblven cand tye ane dans se Btave as Mts af stmnilar cwverits in alas 7 3 = Tonftelvendestuess IC glteiy vain fe 8 sien of stuyeility: aint etitdeen vee Pantshed when tye da pot tye tht Fight, Thies a eeeut teaetahe, fase featiee the wth en He dine foe Hie fae 4 thot. thie side wf the esa aes rnting the tote tweed fhad davetuped ny sty SP Thevsthan re east yer doeeeene ee taht ta de venice ther wath She right and see become Tete tee ane thog het wath etal fates CVomenesti@ te salt ta ie yee RTO eat ri. ea te nape stnefae ese tbe tape fa Cue an ff thie anny ss sionitey tien snort Te pewnasient at qeobente thee cap ef Hive tongue foam totes opngtacided, a1 makes nursing, sbttientt a festos, satel it alleys ter pwersiot 2 may anise a lish, A sligint operation te oll Mat ts. neces ers, Int HO nist" be dene cares falls, waving wy he Hina Of hemucthaie, Kad postntes an ehiilren, stich as Sanling an ane tes, Memphis at Phe shomblede and leunurg the toot elbose a thie tale at Dessanees steal te ate fsa ged atm tersding ter gateiten see ortnitte = The batten total ana tes Aue emsttenahbes ewpvatne sf tie payee sned tfontay er aeoyeunbts a8 oo ates SEOACHIMCLALE OL EgIN ARNIS | Ban on Nude. Girl in Theatre Stirs Row in Rio HO DE TANTO New. Ine eovmtse the "Hee Uneetiet etagter ae see oat teeter a Premed nut eteed eam ety <u. Tees ataWs Bere antes a yank art hak ware taped gen, Eke ame Hadds ate en tuted ie a eancrane cs os fe whedon mutes twdkea fer nt xe fav the Weatthe fe nudes FAL, AS fie same tine the rarity te: Lesapuddis be sttnted fey geese eaten Latzees that cate fram deebus “hortn Eeatrestt stated te apaiear here wet wen. teat . NOTES OF INTEREST _ If the-Negro Becomes : Radical Tle way te asks the Nek be ev etek sehen stent ef ain paytl ten IS met fe eptamie atte apn smagiwary ation soducers, bet the van let ain dtetb as ft ofc shee zadtiet he feet domeston menaees that enstesie the Nexru’s af stated amped hin fe ae PiStenad aets af Peheltan. One vf Mie lenses 18 The ticpeatalte’ tenon Prwsties, Others re exeeratde bettstits ranibaiens, lide eedbutart svi ated 2t-. ly wnbair atiseasmmmnetion tn shes ny ettey vf parks and ntaserennls, Shy these menses Be thes TN ea! fies that thee Ameria ete me Inovantaee Panto 1 Bes tases a path tak Ge will tee Amneggea’s fete ont aero Vinnie 1nd, Profanity in the U. S. Ar Ws gn Of Ure re Sand He Wwe aly Veil as cisteeent. at teat oe Ar as (AL AOE RAR OME bate carl seat retest we bit foe eaten. ie ta hike ue Page cuapnigngt French and British Tactics General Servatt, Reeneh gaverner af SSirha, whe wae tecgntty ne atted titer eet Tne Bie alae bidet hea: woe Niet wath: Herat er beanber Berke cant Dieses eget Sang atae Me oon HEB ra ie Shoah Re, Ue ere $00 Killed as Cyclone © Sect Southern India fitment ree i tal a Nae eee tase ce ce eecrapad abeopeie ht eee Lonnie, Chinese ‘Soldiers Killed By American. Naval. Guard... PEKING, China, Nov, (20.—The ‘Aifipeleva Vand wébe: teal Feeaeed nate from the Chinewe foreien omce feorenitne minst “the. atvlog: eae Chav king wt inka: Litem, Us Chinese petra une on Hjem, aul the Killime of to ‘saldiere cand oweunding nine cothers by the. HAmerigan tigyal guard aboard the vese oe putee morn ai i. hedleveha the steamer heel ignored -frantle alee tele Snan Ge Chics calling pan bre fe step, The meval ‘cuerd-then opened ipo celle Saeegs wap aons Childless Queen's Successor HasaBaby * | __ BANGKOK, ashi’ New SRA Whe dang, in pivtimg-astde bis feat ie ra one Bel pueed wo pans Seok In at moh awe oem, Miss. Rogers. Gained ....-... 15 Pounds-in Six Weeks Skinny Men and Women Gain 5 Pounds mn 30 Onys or Money Bach My thee Eerieoslea Win Pete Aacagietis Neate with iy Mane Taree ela PLAC Ba ea eee Aer ae a Lee el pena eae te AM ela te cet We Care Be SS Or ence 2a Give Your Wife’ Nese = ~ é frontier 4 Real Present ea for Christmas L | Saiteny ey Sseeant, 10, Seca Bias es sum, nae Be Sed ELON wae ae » WILLIAM J. WEIR fe nt Speer, AOA 1 hone 226 damate A:Baby In Your Heme OM cy t 4 Lstd oS eer ee ee eee Peres SA A ee (24 pte etne tee os SS es Sara es oe Rta SoS ee ee Ewe Bago eh FEMALE He FREE pees . oat Bene ee Foe ees eerie Sos aer aa |THE PEOPLE'S FORUM, Se, the Falter af the Scere Pee: T have spent-several yeara in’ Africa +wiW the: “Imparial and “Colonial Gav ‘ernmenia of Bieri Leone arid Nigeria. Yeaving, the Litter-phnew In-1917, [ean ‘ave an cnlightentn: aceonnt. of thes two places. especially Nizoria, Where I have lived for nine years. iNigerla lw-quite a level place. The soil Is rich, The chief products: of the land “age: coro, saffec. Flee, rubber. corn, Kround-nuys, entton, palm-ail and palm kernelx, ‘The-nitive farmers are trying thelr, best, but require assist~ “ance in tho nhape of limprovement. If “we could only’ket Konic af aur exert farmers fropr- thes West PATS OTT ‘there. wo would he able, to help our Wrothers grenily.! Cattle rearin Is another grvat fouture over there and one can de well, In that trate, J There: millions of, ackes of tana Iving {a8 uneultivated. Canas+ palnt with inyhear™tu of sarow te our lands over there wasting, amd we are out here practically slaves ty the white ‘man, May Gud help our prashiens- general nil the Sesuckithor to put aver the great prokraganie whiel fu In front lof WSS That ONE Hay WeMAy Hebe to xtund gn the, soll of ene motlfertand gniox{ox the plemuriw of that eyuntry Away’ fron the zrly of the white man We all over here are raving das and night for 2 speedy release af the Hon, Marcos. Gureay. ws (et he may be with us'asnin ts carry on ls, sweats with greatersforee than ever. |= ee NX. MOORE, Says Kelly Miller's “Article ,Is “Unpardonable Affront” ‘To the Edltor of the Negro Wortd: ‘The more 1 read of sete ofsenr ine tellectustls and agvepted: race lenders.” the higher 1 vulue the Universe! Nee “Improvement. Assurlation sil Mtw Tar sighted Ieader, Hon, Maren Carwes While iseuvaine the sence aqteation [with a.young echoot lad, Twas ured by Bimm to try nul eet the Ortater hee sue, of the Ainericnn Mercury: stuca. “zing, and read an artiste entitled “Tir ‘Color Line.” “After cating at the hews- stand dind failing te forute this pure Meutar feaue, Tews shown thie Nas Yember isetie, White, xranintius Its tne Miller, on the “Sosgrasm Worknian” Knowsng the position lett Wyo Mr. Mile Ter. and ining bean Fe ggifited with Ibe abithe ag fovtfier we hntorna se An tothe eetehpauition aka aisles vy | DON’T ENVY HEALTH vote plinioydtl. ; Don't wish for strength—get it? Bon't-admire Musclee—have them! Don’t dream of Vitelity-ponsese it? Fheamutinn ean he banished, te matter how Tong yn have had Te Others ire enjoyinge bye wsinse ths Famous Tree Why tint sane, We wilt whip, te any: part of the ory one of Gwe seu mr feoe $a Onder nea tee ad. few oe Pain Out of the guint sand inten. . 2465 N. Oxford Street INDIANAPOLIS, IND. c° Branch Factory: “4705 Russell Street DETROIT, MICH. | A Health Restorer—Be Able To 0 > ‘ be If you are troubled, wi:ti constipation, biliousness, indigestion, gas belching. liver trouble, stomach Socele sia eruption and weak bowels, ORDER a bot- tle of HOLY-BARK COMPOUND, « most wonderful ull-yeur-round tonte, ttt once and take a doxo mgrnings only: and you will He pleasantly surprised to notice how your food dixésts better. You are not troubled with your Ktomach Shy more. All indigention distress after eating tx one, Do not let neglect ot Four stomach become. chronic. herauae the resulta are dangerous AGL At once Send for a bottle of this Godsend medicine this minute. Mafled any- where." Price $1.80 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. zi MONEY MWST BE SENT WITH ALL ORDERS . 113 West 143d Street * _ NEW YORK CITY ’ * . Full Directions How to Take, With Each Bottle . i Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower | pm Be a -. Nature's Way of Forcing the © Sam GB . Hair to grow tong, soft and healthy, Sith ge A combination of dried and cow. Cle dered seed. Just clean your scalp and of S Bat, Se caed often Sy rubbing the, i ays r “ [AIR SEED GROWER gently. in Paes IA the scalp. flo this tonight: watch ose a BE, Se eer Be a peters, é Sn hair hower: Try it Ladies, tet us i = glee otoes fall sit monte trentaent . veld & bee cele en P 8 yen eee aw end, Sa Fe cae oe Bee pee het oe U0 7” Feseeerrrs as F ; . File. e ee ge. an ‘eee of the: | rr F Soe ee od Ke Sate ae ae Fz, p, Seine ER q Peas hee 3 : Pho sega sgg. Fons cul ermems : ie ee ‘The first statement that aroused my mental Indignation’ was: “The . Negro {a exsesitlally a manna swarker, fe helorige ty the profeterlit Wwhigy'works With the hands.” On lyoking tip. the dofinityir of protetariana, E fnd: “per ! uinlig, Jo. the common peapleg lows bcuteatt Ong ae ‘Goat ioinbal onette [sortetys_« workman: In anctent Rome, the lowest else of eltizens." | Now, a! Lotus. realize, that we have, tom yer: kreat-extent been forced ta do thes menial, Tahupios Jobs; wut for one. t ay That we belong to: such a” getuy Teoan untardenable insult and affront toy our dntelloetal dighity. In “tic Fecond porausiaph of hie article, he [sBetee that the Nero is ay hedplost an 3 eatin the wind, «Please send axa chistptas prevent ene eons uf Set fain Bundamnentatiam, te the” Tearned peitossur! and ctl te his attention that chugs, “We Bre artaters uur des sing") Vor tiessahe of coSteast and inspires atkins“ L nute the fullawing excerits from Tae Negro Werld editorial, of (News 1. Slaw ‘the: Negro Served His Purse in America? vIn brief, white Ameren ix Boartione snd crual, and is hat concesned shunt the fate of the Nesrw, herause Ine hist already “served the purpose for avintely Ae was boutfelet mre: Phevefure the Negrs’ future feste in hfe-uicen tamds, sud should be Bonatior of deep cmicern, to hin at This tite, seaine he fs ite longer the ward of the nated, seed, portion of preface te PMiisepyA ait Gpinions af See ecses: Gui eters teal Drotiht te ligh! faeces convietion, and, fy state of eenvjetion inspires setton.t Tn conclusion, the weiter makes, tys strikingly duspirivg decoration: the life of the lack consumer is short. tiles he sturge ont iumibttately te prahies those easontiake of every aby Fite whteh wilt tite Kine ont of the | rervent elise and at the same time ine sire his Hivelihend; but the question wt | piethatieds hes in the extabishinent of fe oxevernment of fie awn in Afrie Strang, onewth te prateet Juin in any part ef the wart he may reside, ‘Trity 4 the Nexre Inte served well the white | man's puree foi Metezing tim 1! Amery. 20d the enlightened wiles | sep gare 1d see Uetarininegl tt Servi cece, parton shat. of livid rind stayin We as any ether man, | witht Mintttions iad without hare joes agcalust Wig development stab prose STE PITS AT Te Tee WS ei HS fleieiney theres Nau | with the pusstinistie facalian, and on | with the self-determitieg and aptimistte | ware of Negro Nuthin: fuslders sand Hegnntite Hiniidigaters! ARTHUIE S. GAY, Oakland. Callfarnta, Goal—A Redeemed Africa; Nothing Else Will Satisfy Vo the Kditer of The Negro World: Ht ly usualy true that the worth of Ua toyrraw Lge Iw ike. thats Te Cakgeal "Niata. annwceamset “Aber ciation has preven te be ne exception herp ollie Ges Gna le elt tn aos sete of the Ming witch taday we are ing and, Mearbin! the EOENOINE hoseatl that the {aiversat Negra dnpneves HMRC tn, Uulld “uh Peewee airing br lepienaahos whit 81 Hel us "to Become acquainted- with our. rice gteup Yarouzhout the world, “ay 11 cannot, ‘understand tive atte -xf find of myNéaro tyrother wlio. xecins eele buppy and comented.” Cay amin be happy Waen Kis trentom, nie very Nie, 4x at mtahe?- tw the lamb happy when he Hat the morry-of the greedy .wolf. who, standa’reudy ead, waiting $9 devour hito? ‘The white san eontin~ wally uxes the Negra to accomplish his own ends with ‘Ittle cangern ak to our Welfare nea peoples * Oi Aristo “Duy! the White news: Pinérs were’ Aled With -pletures- jena romintwnees of thee Worl War. But ope .cnuld leak dn vain for any sien of apinegiation for the Neare whe fought so gallantly alung-owith hie white brother that demosrey might Ivy Iweservadt far all, Now. that the” war fx over and the Negra Is, ne tanger needed ty Aeminplish the ebjective, fie dn forgetion. : Sine, there are none ef Ash! “one attles, we af the Unigerkal Nexrw tm Pinvement Asteehition fre fshtiws vr Own battles, Wee kive started ont 10 Bhtdn a nitienal home for aurseiver where we whe xa dastre may deel tor gatqier In peare vem frm, the SHgDta and scorn ef thé awhite joan, ‘Our gov Ig 8 redeemed Africa and nathing esd WHL salt, We swat that Which fe righteetly aura and we are going ty eave no stone unturned to Ret ite, The preddent concent Ix cantined in Atuat riven, ue te whrk i helms Carried ones the satisfaction of the FALAGuN menbees, We ave prawt of our organization. amt ie prozeatn, Ti: ALENANDEN IIGGINSON, dia HGR DAEOIAS Cabin. . ULN. Iv A. Feeching ‘Spreading in Africa - “Te the Billion of Phe Nexen World: Ang Negra whe thinks sertoust® on rate conditions unmet hetp ber ay fected’ by Cie entiselomtionts effort of a Few of wr peohle te better the eyns dition “of the barge group. In spite. of the lare metiberstuip of the Calversal Nera Lapem cae? Avcerintion, dete Ave Mo ANY MELONS Hf ANE psi whe Rave net set hoon reach thar tile hieivement eens tv be jest fn ite ane fay . Nothing “ase P met a Nexre from Xt erin. It vias yearly qerintal te hear ine pebite thy eantitionse nates? with ih the Neuro us fovend to, Hye aid work The Negwo in wre pass wf Che worl hhatilly iinddoesiana! the febrile wpivess sion sh I his hyother fe unutergoins in Atrio i, “ The Neste World base heen the one raat Of Melt on a Son ot daraaees, At hi Thine lefove The coming of This ereat Paper werm we able. ter ebtscin’ the htt forination witel: we have weakly new. LTat Misttiend tivformation ie vere, tnpeessive and thie Nizerken tet me ae FREE ees WONDER of the Sea weem 20th CENTURY ae fase, Mada Meee eeriae Reese tne esse ee te Fite aaa ates UE Ns Pa dd ara er eran a atin Sepectis acer gaa ee J eats Se ilar tates cre ae re Bn Mae eg Se nO oe haat” "Ween: orient” ese an Ss eee NEGRO DCLLS ni ehitad rasta tient ite ATG Bh NOSE STANDARD COMPANY. ~ 438 Tener Ave, New York | , on io REMOVED S DR. J.P. BAILEY 148 West 131st Street .GISTERED CHIROPODIST SEVER 10NORE FRE TROCBLES—= THEY INJURE THE NERVER Wonders, Soest oe Paes Sd TRCHOLFIF RALER CO. 201 W. 140th Mt. New Terk City © THE: NEW. STUBBORN BLOOD : DISEASES?,; | Stet, eens eee eaten so: Fee ne a eeeeeee Ce ee ceo eee. ee ET ie = thoushsful, - Ie ‘sald that Inforrustion (oncetning the Monorable Margui G4r- ver and the Univeraal Negro iinpioves ‘ment Asxoriation In-ripidiy «preading througliout Africa and the rmtlves anx- are greally: eavonreged be corte, énancis we BUbHAL < Bapeeal ‘vesndeaav s 7 . Offers the celebrated” || ‘ as | “MORRIS ANSON” q. 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M.-Y! 8. 2S Negro Universal King coming ‘to rale‘the World Fam Negro Universal King coming ‘to x MM. vale: the World or. ween +g ee aa piel IAL REE Sin Ga fab evecare tone oe Se Tate the focth abd‘ pictore of tn. King ste wena! Negro Characters in the Bible © jpale Gacteren ee taeaey mea he ome ng noone an ne Gee a Sucta” aed’ aeo “hing: Bolom’ Temples No. 2, “The Nexro King Tut aad Hie-Treas- Seat gata on ier tten dara nae we seating that: ter Sata efeme mevr du. ae WOR Sua A Rate care af Balter» Ofice, Chirage, Ul, Bend wie! ours Onee.. Corea: ® ROW TO MAKE GINERS ‘eve YOU | Ot | Mra = rn Vacs B Dy) eel an , + Brees al es a =f ee Tay ent | coo week § ra. & ac. ; Save the. Serishiose. 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ChACS” EVERY NEGRO SHOULD BECOME INTERESTED IN THE GREAT PROBLEM OF RACE AND ITS SOLUTION MARCUS GARVEY with an account of the trial of MARCUS GARVEY that has stunned the Legal and Lay minds of the WORLD MARCUS GARVEY is the Greatest Living Negro Leader, Statesman and Orator. Now imprisoned for his ideals who was elected in 1920, by Negro representatives from all parts of the World as PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT OF AFRICA, has a message that every person should read. Garvey, like Gandhi of India, Zaghlul Pasha of Egypt, has a grip upon the minds of his people that will greatly affect the course of human history! Like John Bunyan, in prison, he sends a message to the World that TIME shall not efface. If you are interested in the future of America and the future of the Races, READ this great book—the thoughts of one of the world's greatest master minds. The book contains, in addition to the "Philosophy and Opinions," the legal documents and briefs in the celebrated Garvey trial, that has aroused the interest of millions of people the world over. The cry of "Africa for the Africans" is raised with a logic, forcefulness and determination that has no parallel in the history of mankind. Every Negro person of intelligence and importance will READ this book. Know what is in the mind of "The New Negro," who seeks the goal of nationhood. Learn the TRUTH about the man who has been very much before the American public, and who is greatly MISUNDERSTOOD. who was elected in 1920, by Negro representatives from 25 FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS MARCUS GARVEY Negro Leader, Statesman and Orator. Now i A Book That Will Set You THINKING RIGHT, MARCUS GARVEY parts of the World as PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT C as a grip upon the minds of his people that will greatly af not efface. Leads eleven million active Negroes in America, Europe, Asia, Africa, West Indies, South and Central America in the QUEST of NATIONHOOD! Read about it! It concerns you one way or the other! Read of the trials and troubles of the Black Star Line! Read how UNSCRUPULOUS and UNWORTHY white men have tried to steal from Negroes who have tried to help themselves in the great struggle of life, for which MARCUS GARVEY has been IMPRISONED, and how HONORABLE and HONEST white men have tried to help the RACE-a great contrast in character. Statesmen of America, England, France, Russia, Germany, Spain, Italy, Belgium, Japan, China, India and Latin America are reading this book and are deeply interested in the Philosophy of the Greatest Black Man of the Twentieth Century.