The Negro World
Saturday, January 16, 1926
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
What Will Tomorrow Bring?
Fellow-Men of the Negro Race, Greeting:
The world in which we live today requires of every man and woman an acute sense of the fitness of things, a keen perspective and unsparing sacrifice if we are to survive and make ourselves respected. The moment we become complacent and satisfied, content to bask in the sunshine of the glory and achievement of others, that moment we set back the hands of the clock of racial progress. For it is apparent that truth, justice, love and mercy have taken their departure, and all that we have is the reign of selfishness and greed which will ultimately be the wreck and ruin of our civilization. In all this terrible muddle four hundred million Negroes are called upon to play their part. It is natural and necessary, then, that we take on the spirit of the age and meet the other fellow on his own ground with his own weapons. It is for this reason that the Universal Negro Improvement Association steps out speaking in unmistakable terms on behalf of our own group, and in language forcible and uncompromising calls upon each and every member of our race to gird his armor on and be ready for the fray.
It is no use talking about settling this human question with prayers and words. It cannot be done. We must employ the only argument that the races and nations of the world understand in the twentieth century. That is the argument of force—physical force, economic force, political, industrial force. England is speaking with force, France is speaking with force, all the other European powers are speaking with force as their only language, and the races or the people who cannot present to the world organized force will be naturally dragged under in the tidal wave of race oppression. England and France are more determined than ever to exploit and subjugate their darker citizens and subjects, their professions notwithstanding. It is no use looking to them in the sense of the larger humanity, because they have lost their Christian souls. Englishmen and Frenchmen no longer think of humanity in the terms of Christian brotherhood, but in the terms of pounds and francs.
England wants money, France wants money, Italy wants money, Belgium wants money, Portugal and Spain want money, and the only place that they can grind it from today is Africa; hence, they are making one mad determination to exploit and ravish that country, the land of our fathers, without any consideration for humanity or Christian fellowship. If they profess other than their lust for gold, then we know it is a lie; it is all a farce, pretense, hypocrisy.
Let Austen-Chamberlain talk, let ex-Kaiser Wilhelm rave, let Briand and Mussolini bluff; their voices will be lost in the wilderness of African hope, because surely we will not hear them. We heard Chatham before, we heard Gladstone, we heard Chamberlain, Sr., and out of their profession of human love and brotherly consideration we find that Africa has paid the price in blood and in wealth for the expansion of the British Empire to the loss of millions of native Africans and Negroes everywhere. We are tired of this kind of political hypocrisy; therefore, we are calling upon the four hundred million Negroes of the world to listen to no other voice than that which beckons us on to action—the voice that commands us to go forward in the name of an emancipated race and African redemption, the voice that says "March on with the hope of a brighter future, with the throwing off of the influences of the past."
Indeed, we have come to the turning and the parting of the ways. The black race needs look no longer to any other race for succor, for advice or for political help. We must naturally look to ourselves. More and more we become disappointed in all our hopes; disappointed in all our ambitions, depending as we have been upon others. In America we are gradually being thrown off politically and disappointed socially and economically. Within the British Empire we are only the scapegoats of a sober and seasoned diplomacy. In France we are only made the dupes of a crafty statesmanship that hopes to profit by the ignorance of those whom they deceive. How, therefore, can we depend upon others? Doing so will mean nothing else but our present and future ruin, such as has been in the past.
The days of slavery are not gone forever. Slavery is threatened for every race and nation that remains weak and refuses to organize its strength for its own protection. Slavery has no day and no time. It is present when the strong race desires to oppress the weaker race. Negroes, be careful of what you do today! No one can tell what our condition will be tomorrow, whether it be slavery or not, if we do not strive toward the goal of racial strength, of racial power, political and national independence. Let us rally around the banner of the Red, the Black and the Green, the universal emblem of African redemption. Let us stand by the colors as Englishmen stand by the Union Jack, as Frenchmen stand by the Tri-Color, and as white Americans stand by the Stars and Stripes. For us, let the vision be fair, let the vision be one of hope and encouragement.
Head of Akron Rubber Firm Accusing Great Britain of Bad Faith, Says a Million Acres Should Be Planted in the Philippines—Strong Must Be Opposed by Exploiting the Weak, as Usual
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WASHINGTON. Jan. 7. — Insisting that this country is faced with the necessity of a "war measure" as a result of the rubber situation, in which he charged, the powers controlling the British rubber industry have "broken their word and acted in bad faith," F. A. Selberling, former president and founder of the Goodear Rubber Company, declared today that America must grow rubber under her own flag, preferably in the Philippines. He testified before the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
His hat clenched, Mr. Solberling said: "The British government has got us right there... by the neck—in the grip of their hands. This country should not permit itself to remain in this position. We ought to have government support for a sound project in the Philippines."
"British-Criticism Idle Talk"
"It is idle talk for the British to criticize us for not buying rubber away ahead. That is nothing more nor less than gambling and, is unsound. Sir Robert Horne is talking childishly when he attributes the shortage in rubber to the introduction of the balloon tire. We had ah eight months' supply when this was done; we now have one month's supply.
"It is a sad day for America when any country on earth can squeeze us like an orange overnight."
Mr. Sutherling, who now owns a company which bears his name in Akron, Ohio, impressed the committee. Twelve years ago he bought 20,000 acres of land in Sumatra and employed 9,000 coolies for the Goodyard Rubber Company. Fourteen years ago he surveyed the Philippines with a view to rubber planting. Witnesses who preceded him deferred many technical and territorial questions to his judgment.
In November, 1922, he said, the Stirvenson act was passed, and in January, 1923, a committee came to this country and assured an American committee of rubber men that the British Colonial Office had the power to control the supply, and that they would immediately release rubber when the price went beyond one shilling six pence. Then, he said, "they refused to make them and resisted our appeals and the efforts made through the State Department and our ambassadors."
"They acted in bad faith. I stand by this statement and can furnish proof. As a result of their action we in the rubber industry are two years behind. They have reaped an extortionate amount out of this country that approximates $5,000,000,000. We are likely to have a real shortage in the next five years. In that time we can do nothing.
Can Go to Philippines
"But in the long run we can do something. We can go to the Philippines. There there are 1,200,000 miles of ideal land for rubber planting. There is rainfall, temperature and climate—it's all there. There is also labor in the Philippines, but not enough for the heavy work. Cooke labor must be introduced for that."
"I agree that this is a new departure for the United States to invest money in the Philippines. But it's necessary, and we will get the money back in the time, with interest. We have not had the foretress and courage of the British for long-term investments, which brought no immediate return. But here is an emergency which cannot be corrected in any other way."
Mr. Selbeiling estimated that it would cost $200 an acre to clean out the jungle in the Philippines and start rubber plantations. He said that America ought to plant "at least 1,000,000 acres."
A. L. Viles, general manager of the Rubber Association of America, said there was an immediate upward trend after the passage of the Stevenson act. He said that the surplus at that time was about 85,000 tons and was now 6,000, so that the act had not only raised prices but had resulted in a very great depletion at the base of supplies—London. He favored co-operative buying as one means of counteracting the British price fixers.
W. O. Rutherford, vice-president of the B. P. Goodrich Ruthberry Company.
Despite Locarno Flourish Continued Oppression of the Weak Is Likely to Provoke More Wars in the Year Just Started
The year 1326 promises to be one of continued complications in Europe and Asia. Students of world, affairs are finding much that is foreboding in the slow march of events, despite the promise of Locarno and the movement for disarmament.
During the coming months, the Mosul question looms as perhaps the most important. Though trouble is brewing in half a dozen other corners of the old world. A war between Turkey and Great Britain, with Russia lining up with the Turks, is regarded as a not unlikely possibility.
Turkey claims sovereignty in the kingdom of Iraq, where Great Britain holds the mandate, but England is apparently determined to hold control in the face of considerable opposition in Britain. Not only is Mosul rich in oil, but it is the military key to the land above India.
The league of nations, with the representative of Turkey conspicuously absent, recently granted Great Britain the mandate of lakr for twenty-five more years. This is yet to be approved by Turkey and, according to many, it is a question whether it will ever be approved.
In this connection it is interesting to note that within the past few months Turkey has made an agreement of neutrality with Russia, whereby the two nations have, promised not to war against each other for a period of three years. It is believed that the agreement also calls for co-operation in the event of war with Britain.
A movement to conciliate Russia, with its huge resources and vast armies, is seen in the invitation to come into the league of nations. Russia has been asked to send a representative to the coming disarmament conferences of the league.
In China matters are also bolling. Chang Tso Lin, the Manchurian warlord, who only a few weeks ago was reported in flight, is again on top, having been put back on his feet again with the aid of Japanese-money and Japanese troops.
This is all said to be part of Japan's determined efforts to gain complete control in Manchuria.
The war in Morocco, in which Abdel-Krimeh has played a leading role as chiefshef of the hard-fighting Rifflan tribes of northern Africa, has died down, but probably only temporarily. Peace negotiations are now in progress. Thus for the French and Spanish forces have had decidedly the worst of the war.
Similarly there is talk of peace agreements with regard to the Drusse outbreak in the neighborhood of Damascus, but the talk comes mostly from France. The French hold the mandate to this section of Syria and the Drusse tribesmen, like the Rifls, would have them stay out and mind their own affairs.
With the Damascus massacre last fall still ranking, it is doubtful, in the opinion of American observers, whether the Drusses will agree to any peace which permits the French to remain. The year 1926 may see, some extremely interesting developments in Italy, where Benito Mussolini is talking of another Roman empire. In recent weeks he has been striding round Italy like a Cresar in a cage.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1926
WHY BRAVE SIKI'S MURDERER WILL NOT BE FOUND
Not so long ago Mons, Louis Phal, more commonly known, as Battling Skii, was done to death by some cowardly white, too fearful of his physical night to face him even with a gun. Skii was shot in the back as he wended his way home, and the white dancers were at little points to hide their glee at his gruesome end. For this Skii had sinned grievously against the social standards of white America. He had done everything that is contrary to the highest prizes of this, free country of ours. In the first place he had the bad grace to be born a Negro. And, having such poor judgment about his choice of race and color, he actually failed to see that it made him inferior to the poorest specimens of white humankind. For what does he do? Why, he wins the Croix de Guerre and the Modèle Militaire, with several relations. But is that all? Mais non amus ams. That is but a very little of it. He marries into the superior race, not once, but twice, and he changed white paramours as indifferently as you would change your shirt. And, to crown it all, he wrests from the invincible whites the coveted honor of a prince of distraints. Die?
"Civilization Killed Him"
Well, assuredly he could do only one thing more to be desired than dying, and that would have been to a world being born. "Civilization," said one writer in the New York World, "killed Sikil. He was immensely strong, but a child mentally. He would never be serious. Always he laughed at everything." In the book "Searamouche" Rafael Sabatini says "Searamouche laughed at everything because, gifted as he was with keen perceptions, he saw through the shams that impressed men of simpler minds." And, in the American screen version of the story that remark, or its substance, is used in the titles. Searamouche was white, so he laughed from excess intelligence. Sikil was black, so he laughed because of his child-mentality. Of course, "He spoke," says the same World writer, a smattering of eleven different languages, but none of them fluently, except, perhaps, his native Senegalese.
Now, I don't know what it is that a man requires to enable him to speak, however indifferently, so many languages, none of them with the elighted resemblance to his own barbaric tongue. But I do know that it cannot he brains or intelligence, for Sikh was a Negro, and most of my readers, being themselves Negroes, must know that a Negro is never brainy and intelligent! But there is one thing about Sikh that must have endangered him to the hearts of the earth. It is that he had their sense of honor and of good merits to a degree positively astonishing. Almost he would seem to have been white. If you didn't look at his face, For look you, with an idenism worthy of a Carpenter, a Dempsey or a Red Grange he agreed (for a consideration; one must live, you know) to be battered about for the further glorification of the good Georges.
That he turned the tables and became tormentor instead of tormented earned him yet one more decoration, that so well known or rather the double cross. And how, well he simulates his white brethren in the matter of husbandhood and fatherhood. For, as the Englishman in India and in Sikh's native Africa and as the white American in the Philippines, out of a sense of the importance of improving the interior races injects his blood freely and constantly into the native stream thereafter, leaving it generously to be absorbed into the inferior strain; even so Sikh having given of what he mistakenly thought to be his superior African blood to Europe, left for America to carry out among other aims the softness worthy one by which Europe had benefited. That his gift was not accepted in the spirit in which it was offered was not his fault. He incumb well. By this time I feel confident, the upholders and even the enforcers of "law and order" have forgotten that there ever existed such a plan as Sikh. And if ever his murderer should be apprehended Negrodom would lose another of its members, for I would drop dead with surprise.
Siki Mush Lied About
I hold no grief for Siki and certainly
I do not regard hini as a hiriting exam-
ample to be emulated. But deep down
in me somewhere in an irrepretable
urgle to defend the under-dog, the man
that gets the worm of the dewl: Apd
such a one was Siki. Poor follow, he
was what he was through no particul-
lous better than many or most of his detractors would have been with his op-
portions and environment. That may
he trained for his rights on win. I
don't believe it. My own opinion is
that he must have been a rather care-
ful fellow with his diet and exercise.
He man, even from the jungle can
live the way they claim he lived and
remain as long as he did, and after
having his body body turn and shoot
up through a long period of war ser-
vice, too! Impassible! The man was
hated because he proved the falsity of
all the white, man's propaganda
claim. And he was have with a rude
brutality. Grievously wounded once
behind and left for dead, commonly
treated with helpless weapons, he yet
appreciated to carry them himself. I ap-
praise it is true that he held men be-
come of an unhappy, pride of
dominance. But so did the law. In thou-
say the happiness of his life, and so do
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CAIRO, Jan. 7. At arabic Pasha,
Sultan of the Crusus, declared in
a speech today, that the Druses
drive well that France is strong,
but they are prepared to fight
until the bitter end.
He warned Henry de, Jouvenel,
French High Commissioner, that the Arab Nationalists are determined to choose between complete
independence for Syria or honorable death.
The Sultan estimated the Druse
losses to date at 1,500 killed.
Little or No Punishment For Whites Who Kill Blacks in South Africa
CAPE TOWN, South Africa—"In 13 cases of murder, homicide or manslaughter of (South African) natives by whites the severest penalty was six months in jail in one case; in three cases the white crimes got £25 (4,220) fine, six weeks jail and detention till the rising of the court, respectively; while in the remaining nine cases the accused whites got off soot free."
This is taken from a letter to The Star, a newspaper of the South African whites. "Some of these crimes," says the correspondent, "were most foul and cruel, and included death by stoning, death by flogging, throat cutting, death of a young girl through strangulation, death by shooting, and so on. In most cases the vultures were unoffending, and in some they were helpless, and in no case can one say that death was justifiable."
These cases occurred all over the country and are, according to the correspondent, merely a sample of the justice meted out to whites when the victims happen to be natives. "The thing is general all over South Africa," he says; "and the conviction" and execution of a white for a black murder is. I fear, unheard of in the land."
MANILA, Jan. 7.—A committee conference of the Nationalist and Democratic parties agreed today on a coalition in the insular administration as a means of fighting for power and the independence of the entire Phillipines, and against the attempts of the American Congress to curtail Philippine autonomy. Rattification of the agreement by directions of both parties is expected. It provides for the organization of a supreme national council to direct an independence campaign and to act as final arbiter between the two parties on all matters of internal politics and government. The body will be composed of five members from each party. It further provides that the supreme national council shall organize a permanent committee residing in the United States to direct the independence campaign.
read of, "John L." says Jim Corbett, one of his Saturday Evening Post articles, "would go from saloon to saloon buying drinks for the crowd and boasting the white he pounded the bar with his first that he could like any — in the world." I have noticed that when the white papers speak of white pugilists they speak of them with respect, but when bluck pugilists are mentioned, especially those that whip white contenders. there is much talk of jungles and primitiveness, or gorilla physiques, coupled to infant minds and so on ad absurdum.
You will understand, then, that I am not defending Battling Sikl, the Prince of Plasticums, nor yet Monsieur le Corporal Louis Phal, C. G. M. M, L. H. late of the French Colonials. I am defending a son of Mother Africa, Sikl, the NEGRO.
For the Colonel's Lady
And Judy O'Grady
Aro sisters under the skin.
The following letter written by the President of the Africa National Congress to the Editor of "Abantu Batho" of Johannesburg, South Africa, is reproduced below, especially for the benefit of Negro World readers, in Africa: Editor of Abantu Batho: Now that the Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa has made a statement of his policy in regard to the solution of the Europe/African Colored Problem, it becomes all the more imperative that a special convention of the representatives of the Bantu Population, throughout the whole length and breadth of the Union as well as the great Bantu Territories must be held, say on Now Year's day, 1928, when the whole situation shall be examined and a modus operandi discovered for dealing with the threatening position:
With this end in view I venture to request members of the cabinet of the African National Congress resident on the Reef to act, in collaboration with any other leaders of Bantu thought living in that area who are disposed to lend a helping hand in this weighty matter, as an organizing committee to organize the Chiefs and the Provinces, the territories, as well as other Bantu organizations for purposes of the Special Convention-proposed.
If over there was a time when the call was as insistent as well as it was urgent on the leaders and other representatives of the Bantu race to sink all, and every petty differences and present an absolutely united front in face of an illuminated national catastrophy, that time is now. As in 1900 when the accursed political Color Bar was entrenched in the Constitution of the Union, history is repeating itself. The fate of the Bantu as a Nation is at stake.
Porto Rican Independence Fight Is Lost, Says Leader
Natives, "Americans by Nationality, Becoming Americans by Heart," Says Writer
MADRID, Jan. 7.—The fight for independence of Porto Rica is lost, it is admitted by Cayetano Colly Culch Porto Rican autonomist leader and former-Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, writing in "In Libertad," foremost Spanish liberal newspaper, Describring Porto Rica an his "poor country," Senior Coll says.
"We have resolutely fought for twenty-five years, and lost. The lands of Porto Rico are escaping our hands, and Americanization, slowly, but safely destructive, is penetrating through all the pores of our organism. Only our sentiments remain unalterable. Since the country's policy, however, it not based on our sentiments, the day will arrive sooner or later when Porto Ricans, Americans by nationality, will also be Americans by heart."
Of Cuba, he says: "The independence of Cuba is surely due Jure, and not do facto. Cuban banks, and industries are at the mercy of Wall Street. Cuba is losing her economic independence to the United States."
How often things occur by mere chance, which we dared not even to hope for.-Terrence.
United States Supreme Court Asked to Pass on Injunction Issued, by District of Columbia Body—Policy Savors of Driving Negro Out of American Life—Prejudice and Intolerance Destructive of Civilization
PROTEST AGAINST INIQUITOUS PASS LAWS IN AFRICA
Attempt to Revive the Worst Evils of the Slave Period—All Natives Forced to Take Off Hats to Official Underlings
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.—The United States Supreme Court was asked today by Louis Marshall, of New York, and other prominent lawyers, to pass upon the right of white property owners to agree not to sell to Negroes. Mr. Marshall challenged the constitutionality of the enforcement by the lower courts of such private agreements.
"The moment that there is a differentiation in our courts," declared Mr. Marshall, "between white and black, Catholic and Protestant, Jew and non-Jew, Infrared and passions will inevitably be aroused, and that which has been most noble and exalted and humane in American life will have been shattered.
"Great as are the mental and spiritual sufferings of those against whom the shafts of prejudice and intolerance are aimed, the lasting injury is, however, inflicted upon a civilization of a country which connives at a convenient such as that which has been enforced by the decrees here sought to be reviewed."
**Injunction Fought**
The case here originated in the District of Columbia, where a group of thirty white property owners, who had coveted not to sell their property to Negroes, enjoined Mrs. Irene Hand Corrigan from selling and Helen Curtis, a Negress, from taking, possession of a house at No. 1727 S Street Northwest, Washington. The Injunction was issued by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia and sustained on appeal by Aho Court of Appeals, whence the case was again appealed to the United States Supreme Court.
Mr. Marshall said the extension of such covenants would drive Negroes out of the District of Columbia and Mr. Marshall cited the Supreme Court's decision in the case of Buchanan vs. Warley, the so-called Louisville segregation case of 1917, in which it was debided that segregation by municipal or State Legislation was unconstitutional.
"It would appear to be obvious," said Mr. Marshall, "that where a Legislature is prohibited, from sanctioning a particular policy, individuals may not enter contracts in direct negation of the same policy. Surely that which a Legislature cannot sanction should not be compelled to be done by a decree of a Court of Equity enforcing specific performances of an agreement between third parties, which is equivalent of such legislation and is productive of identical results."
Mr. Marshall then declared that "if the Constitution could be evaded, it is attempted to be by the devise employed, it would not be difficult to create a situation bearing the elements of a contract that would prevent a Negro from owning reality or from taking up his habitation in any State or in any part of a State." Other segregation cases throughout the United States are being held pending the Supreme Court's decision in this one.
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 7.—William E. Wolfe, found guilty in United States District Court yesterday of sending through the mail printed matter indirectly threatening the President, was sentenced today to ten years in Federal Prison.
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PROTEST AGAINST INIQUITOUS PASS LAWS IN AFRICA
'Attempt to Revive the Worst Evils of the Slave Period—All Natives' Forced to Take Off Hats to Official Underlings
Although Great Britain abolished slavery in all her colonies and dependencies, yet conditions worse than slavery still obtain in the Union of South Africa under Pass Laws. The slave owners in South Africa bequeathed to their descendants who lived after the emancipation, the same exploiting and trading in human beings defects. Blackmen are compelled by legislation to this condition of poverty. Rural and industrial opportunities of developments are strictly closed to the Africans by a hand iron thungh of Pass Laws. No king, no governor, no emperor, nor president in modern times has half as much power and authority as a common Pass officer.
He is the uncrowned king of all Pass bearers and his might no black men can dispute. Might is right in the real sense of the word in all Pass officers. In big towns a spectacle which strongly reflects a condition of a state of the country under martial law in time of war is seen. Africans would be seen arraigned, abused and dragged in their compulsory course through the lion of Pass Office doors. The system is too much complicated. It is a network of trans. The Pass Law administration is a shoer scene of inhumanity, barbarism and exploitation, which strongly encourages revolution. In country districts Pass officers are in their palaces, and he would be a fortunate African indeed who would soon get an audience of these despotic monarchs by being readily attended and given a pass. It is common knowledge that Africans spend hours and sometimes days before they are served. Pass laws have engendered a deep disrespect and distrust of all Europeans and their methods in the Union of South Africa. This is the natural and inevitable outcome of all deprived systems of all tyrants, autocrats and their class. Sons of the Royal Africa blood are deposed, princes are abused and jeered at, mobilities, men of letters and Africans generally are subject to the worst barbarous administration of the Pass laws by any officer of the Native Affairs Department. Africans are forced to take off their hats whenever speaking to these miniatur king's.
It was on the occasion of a Graduation Day of the University of the Cape of Good Hope when Lord Selborne addressed the following words to a white congregation of the university: "I will only ask white men to consider whether they have ever calculated the cumulative effort on the natives of what I may call the policy of pin pricks. In some places a native, however personally clean, or however hard he may have striven to civilize himself, is not allowed to go into a public park or pay for the privilege of watching a game of cricket; in others he is not allowed to ride on the top of a tram-car even in specified seats set apart for him; in others he is not allowed to ride in a railway carriage except in a sort of dog kennel; in others he is unacquainted and unfeelingly treated by white officials; in others he may not sit without a pass. And, if, for instance, he comes, as far as thousands of natives do, in a 'labor district' (established under a law which is highly-beneficial to the State and commendable in the eyes of all white men), he does not meet with facilities but in the course of his absence from home he may have to take out eight different passes, for several of which he has the additional pleasure of paying, though he would be much happier without them; and it is possible that, in an extreme case, he may have to conform to no fewer than twenty different pass regulations. Now, let a white man put himself in the position of a black man, and see how he would like it; and let him ask whether such regulations and laws really make his task easier. Since Lord Selborne and these words pardon laws have been extended to provinces formally free from the objectifiable and questionable laws. Municipalities have been encouraged by Government to delegate their own subsidiary perquisitions pass laws. Urban Areas Act令ing municipalities right to make any part of production. The decisions of those governors as we have already said, have influenced and strayed through a 'daily' detailed garrison of legislative right of possession. The governments directed by these governors not only accepted to enforce the legislation, but also enforced overtime imposed by the Government in order to maintain the conditions.
Injunction Fought .....
Sees Worse Situation
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LIBERTY HALL, New York: Sunday ‘Night, January 10—A
crowd of large proportions consisting of members of the New York
local and admirers of the program of the Universal Negro’ Improve-
ment Association, was present hi Liberty Hall tonight on the occa-
sion of the regular ntiss meeting. After the usual preliminaries
and the rendering of a, musical program by the choir and the Uni-
versal Band. speeches were delivered by “Mr. T. Thomas Fortune,
editor of the Negro World, Miss Mariet Trent, Miss M. I. T. De-
Mena and Hon. William Sherrill, Acting President General of the
Universal, Negro Improvement Association, All the speakers were
in a¢cord iki praising the remarkable loyalty aid’ deyotion manifested
by the membership to the program of the organization and their
untiring efforts t8wards supplying the means whereby the.work can
be successitlly carried forward. Tt is maryeloms, said Mr. Sherrill,
that in spite of all the reversés-and disappointments and setbacks
through which the organization has passed, thé members have dem-
onstrated remarkable courage and determinition to™carry on and:
keep the organization going. It is-interesting, however, he said, to
Jind that world sentiment: was being moulded in favor of the thove-
ment, in that its aims-and objects were being discussed in all.civilized
countries and newspapers in different parts of the-world are today
ate Rie en See ee iaen- ae
“YOU NEED A TONIC?.
Medical science comiiders codiver ol a most help.
Soa
oe ieee
et — Be :
NT ee ee. Ser eh noe mer tease ae
MR. THOMAS FORTUNE EPEAKS
Mr. Thomas Fortune, editor of Th
Negro World, wan the first: speaker
He salt the Universal Negro Injnrae-
meit Assuciation stood out ax the
most remrakable ‘organization among
Negroes anywhere in the world. The
Gimandmity with whist fia members
Mood topethor in apport of thin splen-
@iq organization and the devotion
which they had always shown to the
reat leader was » source of inspira-
ton and Hope to him.- All his ite,
anid Mr. Fortune, he had Aevoted him-
self to the task of trying to Ket Negroes
to adopt a program and organize and
Aght for thelr just rights, but he could
fot sucered..,No other Negro in. the
history of the: Afro-American people
has ever beet) able to get together as
many people af thére are in tha Now
York Laat. not t sneak about the
organization én other parts of the roun-
try. It yeniained for Marcus Garvey
to de it and Ke did it, Like other
reat reformers, Marcus Garvey) was
Called to Wis work; if he had not heen
called his great army of followers
Would not have answered his call, =
“We have got the organization.” said
the sneaker: “we have Kot the leyalty
apd we want, the proxram te accom=
plish what the Universal Negro tm=
provenient .Axsnelation was orranized
For‘anit $s enable wf'uing. The great-
fest effort sq far rendered has heen to
unity’ Negro’ thought “‘througraut “me
world, Whether we be West Indian Ne-
groes oF African Nerrocs or Austvalian
Negroes we're all brothers and we aie
Working for the same pfimary object:
wa hve to look at things from the
Mentical point of view and we have
to atrive for the organizing and the
working out of olir peeullar problem by
Yuu Should Barn
* “In Your Home
Say Tip incense wan
F sured, to all pincee
FBP). oe woranin tn an-
¢ ctent @ayer it
1 orks with twelve,
5 the sodiac of Bu
man planeta, A
Booklet tneide the
bor whi tell Bow
Powerful 1 fe and
Bow to, weet
“| zs |_ Made: tn," Cannan,
i ~" ‘wpper, Egypt, the
city ot acoy
Size box, 4x214; price $2.00
SEND MONEY WITH ALL ORDERS
TWAITE AY ONCE
* Asis and Africa Remedy Co.
~ Bee. © é :
280 W. 128th &, N.Y. City: HW. ¥-
| sim inspiration that comes from the
reat Ieadership that we have. ‘The
Enrapeag powers have thelr erin on
Afciear we all maintein ihat we want
2 nation of our own: we want A tr
deemed Attica from (rom thé usurp
ton and exploltation of the white kuro-
pean powers, That be avery good
Theuaht, but haw are wa_goine te, da
it? We must first of ali Iny a. recure
foundation, If we want to help our
peapla.in Africa we have got to make
the most of opportunities here tn
Americal We must organize our in-
ustrinl enterprisen and having organ=
zed them we nist patronize then,
We siiat fosrn t de for ounicives what
we are now-expecting the white man
to do for un” -
Continuing, the speaker said, thie
Negroes will never pe able to amase
the resmurees neesaears to help thelr
people in Afrba by helms qwane,camers
Ail their Ives: we need to develup buxde:
the Jew has des sloped his bisinest on
teeprives and aa otlier Fares uf people
have developed their enterprises, With
this development we will earn for aiir-
selves the economie indenendénee that
Will enable us te pertbrm effective
service toward fulfilling the proseam
of the Cniversal Negro Tmpravement
Association for the. redemption of
Afriva.
+ MISS MARIE TRENT SPEAKS
“the next speaker was Mise Satie
reggns, wheeantd: Lain sind to te beter
you again on snather Sunlay night,
And an I stond hare there comes to mS
mind one thought—that we,are stand
ing on the brink of a New-Vear, This
Ik the time that great business oF~
Sunizations and {individuals stop to
fake inventory af theninelves. ‘This tx
Ue time ton pain for 9 seroma a ahines |
back tw the beriniing of this arom
Journex. .
led thede=mombars aately this for?
What, "made “their rough’, traveling
canihr? “What made thein-surcive their
losses and close their Byes to hafd?
ship? Because they saw a beckoning
light. the hone of @ redeemed Africa?
the gtr ‘of destiny, and not unlike the
shepherds-of old, oulr most. Honorable
President, Marcus Garvey, aaw the star
while we were sleeping and ‘awakened
us and pointed it out to ux.
‘Those of ux who have come all the}
way through seven years of traveling
deserve the congratulations that an or~
ganization as large as this can give.
Those “of Uk WhO” HAVE: dropped 4uC
yr mtopped to rent must renew our
atrength—and to thone who are just
bexinning, wesinvite you to walk aide
by side with us. There ix much you
can give us and there In mich-we can
nive you. ~—— Be .
‘Allof humanly maxes up thin great
mernal journey. thia march, this pro-
JTHE.NEGRO WORED, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1928
cession. Lock around you In this great
onward march dnd you will ace those
with: whom you murt compete. Be
watchful lest they snatch from yout
ftande the\prige you mean to gain,
| “In our ranks some will drop out. some
will never go very'far on the way. Thelr
steps grill lose_pep, their eyes wil
ioser"their” brightnens "and “they: wil
anave ‘heckuse sOmitone pushes them, °
|. Ge Forward in the New Year ~~
Even now, I can ste keen, eager
faces. Young ambitidus eyes: eve
that have tiever Jon their lustre, eyes
that see cledrly this atar: Then, again,
I see reflective facés,. tightly pressed
lips, nhowing determination. ..These arc
the tharchers I wamt to maich with,
“True, as In any other organization
we have had our lonsds, our sorrows,
our disappointment and some thelr
personal grievances. but thins a New
Year." ¢ :
‘Whatever joy wo have missed: what-
ever have been our-aorrows, our heart-
Aches, We must consign them to the
Rast: We must freshen our atepn and
BXep our tyes, bright. The vision
shguld be getting neafer and clearer.
Yo miust renew our-falth and our
strbngth. We must not be content te
mole Ersauey sorneene, pushes tn
be not weary In well doitts for in due
time “this procession #liall surely end
in the fulfilment of a dream.
T have’ had” my own personal
Rtrongth: sometimes 1 feet ‘that Thi
marching alone, but to those travelers
whom this will help Eive my own per-
sonal motto: the motto that Jina: borne
me up. will work and pray and some
diy my, chance shall come.
T wax eanecially pleased to be able to
Do-here laet Sunday aftdrnoon tw hear
the boys and girls of the éadet corpr
and thelr marvelous juvenite hand
Thore who hear them will area with
me that ‘they .fel€ the spirit of the
youth of the U.N. 1 AL
Ono! Uitle fellow spoke especially
of passing the torch. We are th
torch-hearers, but “when we find our-
selves weakening we must pase it to
there children. ‘That ix why we should
congratulate the parents and-enconraxe
them. We are depending: on these ehil-
dren: “they most not fall us and we
‘must not fail them. ,-*
-_<In_elosing. 1 know you haye had your
heaftarhes. 1 know you have. been
wounded, but T can't help but compare
you to the general, whe fetl 44 battle
and when his men rushed tw hi ‘and
somtinne sald, “Are you wounded?"
“Yes. itm hurt: I'm wounded.” he
sald, “but I'm not sinin—I'l. te dawn
heteand bleed awhile and then I'M rine
And fight again.” |
“"'So-rise, fixht again. Hold the torch.
Re yours to hold it” hich: know. that
thin in a New Your, « time for renew~
Ing faiths a time for tmprovement over
UN pant years tine for inventory.
March on.in this great eternal march,
1 feel the prize is worthy of the strug~
Kies as
MISS DeMENA SPEAKS
The next speaker wax Mjss M. 1. Te
DeMena, She pleaded for greater co-
operation arene the membership, dure
ing the year 1925, We cannet acramp=
lish much, he “hale, wmlese wo lay
AWle uur petty differences and work
With that split of coseperation that
Marrus Ggevey hax hisparted tous
whew he fs aimenigst us. She urged
he members tF support the junds of
he Ietuters whomhave been desssnated
fe carry on the work of the organiza
ion in the absence of Mareux Garvey,
ind tw stick tw the pracram that has
baon ‘piven tm them. ses
HON. WILLIAM SHERRILL SPEAKS
Hon. Willian Sherritt satd: 1 was
gins oVey I amy mind -yestrlAy: the
critival stages through whieis the aes
ciation Nas passed and the lagalt
of the memberships in ail of the Ase
caeiation’s Iwsses. 1 thought wf ‘the
Black Crome Navigation & Trading Co,
end of the many-andusteig! endeavors
hat Wwe made in the association: and
weminely there hax always beat that
Aique or those combines which are ever
inthe alert to defeat in one way or
IE avers effort that was made
‘8 1 Universal Nesro Hmprovement
xaociation. “As T wondered whether
he peonla of the ofKafileation not only
ere in New. York Loral but in other
arts of the country, would be seilling |
n the. face of all their diMentties to
continue to respond, 1 marvel at
lee conrago and the determination al-
endy demonntrated on the part of the
tsiieaeanisihiateeeseeeesnierierenimny |
CARNEGIE . HALL
Wednesday Evening, Jan. 27
Third lec mamma le igeeren
Roland. Hayes
Tickets $1, $1.60, $2, $2.50,
ples tax
¢ Be y Now aT. .
87th se gua Te are os
thelr tes
Sees
ee be ere
meee
ashen
Bethan Me: Pale.
Hair Seed Magic Wonder Hair Grower
- Nature's Way of Foicing the
“ PE ‘Hale. to grow tong, soft and:healthy,
_C co - A srabication.- ot dried snd vow:
* a pat the scedoften ", rubbing the
2 6 cS AIR SEED -GROWER gently in.
Je the scalp, "Do this tonight; watch
ae . Fike ond” _S “
5 RAR” © air grewer. Try tt Ladieas lets
= MERIE . scnd you evall siz monthe treatment +
a este !
“J DAR - excites the ectip Wsle new ond
GA . ¢ fect “Ril “anertl tnd
™s the eof the scalp. aad: at once
i fina, This composzd ‘bee . the_en-
| dersement of the Medical: Profemion
° sy being_the east erewyr ever efter
i eS
_ Seabago y o $0 o.tend that hed teen ball, ton.
2 ROBO — RAMAICA, IY.
membership..of the Unlgaan [Nesre
Improvement Asséclation Im the varl
| ous endeavors of this, organtzation tn.
dustrially. Never.in the history of the
|. Negro, eapecially in America, have Ne-
‘groes been more willing than the miem-
ders of this association hays -been tc
see thelr program thropsh feeardies
of disappointments, and setbacks. Ir
aplte of the losses arid setbacks, mem-
bers 6f the’ ansoclation “continue tc
come arid contribute funds for earrs.
ing on the movement. °
3A Great Reeponsibility. ~~
The. responsibiltiwhicb {S'now mine
rents heavily upon inf, because Lreallze
that We have reached'a point In tho lite
of the aixociation where those of un who
carry on must of necessity’ inaugurate
A prograth WHETEHs” we Will be’ able -t0
relmburse those who have continually
Pollked the[r, money into thixpareanl-
Sition to nets carry Icon: and Mt anl
reimburse, but {f tho Universal Negro
Improverfent” Ansoclation* ix to fune-
tion as ft should, this: organization
should Fm" a porition financially to
help needy memberx whe have cone
to our rescue even to the extent of
rome &f them being financially embar-
assed, ‘
We already, hive under advisement
such a program. We hape during the
Sent 1926 ty have fo fil oom dur
secret .armaniantion the “Sons and
Daughters of Ethiopia, We espeet, to
Rave in thiR organization everything
SHI) Riek Into « secret oreantation:
Because We have reached the point
where tt fs necessnry foF us te do our
propaganda work in Africa th secret,
. | The Political Union" “a
Wa. oles intend during the yeuz.1n2r
to organize “Indeod and in twuth en
Politfeal Union, Our Potitical Union
heretofore has byen imps pulling
Atself_alone sx to spegy., but in 1924
seo Mane to oegaater eitetively our
*olitical Ufiton; to organize It inn
way which will etuble us in he
quarters ta have ‘enniral over tie
Political Activities of the Nesrsey in
Other parts.ef the countrys that, we
will be able te offertively dewarnd cert
tain things’that we have heen begeing
for during the last year.
We ank each and every member of
tho Assoclation to remember that the
Universal Nesro Improvement. Assocl-
ation if orpanized for the mirpose of
Vidding Africa 6f the explatiers and
establish there a government oF a
nation gttonk enough and pawertul
cnouRh te protect the tdterests at Ne~
xroeseverywhere, We muxt remember
that all that we have enntelbuted even
though’ komo of it may appear to he
a: thinieoney lean, it kas ateipie teen,
CHARLES
Shormaking & Tailoring Patabtisiment
108 W. 140th St.,"N. ¥. C.
Shere Repaired and Salts’ treed. While
SPECIAL
“Showa Halt soled coca BE
Sait Sponeed. and ‘Precned ise
For Gadad Wrkrmattie tity, Ue Teal
Tae Cn Fae ee
THE BEST MADE
A wonderful gift to
the child -
Na 2669 othe twas mate Negin att of
sans ae ua cheese” sabe Sart
Cyan eet
Na DASA. hewnitat Nero elt sith
Seal nates nite sneeeod. tnechauwe ate
Tee a Sea Ue ated cen ie
Fete ye in
M5 adie Sith Metattai cael "BSE 2
eee oa
Fingiicr Monin dots no hast =
Te athe ce rctrreerrggeee BERS
Be meh niae TT a
asiineh Saran toy Hi nity reared
| Fos
Beautiful Negro’ Calendars in
Coiors—targe Size
12 Aunterent mubyectn si8 for coo. 81S
We nave a njee line af Me art pretatoe
Sieen 1x 30 ane, ne plesures for €128
AGENTS j
We watt gona. yao a mamite ling of the
Sent Tine SU dolhte Saft nur eatatngve at
Rehan aaah atic aman t
fame yeu nuick recurne ter azne, In
Pelle counttten “wend so, Extra tr
Meine. “Order meaty |
ART NOVELEX CO.
Ls Pet, A
2193..Seventh Ave.
__ NEW YORK CITY
an effort to keep going. We have suc-
Ceeded during, the seven years: of ott
extatence in creating 9 sentiment - is
favor, of Our program. In spite of the
reverses ‘we have had'we have kept
wolng and: the alms and shiects a
‘the Universal Negro Improvement At-
sociation are being discussed now in
‘all civilized countries, hewspapers are
Aoday commeniing-on the aime and ob-
te ofthe Association, which simply
mains that the organization te mould.
ing public sentiment in favor of its
Program... The Irish people have spent
millions of, dotiars’ In creating .pwblic
sentiment .in favor of thelr program-to
the oxtent ‘that England herselt is
very careful what action she takes
towards Ireland. England could mare
an army into Ireland and wipe her out.
Dut world sentiment ts against It ark
she munt move in-accordanve with that
world sentiment:
. Blazing the Way :
_So it fa with’ the Universal Negro
Fraprovement Association. Oyr.xentl-
ment fe in favor of Nesroen having @
homeland in Africa. We. of the
‘Universal Negro Improvement Asocia-
Hon, have struck’ out along a new path
entirely: we must blaze the way! no!
body han blazed the way for us; we
aro proud to, know that the member-
ship has been able tq ace this and
hax stood by us In this fozing of the
way, a
In .Europe: today the great powers
ae getting tpcether, and [want {6 aay"
that I helleve this Is brought about al-
Fectly beruuse af the activittes of the
Universal Negro Improvement. Asxo-
ciation, ‘The, activities of the Tniver-
wal Negra.» Invirevement .ssociation
have Imprested the white woghl cto
such aan extent (hit they have alsned
Tt Lercarne part with the idea of the
Sypite world Keiting together for thelr
Butual protection,
The Unjvorsal Nerro. lnprovemant
Aswociation im the greatest instrument
in the hands of tho black man for the
Fedemption of Afvieas 1 want to say
to you, thene.of yo whe hokt upen
the name of Marcus Garvey, and
Say “Una ivaw, Tove Macens “Garvey
and you ard’ doing dit “or” that
fer Marcus Garvey and are at -the
same time contributing to the, disrip-
tion of the UniversalyNerra Assacin=
tion, son have no love Yor Maveus Gar-
vey. The only way Gasver’s name will
be perpetuated ix that the thing that
Garvey started, Jives and’ warned an:
Tt n'a compllmentate Ghevey IF After
‘SPANISH AND _ ENGLISH
* TRANSLATED
By Reliable Correspondest
Address, Negro World's Office
54-56 Went 138th 8t.. New York, N. Y-
Snone!' Haviem S07
rT .
O’Brien Boy...
... Thin and Pale
In a Little Over Two Months
Gained Eleven Pounds
| As # body builder, an appetite cre
Fait dint mite Sera tinny hans
tnd ele Sturge strong sand gl
Sheege thera te nothin Tike CME Liver
SHGng phgaretan will tell” om te
Hut wet ties hervilte stage. tos tak
DH Cannenats ater csugie eoated,
“Thies con Genre ti, t'itrbon of
Maia Shy way shan ange sa
Jha Mtoe eat egal, neamnahimet Coen
this teste Inc tile ver twee mantis
RE gate elocen aint song -belt, peepnetes
Rad feels awd hooks ane Ruble pet
Pei Mette
Mechses. if any of your vhitdren are
swettke thin oes puns. iv then these
Taldeie ne iter “fer 20 says id
suites haem ain Mest nd hecetitowam
flag tecddee Sahweg ecko fale bat at
tind unisuat stb hansen sine yi ase
thet "nupremels itintio’ with results
Ehud avageiet &athowizen es pete
Tue sitte Salweags to eet the’ Zeléhwot
and Zenuun "Socoyey Cod, Tver Ot
Compenana) Pattee 38 tghisia eo conte
ai ne sirmeenet in Atnerwe, Ehensatils
wf huxew sek dats
0/
_ 94% AIR .
,
Beats Electric ar Gas
|. Anew oil Inmp that’ gives an amaz-
ingly brillinnt, soft, white hight, ever
bette: than Ras or electricity, has heer
Heated by the US, Government and.
loading tiniversittes and found to be a-
perlor to 10 ordinary oi lamps, 1
Turns without oder, smake or noise
no jumping up: is Smple, ean, safe
urns 24% alr and 6% common kero-
ene (coal afl). -
‘The inventor, ©. W. Johnson, 42 N.
Brod St. Philadeiphin, ts offering to
send. 4 lamp on 10 days’ FREE. tr
or even to give one FILE to the
mixer in éach locality who will help him
introduce it. Write him today for full
particulars. Also ask him to explain
how you can get the agency: and with-
Ut experience or money make $250 to
$500 per month. :
The book that every thinking Negro man and
woman must read and pass to: their: children
and posterity. GA :
The Second Volume, of the Philosophy and Opinions
of MARCUS GARVEY, or
With an account of the trial of Marcus Garvey that |
has stunned the legal and lay minds‘of the world.
"25 FULL PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS - °
Price Volume I, $1.75; Volume Il, $3.00
: Combination offer, $4.50 =
- You can now obtain wall cards, artistically. prinied,
of epigrams from the sayings of the; Hon. Marcis
Garvey. Real gems of. racial thoiight: » Six diffetent
mottoes to.one set. Only $1.00 per set. For hanging
or framing, size 9x12 inchés.--. ~ - "
re : wits ny 1
Also that masterpiece written. by our ¢:2at! leader
entitled, AFRICAN FUNDAMENTALISM. Beautifully
engraved with deep “edge for-framing. ‘Size 1§x21.
Price, SO.cent
- "Send. all orders.to Mrs. Amy Jacaces Carvey”
working in the orgaptsation Tor: seves
years -be. can set around, him st least
one or two- men who wiil be able to
‘dtand and carry on, IC in %-end’ plight
Af there is tm dhe Negro race none who
can_‘agslet Gatvey—none | whom the
Tape can depend upon to pick up and
carry ‘on what he has etarted. Does
the army stop because’ ihe general, is
wounded? Does the army stop because
the captain fells? Through dlsctpline
and’ trainiyx the Teutenant ‘steps up
and takes the reins and goes forward.
(Applause) —
‘Bachelor Poll Tax >
Proposed in Turkey *'
CONSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 2%.—The
finance ministry: propores to put « poll
tax on bachelor Turks between 30 and
45 at rater hall as mucll an against
married men. . i a
State monopolies of the sale and Im:
port of oll and *ugar Are also proponed
a8 new sources of revenue,
Headquarters‘
For Au. ™ wet
For Magical Purposes
indo eu Ast Mopihseoveetes 4h
For Young Menessssseccecseccigeee 288
} Livan arene tnterprcted sesss cates
verte Mteewor 0000S III Pee
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wi "Mnenetie nahin ae"
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Ajedy The eight ates Ver acon ele ated
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fora Rane eas SE att
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Tom, 98, 8. . SaKsoN, a
Ra Macw MS dailies’ Gramen ste,
j Sel Wie ter Se
tse he ite ae sin ako
| When the postings ate iteets thie packages
Peg the Fane ans ay nae tae nes
jase cet tn hs
J Miia eran! Beate ng er ake
Spin state Mowe Many: Trentmate
| Sou tute?
| stators esenwanrennsennsensss beetle
..'. GET INTO
A BUSINESS
Face Cream and Perfunes
At $3.00 Per Dozen I
| Gouget dy Petfamer
paper published, every Saturday in the interest of the Negro Race and the Universal Negro Improvement Association by the African Communities League.
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:
RACE UNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
In his New Year greeting to the members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, published on the front page of The Negro World January 2, President-General Marcus Garvey, among other things, said:
"Today the world stares the Negro in the face and demands of him an account of his stewardship.
"For thousands of years we have mixed with, the rest of mankind and now when all of the races are boasting of their individual and collective progress, the progress of modern times, the race to which we belong has, perforce, to take the hindmost position because of lack of this world's goods.
"Let the year 1926 be a remarkable one in the life and progress of the Negro."
The founder and leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association never loses confidence in himself. That is the primary qualification of leadership. He who itas not supreme confidence in himself cannot inspire it in others. The history of mankind shows this to be true. The successful leaders in war and peace have been those who were most able to inspire confidence in others, and they could not have done this if they had not had supreme confidence in themselves.
There is no doubt that the world today stares the Negro in the face. It is equally true that the Negro stares the world in the face. No person can find a perfect image, a perfect likeness of himself, unless he look into a looking glass or upon his own photograph. That is because the supreme Artist has drawn no two pictures just alike, and this is one of the most remarkable things in creation, when the millions of persons on the earth are considered, every one of them unlike the other in some essential thing. So, then, as we stare the world in the face and the world stares us in the face, what do we find? A friendly reflection the one of the other? Not a bit of it. We find mutual distrust and antagonism, eternal war between them as to which shall have the advantage, the mastery. As it is with the world and with the race, so it is with the individual and the nation. Universal distrust runs as a thread through the whole scheme of life. Success is only accomplished when large groups unite by reason of education and self-interest to co-operate for the general good. And, still, even in such mutual associations, distrust persists. It may not be obtrusive, but it exists, and shows its teeth in most unexpected places and ways. Perhaps the Negro race has more of the element of distrust than other race groups. This is largely true because it has a larger percentage of average ignorance and poverty to contend with than other race groups. Ignorant people are naturally suspicious of one another; poor people are naturally envious of the more prosperous. It is only when they are intelligent and cultured enough to mutually agree to co-operate together for their common welfare and defense that this ignorance and envy are subordinated in part, as it never is wholly. The element of distrust and suspicion always remains.
The Negro has not a great deal to show in worldly goods for the labor of centuries, as compared with what others have, but he has some of the education that comes of experience and some that comes of the church and the school, and he has some that comes of cooperation here and there, which teaches him the strength of standing together, and he is in a fair way of getting more of this necessary education and co-operating with which to help himself. It looks that way to us. We feel the impulse of race urge and helpfulness in the United States, in the West Indies and in Africa, and these influences should spread and grow stronger with the years.
The Crying need of the Negro people everywhere is race unity. Without this the conserption of our social, civil and economic values is impossible, and we can have none of these unless we develop confidence in ourselves and in our neighbors. Nobody understands this better than Marcus Garvey, and no Negro has done more than he to arouse the Negro race to a consciousness of its inherent powers and to the determination to make the most of those powers for the advantage of the race.
Yes, let us all strive to make "the year 1926 a remarkable one in the life of the Negro people." We should expect it of ourselves, even if the world discredits us and does not believe we are capable of so doing. Even as the eagle looks the sun in the face without thinking, so let us look the world in the face, confident and unafraid. The Universal Negro Improvement Association is as an ark for this in the thought and effort we must put forth to succeed.
RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION
must learn how to think and to fight. What is your idea about it? Think. When you get to it and have to fight. Is that the way you think about it? Perhaps.
The second meeting was addressed by Dr. Sweet himself and Mr. Arthur Garfield Hays, who is associated with Mr. Darrow in defending Dr. Sweet and those indicted with him. Mr. Hays declared that the fight against residential segregation is "to preserve the fundamental spirit of the Constitution," and, because of this fact, "nobody, black or white, deserves his home or liberty unless he is ready to fight for it." As a matter of fact, the Negro has a great deal of fighting to do wherever he is, in order to get what belongs to him, but the fact is now and but slowly seeping through his consciousness. After a while it will saturate his thought and determine all of his action, for the white man everywhere is showing him that he must fight or knuckle under, and the Negro has determined that he does not want to and will not knuckle under. He is going to stand up straight and fight.
Stories of pearls and poisons, unless they are made to serve you, have no place in this column. The picture given last week was meant to prepare the way for a prosala but valuable hint or two, about the importance of that, which goes into the body which enables you to take pleasure in romance, adventure and other aspects of life.
"We have been talking about the heart and blood pressure, those two necessary appurtenances.
Not only does the heart send the blood stream around the body with its shipments of food, and oxygen and its armies of defense, but it responds to the food which it carries. Proper food nourishes the heart and the blood vessels and improper foods act harmfully upon them.
THEY CAME OUT OF SLAVERY WITH THE SPIRIT THAT CONQUERS
THE Salvation Army people, who go about the world doing much good, have a saying, that "A good man may be down
You cannot expect these carriers of the blood, to be uninfluenced by polysons. If you allow poison-manufacturing places to exist in your body you must expect the blood to carry the polysons throughout your system to do damage everywhere. The soft tubes which are continually bathed by this poison laden blood might logically be the first affected.
but he is never out." The mere insistence upon this viewpoint encourages many "down and outs" to refuse to give up, but to make another effort to get on in the world. That effort may serve to put them in the way to get along which had been impossible with them before they made it. It is a good thing to help those who are in distress, to encourage those who appear to have lost their way and are groping blindly. It doesn't cost much, and we may be "entertaining angels unaware." It is hard to tell.
When that occurs the blood vessels undergo a disease process called malignancy.
The Negro people have displayed a great deal of heroism in the United States, and everywhere else where they have had to face great difficulties in order to have a little success. We believe no people ever came out of slavery, 4,500,000 of them, poor and ignorant, who took up the burden of life and made more of a success of it than the American Negro, made a free man by the proclamation of Abraham Lincoln, and the 200,000 black soldiers who fought under the foliis of the Star Spangled Banner to save the Union of the States. They bent to the work of making homes and schools and churches and an educated man and womanhood with the heroism that conquers, and they conquered. They now have millions of homes and schools and churches and educated men and women, and they secured them by infinite labor and sacrifice and faith.
Hardening of the arteries may be caused by the poison from diseased teeth, tomlins, appendix, gall-bladder, or by syphilis or kidney disease.
Overwork which causes a raise in the pressure of the blood eventually causes a hardening of the arteries.
Overindulgence in alcoholic beverages, even if those beverages are in themselves poisonless, causes this condition of the arteries. The beverages made in these days are generally a two-fold measure.
Lead workers undergoing a slow absorption of lead-become poisoned and suffer from high blood pressure due to hardening of the arteries.
Take the case of Zack and Camilla Hilton Hubert of Hancock county, Georgia. Mrs. Hubert died recently, leaving a husband eighty years old, and twelve sons and daughters to whom they gave a college education. At one time they were supporting six at college. They were fifty years educating those twelve sons and daughters, although they had no schooling whatever themselves, and they lived to see every one of the twelve married and engaged in good works—in education, in the ministry, in uplift work—a credit to their parents and a wonderful help to the Negro race in America. Zack and Camilla Hubert came out of slavery with the spirit that conquers, and they conquered, and their children and race and neighbors rise up and praise them, because they wrought mightily against great disadvantages.
Stress of modern life, and the strain attendant upon the obligation of these times have influence in causing this disease. Excesses, emotional and otherwise, play their parts. There is one other cause of hardening of the arteries so important as to justify a separate article.
You can't keep a race down which contains such characters as Zack Hubert and his noble wife, and there are plenty such among the Negroes everywhere, plenty of them among the millions who belong to the grand army of the Uniiversal Negro Improvement Association, and they are blazing the way to Negro achievement and victory.
Hunted and Imprisoned for Non-Payment of Taxes Without Any Representation in Courts or Parliament
RABBI WISE AND THE RETURN TO PALESTINE OF THE JEWS
(From the Workers' Herald of Capetown.)
If a visitor from Cape Town happened to find himself in Bloemfontein on a sunny morning between the hours of 6 o'clock and 9 o'clock and witness the poll tax raid by the native and European mounted police mostly of Dutch or African descent in and around the location, he would leave the Free State capital with an impression that the natives of the place are considered not as human beings but as beasts of the velit. It was never repeated in all the chronological fact of history, that a human being was ever hunted down with front hoops of fresh stewed pattening at his helps. This is the case in Bloemfontein. The provincial government of the misnamed free state is so color blind as to have lost all sympathy and justice and human consideration of its black loyal subjects as to run them down and drive them into captivity for mere human failure to pay a tax for which you have no direct representation, either in parliament or in the European trend of administrative legislation is concerned. If the policy of repression and oppression is thought to be the only successful initiative to make South Africa a white man's country by our wise statesmen then dark is the future prosperity and universal peace of this cursed country. It is a fact left unchallenged that these black bruises, whether driven from their jobs by their masters they must pay tax or go to jail and come out again for another postponed raid.
WE have all watched with interest the commotion produced among the Jews of the world by a recent pronouncement of Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, of New York City, one of the most scholarly and advanced of Jewish thinkers, concerning the reality of Jesus and his influence as a Jew and how he should be regarded by the modern Jew. Rabbi Wise is chairman of the executive committee of the United Palestine Appeal Fund, which is raising $5,000,000 to continue the back to Palestine movement. Rabbi Wise has always taken a broad and helpful attitude toward the Negro people and the uplift work for them. A large section of orthodox Jews in New York City took violent exception to his views about Jesus and demanded that Rabbi Wise resign as chairman of the United Palestine Fund. Jews everywhere took sides for or against Rabbi Wise.
When the executive committee met, after a long and heated consideration of the question, it was voted 59 to 9 not to accept the resignation of Rabbi Wise. But this action, it is said; will not prevent a decisive division of opinion and conduct of these who are supporting the Zionist movement, which has already accomplished wonders in developing Palestine and caring for Jews returning from all over the world to the motherland.
The point to be observed in the controversy is that a very small matter, on the surface at least, may destroy the confidence in a man who has devoted a long life to the good work of advancing Jewish interests, and in a measure, cripple his usefulness in every direction. We are not entering into the merits of the controversy. It is a question which the Jews must decide among themselves. But we are interested in the return to Jalestine movement and in the very human question as to how easy it is to make a mistake which may destroy a man's usefulness after he has given a long life to a work and proved himself faithful and true. The applause of the rabble is a very fickle thing. Its loyalty is equally fickle. The idol has always to keep its favor by giving it what it desires, or it will crucify him. The disposition to do this is not racial at all, but human. You must not hesitate, you must not stumble, you must not look back; you must stand up straight and solid, without hesitation in your thought or act, and you must keep on amoving. Fail in one or all of these things, however faithful you may have been, and the rabble will cry, out, as they did in the case of Jesus, "Away with this fellow! Crucify him!"
Negro Veterans Seek Posts In Republic of Liberia
WASHINGTON—Traffic in far-off Liberia, according to the African World, is producing vehicular and pedestrian problems among the natives, requiring the appointment of a traffic director and native police. The situation has arisen through recent landing at Monrovia of hundreds of automobiles and trucks for use on the Firestone rubber plantations. Heed surface roads are being constructed to connect twenty centers of operation, one from Marshall to Monrovia already being completed. From an estimated Liberian population of 2,000,000, Navy Firestone, Jr., has investigated an ample supply of labor. Disruption of enlarged constabulary and police forces is being sought by former relieved officers of the "Ninety-second" and Ninety-third divisions of the American expeditionary forces.
Young Passion Year
Without Lynching
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Jon L.—Least eight around the first year since the Civil War in Illinois no hospitals took place there the bridges of Houston. We have kept yellow and blue ships but the marines in the district of our town.
It is a good thing, for Jewry that Rabbi Wise was sustained and will continue in the Palestine work.
EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS
Profits Not Education Is Goal of Colleges, Declares Professor
Professor W. J. Newlin of Amherst charges that American colleges have become huge football trusts at the expense of scholarship standard. His charges are being warmly discussed by educators attending the convention of the American association of college professors, now in session here.
Professor Newlin declared education is bankrupt, while football is turning over a business of millions a year. "Football," he said bitterly, "build-stadiums—and when did mathematics ever, build a residence hall. Scholarship is not a paying proposition. It has to be subsidizal. Football makes money."
The public's acceptance of an economic yardstick as the true gauge of success has made them apathetic toward education, he declared, and caused them to classify educators as intellectual wet nurses, along with house maids and butlers.
Turks Adopt
Eugenics Laws
CONSTANTINOLE, Jan. 19.—The science of eugenics is to have a part in creating the civilization of new Turkey. The Governor of the Province of Constantinople, Suleiman Simi Bay, after a conference with the health authorities has framed an order requiring medical examination of applicants for marriage licenses. Another striking health measure has been adopted by the prefect of the city, Emine Bay. He has established free hot baths for the poor.
Oriental Customs Found In Center of Africa
In the Niger region of the Sudan the recent Citreon expedition (from Algeria to Madagascar in cars with caterpillar trends) visited the black suitaten of Tessaua whose inhabitants live according to the best Mohammedan traditions. The Lord of Tessaua is a Negro of the ancient Hausan nobility, a descendant of the great Changnana V. His name is Barmou and he has 100 wives, jealously guarded by counuchs, says the Kansas City "Star", translating from "L'Illustration," of Paris.
The customs of the ancient orient are still followed here, such as the prostration of the wives before their lord and master and the sultan's repast, which he takes alone in the shade of a fig tree while musicians seated with their hacks to him—for none may watch the sultan eat—sing his praises and recite the long list of merits.
Ambition and desire are closely-related. Behind every worthwhile successful life, you will find a predominating ambition, an unrequited desire. In fact, we are the products of our predominant desires. Our thoughts, emotions, volitions and behavior are largely determined by our desires. In other words, we get what we want most.—St. Louis Argus.
Organization and mutual understanding among the leaders of our race is of paramount importance, for only by such men we go forward. Organization means hard, self-sacrificing work, often disappointment and opposition. The pioneer organizers will get but little in this day and generation. But they must stand true to their vision. One year from today, we know the Race will be much further than it is today. So we face the future with happy anticipation. — Christian Recorder.
Luxury and disdain, soft and gobble as their approaches are, and silently as they throw their silken tharms about the heart, ensalve it more firmly than the most turbulent vices—Nashville Clarion.
Common sense and a many understanding will find a way out of the most grievous situation. Our possibilities were never better than they are today and the future of the Negro is almost entirely in his hands. We can if we will. We must rid ourselves of the sequestered and cranky notions so prevalent among us and proceed to the higher and better things of life—Tirmingham Reporter.
The world is not so bad as the "ugliaments of fallen humanity" try to make it. We are in good of a few more men who take hints, think, and work more, and whittle occasionally. There are fun.
The difference between the building
groups of the stable appraisal team, and
the operational program of the architects
of industry is largely the study of
architecture.
New Jersey Senator Fathers Bill to Teach Religion in Schools
A bill allowing state and district boards of education to provide for religious instruction in public schools will be submitted to the 1926 Legislature by Senator Henry A. Williams, of Paterson.
School boards adopting the provisions of the measure would be required to give "strict record" to the religious preferences of pupils by arranging for Protestant, Catholic, and Hebrew instructors.
Periods of instruction would be limited to two hours each week and no pupil would be compelled to attend.
"Experience is teaching us that Godless schools make Godless children," said Senator Williams in discussing the measure, which is bound to create a great deal of discussion.
"I feel that the bill is especially meekorious in this age of youthful criminals. It eliminates the sectarian objections which had arisen from so-called Bible bills, and cannot in any way he held to conflict with, or infringe upon the constitutional guarantee of religious liberty, being a local option measure as far as local school boards are concerned, and a personal option measure as far as pupils are concerned."
Average Savings
Per Capita, $529
"The total for savings for 1825 again indicates a consistent growth in the thrift of, the Nation despite the tendencies of some adverse factors and the many avenues of investment open to the public," according to the Saving Bank Journal. "Approximately $24,157,909,000 will be deposited to the credit of 45,561,916 persons at the close of the year according to a survey based on the reports of banking institutions to their State banking departments. The amount credited to each individual account will be in excess of $529, establishing a new high mark. The total represents a gain of approximately $1,000,000,000 over the figures for the close of business on June 30, 1825."
1400 Bushels of Potatoes Grow on $ 4 \frac{1}{2} $ Acres
Grover Bickford, an enthusiastic postato grower of Strafford county, N. H., reports that he grew 1,400 bushels of potatoes during the last season on four and a half acres of land. The average cost he reported was 61½ cents a bushel.
mind and preparedness for one's work.
—Kansas City Call.
The New Year should be to us as a new page upon which nothing is written. It should mean to us that we have a perfectly clear record upon which to begin our record of life. With a clean sheet, with a new determination, with greater sincerity and with nothing to think of but the future we will find that living today the best we can that the year 1926 will be the best year we have witnessed.—Atlanta Independent.
But with all our changed conceptions and brand new theories, we are not utterly helpless pawns. To accept such a creed would be to paralyze our every ambition. We think no such wise. The rather do we helve and know that we may affect while being affected, may modify while being modified, may grapple with what seems to be fate, and while living may achieve. Achievement in the net gain over opposition.—Louisville Leader.
Having in mind our progress as a whole, may we not forget petty differences, selfishness, and jealousy within the ranks, and work wholeheartedly, unitedly for the attainment of these ideals of manhood and womanhood which we all cherish and hold dear?—Cleveland Call.
The Negro is reaching out for the best in life and eternity. He is laying up for his children's children and his nation. There is no power in hell or out that can stop his inward march and no power in heaven that would do otherwise than behone him come to higher altitudes—Springfield Reformer.
Amidst the varying perplexities of this human life and its complex shifty man, man, horse man and tree, straight forward in their efforts to better human civilization, these are all they have made the world civilization which it is today and such will help their servitude until their expedition day in death—Hamilton Bayview.
= 7 7 at or > « & & 7 i “a = oF gs. = Ep Sie ae sels cor ON ws
<>" @BCCLON EN ESPAROL 2
por Ea Aseciacién Untiversa! para el Adelanto de Is
7 Raza Negra i
. . , Giadad de Nueva York, N.Y. -°
fst: PROP. MA. FIZUEROA, Editor 2 et
Eepirita de grandes realizaciones en ‘el-nuevo afio—Era
+ de. extrema competencis entre las razas y las naciones
—Conociniiento en todas Jas actividades progresistas—
| Confianza en ‘si inismo—Causas que originan el
“Adelanto 6 retroceso de: los pueblos—La cuestién del
dia—Sigamos adelante y con determinacién invul-
nerable . 7
. Despues del regocijo espiritual y material que hayagos experimen-
tado durante las Navidades.y Afio Nuevo, y haber sido ooparticipes en
todas las bondade diarias que nos haya:brindado Ia estacién, wpimonos
de mano-y corazén y con enérgica yoluntad hagamos de nuestra organi-
zacién un cuerpo fuerte, para que glia sea eco tinico de nuestras mas
legitimas aspiraciones. Jaginios pues de ésta ‘un instrumento ineduc-
tible, intachable, que opere pura y netamente por Ia felicidad y el bien
comin dd nucstro elemento en todas las latitudes. ‘
» Haced que el 1926-os proporcione el enaltecimiento spiritual, cuyo
suplo sea vuestta tierra orientatriz. No obstante, no liechar de menos
-Ja constelacién de progresos materiales que se desarrollan en todos los
‘érdenes, asi como tambien del claro, depuramienio civilizador que el
movimientd“racial va'desarrollando. Recordad que estamos en Ja cru-
zada de tna época de celosa: competencia ; naciones rivalizando con
-—nationes;‘las razas rivalizando con las razas; los individtios rivalizando
con los individuos ;'y todos ellos librando una. gran batalla-en Is cual sera
» venced6r ef que mejor este preparado para Ia contienda.” ° o
~ gQué vais a hacer vosotrns si no os esforzais por sobrevivir a este
gran conflicto? Esperais ser derrotados? Esperais un bochornoso
descalabro y morir ignominiosamenite, aun sin’ lamentaciones en vuestra
caida? Hay muchos, muchisimos elementos de nuestra raza en al mun
do, para que perezcamos tan lastimosamente y tan faltos de valor en fa|
lucha. empefiada. Tenemos que vivir y viviremos-apesar de todas las
persecusiones y oposiciones; apesar deta esclavitud industiial, el ostra-
smo social y Ia'limitacién educacional tue se nos-brinda, tenemos que
sobrevivir. es are ee
-- ‘Numéricamenie hablando, nuestra raza ocupa el segundo pitesto.en
el mundo; estamos repartidos por todo el orbe; hablamps los idiomas de
todas la naciones ; tenemos conodimiento pleno de todos los adelantos desa-
rrollados en lac diversas razas, en Jas nacionés viejas y modernas. Hemos
tomado parte activa en los hechos constructivos de todos los pueblos; teng-
mos pties civilizacién en la punta de nuestros dedos. Hemos estado en la
escuela de la adversidad y asistido también a fos centros docentes de Ia
prosperidad durante los iiltimos quinientos afios, y con los conocimientés
del pasado, del presente y una vertfadera concepcién de lo venidero. Po-
seenios un gran equipo que nos pone en condiciones especialisimas para
ir hacia adelante y conquistar el triunfo, por la gloria de nuestra: raza y
por fa libertad de una patria.
Todo hombre 6 mujer que no tenga confidencia en sf mismo es uy
ser desafortunado, y es en realidad una equivocgcion dela crescién. El
Ser Supremo creo todas kes cosas y a cada uno de nosotros, para que
ocupemos un sitio ya destinado de antemano ‘en este mundo y lo menos.
que debemos aceptar y creer es que fuimos creaossolamente para_qde
‘obremos en la inercia, sin adelanto ni progreso en nuestro todo, sino
que tenemos que hacernos, reformarnos y seguir un desarrollo y' ade-
Ianto, conforme al medio y manera de la atmésfera que nos rodea y las
circunstancias que:nos dominen. * Hacer lo contrario seria mofarnos de
Ja gran obra divina. Dios, pues, nos creo a todos libres; como tal debe-
mos de actuar. . *
Que Ia razarnegra sufrié y-siifre todavia bajo el yugo bochornaso
de la esclavitud, no, fué obra de Dios; no fué culpa del Divino Maestro. |
“Todo ‘ello fué culpa de la-riza misma; desidia, neglizencia, poco dina- }
mismo, empobrecimicnto de accién. Todo esto nos hizo ser esclavos.
-Confidencia, conviccién, actividad, resolucién, voluntad, factores de
gran constructibilidad, nos-haran ser libres y por ende honibres de privi-|
Iegios y derechos,:con plena antoridad para dicernir nuestros asuhtos en |)
esta época presente. .
. | Laciestién-planteada sobre el tapete de Ia humanidad hoy. dia és—
aVivird usted? La contesta es—Si 6 no! “Seri sf/para aquellos que |)
tengan la voluntad; si para aquellos que tengan iniciativas; si para los
que tengan corifianza en si mismo; y sera so para aquellos remisos y
faltos de £€; no para los que esten faltos de las grandes cualidades de
éxito. Hombres de mi raza, mujeres de la Ftiopia legendaria, sed de
los primeros y nunca imitéis a los tltimos, Id hacia adelante y conquis~
tad !a meta de las aspiraciones de un pueblo, astiadd ya de tanta aveja- |
cién, de tan poca consideracin y de tanto atropello-injustificado.
"Que el 1926, hemos de repetir, sea un afio espléndido en la vida y
progresos del negro. Descartemos el’ desconcierto suicida que podamos
alentar y con unidad.de accién no habrA limite que detenga el éxito del ||
nuevo negro.’ El porvenir se vislumbra; el Africa esta‘en el mismo |!
sitio, y.Dios rea y rige los destinos en el mismo cielo. ~~... | ‘
‘Tramemisién por radio
EI perfecionamjento de un siste-
ma de transmisién de peliculas cine
miatograficas ‘por radio, afirman ha-
berlo realizado tres inventores rusos
Grabovsky, Popoff_ y . Piskunov,
quienes declaran que ya han, pueste
en el mercado.su invepto.
_ AGrman que han hecho posible el
éaviar por telegrafia inalambrice
desde una estacidn central ‘pelicillas
cinematogrifiss a millares de tea-
on Sree Sacutte’ os gat
repetici las peliculas, tos gas-
de’ transporte de los ‘tollos y. los
Higtos de inceridio ‘en cada cascta
Ge proyeccion. © °--:: 1
Relaciones. diplomatices
perturbadas: °
peeetass
Sams
‘feole con't coonnita Prnce Were
Bere cate
ie rage ie
Spanish Section
.siste, en presencia de la protesta
norteamericana, en hacer observat
las leyes ¢omo han sido. aprobadas,
‘a las cuales.reputa como amenazan-
do con ‘a confiscacién virtual de jas
propriedades norteamericanas. -
Er presidente Coolidge asume que
el gobierno mejicano no sancionara
la viojacion .de los -acuerdos intef-
nacionales, tiénese entendido que éf
tiene esperanza dé que‘el presidente
Calles, por miedio de un decreto e-
-pecial, mitigue.las eyes en su apli-
cacion. i ;
Aunque de todo esto puede resol-
tar una rupture. de’ las. relaciones
diplomaticas entre los dos paises, ial
eventualidad ho se considera’ inme-
diatamenté'probable. : .
- ‘Se ha sugerido la retirada de ‘cré-
ditos norteamericanes’a Méjico co-
mo arma, que emplearia este’ ober
no a menos que sus protestas fueran
6m amenarante del secretario de
§ Méjixo, es cosa que siempre se
Tas" leyes. cbjetbies, que hace
< que
efectivo ol articuiq 27 de ln consti-
turin que Menits Jos dere-
ches de | — i ae we
imterpretan (CRD carketts,
Fetreacttyo y por lo tamto come um
yislaciies de! derecho imtvhatieal,
‘THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1986
Nunea-olvidemes
Se ee ee ee
Sentiroos como ‘nuestro deber ex
esta época del afio el: recordar a to
doe-os miembras de:la Asociaciée
Unitersal ‘pps, el Adelanto de I
Raza Negra, que no deben olvidarse
del partido serio, de vida como, ests
expreso .en_ las aspiraciones de ess
gran organizacién y-dar gracias a
Ser Omnipotente por lo.que ella hi
Nevado a Ja realizacién hasta ¢l pre-
sente. :
* Dios,. Padre Todopoderoso, envié
su Hijo obra para que redimiera Is
humanidad, seiialindolé el camiac
recto de la salvacién. Jesits, aquel
Divino Maestro, en recompensa, {ué
avejado, coronado de espinas y er
cificads. Luégo de transcurridos
‘diez y nueve siglos, celebramos' aun
ia gran regocijo la memorable fe-
cha de su aparicién ante este mundo
material. ee?
Muchos de nosotros profesamos
la religion cristiana pero -muy pocos
‘la practicamos, resultado de lo cual
et género humana se halla tan Iejos
de la perfeccién, como to estan los
asiros de. Ia superficie de este pla-
neta que habitamos. ,Si el mundo
cristiano se-adhiricra al precepto de
Ia ley diyina “ama a tu préjimo co-
mo a ti mismo” no-existiria la im-
periosa necesidad de prepararnios
para ‘protejer nuestra propia exis-
tencia, en contra del egoismo’ impe-
rante de parte de aquellos que sc
creen dueiios y sefiores de todo lo
creado, i oe
En medio de tanto jibilo mani-
féstado por el advenimiento de m
Nuevo Aiio, los que reconocergos los
sacrificios y martirios del caudillo y
fundador de esa gran institucién de
nuestra raza, el honorable Marcus
Garvey, estainos contristados porqite
con, él sentinios sus privaciones ¥
tormentos, ‘victima de las circun-
stancias por defender yn sacro ideal
—la emancipacién de su_raza y la
redencién de su Africa, Tal parece
la suerte de los redentores.. Toda
causa én pro delzenaltecimiento de
cualquier pueblo 6-raza ha de tener
sus jnartires. Fl tirano no ha de
ceder nuncaya las exigencias del ti-
rade afees que éste se ‘halle
lo converlientemente preparado, de=
mostrando su poder y su actitud
determinada. .
No nos corprende, por consi-
suiente, el: que up caudillo etidpico
sea privado de su libertad personal.
pero si nds sarpende y nos alienta sti
comento, a los adherentes a la causa
or la cual experimenta arduas pri-
vaciones > “Continuad en buena lid
asta. mi regreso .al seno de tan
nagno movimiento.” “Lal manifes-
acion sincera nos inspira a ehtonar
1 gran Himno de nuestra organiza-
ién, “El Todopoderoso aliente y
onsagre a nucstro Presidente.”
EI afio viejo y el afio nuevo
Miramos al presente y al pasada
y siempre suspiramios por fo qe
existe, dice el poeta: Es pSr esc
que la mayor parte de nuestras aspi-
raciones no se realizan porque, Ia
ilusion y ql ensueiio estin lejos de
las realicades a veces duras de ‘la
existencia.
De todos modos en el final del afic
1925 el mundo, haasistido a ta siem-
bra de las. semillas de esperanza
cuyos frutos se'confia maduren en
1926. El Afto Nuevo,es un nific
eno de schrisas que son promesas
para el mafiana.
El afio viejo al salir y ef nuevo al
Hegar Hos lega el uno y nos trac
el otro Ia obligacién de seguir una
norma de conducta que fluctia en
el {clix término medio sin prestar
demagiada atencién ni a las jere-
miadas de los pesimistas ni tampoco
a Jas quimeras de los optimistas.
Un. venerable anciano de cabeza
plateada ‘denuncia en la canara: de
los comunes det parlamento_ briti-
nico, que el gran'peligro de la pre-
sente centuria estaba compendiado
gn una sola palabra-periodismo.
De todos modos es de la opinién
general que Ins esperanzas de la ci-
vijjzacion -descansan sobre los ele-
mentos del ensanchamiento de ma:
yores y mutuas simpatias entre to-
dos los pueblos. -
sentimiento, popular y
os Imkey
Los Earados Unidos atin ante
ién '¢ desorden;. .
She gh 6a cele
te 8
mae ieadad conebiacapsies
qué lain minado-al gobierno, segin
tmanifesté ante el congreso ei repre-
dots ied se tomes
dadanos las leyes a cm ser
qo pesetras hayes tehgee rani de
=i we ro tama
conetivariomales asl como
hecer cthinpli la: « de ba pre
Nuestro- ‘actiyo ‘ secretario
general’ asistente como
La. muy, acreditada corporacién
fabricante de articulos, de. tocado’
Madam C. J. Walker Co.,-Inc., ha
Liniciado un ‘certamen pata enyiat
Igs_mas conspicuous hombres:y-mu-
jeres de la raza identificados con las
diversas instituciones de este pais,
en viaje. alrededor“del mufdo a
espensas de dicha corpotaciap.*
ge cierto ntimero de votos ts ad-
junto a cada uno’ de ‘oS’ artigutns
prepafados por la Watker Co., ¥ los
compradores pueden: utilizar ehtos
para dar su- voto a su -candidato
favorito. "+ @
EI Sr. Percival Burrows, enér-
cigo-secsctarie general asietente ds
esta organizacion es uno de los can-
'didatos. y en su apelacién a conti-
nuaciin persigue ¢l sopora de los
miembros de la misma; }°
‘A los oficates y miembros de Di-
visiones de la Asociacién Universal
para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra:
Ile ‘sido aceptado por kv Madam
C. J. Walker’Co., Inc., como uno de
Tos candidatos para el @inje airede-
‘dor del mundo, en,el.cual soy el te-
presentante de esta organizitcien, y
euyo endoso ha recibido la, aproba-
cin de nuestro presidente general el
Hon. Marcus ‘Garvey. :
Un gran nimero de instituciones
ide Ia raza estan representadas ‘en
esta cleccién, y estoy’ seauro que
sera vuestro deseo,el que Ia nuestra
se vea tambien representada, Es mi
aspiracién obtener el primer premio
como Yuestro representante y para
ello vuestra cooperacién ed requeri-
Ga, enviando a estas aficinas’ los cu
ponés Henados que se encoltraran
adjuntos .a‘los articulos de tacalor
que dicha corporaciim fabriea. --
En la seguridad de recibir vuestro
soporte reflejindose asda grin po-
tencia de nuestra arganizacion, ten-
go'el honor de ser. >
Vuestro ohediente servidor,
P.1.. RUROWS.
+ Sceretario General Asistente.
Preclo y Numero de Votos en Ins Varias
‘Preparactones
ae
Pomada para eFpelo....$0.50 100
Pomada para cl criinco.. .50- 100
Shatnpoo vegetal.....+7 "50 100
Brillantina '...eesee022 R575
Crema, lustre..-6 s.66 59 100
Cold Cream...eeeeeeee 50 100
Crema, suave... +... 50° 100,
Polvo (blanco, rosado, *
OSCUTO) eeeeeeeeeeee 50 100)
Polvo, tile... eeseeeese 25, 50
Pintura Treko..oceeee035 75;
Locion ‘Treko, 3.oz...2. 1.00 100
Locion Treko, 6 07.+426 1.50 » 100)
Gelatina Witch Hazel... 35 75
Perfume Treko....+.24 1:50 109
Pasta para dientes..... 35 75
Crema para Ia piel..... 35 - 75
Japon antiseptico....... 10 _ 10)
Japon de tocaiore.eee.. 20.” 40)
Cualquicra de estes abliauitoo|
puede ser obtenido lel Sr. Burrows
6 en la casa manufacturera C.J.
Walker Mig. Co. (10 NWSE,
Indianapolis, Ind." ‘Léliense «exe
viesen los cuponcs de este modo:
Percival Burrows, 36 West 145th
St, New York. N.Y.
- Informacion General
REQUISITOS NECESARIOS -PARA
. SER MIEMBRO DE LA ASOCIA-
CION UNIVERSAL PARA BU ADE~
EANTO DE LA RAZA NEGRA.
Con la cantidad de sesenta centa-
voy; ($0.60). todo elemento de nues-
tra raza pucde ser micmbro de la
Asociacién Universal para el Ade-
HTanto de la Raza Negra. Esta sum
ingluye cuota de entraila, veinte y
cinco centavos $(0.25) y pago del
primer mes,'treinta y.cinco centavos
$0.35),como miembro, ° *
Todo miembro dche ser provista
de-una Constitucion, 6 Libro d
Leyes de Ia Organizacion (valor 23
centavos) y una insignia (valor 15
centavos). wt
Si-hubiera en la’ villa, pucblo. 6
Giudad dopde Ud: viva una Di-
vision autorizada” de -esta> Asocia~
cién, haga su aplicacién env ella; en
caso contrario, mande su aplicacién
al Cuerpo Directivo dela Asocia-
ign’ remitiendo-la_cantidad de un
‘dolar ($1.00). Al recibo de esta
‘vantida Je serd-enviado por correo
‘Jos articuios antes mencionados, con
un Certificado como miembro de la
‘Asociacion. La aplicacion debe-ser
dirigida;a: :
Sr, Sectetatio, @ficins General del
" Gxtano: Directive, © * °. 41
“Universal ‘Negro® Improvement
"| Association, 7S
56 West 335th Street,” -
New York City, N. Y.
Actacejaqos 9 aquellos. que" en-
wien sun cena al Cuerpo Directivo
lo hagan satal,. serii-ancal &
tres meses, on evitar ta
trasmisiin Ge tn Tarjetas 1 e508 of-
cima todos loo meses.” =
AFORTR 9U. OBOLO Pama Ei.
GRAN MOVIMIENTO Tooas Las
BOCAS cx LA REOENCION DE
4 =
oe ete
_ Magazine Section
OS Of TOR SIN, lee Ss S| eeu
“IN NORTH AFRICA) s3i Sous azert toe sees) * IS EXCANATER
a St = ervetne, iw tae: some four | Rare Finds by Joint E
What the Romans Left of | ..‘ava conn ail tret sto bo ween|tion of Pénnayloania
Theit Occupation—Sights] + ihe once: flourishing Hippo: ane Sersity: ‘and: Britis
0 ip Thveanh Nore St hee i prsensome ten Museum
- en Towns [inary problema Here te Gystoness i :
a) traced quays and corte for mercer] PHILADELPHIA, Jan!
From The New York Sun ‘andthe pea. ae mag be eaaily scen| nearly 5.000 years ‘old: have bt
NA “eoreeapondént of the
‘Times says traveling from Constantine
to Bone.te a decided gharge; though for
the ayaa, number. ef miles. one, may
male still greacé? changes fn. this vas
ried and intensely intereating country:
But one Jeaves: Constantine, péiched 6h
Ita rock, with every vialble suggestion
of extreme antiquity, to ar¢tve ‘at Bone,
where antiquity has to Be looked. tor;
for Bone, on, the Mediterranean, with
its port-and Broad muin street. artfully
areaded against the'encrvating heat of
summer: tf végerable only tn Its name
which 19a cdPruption ef Hinpo, tho
homo and seat.of the’ great Abguntine,
a ttle distarice away from the pres
ent town, «It wan the Ubbo of the Care
thagintans: * ;
Tobacco Ix one of the main sources
of woalth, a herd which Virgil knew:
not, as he Knew not the health-giving
eucalyptus treo, which here, aa clne-
where in Koman Atgerla, vies with
the poplar and tho plane ta, shige the
dusty wayfarer. A stratght and long
Koman ead ieuls Into Lone, and
almost for the first ume one feeis that
onesis on a Rumun rend at lust, 90
Uwisting and curving had the route
Vien for many" etapes before. Bat
Hippo, before Ik wan destroyed. by,
vandal furyy must needa have com-|
nundat good communications... , Sot
only are-there plenty of oman. re-
mains beeen Bone and Constantine:
but the country Itsci¢ fs, and has been,
obviously -prosperous, both ‘fer crops
and for grazing: ad
“The Accuresd Bixths™ —~
_, About halfway, nobly situated among’
‘hills, and set in gardens and groves,
are the famous Hammam: Meskoulin,
or the “Accursed Baths,” ais the Arabs
call them, a thermal, eatublishment
which coitld “nde=fiil to he a joy to
the Komuans, even if no Roman object
pavement, baths, stitues and tablets
—ivero there to testify ty tt) They
knew these bolluic #prings by the nume
of Aquae Tibiliunae, and “they would
recognize them at once totay, for the}
scene can havo altered hardly at ally
Ont af the rock, white with carbonate
of Itime, arethe the sources, and & per-
Petual cloud of aulphurie ateam risen
inte the afr, Down fails the fascade
over a precipice eral parte into runnels
and basing quite a hot ag the hand
caren to fecl. %
Sinvé the Romane’ day the main body
of. these waters must have shifted a
WiUe, as ald cxlts have Leen. blocked
and new oriay,forced apen:on the top
of the main rasan one walks.on an
cruption ef mall“ voleante cones.
Waters mare hot than thes aro anid
(o emerge in only Uwe other parts of
the world, and one can well believe It.
These fountans make an unfuiketiable
Lnpression.
A few miles away 1X Guelma, whieh
Augustine knew ae Caluna, where the
itotuan theatre Is till larze enough
© be diznitted, thomeh It is more dilaple
Inted than these xt Jemila and Tim.
id. From it the mpectaters could!
Main asRorneNNs View of the moun!
ins uctess the Valley of the Sey-
Old Roman Swirtming Pool
“Henopelts can te so named for ne
articular etmelogival reaswn, since all
hese aré cltles. towns amt villages of
he nun; but not far-trom it, just_ aft
he road, ix one of the most refveeing
f Roman aights paseo. Tees atone
jneturedy irentar, spen-ale swimming
a abent elckt yords in diameter,
cP he Aresh warm xprings which bub=
Je np at ecteral points, Tho stona- |
sork is not as perfect, ax ans could
Ne ie gle
The Book You Should Have
Tin. anh, aid seventy Seok i eon
cde pes gig tinge Trg
bois TeeASaT Grates
‘Hayes Book Store
Dents 8, 618 Eaet 43rd Street
fre Sat (ees
i SES
gintgteniamnmemnn pina
IF U DON’T.C
SO gone
DR. KAPLAN
The Eyesight Specialist
RELIABLE and REASONABLE ~
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ie
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jinssce Meneame, eaouee center ean .
Bizarro artist piak Beenie. [ieee Raeeeches ernetton, sernes,
Rlemgs Pacis: Silhet np Gt aint Senate Tasted oeatpatee
RURS Sabie ie Sentech Rinse tna poke bares a Poe
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Fone monty canton CURRENCY "Ly RH tie Ce tee
ARS Tl OR.
. SLEGNEstwick a'aRo.
: w VEST tach STRCET, EW YORN-GIFY Oe. :
a ~ eee CasTre a8 24 7
eeesk hk uae aaiene cae hee
pdelight the exe nd feed sheep
and goats, and bard ty an Arab Mena
Wan pipes Ne rdther modnsequent
strain >
A very few scres. perhaps some four
oF five contain ail that is to be ween
‘9 the once. flourishing Hippo:. te
rest remains under the soll. ‘The Nule
shat there Ia pregenta’ some extraor~
inary’ problems, "Here is Gyclopean
movary. of the .Punle occupation—
parts’ of quays and docks, for the river
andthe nea, ag mag de. eaally. seen
from the Cathedral, have changed In
the course of'centuries; here ales are
Roman. wills, built. one over another
‘with: Bia" hosales belonging to etch.
The mosaics are marvelidue for color
‘and design: the dest ‘are varnisbed
‘over and #0 Keep their freshness in ail
weather: on olners Iles a thin coating
of dust, Dut @ sprinkle trom miyatec-
Ing ‘can restores thelr brillisnce in-
otanthx, Pia i .
Tart of Ippe ts. ax it were, A mie
acum out, of doors; the rest fs a tune
‘tallzing Jumbie of miscellaneous ex-
cavation: The dimeculty must de
whore to begin and shat to remove yr
Jeaeuratone: ad honey ie madliy slior:
for epade work. ‘Tho site 'm, just be-
yond the dutskins of.commercial Bone,
and most of If in private property.
Cisterns Still Used xa
In the mount, wn which the exthedrat
ntands, are the Koman eigteras which,
SUI, supply Hone with mest of es
water, The Vandyg apparently let
them alone; Jniler arm fo be
fmpresnabiy sieuilt aio the hfilsite,
They consist of a double series of wast!
chambers alonasule™ of one an: a
and ‘exeh Noldy wee 22u0 sqtare
meters of water, One watke tirough’
thet on a gullery to thy weiss ef
mighty murmur nan! ean dima afer |
what they gtore by Ue hight that eames
trough anelent windows and voutll- |
tion shafts, |
What a fiir city Hippo murt have |
ween in Aube aay con ho inne
Bede om te ate ot he enh
ral, raveh though of the modern town
of Rone has spread to the teft of the|
oMf, Bit modern fone” ix still of a
porns angen sir: ail she
azure coast and the mountaing ‘beind |
WFo neither RuvUES Hor yet OvereIviHized. |
The harbor and the shipping ares |
detent to make Bonea cenmine phjve of
jminian Iabor and nat merely a lwauti-j
No Rapid Transit.
A fev days after q farmer had placed
Ifa two" eluldren in a schol a book
agen}, enlled on him and guide “Now
that youg children go to Rehort you
ourht to huy them an encselapstia.”
“Buy thom an encxelopedls? Wiheod
WT do." way his reply, “Let them
walk, Ike’ I did."—Farm Life.
: A Remarkable Home Treatment
‘Giver by One Who Had Te
Femefy after remedy, hut such relict an
Sartre see re ere se
PON ii y.
ZY \\
ae es
— 5
7 re *
“1 Hed Sharp Paine Like Lists
“Flasher Sheotiag Torvonh Me Jointe™
T wnat avery sulfarer trom any forin af
muscular wtSaurrareia oeetiinn. al tho
BoineyeRtuoetian ty, ye es “ereet
for ite rerharkatie heating power Dinkt
Sada Cone! simpig' mail yur noma’ sot
Beach a TN nk Tetcte te te
Aieee you Rive uneitsnd te hse $e
A Pu eee eat e
Helings ria Sessyete trae y-mmgina tae,
Fou ning rend the hice af feeome deste
Tar, Bur protersiana’t a petemant Fee
isinay ptcreeaint mp ngefeetly pacished
Koveenc’ fen tent thet faite | wae tute
Borcsny ongees when rect te tha ate
Starke HL Jnruron, IRA. Doraton Hite
Me. Jochen be iewpuuritte, ier stoene: su.
ART 800 YEARS OLD.
- IS EXCAVATED AT'UR
Rare Finds by Joint Expedt.
tion of Penneytoania Uni-
-Mescam ll‘.
PHILADELPHIA, Jan.'-3.—Objecta
Nearly 5.000 ‘years ‘ola; have beem wav
earthed dy the joint edpedition ef the
University sof “Penneyivanié. Massure
and the British, Musoum to’ Mesodo-
oman ¢meourasing the archaeologists
‘in the Nope that further excavations
‘will bring forth material for ayeome
plote history of inan’s first settlement
in.the Euphrates Valley.
A report from C., Leonard Wooley,
field director of the expedition, made
public tonight by Dr. G.B Gordon
Director of the Univeraity Museuray
nald the Orst month's work ef: the
digging xcason at Ur had been une
usually rich In important dlacoverieg
and ‘has taken um straight back te,
the eurltest times.” po :
‘The expedition in working te the
South corner of the “sacred area” on
site Delleverd (9 ho that of the palace
of Dinsh, King’ of Ur in 2250 B, Gy
which had been partly excevated fr
“88s... Namerous graves, dating to &
persed Defween 1900 and: 1700 B. Cy
wore unearthed and, the creat Temency
Wil ef -Nebuchadneszar was found
well preserved, chime ioe
In ono of the tettored’ rammante. of
the-mud-heick Yail were found boxew
of-burn: brick, each containing # stone,
laict Inserihed with the name of Dunst
And the deilteation ef the bullding, an@
a Copper atatuette of the King: reprew
sented ns carrying on hin head a Dasket,
of mortar for the laying. ofthe first
brick,”
790 W. Walnut Mt.," Indlenapotie, Int.
«38 EL ath At, Clactanatl, ©;
‘These two adtroeon cam be weed for
nt jeate to enter Foon.
‘This is all the price llet you need
anit a U.S. Money’ Order: for other
Information nénd two.cent stump.
Mible, $1.00, $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 and
$5.50, .
Song books,B0e, 40c, S0¢ and $1.00
en ;
1—The mininter helps text dodk,
price, €105, $1.60 and $225, zs
2-—The book of the Piterim’s Brox:
rene with m business letter,” Price,
fis "and 9230. Written by John
iunyan
B—Ne 1 down 19 No. $. Price
$125, This ‘tn called “No. 9 In onc
Dhak? ant the history ofthe Ameri=
cam Nexto Slavery.
—Mow Africa should be re-
seemed.
| gtvonf Ne. 1 down, to No.3:
the Ethiopian iilack Man's History
in the Mibie,
42-4 business letter how to make
monty.
“S—Negio ‘faults “and future tm-
provement. nate
K—The Judginent of God at the
Tast Day.
Z.—Whint our women are to do tn
the future to save the rage.
SLA qessaee or all the Nexrooe
tothe word. :
fo Negra ships an the ocean. Tou
get git trom Xo. 1 to Noe 9. all mm,
fine Viehy tls a printed, Business
letter for a1,
19.— The part of the oli Bible not
printed seth the ol Bible and m
Business Teter, Prien, $2.30,
i A hook haw the your own |
dontog With 9 business Ietter, ‘Prien,
SER a Mistenns Bosak 58,
12 The Deak of the proph
Enoch with-2 itsiness Inter Peles,
$2oh
13. —Te racial songe with maunic:
riiuais, af the. seww church. of
Chelst anu a bustiens Jester. Price.
fos, :
ALA book of all the great Negro
Men” and “Women with ‘a business
iefive Price, $235, :
1.—Anyone who wishes a bottle
of pire herts medicine that will-res
lieve or cure all manner of alckness
ant aif manner of diseanes, untess
Son have walted too late, 2 bottles
Hian: une of medicine and one of
Inimont. A “mininters LOOK. of
-wretts and filed sermons wiih ages
tons nad answers, Blass
Ge, Bi BS ; - THE, NEGRQ WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1926 - pe, See Domest wits cael
THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF .U.'N. I. A. DIVISIONS _
P. '
"MAKE YOUR WISH COME TRUE!
Sa = SN SS
" = Cpa FSS EEE:
a LG BSP eee
y e mee L
(ae y} Headquarters for All Occult Goods seen
BUDDHA : ;
SPECIAL AFRICAN OUTFIT
eed by thounmnds of peunte all over the werk te Tap then sdons the |
soSESS a chsen oF pent oll ote eet Ee ate |
“4 Budana Mtignotle tanescone cs srt foot Bin teat coseen te $3.00 |
} Beka Steee i Caen sin ais, apedhad Cal geat SalUIE CED |
1 Sees Fetde ar nina treme eta (nk female a8
F Bee becane aeeuesiees uettiie Wr taooass coeceee Tee
3 Bpaele eee tener asec ees Ba |
1 Rites Renee cette rceere C eU Unga gs
1 Wondertut Wheel of Fornime, “This whe) of forme as se made |
See eis dap wach ap Mal Wat teaneunes 108
six, “Halal covivescussises thratazsl acvsasnnasnvenegrna a cuptveveero SIO |
We trust you—Send us only $12.50 sai pay the bitange of $6.75 In 30 days. |
ease Sees ea ete ans Bt est ceeetinine Yond |
Bee We carey A lines of howd hanks ate chore Ske, We Fa |
domt nee write for. |
LENOX DISTRIBUTING. Co., Dept. W . — |
of 385 Lenox Ave. 5 i
: * NEW. YORK CITY {
_A Health Restorer=Bé Able To
a EAT Wewr ©
2 Uw
ee mae
i. Jeter ee aoe 2 eer ae
FLORIDA, CUBA
* Liberty Hall, Florida,. was crowde
eh Sunday night, Decerjber 27, tw 1
utmost capacity with memberk, friend
and- well-wishers to celebrate tho itn
aniversary of thé advent-of the: Las
Jeaus Christ. Many who had neve
deen There: before or for- sulle a, Ton:
time turned out to .2well the numbe
gathered. Every available “seat wa
occupled.-
‘The choir marched bi, the hall ay |
‘enatomary, singing the processions
Anthem, “God "Bless Our’ President.
As soon 3% every member wis trate
the opening ode. “Greenland’s Ie
SMountains.” war Justily sug by the
whole congregation. The religious par
of, the service was pérfarmed by th
chaplain, R. Whenh. The 22d Psatn
wax repeated, followed by prayer
Jiymn, "God of the Right.” was sume
The ath chapter gf St. Matthew's Gus:
pel war rend for the evening's lesson,
Hymn, "Oh Come: AN Ye Faithful.” bs
-the congresation. pes ie
‘The presitent ofened the literary
part of the nroxram by dwelling close:
Aly on the mensar® that came to us
over, 1,900 scar ago! wiiich was /Pesern
and Rood “will toward men”: sons by
the choir, “Joyous Christmas Kelis":
recitation, “Fight for the Right." by
Miss Veriton; solo, “Make Haste.” Miss
AcMendin: addpons ty. Gian
thik stizo-of themeetins the col
ron esa tiken up sind hymn
“As With Glndness Men of Old," was
mung: address hy the chaplal. I.
Winn, “face Leadership's recitatien
by Miia Mayeock, “When, Garves
Comes; duct, "Giviy 19 Goa.” Misses
Cara: recitiition, “Hesus anit the Littie
Onés." Jentina Stoxter: aitdress by A
Riake, Brat vice-presitent, “Why FAI
Speaking’ for Africa”: song by chet,
“Ring Ont. Christmas Bells": sat,
“Dark Relgte." Mise KB. butehinnsen:
recitation, “Te US a Child tk fern.”
Maggie Oxborne; adilcess, J. Carmiben,
In hin aiddress’ Mr. Campbell swe!
mortly on .the strenour, asd united |
effarix that are being. put forth frum
timg't time by the hdy president ant
president alvin With the wtiwer oiliees
10 Keep: this ihelsinn peagtessaie, Me
nino xhoded that hen and women nf
puch character Inthe Fage should te
highly respected by* the community
in Shieh they move... ‘The procera
rontinired .with it reetiittion, “Afeiea.”
ny 1. Williams, ‘The president in his
soning remavkes sid: “We want sit ou
people to know, whether mechanics or
hepherds, their phice 6" the Uni-
yersal . Negto ‘Intprovemsnt. Assnvin-
fon. ‘Thare they xhalf by weorktn for
ho common cus for the betterment
if this race, of ours," ‘Fhe vlusing snle
camming and the mestins wax brwueht
wy a'cloxe. pK. EWART, Reporter,
HALFWAY, MICHIGAN
Mwlfway Division held a miass weet:
ing on Sunday, Dec. 13. The amevtine
opened with prayer ginil x short ret
lous Korvlce eondurted gee Me An
drew Wood, The opening renirh
were delivered by the Ludy presnlent
Bra. Malissa Word. ‘Phy week vtahe
oranization whs dtepnyed “by the
prenideht, Miz Henry itugietem,
Mr, Fred 2. dohnvon, Sty Leeatared
Smith and Mr. Pettis of hetreit, were
the gucats of the division dm Sarde
evening, Dec. 13, at an entertanment
held for the benefit wf the aivtsten,
MRS* 0, SINGLETON,
7 ame eso
: NOTICE
Alt secretaries’ ef divisions and
chapters of (RE USNSTCA. ahe-of
the Universat Political Union are
hereby requeited to forward ail
romaining. petitions to their re-
snective senators. and congress-
MARGUS GARVEY COMMITTEE
ON JUSTICE. re
YONKERS, N.Y.
| The Yeukery Division, No. 847, 0:
the UN. 1A. wishes. twannounee: th
wedding af its sovretrs, Mise Adetu:
Whison, daughter of Mecgnd Mrs. Me:
Kinzig Rosa, to Me, Willle Pou
Falls, N.C. Tha wedding took
Blave engDecember 24, 1923, at Labor
Hiatt, 22 Wowdsenrtth avenue, Tot
NY. F =
The teal wa heantitully decordted
for th weasion, “The marrlige cere
mins was perfarmed by Hishop BLA.
W. Cook ef Montelair, Nod. whe is
alse.a niembeg of the dlyston. “the
atfendonts swore! Ay. amex Poa of
Sallainirs, &. €, brother of the sient,
bext man; Miss fla Lutter, matron af
hen: Meblesinaite. Mies Martha
White Mise Esther Tinwn, Miss Thel-
"afore, Miss Alina Peterson, Miss
Milteed Wilson of Nutley, Nod, and
Misa Eveltn tae; Me. Robert Miltinet
St Danvitte, Var Lt A. Cyptiah of
Ferien of Newark! Ned. The setdine
weak af the rambo eféeh, aad was
performed aime the eolars aif the Red.
Black att Green, Relatives ad fetes
from all ever were yreent, Pleediiy
and geaiay were the peedpiente at a
number of beutiful snd bestiy sifts,
Rev. Wan. Hiewtans ehvistened the
Witte siushter ot Mr and Mes, BOW
Mieke, Bette Shiee Monette dane
Hicks. on “Tuerday evening, December
22 Mrs. Hiizateth Ragd was. Be
mether cad Mr, Wo, Gill zadfather,
A dedieinus rept wus served and a
el Unne eit ed Ea
(De otavisien alsie seve its Chyistanes |
jrecram wi Thue sbis, December. |
A teautifin tyew cutorned the Mall, ad
Meee were'ptent: at presents tor the |
hd as well ws the youn, The promrite |
sebixted: wf recitations, sisins: duets |
bint tootiien, Miss “Thelma Leet fe
sigtant xeeretars, qeted as auisteess wt
reremenies, AML ssteeattended enjoyed
Wn evening of Heal fan, The fewal 2
yee Hiking TL a. a, sme dees on Sygte
tay, Teas tnturested. ure bavttey to
‘aie aver, to Yeukere and help cares !
mi the gent wank whieh ome leuler las !
eft dere for me ine de. ‘the, Yonkers i
hvinive Me pengtensing semen hat andj
wae fetter re Readually cominse an |
fam tine te tine, Guy members ox: |
end te the qeront Woy a heeppey cena
ennditeons, Mew Gaee © |
- CIEGO DE AVILA, CUBA
Vetere Meron, daityhumies, Kean.
Yow ding ott decisions ef the asserts
tien In the Previiies ef Camagues: ta
ceeegeeSeye! Ie promoting a phen Cer vie
tadastem! Wettogment of the irsantza-
dicey semaneae ate wiih Mies, B ttegh
Milby, eyecdtuve secretary, 26h Men:
CHICAGO, ILL.
+ Chligage Division No. 24 has come
through tie holiday, period with en:
tuskism for accomplishment at a hixt
pitch, Our firm “resolve in that the
activities of oe organization durln
1826 ail be determined by accurate
Judgment: that reat acdempliatiment
will more ani more take the place of
excessive prewchinent. When the holl
day neasoil noxt arriver, and we shall
lave an opportunity: to look back “on
hast” wcomplishments, .we sincerely
trust. that, our Wivision, and the ore
funization ng a wholv, will be able. go
prodlly anneuneé that's hinve all the
sear stood, siguliast by the principles
of Garveytsm. on
Our meeting eld Sundiy wax well
attended, notwithstanding the very. in-
clement weaihers MIL the numbers on
the prozitun were highly instructive
and entertaining. and evershody manic
ested deen infereet {0 AIP that was sald
and done. ‘The principal speaker of
the day vas Hon. Roxx DL. Brown, an
orator of national repute andar toyal
member of tie Division, Avery whee
Ing address was sludeljvered by the
President. Hen, W. A. Waltaee,
‘ithe mrsieat wart of the peowramy wes
furnished. Wt the Leelee Quartet, who
rercived several encuren and, by the
chair, with the Lady President, Mes.
Frances Tummer, perfyrming at the
Hane avay et ante
Sumby twas Garvey Dag, and the
auxitiaries Were Well tejuysealted, The
inilitary department exhibited unusual
pei an otheur ssastumnary dill heomh
the eirendee: Lefowee tha meeting wad |
sailed tn oreier. Lnstinautsted visitors
sit us Sunday were Wee. das. Me
Welsh, of Seattles and Hen. IE. Sams
nets, uf the, Gary Division, Atse ox-
emuinsioner 1 1h, Moasls. of Tome.
he han matt Chienge hls, permanent
sidenie, ind hie tvantferced. his
Membership te eur Divisevn, re
BEB, KNOX, Reporter,
PUERTO CORTEZ, C. A.
| <The Muerte Cortez Division regrets
16 report the stowth af mnie wt its mont
HAInESe and ative juvenile maior
Mr. Liewet "Tatnm, see niet with, ae
haetuleeon Lieeambinni® whieh pesuited
Wn the fees. of ue of his Tors and Hints
fam death” Phe Mivisiea “nye neg with
Mis Gamnly asd friends. in the Jn of
seh a promising young man, as
| ‘The unthnety dearth of this Sout has
Saet an shadns aver the Puerta Cortes
Bigisten that “ean scarcely bw ox.
erste an Wnts? db wad crite ay,
ta bhneeh a “Suiiny Alehe. Gen he
Same geoontiet with a pussing train
While be oat aE sane Bis ewes The Dine
Was Calon tee the bie pital wiiec ehiesth
the physteuin tied ble bext he sues
imtoo tamday meht,
“Bete can “Titesilay iyesning dais roe
homins wnee take Crem the Inmwpitad to
the hgmo of his prundinather, Me
Hamutten, 2
AUR. the pueecengnen, foot bye the
forted af Mee UNA A. prewcemed fom
che resitone eof Mrs, Hamttion pa Sit
Westade hunch where the Ginerat
Sevt was wnasiie ted by ttle Ie
Cowie. pastor af the phureds,
‘The Stent was lined with spestaten
Hie eneentiye wAtirnnsy slewssea tm ties
sella. ty teiteahe Lenttems of te ate
Rese Britade ander the command of!
Mr en FL AL Hherrisen, Jed the wary. |
Che ete inemlership af the divishens
sheet ie stem weer from Mis. Has
Nth etd toe te church, The!
Huvemte Carpe inerehed an year af tie
rm, Wiis Vine lenrue oy ala anal
Nittabeds wf te seanesation. ‘Tas tone
prweesston was elognd bythe natives |
sol 2 1046 allforats wo the Rowernment. |
“Ve devetesed wise atnlerd want af
Steak Vosuote He Toad hte the sores
Le ace of ins alethh wae a flags
Winker of the tnt, and an ardent
Bron this «zed de eure Cone
ese) an the tna atl te the Supote
Taneters, “where aMtfer «eremony |
Aer which the Hes. Cwoper oflleated,
ristint by the chaplain et tie division,
fr. én Callan, was condincted,
O. BOA. HAREISON, Reporters. |
‘GARY, IND.
Shristinas brought about many help-
Cul and tnspiring Aetivities under the
auapivgt af the “Gury Uiehhne | On
Dew. 24, Capt, Walter Thornton and
Mise Hihet Ivey, one of the Motor
Corps, Were Jolned? In happy wedlock
Ay Rey. Meligary, spmentinent “Oars
minintee it Liberty, Hall, wtter whieh
Ue Ruestx wero elaborately enter-
tained: On Dee, 27, Rex, Meflenry
Shristened Little Hya Washington,
Rrand-daughter of Mra. Mary Jenn,
one of the Blick Crosy>Nursex anda
faithful worker, >
“An enthunlustic, patriotic and In-
‘apiring mass siseting for the release
o€ Hon, Marens Garvey, cried by the
Trenident, Mr. Thomas Biogkes: tn the
©. M, E Churety Was held on Sunday,
Jan. 3." Prominent citizens, black and
white, parucipated. The first vice-
président, Mr. U.‘W. Wirite, wan the
presidieg officer of this. occasion: Th
the welcome address, . Rev. MacLin,
pastor and yours putpit orator of no
meen“abitity. reeistered unmistakably
upon the minds of ble bearers, the
fect that ‘the Universal Meme ‘Bun-
provement Asvectation. tas givwa ‘to
be a potential clement te the rank ond
Sarak as Memmi
WOR Thomas Rrcotes tn Cofewring
the petnctpsl aiivecs . of io’ svesing
exyiigcioed regusted asewrihiee nay
a oper. @ petting Mr. Garvey’
meer hed reve sve and
neee Repted, aead Wf cine noveben aoe
=
_y NOTICE
_. AN" private ad personal
communications intended for
Hon. Marcus Garvey should
be sent to i
133 West 29th. Setcet
New York City.
“Care: Mrs, Amy. Jacques
“Garvey. >"
asec
|. . Seattle Division No. 30, irresprecthy
‘6f the obstructive agencies with: whic
it. hag bad tp contend, Is demonstrating
to the sUill lethargle and ungonseiou:
Negro that its primary objective tx hon
sther than ty strike for a treo any
emancisttted race ant rede@nre:
nlbtherinad, Africa? :
On December 31,°8130 p. an. ther
wan a remarkable furnelit of members
and frlends to watch the olf year om
and the new year In. :
5 “Present Day Happenings sind Hes
They Affect the Nexto.” was disenrend
ty Mr. Foveph Tynehes It left a tine
Impression on the minds of the awl
eneer hy the masterly and viguros
manner in whieh he handled his sub-
Jeet.
7 A eiptal ‘ashlress wax delivered hy
Gur acting president, Mrs, C.’ Moore,
who, Was at ker best. She spake on
“tnkty ant Loves! = .
Rev, Sime delivered! a tine seimon.
The Fight Ix On™ was sung aid
prayer was offered that the -prixon
looks might be opined sad our Ereat
leader return to usin the new year.
We have much to be thanktul fier, for
we have unity in aur midst.” Divisten
iM ig 90 well arcintzed thesenein’ shal:
not pass, woo fe ee
SACLE pom. with a chad hued shake
wishing eveevene a reppy mea year, all
left feeling 1 wane Renn to be present.
MARY RURCTL ROSS, Reportet,
BOSTON, MASS..
| On Suntoy, January 3. Garvey De
[win erdebrate bythe onan Dv sign
HN. ie A. and a vere enjoxable sitter
[nin was sent. ‘The euviston wa als
Honored with the presence af ax:serre%
sides, ins New: Yexke and Hon, ‘Leven
Riles, commiseionce of Cuatltornta
*Trestdent Athens was in the chai
ant) ip dis usta? Way iiieb the opening
remarks of the afternosn, and. ex:
phitued the signiticanae uf Garvey Day
HBequeitul xolections were remdered by
the ain! My. Fatks, tije anusgeal oi
rectin.. mast he,rumeptiewntel tor Is
uiitirinif Services: cehifornd' 43, the divi
sion. veg ee
short, adpriived “whre “wativereet doy
Messrs. ‘Tones? Mowves, And, ex-Seore-
tary Williams: At thin juneture the
vollectinn wan “taken, to which the
members raspunded, Jbecatls,
Fresifent Askew then trecented és
the auslience Hem, Toesn tiles as
presken af the etening. Me. “Riley
sign at Jonathon tive aims and wie
Boots a the ormamaetion, He prexed
iumeelt a tiv wire, prefeatniy fereetl
trad uinpredsive, Hew tally. wert ms
sn unity, ampere sing an the members
fia! tothe yally they contd get nes
where, the meeting wlesed with the
Sieg Wy the chiar amd prayer by
che este ehopztn,
WMH. MUNEOK, Reporter.
BROOKLYN, N.Y. |
hwneted eect af the Raat Reenkisa
Carves made a splendid tele whieh
Tyiends. The prekramy was ak follows:
ematiied: the peesilent, Se, Hest
vane: setsiton hg tive thales vin
sd planer welegtiom by the-Mieery= Hes
‘WIN: Sele Mrs. We Bo Miller: piane
solo, Miss Alice Whittell: ersen solo,
Trrotessor We. Hy liens tatyotvetion
Mess Garvey by Mes BG Thespesia
dines Alem Garves? planes sla, Shastor
A. Taumpson; closing remarks by tie
Poeailant, The mcet}oe. closed. with
mnuch enthusiastic pppkruse and the
ringing wt the National anthess
MS MILTON KELLY. Reporter
. CHARLESTON, S.C. --
|X apeciat meeting: in’ thé’ campaign
tor-thereleqae o£ the Honorable: Mar-
cur Gassey War held-by, the Charles-
Jan Division on Sunday. December 13
The president ‘ofthe division. °Mr.~A.
Rowman, presided. ‘The meeting onen-
Jed with religiou service conducted by
he chaplain, Mr.38, Mf. Saunders, ag
sinted ky the president. Mr. Ws 3
Smaiie Sie-the bein speaker.
[adaress on. the work being “@gne_ for
the Negro by the opeanizatlon received
much applause. ‘Sikdamie Rose Chap-
Hine alto made’ a eplindfd address
Musle for the occasion was furalehed
by the chole. Mears. 1. M. Johnson
and S..L. Ore aleo gave short talka,
_ 8. & GAILLIARD, Reporter.
ce
-’ If You. Have a Reem _
You Dede to Rast
Call or Fosen Beaten 2877
ot a
FITS Accashe . Stepped
= : on
Fe lee eae:
eS ee
Po pang
ts your 6TSTE® rus-Gowa, wear, ur s zi
tn Jour BLOOD sain ae thins watery? |. BLOOD RED MEDICINE TONIC ;
(ERE Bontealttnche Bing so ier tay aire’ +, Prat SRST Sal Seabed a ee ow
: = mz LOPE PLLSEPOLESESSSESEEEESEOFSSSOS OOS |
WEAKNESS - * INDIGESTION ¥ ‘MN. W. SAKSON, Bex 43, a
+ NERVOUSNESS. RHEUMATISM Petes orate On thn isos Red misdicine Towle, when
ANEMIA cones | Be Dagga delivers the packaee fill BAY, ‘hima the special
TIREO FEELING CATARRH Biase Bis oes ene, osseaaee tor BL te: ie SPA gae
~ + NEURALGIA ~ . —RUN-DOWN - PLEASE STATE WOW MANY TREATMENTS YOU WANT «|
‘ie 5d vot: WRSGin? aco yo’ atwura rusniy ous ina fe MAME LS Coveregrevetcenorerngeeteeesee etre ea
“KNOCKED oat? Do you walk around withoot doy COUR AAOCCR veeesereadeserecaseninennarsesnsccames mate nmenanant
‘AGE, AMBITION? Don't wait oni! 7ow are gone! Improve Town .... ‘ yaenennne
eerie meus metep naps tram tas bears pet ee cole Mai cosises te easioee 38 conte fot open ores
Sober Coe hs Fee Sea!" OFdar tae? : Benet PERE SS SP ate Sette tea Raney wit order
"a cea RR RRS
_ DETROIT, MICH. | SAN BLAS, PANAMA |CENTRAL BAGNANOS, CUBA
‘The usual eAltustim, of Garvey Day
was demendtrated by a large attend:
ance on unas, Jamanry Rat, Lert
Teall, The mesting wax wpencd by the
lest vier-president; Hon. ‘Ta suntth
after which the'follawhys proeam wi
fendered... Seigetion by the choir fol-
lowed by A short address by the third
vice-preaident, Mr. Rufug Petthe se-
lection by the bind; Uh front prise
mevsaze of ‘The Negro Word, was
dead by the sscond Wee-prestleit, Mr
(hariex Tethel: select reuding hy Me
Wilyed, hewn Tome on the Farm":
xeloction hy the choirs he ptysident,
Hon. Fred 1. Johrwwn presented ie
exerttive seeretars, Hon dA. Craleen,
Sehie made a fow remarks. Mr. Cratgen
sid in qert: “ThBe is Garves Day
and he Ix in Atlanta suffering, [ect ux
shaw ome determafustion that we are
Eoin to have the Hon, Marens Garvey
Heck with ae Garver as thst respon
sible for what" hase ben deeie and we
ure suing ty Tet the world know the
ratte, We will shox wher is the thief.”
Captain “Thesdare 1 Denk saber
spoke. "The nimefing: lest with the
citieinus of the National Amthems |
MIS. FRED I. IGUNSON,
ne Reporters
~ EGG HARBOR, NJ.
The Eee Harber Division held a spe- | Pecdy release: of our later, awlienee Was present and enjoyes Mr
ch teem tneeting om Maniay, Decom- MES, W. SAMUELS, Reporter. Carter's address.
er 13. at 3 pean. The princiwalspmaker |= SSREEEEneaeT M'JOUN CREED, Reporter,
Ns tie, Wlanel Htanio Granites , ea
Gar Sea. Ansnceresiog wersee so) BARBERTON, OHIO
pote seme wera sees |e a |. CHARLOTTE, N: €.
phamed a meeting for the Honorable] The Barberton Division held its: ras- =
Spat Lecceueeticn se kun Inpenrte] ular qnage seveting sn tunday, acer} Sihin teidite’ Vinton Ba vin want
eas Beatetan in spinal ie ome [ rete Teagreaisoits Mee weiiiem [ajene at the Chuctions Division be Bs
sihige meciihe wer nell ar hich tne|irepae Croak waht ing icinoae = Iiretines weve: okt ach Sta
am spose, V, LOUKET. Reparter. EESSIE RAGLAND, Reporter. - |", AKON DIXON, Keporter.
wd too.can Larn
& I will show you how, without investment, expe-"
- Ngee riénce or training, youcan make $809 in 30
4 <2 days and be on the way to big success.
Te pen are making loos teen $100 se wenk, write
tee pie at ahicn, awl | AGdaE Maw Yen hee Net
Chotinare Ghia debe yene heer Yon eh
an” sunita Date ston ea wairhe Whareyer
Sout plvarees tave hours dass othiiee hours 3
Gig ly Twists day omaead mabe fram #1 to
$16 Gor every her you werk
Jnaice of tliety dave yeu wan oven a Univinss,
Droperoue hum mest withant Investing ane
Time vane terrame aneae rhe hie Tene
Miners fy yeur eaMMUEniey Wye MEU the
cunpen beter. . Mi
_ > Simple as-A BC
Tam ane of the largest sannfacturers if Wighs
Reade topeni's ani rainenate im Amerie. Th
frers comoninlty fappoint representative,
Sad this representative has the same upnertan=
ity of making money as most merchants, dae
favs oF prtfexsional men have. My. etre
Rentative doesn't have. tv sty Feat nor
Salaries. shor take ang. of the ‘oliier ordinary
Dnviness Finks and expenses “All the prone
he thalwes tre keeps for himself:
People Tikt t@bus shrect trom the factory, for
Alicthe money aaved by selling thin "way ia
Passed on to tha customer. They kanye all
Alagut Comer All-Weather Topeoats and. tain~
cdhis. ‘They know they are big. bargains. We
in'a cominon thing for one uf my rehrene "tu
tives fo make $20 tn te single day. and overs
Dollar thes make ix net profil. (J. it, Mead, of
Kansan, did. In a siigte day’ Sir. Head made
$68.50 elear pront for mimxcrt: tt, W. Krieger
made $20. in half an hour. “George Garon
gicared $40 pont hiswery feat das
{Want you te act an my representative, and
ai sou need to do in eal an. may. customers ard
Rename. tier orders. It fe the most Plensam:
dignified ‘and promtable’ work that anyone
can doer i
Build Up a Permanent, Profitable
t ‘Basiness for Yourself -
T don't want you to think that this in wny tein-
Fon pit ninried. shat peur hurineen grown week
iy 'aireke and month wy. month. Evers sears
buninesn in bigger than last year's? And when
rau become iter ara tigener repeeeatstiee
Banincee wi rollin hone for: the mann,
How Mach Con You Make?
That dppenin on how-satich Cone you devots
Te thie eopetiign Opn cam Gene anyetie: c
from $108 to $200 4 week, E> A. Sweet, -of
Bier mee Pt ‘one month'n work,
‘ieee Ws, weet he carn
— . Sore Zeer te
‘4 corona
pract t ontl ecw ae gu tains Jos
i er gout wae
Sante & cacy Sv. te
the imderioatio® yeh "3 co
Pa Fo
ees .
oa
Paes Sees
a
_ ABRES REE Ce
Lea
“>
"A he a. OLIVER
onctate tect Heainenats
.
ay
ye
woe eet
Roe iat ete
PFREE
SAN BLAS, PANAMA
The San las Division held ‘a ‘ane!
clit Garvey Day celelratisn, on Sun:
day: December 6. She meeting openes
with relfiioux service “followed by ar
address by the president, Mr, M. E
Green, The program was an follows:
Suly Miss Heelinda Abrahain; athiress
W. Dixon: reading of the president
zeneral’s weekly message in The_No-
gry Worhl bys Mia BL Watsons” ad
dress, Mise J. Robinson: short tatk, L.
Fisher; sol, Miss Watvon: “address,
MrT. Lysiacht; address, Me. P
Giodridge: short talk, Mra2M. Anglin:
lo, Mr. Gpodridge: addres, Mr. 1.
Edmunison. ‘The closing address. was
delivered by, the president, The meet-
fig closed with She singing of the Ns
Linnal sntheni,
“MISS RB. WATSUN. Reporter.
> CAPETOWN,.S. AFRICA
| The West Landon Diviwien held a
Garvey Day eolebration on Sunday, Le-
comber 6 “The president, Mr. del
Samuels, presided. An interesting pte-
ruin Wan retelered, Adirenses were
Melivereie By “Meats. J. Franeis. £.
Kamisasand 1.0. Samiels, fhe choir
Felered several tre: Jiautitul. an:
theme, Speciib prayer was Bifered for
the continied eee health and the
speedy release: of our leaRer,
MES. W, SAMUELS, Repoiter.
BARBERTON, OHIO
The Barberton Division held its: ves:
lar maxe meeting on Sunstay, Devens:
her 1. The president, Mir-, William
Davis, presided. Several mnemibers atl
cionds fran neikhon ing divisions were
piesont. 7
ESSIE RAGLAND, Reporter, —
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Members and friends uf Central Bas>
nanos Division enjused 9 apectal Gare
vey Day prezniin on Sunday, Decem=
her 8. The ineeting ‘opened’ with fm=
preshive divine, xerviee during which
2 speci prayer for the president Ken
erat was oifered by Me. D, Walford.
Mr. C. I. Oliver, » visiting member
of ihe Baniey-Division, profited durhie
the Feligious service: ‘The program was
am follows: Opening address, by Mr.
Simicl ive; addyess, Mr. John
Burke: sole, Me. Stanley Conti: ads
dress, Mr. KC. Kinloek: solo, Mr.
C,H. Oliver: a short tale on Garvey-
fam. by Mr. Uc, Euwards: sole, AMiss Sf
Skinner, ‘The cloning address! wa de=
livered by Mx, Pomeroy S., Paris.
SOHN J, BURKE, Repotter
KANSAS CITY, MO. -
The Kansas City’ Division held “its:
legutey Garvey Day “pelevation on
Sunday, Desrmber! 6.5 320 gyesitenty
Mr. BL dohison, srestded, ‘The mebt-
ing opened with Fligioms seven cone
ducted bse the ebvanbabs. Reverend Tene
nett, The division was tonofed with
the, preshuee af Ue Honorable G."E,
Garter, sevietary general of the ove:
ciation, Atthoush the weather was”
story, a giv sized and appreciative
aulience was present and enjoyew Mr.
Uarter's agdres,
"JOHN REED, Reporter,
_ CHARLOTTE, N:C.
‘Mins Henrietta Vinton Davis was the
ationt- of the Chartotte Divisfon oa Des
venuber bi aT? ‘Twa very sttgeesKe
ful meetings were held arhich Mise.
Davis slaresseut, S *:
TS. , AARON DIXON, Reporter,
OUR WOMEN and WHAT THEY THINK-Edited by Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1926
law or regulation should be made for their deportation to the Southern States." Included in the protests were newspaper clippings telling of crimes committed in Detroit by Negroes. The protest from the realtors say that "northern Negro agitators are promoting agitation and turmoil" and "taking social equality, steady employment and intermixture of settlement and residence." Detroit has heard, it is set forth, that 200,000 Negroes are moving from the Southern States toward that city. Their coming, it is stated, will reduce the value of Detroit property $200,000,000.
Just as the Mayors of Chester and Johnstown, Pa., ran Negroes out of these two cities, we may find the same thing coming to pass in Detroit, not only is the white mob active, but the legislators of the country are asked to take a hand in deporting Negroes from State to State. It is time that these Negro intellectuals wake and fall in line with the program of Marcus Garvey, that seeks an outlet for Negro brains, ability and brawn in a country of their own, where they can make their own distinct racial contribution to the world, without hindrance, free from the prejudices and hate of a selfish white majority.
Garvey's solution for the Negro problem is the only solution for the peace and happiness of black and white; some may soff at it, but the sooner you act on it the better for all concerned—Africal for the Africans, those at home and those abroad.
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DAY by day we are witnessing the predictions of Marcus Garvey coming to pass, and those who called him an alarmist and a crazy man, are today silent at the accuracy of his forecasts.
A couple of years ago when Negroes were leaving the South in large numbers, some Negro politicians were jubilant over the idea and urged them to come North where they would get better jobs, fine apartment houses to live in and freer contact with the whites, but Garvey, a keen student of politics and economics, warned them that moving to the North would not solve their problems, as Negroes had no jobs to offer them, and being dependent on the white man for work they could be starved out at any time, and would then be glad to be sent back South; that the Northern white employer had his European relatives coming here daily and quite naturally he would look out, for his own kith and kin first by making room for them in his factories and plants, even if he had to put Negroes out of the jobs in order to place his relatives and members of his own race.
Be Silent Sometimes and Cheerful All the Time
(From The Household Journal)
I'm going to tell you how to get along even with "kinsfolk." The best way, the easiest way, which is at the same time the most important thing to bear in mind, is to stay away from them most of the time. Visit themeldom enough for your short stay to be a source of satisfaction to everybody concerned and for your departure to be an occasion of mutual resent.
Don't live in the house with them. Even you can't make a success of it. If you are ever forced to borrow money, borrow it from some friend, pawn the coat on your back—anything except asking relatives to lend it to you.
But some Negro leaders kept up the agitation for a depopulating of the South of Negroes and their emigration to the Northern States. Some painted the Northern white man with the hand of fellowship outstretched toward the Negro, while Garvey opined that it was only a question of time when if the Northern white man was as environed with Negroes as the Southerner, the former would show the same propensities as exhibited by the Southerner in his dealings with poor Negroes; that the Negro would go from State to State, and as soon as he increased in numbers and pressed against the economic and industrial life of any community, city or State in his quest for employment and a place, the race riots of East St. Louis, Chicago and Tulsa would recur.
Now, in general, there are just two or three things necessary in harmonizing with folks. One of these is to be needed by them. Society needs you somewhere, somehow, sometime. Aside from your occupation, there is in the social realm a place where you fit, and nobody else can exactly fill that groove. There is a speck of originality about you that is not only welcomed by your friends, but necessary to their complete happiness, content or well being. You don't have to search for it. Stop searching, and it will assert itself.
Detroit, the home of Henry Ford's flivver, has been considered a city of refuge for Negroes until recently the poor whites have started to run Negroes away from their homes, and even the police have little or no protection to give them.
The recent case of Dr. Sweet and others bears out our contention. In this instance, the good doctor moved into a white district. The neighbors sought to run him out with sticks and stones. In the fracas a white man was shot down, and now Dr. Sweet and nine of his friends are up for the murder of this one white man. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People suddenly rouses itself from its peaceful slumber and is raising fifty thousand dollars from poor Negroes for the defense of Dr. Sweet et al.
Adapt Yourself to Them
Adapt Yourself to Them
Another thing necessary in getting along with folks is the frack of adapting yourself to them. This, of course, requires some knowledge of human nature. If you are throwful with the fellow who wants to do all the talking, let him do so; that makes matters all the easier for you. As for as possible, interest yourself in what your friends are interested in. In fact, above all, don't try to form people to your way. When it makes no material difference—and it generally does matter little—fall in line with them.
Helen Curtis, who was so vigilant in harming the work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Liberia, is another intellectual who bought a house in a white neighborhood in Washington, and the N. A. A. C. P. has had to raise thousands of dollars fighting in the lower and higher courts the right of the whites to exclude a Negress from their neighborhood.
Then there is the art of being silent. Here's where most of us fall down. If we've got the glomos or the grouches, our first and uppermost tendency is to transmit them to our friends. If I can't give you a boost, a shove in the direction you are headed, some sign of healthy communication. I can at least let you alone. When you sing your song of optimism, if I can't join in with pleasing harmony, I can at least refrain from singing off key.
All this waste of money trying to associate with whites, who don't want their company, could be avoided, and far better were it spent in opening up a factory or some avenue of employment for Negroes who are being turned away daily from the white man's factory doors.
Nor has the anger of the whites in Detroit subsided, but as an aftermath of the Sweet incident we quote the following articles from the Atlanta Constitution, under date of January 9th:
Washington—Protests have come to the house immigration committee from realtors and others in Detroit against the inflow of Southern Negroes to the Michigan city, which, it is claimed, is causing an increase of crime there and making an increase of taxes necessary for suppression of crime and for care of paupers.
The protests were turned over to Representative Rutherford, of Georgia, and Box, of Texas, by Chairman Johnson of the committee, for an investigation. It is not believed that anything can be done, except in way of publicity, in letting Negroes know the situation in the Michigan city.
One protest asked that a United States marshal be dispatched to Detroit to deport the Negroes to their Southern homes. A protest from the Detroit realtors' committee requested that the Negroes should be "halted in their march on Detroit; that a
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HOSPITAL SHUTS DOORS ON YOUNG INDIAN MOTHER
Girl Gives Birth to Child on Sidewalk
(From The Daily Worker)
SEATTLE, Wash., Dec. 29.—Mrs. Frank Benson, a half-breed Indian girl of seventeen, gave birth to a child on a sidewalk here in front of the Free Pucking Company with over a hundred men and women gathered around watching the pain that the Indian girl was forced to undergo.
Earlier in the day Mrs. Benson applied to the county hospital telling them that she expected her child, to be born at any moment, and asking for a bed. She was refused admission by the 100 per cent American Ip charge of the county institution, because there was no room for her.
When newspaper reporters investigated the matter, the matron declared they could have found room for her — if they knew she "was that bad off," and tried to escape responsibility by saying she did not recognize that it was an "emergency case."
She then left the county hospital, bounded a street car and was on her way to the city hospital to see if she could get a bed there.
The jolting of the street car increased her pain to such an extent that she was forced to take her suitcase and walk. While walking, she was seized with excrementing pains and sit down on her suitcase and a passing worker put in a call for the city hospital. As she sat there hundreds of packing house workers gathered around and watched her as she labored with the birth.
When the ambulance finally arrived she had given birth to her child. Many of those in the crowd, when learning of the fact that the county hospital had refused her entry, declared that the county hospital matron always played "dirty tricks" on working class women and especially on those whose skins were darker than theirs.
Vear—"What would happen if you were to break, one of the Ten Commandments?"
Wille—"Well, then there would be nine."—Christian Evangelist.
malle for their deportation to the
are newspaper clippings telling of
by Negroes.
ers say that "northern Negro agi-
and turmoil" and "taking social
and intermixture of settlement and
forth, that 200,000 Negroes are
ates toward that city. Their com-
the value of Detroit property
and Johnstown, Pa., ran Negroes
find the same thing coming to pass
nob active, but the legislators of the
in deporting Negroes from State to
intellectuals wake and fall in line
vey, that seeks an outlet for Negro
country of their own, where they can
contribution to the world, without
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no problem is the only solution for
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On the heels of the resolution in Persia which has seated Reza Khan on the throne has come another change of regime in the unstable kingdom of the Holzaz. Duan Sand, Sultan of the Neld and leader of the Wahabis, has by his victories in the field caused the publication of King Ali. The British, always noted for the promptitude with which they transfer their affections to the winning horse, immediately seated his victory by signing a treaty with him. Meanwhile, in Syria the French are pursuing a painfully familiar double course: They announce loudly that the policy of de Jeunesse will be one of conglination, designed to bolt out memory of the mistakes of Sarral, and at the same time, they are making strenuous efforts to kill as many of the Druses as possible. An agreement has just been made with the Palestine authorities that should any of these military patrols refuse to cross the border they are to be returned like trapped rats for execution. This is a type of conglination of which we have heard in other parts of the world. It is permissible, however, to have some doubt as to its effectiveness. The Druses, like the Berghers of the Riff, are a proud, fierce and indomitable people. Moreover, whatever may have been the beginnings of the present revolt, the sixth in seven years of French rule, it is now clear that all Syria is determined to throw off the yoke of France however long it talks. Those are circumstances which make maintaining the guardianship of a backward nation" an expensive thing—New Republic.
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How the French and Spanish pined for peace. They would have given anything for peace, but their power to dig high grade ore out of the hills there with cheap labor. Now when Abel-el-Krime proposes peace, both Spain and France refuse to listen. Daily Worker,
Anglo-Turkish Dispute
Even if the league achieves unanimity, Turkey will, without a doubt, refuse to bow to Geneva's authority. In this she will have the support of Moscow and—politics make strange bed-fellows of American and certain British oil interests. "We are informed," says the Morning Post, "that the true facts of the case are that certain American oil interests have made an arrangement with an independent English group, which has been cooperating with the Turkish Government for certain oil concessions in case Mosul should be awarded to the Turks by the League of Nations." The Nation.
Soviet Diplomacy
"In its struggle for Sorafianum, the working class has opened the door to private capital comparatively wide, but the working class must never forget its main objective. It admits private capital to hasten the development of the economic system of the country in branches that thus far have not been effectively controlled by the state and by the co-operatives. But the working class must learn as soon as possible how to build up an efficient commercial organization of its own, and one which will be able gradually to force private capital out of the country." Moscow, Ilyushkin.
Open Letter to Clémenceau
"Shut your books for a moment, leave your pen and forget your heartburns, look toward the soil--this soil of France which your arbor and tenacity liberated from the forefinder. See what your successors have done with your victory, old and respected polish, and gift your teeth and close your fists with anger.
"We turn to you. Your juniors have quit and the young have lost their ideals. In the darkest hour the ancients are those who give the fullest ignition to events and defy their duty to citizens who are still filled with love of the public weal.
"Speak to us. The enemy is no loner of Noven--he is within each of us--he besieges our hearts and they give way a little more from hour to hour. Our governors watch, 'powerlessly, the oblong tide which they started. Replace them.
"You have been silent long enough. Tell us our watchword."—Echo Du Nord.
THE PEOPLE'S FORUM
Blazers of the Trail Always Meet Obstacles
To the Editor of the Negro World:
Whenever we read or hear of any one trying to discredit the U. N. L. A. we need to remember that most of the things taught by the Honorable Marcu Garvey are new to the Negro. Negroes who have not changed from the attitude which they hold many years ago before the conclusion of the U. N. L. A. still doubt themselves.
One of the things that the work of the Honorable, Marcus Garvey has taught us is to distinguish between efficient, and inefficient leadership. They call the members of this organization an ignorant group, but our work has proven that we have had intelligence and foresight enough to try to do that when the Negro has never tried to do before.
PRISCILLA C. DE GENESTE
Boston, Mass.
Some Reasons Why We Should Not Falter
To the Editor of the Negro World:
The U. N. I. A. is the organization built up on the highest principles that an organization could have. There ought not to be the slightest sign of weakness on the part of any of the members on account of the imprisonment of the leader.
Many Negroes laugh at the organization and plot against it, but there is no need to feel discouraged, at this. Those Negroes have not seen the light. They do not have the longing for freedom, economic and civic, that the members of this organization have because of the inspiration and light thrown on race matters by the Honorable Marcus Garvey.
The Negro is considered weak and incapable by most of the people in the world. This state of mind is brought on to some extent, by the attitude of the Negro. If the Negro will wake up and take his place among the peoples of the world as a man, the opinion that most folks have of his unfitness will be soon changed.
The Universal Negro Improvement Association is trying to give Negroes a program that will make him inde-
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pendent and give him some self-respect. We ought to all want to help to put over such a program.
To the Editor of the Negro World:
We welcome the coming of the new year because we hope that it will bring with it the release of our leader and brighter days for our organization.
We cannot tell what the new year will bring forth, but we of the association who have the program deep down in our hearts have high hope.
We will not be discouraged by the unhappiness of the post year, but we will press on, believing that all will be well if we keep the faith.
A. BARNES.
Hatney, Cuba.
Enthusiasm Runs High In East St. Louis, Ill.
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Secure Suitable Roomers
ADVERTISE
Same in the NEGRO WORLD
Special Rates For To Let Aids
Call or Phone Harlem 2877
56 W. 135th St. N. Y. C.
Give Your Wife
A Real Present
for Christmas
Knitting from lattice - expresses the suffering caused by rheumatism. Mrs J. K. Washington, Ill., is an thankful at having healed herself, that out of pure gratitude she is unable to tell all other sufferers how it was caused by her a long way at home.
Mr. Hirsch has nothing to eat. Moreover,
he has no money and no name, and she will
give you like valuable information exactly
to use.
THE NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1926
Division of the association and I must say that I have yet to see a more loyal and enthilious group.
Not long ago a representative of the Garvey Release Campaign Committee spoke here. After this meeting, enthusiasm seemed to run higher than ever. Now the members are hard at work obtaining signatures asking for the release of our great leader, apt even the white people of the community are interested and pleasing themselves to help us gain the spirit that we will re-pit our great program over.
seem impractical, but Negroes will but heed the voice of our inspired leader, they will soo gain strength enough to accomplish many things which now seem impossible. Negroes should want to live where they can be independent and have the opportunity to do those things which every race is doing today. No hard-should be too great to gain the end.
MAJOR R. DUNN, Columbus, Ohio
Conference on Farm Relief
this week under National Council and erotic Marketing who are interested in the Negro farmer plan will be adopted them to participate benefits, of the customs. With the exon and the tobac erotic movements, a general policy of operates against the of Negro farmers, we
Membership Growing in
Commendable Manner
To the Editor of The Negro World,
Enemies of Garveyism may do everything in their power but they will never succeed in changing the course or stopping the progress of this great movement. In spite of Garveyism coming from those who do not understand, the membership of this great organization is growing. Negroes who learn of the program are being convinced even against their will.
At first sight this program may
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THEOLINE
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Ask Your Digest or Pond 106 to the COMMONS HIRES, DISTRIBUTORS 106 West 210th St. N. N. C. Money Back If Not Satisfied
Can You Sleep All Night?
Or Must You Get Up Frequently By Reason of Bladder Trouble?
If you do, you would have to sleep with a couple of my Home Interiors company on alert. I want you to know how quickly it is possible to sleep upright to urinate every hour of two whisks is very wearing and a source of endless complaints. If you are so tired, the company should be to F. L. MOWTHY, 127 Main Street, N. C., and a free trial will be offered you by mail.
This company is good for a fresh breath
and a new start. PAY IT LINK
SKINNY. Fill out your name and address
WESTLY, 127 Main Street, MARSHALL,
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REGISTERED CHIROPODIST
NEVER IGNORGE FEET TROUBLES
THEY INJURE THE NERVES
seem impractical, but if Negroes will but heed the voice of our inspired leader, they will sooain strength enough to accomplish many things which now seem impossible. Negroes should want to live where they can be independent and have the opportunity to do those things which every other race is doing today. No hard-should be too hard to gain the end. MAJOR R. DUNN.
Conference on Farm Relief
WASHINTON.—Negro farmers are generally interested in the fourth national cooperative marketing conference that is being held in Washington
DROPSY TREATMENT. It gives quick relief, 'Swelling and, short symptoms rapidly disappear. Liver and kidney act better. General improvement is absolutely FREE. Try it. Never heard of anything its equal for droopy. Write to
DR. THOMAS E. GREEN
Bank Building, Box 25, Chatsworth, Ga.
How to gain: Health, Monkey and Happiness and to Cure Disease; or PERSONAL MAGNETISM and WILL ROWER
A Guide to Success in All Matters
Relating to Health, Business, Friendship,
Loyalty, Marriage, Ec.
No matter what your condition or
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FITNESS tell you how to improve it.
**MEDICAL** **LIFESTYLE**
This book is full of secrets. It tells you how to hypnose a man, how to put him in a tractor for a week and so on. How to cure, disease and bad habits.
If a man know he should be live again, he can tell you the "gate of death." And if there is a put world, can we communicate with it? How can we sense WITH SPIRIT FRIENDS, must be unimportant. You demand patience there as it.
**HOW TO KNOW YOUR FUTURE** tell you your future at a distance. How to know and give advice to a hidden treasure, to find best friends, ammels and property, and so on.
Four Books Worth Their Weight inaid to Anablasts Men and Women, 125 each, or the 4 Books for 12.
RUDOLPH SALES COMPANY
300 W. 100th St. (Cor. 8th Ave.)
New York City, N. Y. U. S. A.
ACTUAL SIZE
BE LUCKY
History maps
the old King's
priests and old martyrs of
Egypt, India and Africa were
martyred in the city of
Fortune, and thousands are doing today.
William and Mary were sainted and sacerdote.
Harry money, friends and sweet-
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set with Stainless Steel of Thomas's King
entrained with marble perlants. Made of
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SEND NO MONEY
Just send your name and address to the
northern 11:27, when ring services. You don't
need to rent a room. If you are not more than pleased
with whatever you just sent, you can
5 days and we will return your money.
Actually, that makes it just "Join the lock-
one." Written by Thomas.
ROB O'REILLE'S WALK
300 O'REILLE'S Bldg.
St. Louis, Mo.
WHENEVER YOU HAVE
ANYTHING TO SELL
ADVERTISE IT IN THE
NEGRO WORLD
UNDERGROUND
TREASURES
HOW AND WHERE TO SEE THEM.
100
We will send you FREE information that may mean your fortune. Secret of locating underground or buried treasure. Keep what this secret, write us today. Address
The Magnetic Co.
Dept. 8 St. Louis, Mo.
Negro Universal King coming to rule the World
Rev. Webb
The Kaiser and Napoleon failed in war to the Universal Kings, the coming Negro King will not fail. A reference book to the Bible tells the facts and a picture of this King in $1.00 for both.
Negro Characters in the Bible
Negro Characters in the Bible
Four pictures in two forms. No. 1. "Negro King Solomon" and "Negro Solomon of the Hebra" and "Negro Solomon's Temple." No. 2. "Negro King Tut and His Treasures." Price, all for $1.80. Agnes wanted to send $1.50 for outfit.
---
this week under the auspices of the National Council of Farmers' Co-operative Marketing Associations. Those who are interested in the progress of the Negro farmers' hope that some plan will be adopted that will permit them to participate more fully in the benefits of the co-operative organizations. With the exception of the cotton and the tobacco growers' co-operative movements, there appears to be a general policy of exclusion, which operates against the financial interests of Negro farmers, who have no organizations, state or national, of their own.
Wife Saved Him From Whiskey
Here's the Secret
I wish that every woman with a plumpor husband, son or brother, could read these lines, for they tell the secret of reform and happiness. I was a continued drunkard, I thank good whiskey when I country was two, and mature shine when it went 'dry'. I became a lot, a disgrace to my family, an outcast from society. My wife and children were hungry, ragged, in despair, when my good wife read of the Golden Age and cryed for a trial package. I didn't know she was giving it to me, but I noticed that all at once my craving for drink began to go. Before long I positively disliked any kind of liquor, and we they my back out of the kitchen.
"Now I am a total obstinate my family is happy, well fed, well clothed and proud of me, and I am prospering finely—all because of the wonderful Golden Treatment."
The answer could be written any of the thousands of men whose third for honor has been conquered by this great and magnificent wizer, mothers and children.
Try it FREE
Golden Treatment works like a charm. It is easy to juggle, gloriously, tasteless, and quickly handles the desire for drink. Used in tea, coffee or food.
If you want to make a great of it, send no money. Just for the sake of P.E.P. PACKAGE, which we will send in a bottle sealed weather. Address Dr. J. W. Haines Co., 411 Glenn Building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
PE-P
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For two years I suffered intense stomach pain, in a major angina and heartburn. My heart was tormenting my body, I couldn't eat or sleep well. Physically I was a wreck and my home life was unhappy. I had to buy a bottle, took it, I fell better, after six doses. Now I enjoy and vitality and am free of all ailments.
Two coupon belts. SEND NO MONEY.
Pay postal code. $155.
Wanted. Wanted. Karethere.
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pay the payment $10 when delivered.
Address .....
Under Ground
TREASURES
HOW AND WHERE
TO FIND THEM
A Secret you need to know.
It may be a fortune to you.
FREE particulare.
Write today.
MODEL CO.
CONO BLDG., Chicago, Ml.
If you have Epilepsy, Pete Falling Dickens
would be happy to help you today for your FREE trial treatment. Use success
until 18 years old. Give age, give explain
4th grade, give explain 5th grade,
CLEVELAND, OHIO.
Pronchitis, asthma, cough, cold in the
many new threat and objection ANHEDED
the use of GUNORES CATARRH BALM.
Sued $1.00 for three tickets today. Postage
10s extra. AGENT wanted.
Aquile GUNORES MEDICINE Co.
120 W. 120th St. New York City
HERB
Doctor Book and Price List Pro-
Wilson Pinky Co. Lock Box NL, Chicago, IL.
RUBBER AS OBSTACLE TO FILIPINOS' FREEDOM
said the industry had been restricted and had been unable to expand the business in many directions.
Representative Loring M. Black, Jr. of New York, ridiculed the entire investigation in a speech in the House today, terming it "propaganda plus" for Hoovery
FIRESTONE HITS 'MONOPOLY'
Great Concessionaire in Liberia Says America Will
Solve Rubber Problem
WRITE PHILEMON GREene
Bos 62, Station O
—New York City
STYLE GUARANTEED
HOSIERY--Must wear or
replaced free--All the latest
styles--fabrics and colors--
BIG PROFITS--Repeat
orders bring you regular
income. YOUR PAY IN
ADVANCE--Just write
either WORK DELIVERY and
COLLECT--No credit or
experience needed--Sum-
ple furnished--All color-
games including finest silks.
Men-O-Green Co.
Ontario, Ohio
AGENTS AGENTS
Men and Women-$10 daily sell-
ing big line of toilet preparations
and household specialties. 50 fast
sellers. Write STANDARD COMP-
PANY, 438 Lenox Ave., New York.
AGENTS WANTED
Salemmen: Airport guaranteed Waterpier
You are interested in quick sales and make
$50 upwards weekly, call promptly, Morning
ings, 261 Fifth Ave. Room 500.
Call pretty colored dolls and 150 other nov-
els. Mfg. Co., W. Jamaica, N. Y.
Bethel
Let us start you in business. Sell our gem-
united English broadband and silk
room shirts. Write for samples and
particulars.
WM. J. RICHARDS CO.
25 East 132nd St. N. Y. C.
For Sale—Bargain
Light Lunch Room Equipment
1 set of Urna with Milk Top Combination;
2 Tables, 2 Counter, 2 Tables and few Dishens almost
new. Reasonable price for cash only. Call
Braithwaite T42, Grosvenor St. 60 100 or call in person at 252 W. 132nd St. N. E. G.
LEARN
Public speaking taught by mail. Writer
The Universal Speaker's Bureau, P. O.
Box 184, Kingsburg, Calif., U. S. A.
Agents to sell high grade toilet articles.
Quick sellers make 100% profit in spare time.
WRITE
BOKHARA PERFUME CO.
305 West 117th Street
NEW YORK CITY
RELIABLE agents wanted in every Negro community in the United States to represent your best interests and professionalism. Send Gentle Hosiery direct from the mills to the wearer. Become independent by being your own agent. Send your orders from $25.00 to $60.00 per week, with promotion. Write for information. B. D. L. dane B. D. L. dane Westford, at West 116th Street New York City.
BECOME INDEPENDENT — Birmingham, Richmond, and Roosevelt indices with drug dealers of tobacco. We start you in buying of your own or community equivalent you may be interested in. If you have business, ask words or letters. Bark Equipment Co. S. W. 200 West 100th Street.
WARNED: Agents to sell a list of over 400 brands of tobacco. Products must be tested by our agents. Admit of weakness or disease. Dept. 26-C. Pharmacist.
Your business should be warmed up. Please contact us at 100-222-2222. Mint Grove, 100-222-2222. John G.
telegram asking him to appear in Washington tomorrow before the committee investigating the rubber situation, but said that he would be unable to appear until next week.
"Yes, it's true that we leased a million acres in Liberia for planting rubber," said "Mr. Firestone. "We are building a harbor there now and we already have under production a 2,000-acre rubber plantation set out by the British in 1810. It reverted to the Liberian Government later and we have it now.
"We have sent ten experienced planters and are sending ten more, each with full equipment and engineering force to plant 1,000 acres, so we will have 20,000 acres planted in 1826."
Mr. Firestone said that 30 to 31 cents would be a good, fair price for rubber. "When the British passed the Stevenon act to limit the exportation of Rubber the maximum price they figured on was 36 cents," he added.
A Voice from the South
WASHINGTON.—Commenting upon the political problems of the Negro, Editor J. H. Watson, in a recent issue of the Supreme Circle News, published in Albany, Georgia, says: "Politically, the Negro is not even holding his own; he has been slipping backward for the past decade, and it is because he does not interest himself, sufficiently to qualify and participate in matters political. He has no political program, and is never found a hint on any proposition. Yet he swears the Republicans have betrayed him and the Democrats would destroy him, and rests his case there." C. P. J.
DO YOU WANT PROSPERITY HEALTH and HAPPPINESS?
Tell your secrets to the right man and draw from the world the best it has to give.
CALL TODAY.
Cash or Credit
DOWNING HERB CO.
99 Downing St.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
YOUR DESTINY
What Has Destiny in Store For You
This Year?
Your Horoscope for 1926 Will Tell You
PRICE, $1.00
Address, E. J. Hunt
160 W. 128th St. New York City
FOR SALE:
Billard room. Terms to suit. J. Jankina,
S. E. 134th Street.
Commerce 1125 1125 month. Mail carriers,
too many clerks. School coaching—FREE.
country. Sample coaching—FREE.
Write immediately. Franklin Institute,
Dept. N.E. Rochester, N.Y.
Violin layers to view violin at any time at
187 W. 134th St. Rochester.
MALE HELP WANTED
Civil Engineer—One experienced in designing reinforced concrete and steel preferred. Apply Foederick Massiah, 1342 Cypress St., Philadelphia, Pennau.
Fireman, Braakmen, Bagagemen, sleeping quarters. Apply Foederick Massiah, 1342 Cypress St., Philadelphia, Pennau.
patience unnecessary. Apply Foederick Massiah, 1342 Cypress St., Philadelphia, Pennau.
OELECTIVES—Travel. Make secret investigations. Experience unnecessary. Write Lawyer for government Detective, 1966-D. Broadway, Near TO LEE
Furnished rooms, large alley, 275 W. 141st St.
Furnished rooms, large alley, 275 W. 141st St.
Furnished rooms, large alley, 275 W. 141st St.
KY Station, Apr. 7.
215-13th Ave. Apt. 6. Furnished rooms.
Large, small; private; all home privileges.
Near subway.
To let. Suitable for couple or refined gentlemen; very cheap to U. N. L. A. member only. Suit $28 W. 11th Street.
New apartment house—3 and 4 rooms.
Improvements; all hallway and carriage. Apply Supt. 199 W. 14th St. N. Y. C.
Furnished—Light rooms; respectable; colored. Call 1390 to 3, 6:31 day Saturday and carriage. Elevator, April 17, 211 W. 11th St. N. Y. C.
Four private rooms; $50; five rooms. $20-$48. All modern improvements. 3 N. W. 16th St.
Excellent rooms, private house, parquet throughout, electricity, gas, hot, hot water, 2 baths 4 toilets, 10 wash rooms, 2 kitchens, extraordinary advantages. 23 Edgecombe 219-221 East 127th St—34 room apartments. $20-$24; $20-$33. Newly painted and papered. Hot water. Call Harlem 2122.
Three room apartment. Furnished. Newly renovated. $10 per week. Wright 181 W. 134th St.
Four rooms. $50.00; private. Five rooms. $20.00 to $64.00. Bain, electricity, hot, hot, hot. Newly painted. 3 E. 114th St. N. Y. C.
Furnished rooms, large and small. Respectable people. Williams. 32 W. 127th St.
To Let—Large next furnished room. Private. Kewick. 227 W. 134th St.
75 E. 127th St—Furnished room for rent; one or two people. N. Hail, Apt. 30.
Furnished rooms—Large, small. Private. Call all day. Burke. 19 W. 128th St. N. Y. C.
Furnished—Light rooms; respectable; colored. Call 1390 to 3, 6:31 day Saturday and carriage. Elevator, April 17, 211 W. 11th St. N. Y. C.
For Rooms—Two houses—3, 2, 4, 5 room Apts. bath. 218-16 and 219-21 Edgecombe Ave. Agents on promotion.
To Let-Three rooms furnished. Bath. 120 ft. W. 100 ft. E. W. Wharton, Binghamton 1344.
30 of Montague Ave. Apt. K. South at 100 ft. E. W. Purpledown room, modern room, elevator service off night. Just the library room party. Call frequent 997.
To Let-street, private furnished room. All accommodations. W. 100 ft. E. W. Call pay them.
A room and furnished room, aptside by room, with balcony. Furnished room. W. 100 ft. E. W. Call pay them.
DANGER WANTED
Bath and Lavender room. W. 100 ft. E. W. Call pay them.