The Negro World

Saturday, March 10, 1928

New York, New York

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Our Programme By HON. MARCUS GARVEY Founder and President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association The weekly message of the Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, not having reached the office of the Negro World up to the time of going to press, the following excerpt from a remarkable address delivere' by the famous leader at Liberty Hall, New York City, on November 25, 1922, is published for the careful consideration of readers the world over. The full text of this speech appears in the second volume of "Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey," or "Africa for the Africans," pages 93-100: Removing the Misunderstanding In advocating the principles of this Association we find we have been very much misunderstood and very much misrepresented by men from within our own race, as well as others from without. Any reform movement that seeks to bring about changes for the benefit of humanity is bound to be misrepresented by those who have always taken it upon themselves to administer to and lead the unfortunate, and to direct those who may be placed under temporary disadvantages. It has been so in all other movements whether social or political; hence, those of us in the Universal Negro Improvement Association who lead do not feel in any way embarrassed about this misrepresentation, about this misunderstanding as far as the Aims and Objects of the Universal Negro Improvement Association go. But those who probably would have taken kindly notice of this great movement have been led to believe that this movement seeks, not to develop the good within the race, but to give expression to that which is most destructive and most harmful to society and to government. "I desire to remove the misunderstanding that has been created in the minds of millions of peoples throughout the world in their relationship to the organization. The Universal Negro Improvement Association stands for the Bigger Brotherhood; the Universal Negro Improvement Association stands for human rights, not only for Negroes, but for all races. The Universal Negro Improvement Association believes in the rights of not only the black race, but the white race, the yellow race and the brown race. The Universal Negro Improvement Association believes that the white man has as much right to be considered, the yellow man has as much right to be considered, the brown man has as much right to be considered as well as the black man of Africa. "In view of the fact that the black man of Africa has contributed as much to the world as the white man of Europe, and the brown man and yellow man of Asia, we of the Universal Negro Improvement Association demand that the white, yellow and brown races give to the black man his place in the civilization of the world. We ask for nothing more than the rights of 400,000,000 Negroes. We are not seeking, as I said before, to destroy or disrupt the society or the government of other races, but we are determined that 400,000,000 of us shall unite ourselves to free our motherland from the grasp of the invader. We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are determined to unite 400,000,000 Negroes for their own industrial, political, social and religious emancipation. "We of the Universal Negro Improvement Association are determined to unite the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world to give expression to their own feeling; we are determined to unite the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world for the purpose of building a civilization of their own. And in that effort we desire to bring together the 15,000,000 of the United States, the 180,000,000 in Asia, the West Indies and Central and South America, and the 200,000,000 in Africa. We are looking toward political freedom on the continent of Africa, the land of our fathers." Every Negro should send his friend, mother, father, brother, sister, sweetheart, wife, or other relatives a copy of the book that is being read the world over, "AFRICA FOR THE AFRICANS" THE PHILOSOIHY of MARCUS GARVEY as A PRESENT FOR THE NEW YEAR. All Leaders in the U. N. L. A. should have a copy to study the principles of the greatest Negro movement Vol. I, $1.75; Vol. II, with 25 Illustrations, $3.00; combined offer, $4.50 post paid Large Size Plates of Men, Minas Garvey (for printing), 40 cents. African Photographs (for printing), 40 cents. Song Hit of the Season, "KEEP COOL"—SPARKLING, CAPTIVATING, PIANO AND VOCAL ARRANGEMENT—ONLY 25 CENTS PER COPY. SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION ON LARGE GREENS. SEND ORDERS TO MRS. ANHEA SAFERS, BOX 22, STATION I, NEW YORK CITY iialae theo? Flaca “s SF NaNO RONEN Tr CRT TEE THs ee ee = earn PORE pe ae es TET ee ee ae TETHER TIRE OR PROSE ae SRN Sea ea AR) BA GO ea RL AUN ee TARE Reape seme Nn fa Wace sage ee seater * we AR HLT &: AY LARCH 4996: Abeta ten 5 peed gee ees sth eo fe NES iN "THE NEGRG WORMED SATURDAY, MARCHE16, -1926--=) =P yin Bo: BIE UAE i Bee tn SS, | BALE) | a2 (BOY _SAY_!BAYER. ASPIRIN’ and “INSIST? -Unless you-see ‘the “Bayer Cross” .on tablets. you are. ‘not’ getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe ~~ by millions and prescribed by-physicians for 25 years. sgt Gn we me cf Bape Meewtestess of Mansbertivecifester of Seley Boost ee : = DUCE WARNS TROL CRITE . “ROME, Maich 3—Premler Mussolini today Thade «vigorous \etenss of. the _Saeclat regimo-in the Itallan TyrdY and early restated the” Italian. poiiition that’ administration of the dixtrict te a-matter_of Internat. policy, “thterter: ghee in whlch by forelen governments would b% intolerable. Maklay a -long-awasted: xoply_ to Chuncallor “Seip? of Austria, cio: For- wisn Premier defended “the Fascist Government's patience 1h the «Mynin- istration of the Upper Adige rbxton, In which there 1s strong Gee®an- peaking minority, and Jesued a warns Ing that’ the’ fifteen: German-language newapaners, publisved there would be ‘nimmarily sunprersed In ease of a Fe- vival of “intolorabta: Mterference.” Mussolini's Warning . BMusdolint ‘said that despite ta tolonce . of Austrian criticjum, , ne would speak with “thie-atmost eam, iat without cquivocatfon.” ho sald “Furthonnorg, this is tie Inst time atl aball shieuk ton this theme. In sho fvture Lvhsl lot the facts do the lalkin. : “A stat: ‘vespecting self cannot iolerato. furcign interference. . Mr. Fuller. the Governor of Mustachusetts, fan xupplicd us with i ‘striking ex- dunplo en that Aubject.” (fhie reference wis. Lo the Sueco- Vanzotti ease and “raferred to Gove vrnor Fuller's refusal to keep Sacco And Vanzetii=-toth Iallansstrom exe= cution, despite widespread movements in thelr behalt fy forelsn Countried.). Safety “In Question®; ~~ Mussolini added: o 2 eg _ "It ta me tovddstire that insolent Speeches, odious iiNhivatigns ana-val- zar Inspits hwo’ onig one reqult=—to acéelerato the turning -of the Fidelata vise and open sas abs's beyveen twoe ralghborine pepnica. “An eh aad Te in our power yee-wi ty ho friends of the German woiJd,“but on ono. covidi- tion, that fur safety, namely, the exfety: of 42,000,090 Itatlank, rhould not be ppt ove NARUAY Th question.” TAR iathy of wubultting the question, nino ti ef 3 fons, tx/ nunsenie, the Premier a3- Hnred, adding that &f Genova-Harinrnda auch a labyrinth I Would ever oue- need “oF eter.” ‘Thin reference th'the Lengue.of Na- fons, uttered with what appenred a sardénte wmilc, evoked «titers trom among the deputies who crowded the Shnmaber-ty-whieh-te ApoE. ‘The Premier sald reports of Fascist itroeitien wera the more inventions of i dinsahed teemeinntion® «: | Spain Gets.3-Mile Zone Around Tangier 6 ----~ LONDUN.—An ainsoment try been Lronehed . between the” Spaniah , and Feeney), kovernmonts rogardinus Tans pler, ‘The Shaslards Wil xppotne ehtes of pullve and edntrol a three- Imllg sone sironnd the ity: ‘They wilt thud be “able Co prevent umunkling of demi ind anti-Kpanish propaganda tn “ rorriyory sander fete control. STA getioral coamrence 3M be, eum- moned at Malaga nt an‘extly date Jt Das heen aereb.to- favite Talkenceb- rouentaiives spur fortlh Kaly’s elaime before Hekink, Kyench and Spaklen adotexiaten, : 7 Drive Here to Aid Sendino “Eioats forstardiect suptien for the “fézeen of Atinestine Sandino, Nlet= Fagen pele! Jouder, WHE be sought ts A campalan slatted. fou dav ako ty the AliAmeriea Imgrudiet Leane, 23 Union ‘sauiie, A hgtion-wlde: aye Peet Will be mate, according te Mane Bel-Gomes, sort tary of the leozue, To ntder the eammulaa. 2 pastente of rpntica! gapplies and-bandasen will be pont STEN race to Sandeno thi wrelF “throurh,. S¥osian’ Turctos, - the Nienromuin's, ‘perrenal | reprerentative, bere, Mr. Gomes ~a16-—Divtrict-eentern arr fo be opened In a Humber of the larger -cittee throughout zhe.country. . NORDIC SAVAGERY.IN US. SOUTH Negro’ Beliboy “Accused of | Gruesome Southern, “Sport” ., “Insulting : Woman”. in| - of Castrating and Other: -: Mismni Hotel Taken. for.é|..wise Mutilating “Negro Ride by Detectives: and|: Men: Found: with “White ” Riddied with Bulfets-—_ “Women Gains Popularity ~ MIAMI, Fia., March 3.—Police Chie! H, Lealie Quigg’ of Miam! today was ‘accused In ‘court of placing his official ‘Spproval on the alleged lynching of H. Hikter; & Negro .beliboy, By médibers of eC Rolice Department, two of whom re udder, indictment-charging first, do- ree murder. = * ‘The testimony was brought out when Police -Lieutgnant M.“A:. Tibbits. end Detective John Cxudell ‘sought, their release from prison. on ® hubeas corpus writ. Judge: A. J Rove denied. the writ immediately afterward Mayor E, G. Sewoll and members of the City Commission recelvedswunimonses to ap- pear: tomorrow teforg ‘the. Grand Jury, which hig been investigating alleged police terrorism. _ < ‘Withesnes _ tentifed that" Dotective ‘Thomas Nazworth shot and Killed Kler without: provocation, July 15, 1926, after the Negro had been arrested at a hotel on complaint that’he had tngulted a woman guest. Tho Nogro was taken to.police headquarters and later for a aGcHDbIto ride by Lteutenant Tidbits and Detectives Nazworth, Beachey anid Plorce. * tetas ‘On reaching the outskirts of the city, Detectives -Plerce and -Beachey testi- fie, tho’ Negro was femoved from tho machine. Beachey stated that ho ex: pected to ‘s¢o..tho_othen officers “slap, tho Negro-and let him go" ..h the promise he would Ieavt Miami. In- stend Nazworth, tho dotectives testi: fied, drew his pistol. ‘The’ tercifled prisoner xtrurgled with Nazworth, ahd his frst hot went wilds striking Licu- ienunt Tibbits in'the ufde, . Nazworth thin ridifieg, the Nero's body and the four: policemen left it iymg on tho atrect, whilo thoy took Tibhlts to a pospital. They telephoned éuilot Quizzs, who came to the hoapital. Quizz told them, Heachey sald, that they "would hava-to-get. together, on, A story, no that all would agrees" “The chiet ordéred the body" removed from cha utreet and thrown Into fone’ pal- otto xcrubs, Where it, would not-be found for several days. Beactioy added, Viorce teatifled that whet ge body waa’ *dineovered,"” ho took charge of t, Liking {t to an undertiker, and Ro, oficial report was mada’ by bira, at headquarters. i / Plereond Beachoy were not indicted. in eourt today they declared they nad Tibbits und Cnudell wersmero~ by Manders, and that’ the..tndicted men sere no mere guilty thah they were. Chict Quigs denied the charse. "have, never heard of any “such murder aa thia.er of anysmurdor bo- ing committed at any time fn which he Poltce Depastment was implicated,” ia declared” ---— . ‘Indians Colonized.China Before-Christian Eva___ Profesor, Luders also had dixcovpred causal a hetura Ustore we Oriental Research Institute, Rave an ReCodaC yt [in discoveries of ‘an aneteme Indian Son Chino mld oe [covered inseriptions on wooden wedte- honed tbjetn sng stepalin, which wero probably oMcilal sealed letter, [anowlng tant dosthina wed colontend & partion’ of China soveral eves, ber fore hts PProtensor Ludera hi also alucovéred Inseriptions 6n oblonis wooden blocks, Satin ‘whieh He kau! Cues a Mupuber of terms and words tn the linguage current In those pagts’ef China today, evldrnsiy, Catan from WeateraJndlan und Persian lanssuoges. ——— ! Paris Creates Museum, Of “Words and ‘Gcatures” PARIS, —Siang and -colloquiallsms, sank Sonrsnne and Sat, Se he etre fue Ue ge wun che words, ate EE puteoanentiy neererveal iv tha shee Hun of Worle ard Gesture, This uscr pounding places, deat fonmged By the ety, will bo under the tytelage of the Sorbonne. Brench an shee spoken Saal obene ai bs aenek ton eter Achts of the future. Inge exactly hat sasteviat ln" tebe! Kent cofitine to Og Golica bur deutsion’ puetoe-eoi res: onde will take dicte place’ oon wit eee oct Gruesome Southern, Sport” . Of Castrating and Other- -wise Mutilating “Negro - Men: Found with “White -Women Gains Popularity The Jackson, Miss, Daily Clarion- Ledger anys of two pgrters.in « locyl hotel?e 2 7 6 ’ * Jackaon pollce late Wednesday night arrested two ‘Nero men, Major Pink- ‘erson and George Lewis, ana‘awo white women, In &: rooméZof a local hotel, their conduct being. sich as. to. causo a charge of disorderly conduct being Placéd agninst the women; who wore Placed in, jail here, while the Negroes were oprried 0 Raymond “for wate keeping. F - x oleate Jottor adds these detatie: “Lewls and Pinkerson are both re- rerted to be in’ precarious conditions. Te fs mal the charges: had been din- ‘nisged in polleo court when the dop- uty was bringing them back froni Ray- mond to Jackuon, The boys suy the serie offered no roststance whatover and-that‘when they-eaw the mob the doys jerked loose, but the sheritt (thet Is, tho deputy cheriff> grabbed them and turned thonrover to the mob. * “They were sent from here. yes terday “to Rayménd, Miss. this county, ‘for alleged safe ‘keeping. Today at 12 o'clock, noon, -when being brought back ‘to. Jackson, they were taken from the sheriff by a moti and castrated, thyir-ears, cut off and, they were laid on: their backs and heavy ‘men. stood on the two:boys' abdoniens and jirmped up and down on them and thereby rup- tured theme * = ‘This is thé fourth ease in which Negro .boys “have been ~castrated here within the past year charged only with mutual: intercourse with white women, : x LYNCHING IN AFRICA ** “IS NARROWLY AVERTED Europeans in Natal Rush “ail to. - Seize Native—Thwarted, They Destroy Union Dovuments _ | DURVAN, Natal, March 2--An at- -omnpt.ta lynch’ a native was made at Graytown,. néer the.Zululand border, yosterday as thé result of a remark- [able crimé—the wholesile desetration ‘of gravertoncs in the local: cemetery. + Tho relations of tho Europeans and ‘somo of tho nativen hnd boon strained in recent: months, chiefly becuyeo of ‘ho’ antl-Buronean--proparanda of the Industrial and, Commercial Workots Unton, tho bfx native trade: union. “A fow months ago a ‘native -Ax-ofMctal of tho union Waa convicted of deue~ {nk the 190¢ xohettion. z i —Restaeht peluct were Bend nthe comotery and sn drventigation showed Abat 130 memorialt-had decry" detaced, Pollee dogs foltowed the trail of a na- tive, whe, prover to be the man reapons Mble far the 1306 ontragn ‘tho “occurrence exarperated the township ‘and practically te whole population irithersd In the street, With erles of “lynch him!" they mace (so attempts to ruth the Jal t which the prisoner had Leen removed. Some af tho erowd xétuaily ot Inalde the prison, but the authorities induced thom to withdraw. ‘Then, whllo ‘a meslatraie was ap? poaling to the popuines te control themselves, the prisoner sax -receetly temoved to” Maritsbure. "7, “Thin eauked anotier “ebuilitled of foling and a‘large party of men raided tho office of the native union, brought out, the contents and burned them in| tho antvect.. Another erty of mon treated siisitiaely the local officers of tho union at Krintzkup. The, mabiie police force was dispatched io -Gray~ iis : Negro Forced to Kill * By White Employer _ 7 Saved from Chair MONTGOMERY, Ala, Feb. 28.—That Justice docs not always go astray whore the rights of-Seqvoon tre -oor cerned has been cltarly demonstrated hera by the aetign of Governor Bibb Graven inseaving, the Jifo of, Hayes Leonard, colored. convicted of a ‘part In tho murder of Jydgo Lamar. Smith of Seaturipke Leonard, who. confessed. the crime, waa sentenced to death, but on the evo of his-execution the ov- crnor ‘commuted his sentence to life imprisonment. -Ateant:me-Clyde Bach~ valor. Leondra’s “waite enipivsers wise ‘had been convicted Jointly with “nla for tho crime, went to the electric hate pom wavha ago, ° : ‘Bachelor contequed-taat hehaa torced Leonard to fire tho fatal shot, dnd in| consequence a number of prominent WhtS PEODImetating represeriatins Ot the Interracial Commission; united tn request for clemency for Leonard, The pardon board declined to recor mente the. commutation, but the Gove ernor took the matter in his own hands an@ saved the Negro’s life. © * "°° Kingsof Afghans =. ? is nin, Nite Pamey *t -, BERLIN. — Amanollan_Kben, King of Afghanistan, who '9 om & tour.of Worepa, now. owns “4 nine-passenger Junkers plane. we “The Orlental_rpler, who arrived .tn Berlin ree-wtly, inspected’ the Tempe(- hot alddrosie ang while there thedlecs man Government presented “im with the plane, which alsa_hne accommoda- tion for.two pilets and wireless oper= “IN NICARAGUA WAR FAN SENATOR'S IRE Senator.-Dill. Demands = drawal ¢t=Marines—Borah Says ‘Senate Can't Compel \Actlon—Spirited Debate” _ WASHINGTON, March 2—Sonator Dut (D., Wash.) today’depnsinded thay tnd. Unlioa Brome eine oe ibe drawn from Nicaragua.’ He declared we have ho-eontract.there-thet~oalls for’ the sacriqce of Americans, He precipitated ‘a. spirited discussion’ by Teading into thp-record ®, press dla: patch that hive marines had beon killed in a.recont ambuth. =<” = Mr, Dill ‘auggested" that Séhator Hefiin (D., Ala.)-Include in his pend- Ing: revolution a provision to bring ‘hora the bodies of the men killed this week, ' Senttor Doayield,(D» Toxasy ans Mr. Dill ff he knew what had becdmo of-the Hoflin and other resoluttona Fo: lating to-Nicaragua._ ¢ ‘© ascume,” replied Mr. Dill, “that thay are sleeping the usual slecp that Knows no waking, in tho Foreign Rela tions Committee.”. . Borah Tella of Hearings {Sonator Borah (R, Idaho), chatr- roan’ of tho committee, interrupted: to explain that the resolutions were belng oondldered, and thet within forty-eight hours the hearing, on’.them would be printed, so Senators could have copléa, “Wo: haven't gono into the conces: sions of ilnancial operations, but, in my oplufon, we" hive’ fully exhausted tho ‘facts conecraing thé - militney phawés,” added Mc. Borah. : In responso to. a question“ by Mr2 Dil, Mr: Borah declared that when resdlutions were introducédy ‘gz Havand Conference gras singed and It was thought wie by all pert includling’ advocates-of tho.readh 1 postpono actign.” > ye Me Bill wanted & "Sb. 3 ty voted cn. . yi “I can't say,” Mr. Borah replied. 7 | “1 want to know,” tnoisted-Mr. Dui, 'i€-theto will bon voto, dn’ whether. we | vill continue this “war, In Nlearagua?”: Clashes Wilh Chairman -Bir, Borah dnawered he dla ‘not know sf <any “authority the Senate had’ to sompel the President ‘to withdraw tho marines, ae 59s : “Weil, wo might pass @ rovolution nd sco whether ay nor It-would have ny "effect on the Presidhet,” snapped Mie, Dill. “AE Tent” wo could-let~ the country iinow where we stand’ Sonator Shortridge (R.-Cal.)—asked se. Dil {f ho. would withdraw the oops ‘at once and leave “the lives 0 American citizens ‘and property at.the nercy Sf thin bandit,, Sanding.” Mr. Dili indicated he would. ndding: ‘There fe ho proof that Amorican tives nave een threatened, utd wo are not ir tho business of protecling property st American citizens all over.tho world y having marines sintloncd there tor hé purpose of maldng a prodt of St.” “Gallery Applauds Hine ~ ‘Mr. Shortridge sait: “The Senator ts ma notin, sympathy and ho disap? mnie me grote” 7 {i Go not caro partanaAy apauty nits" seaponded “36. Dit. "L dow'| rant the sympathy of cay American! io would have men. who ealisted In ho atmed forces of the United Stites 5 protect this country and this flag ied to protect men who Invest in for- ign coluntrien tn Geder that they may ronlteer. : : ‘Tats dectaration was follwod by an uipreak*of applause ‘in the alley. Sinator Edge. (R, Nod.) asked Me, HH AE he would have thy Unlted States Spadiate itn solemn contract with the aders of noth parties in, Nearasun, “X don't consider tt “(the Stimson} oniritet) & legal contract fh any Way,” newered Mr.,DUI, “and I weuld’ ce~ jove the marines and let tho Nieara~, ans set up thelr own Government.” agement just Monday between marine rex and the bandit forees of San-1 ino, wax reeefved today by the Navy epartment from Rear Admiral David , Scllirs, eomménier-eF the “‘ipoctal ryivé uquadron and the senior United | tates miituy oflleer tn Nlearasuan |, ators, “Five marines. wore Seilled ahd ne werd Wounded; one acrloiscly. eazy Teachers Seek *- To Increase Usefulness : —AWASHTNGION, March 4—Or 945,- 600. teachers prineipats, supervisors nd administrative ‘oilicers. In publi olementary and ‘secondary schoohs of tho United States in 1926-27, 327,462 were enrolled In summer xchools dur- ing the lust summer, qeeording to figures recentiy compiled’ by the Na- Monn avieation Association, — “OF thens, 247,227, gr 222 percent of the: total ‘numberof school men. and samen of uly coaisyy Wir <urote? in ~ teacher training . or | education couses. * Tho: larxest proportion .en- rolled trom any. one. State, waa" 62.5 poreent from Colorado." : ‘Alabama come nest, ith anc enrell? ment of 36.2 percent; O¥lahoma: stood Courth, with 42.3 percent of the teach. crs of the State enrolled In courses for professional Improvement. © ~ Ets) EGYPT RESTS BRITISH DAMN CAIRO,-Esypt, Mareli-4.—The, resig- pation of the Egyptian Cabinet was anded: to King Fuad by Premier Sar- wat Pasha this evening following the vide of: the Premier tS Lord” Lhya, British High Commissioner, in’ which he conveyed a :note rejecting the draft for m treaty. alliance; between Great Britain‘and Exypt. King. Fuad 18 expected to éall on Nahas Pashg, leader of tho ..Wafd party commanding ¢ majority of the [Chainbor to form a new -govornment} but the situation arising trom the re- Jection by: Nationalist loaders. of-thé arate Aogotiatod: betwoen Premier, Sary wat-and Lor Lloyd ts highly uncor= tain, a . : ‘The problem of Angio-Egyptian re- Intins may’.bo summed up in one word—"watey"—which, fundamentally, governs all the actions “of both par tles to this internetfonal quarrel. Canal Britain's Chief Interest Great “Britain's supreme -mnterest in Egypt; to which’ all olse ts secondary, fg the security of the Suox Canal link between the Medlterrancan and. tho’ empire overseis, Egipt’s supreme in- terest" {s,.the- security of the Nile, water supply, which 1s so, vital to tho country'g.existence. With India, no- tably,, watching’ olpsély te “evolop- ment’ 6f.British polley ia Exypt, this, countiy. ts angioun to avold.taking ony Bite cogarded sa70 Pie ic pteates On Gr hand be peea NActonstism sfelustant..to.ebato formally, Pirie tice, tis de- ma ERA copeniience., Essentially, HOMME 1s tho two streams of water: polléy which apnear. again to: Have washed’ out tho hope of wottlemont. Groat Britala tn 1924, following tho murder of Sir Loo ‘Stack, Governor Gonoral of. the Sudan, "the vast terri- tory. tying to the routh of. Egypt, by. sjecting Egyptian omcinle and troops: from tho’ Sudan applied a strangle-hold 10. svt, aimed at forcing her to ac- sept conditions .whjch yvore Judged noeeesary-for tho nccurlty of tho Sude Canal by .threatening. the Nfo «water supply, which ts this country's life blood.” * rs Toki Society Formed — < _. Fo Improve Relations ~~ OF "Japan and-Stam * K resent letter trom Toklo r porte that @ Japan-Slam Society hau beer formed*in the Japanene capita’, which, it was stggested, might provo tho first atep toward 2 closer rapproachement between the two kingdoms. - It was added that Japarr would. soon ratao the an erabaaey and Te CT Dithaleeny the present Stamete Mini tere Tokley-woula He zogie the: tH ambawmador ste Japan” * s aimee wea anes ake hie ipittattve tn thevattte had been taken by Chaminong-Dithaker, his first ef- forts had heew surpaescd by the antict- pations of the Japanese Government, file foreanw a tutaro around for Japaneso “emigration, a market, for Fapanese manuragired artictes and a secies fan SHG mirhE te clined heeded shy montcrtal ‘ThesBankkok Nail reprints a tong interviow with Baron Okura, the prest= dont of Okure & Co, whe visited Stam faut autainn, ‘Pho bavea alge “in toetvet the. countries of the World there are Japan Socletiva.. They can be foynd in Germany, “England, Vrance, itdly, the Untied States, South Ameriegn countries and Avsiraila, They ase Reneral sleetinis places for Sapanens and thé ‘Teeldgnih of eath country. ‘Through them Geemans, Ine- Ush, Frenchmen, Iteltuns and others nfect-nnd exchange Ideas on .cultues, economies and othor subjects of Inter. est to the mations fnvolved There | hyphenated societles try to interpret’! Japan abrond aris. other countrica tn Japan. ~ as “*Should such a socleiy-be fnstiuuted. I belleve it would be doubly’ effcasive. Very lita te thown tn Tefen of Slam But the clvilisution of cach ta ground ed More OF less_on ‘the samé founda- tion. Our religion fs similar. We are poth Orientals. Wheneversn desire for tho organivation of a uoelety. tha wlll pring? our. tte countries. dato. closer ouch arrives, you can be axsured that f WHI aid it fo tho best of my ‘abiiizy.” Porto Rican Women « Visit U. S.. to Ask 5 * Congress for Vote The detoxation of Posto’ Rlcin wSnion “whichte-stetetngschts country fe request Connress ta.zeant aurteuge to-wonten if Porto Plco, was reecived recently dy: Mrs. Henry Goddard Trea, SHR Crater the New York ‘League of Women Voters’ head, quarters, 420-Lexington avenue.” - “Mins de Hostos, ax apoxcaman for, he party; told of the work done_in Porto Rico: ia ‘behalf of woman suf. trage during the-past eleven years. She said tile men of Porto Rico are hostile -o, equal suffrage. “It has been a par- Hculasly iment’ strugete, the ox- plained, “because the country, being & lependency; bes power to give womer he vote in’ ite dwn Legisiaturé, ab ough the opponents of much 's dM. paley that the Congress of the United | grates shoul make the measure-f- eptive. So” “Thin has been owe firet dinect appeat o Cengress,”"she said, “and we sre cnSdent now thay tt wil.#iot be loos afore we will have the rote” = ~ INFAMOUS MORTER ESTATE CASE ~~: BY HIGHEST: BRITISH: TRIBUNAL Report Recefved/ from ‘Belize, British .Handaras, ‘That * “News of Success of Appeal in Case Involving Prop-. _. erty Valued - at $150,000 Has. Been -Flashed - Over :” Radio from England—Belize Judge ‘Had’ Virtually’ ous Was Mlegal ‘to Work, tee the Retlemption of ‘Actording to.a communication received from ttie Hon, SAL Haynes; High Commissioner for Virginia and the Carolinas of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, the Association has won its appeal in’ she famous Morter’ will case which last month was oo- cupying the. attention: of the highest British tribunal.'»Up to’ the time of going to press, however, no official confiriuation of this splen- ‘did news had. reachéd The Negro Warld office: vos WS Mr. Haynes's letter follows — oe : ae The Editor of The Negro World, March 2, 1928 142 W, 130th Street, me et og .o _ New York City, N. Ys a Poca a 4 Dear Stf*-The following is culled from an official communtcas, | tion-received yesterday from Belize, British Honduras, Central America; my native land: ° : f ae ae + > “As I write news has. just reached us by radio that His Maj- esty has allowed the'appeal in re theMorter ail case.” " na (Signed) W. HARRISON-COURTENAY. Mr. Courtenay is the Secretary of the Belize Literary and Debating Club, the outstanding organization of culture in the Colony, whose officiat representative I-am_in the United States, He is attached to the Colonial Scarctariat and reccitly returned: " “from an extensive tour of Europe. He'is.one of the most-promi _-nent young men of the’Race in British Honduras and scion of a > distinguished: family. - : a i. : sei Yours very trulyz— ; es Mee a S.A-HAYNES.. 2 * _.. HighCoinmissioner for Virginia and ‘the Carolinas. * + 906 Whitehead Avenue, Berkley-Norfolk: Va, + >... + a - ‘HISTORY OF THE CASE - * It .wilt be recalled that Sir Isaiah Morter, a successful merchant oF Belize, British Honduras, and 2 stanch member of the Universal Negro Iniprovement Association, died-on-the.7th of April, 1924-be+_ queathing practically his entire estate, estimated fo be’ worth more, than $150,000, to the Universal Negro lmprovement Association to rurther the work-of Aiea redéraption: The will was. contested in the‘courts of Belize, ad after several hearings which attracted the’ attention of the whole;world of Negroes, by. reason of the astound- ing issués which were raised, Chief Justice H. K. M. Sisnett, of British Honduras, réndered a decision adverse .to’ the Univeral Negro.Improvement Association, ruling-in-effect tha it-was “illegal” to work for the redemption of Africa and that the will should be set aside.” .- eS : - Ena Iecal battle, which extended.over a year, was waged at great -xpense-t0-the Universal_Negro_Improveryent Association, and the expenses were trebled when it became necessary to take the case on appeal to-the Privy. Coiuéil-of England. Ne New immigration Quotas « Benefit Irish Free: State WASHINGTON, Feb. 27.—A revision of~immicention—auotas_atecttng a eansintied fo" the abate todey by President Coolldge on’ behalf of the Sverstarles of Stato, Commerce and Enver, tn“gesnonse to « resolution. by Senator. "Stilpstend, Farmer-Zabor, of Minnesota, “Under Gic"ivision UE annual qnota for Great Brletin and northern Ireland fs reduced by 7.145, cmuntidly, the new gkrge Deine 6680400 against the estimate of 73,097 transmitted <@ Con- Brean in January, 2921. "Phe new quo- tau) based on national orlkts,, would become effective next July 1 unless Congress meantime ausiienda the quota provision, as it did Inat year. - Tho largest alngle tnereace of quota tx aint for tho Irish Free State, the now estimate boing 27.427, am amalnst thjy oristoat estimate of 13,862, giving | ‘The Teallan quota. ts reduecd from 2.091 te 6,989; tho Raselan quota from S781 to 3,540, and thd French. qos trom 2,887 to 2.008. Se ‘AN of the “Scwhidindvian countrics! aro°given slight Mmereanes, Denmark's quotas going up from 204% to. 1,234, Sweden's from‘3,200 to 3,099 and Nor- wats from 2267, to 2,102. Poland's qiiote jumped from 4,878 to 8,090; Ger- many’ from 23,128 to 24,908; Caecho- Slovakia’s from 2.248 to 2726; Boi rium'n from #19 {0 2,228, Austria‘e from 1486 to 1.699, tho Netherlands rom, 2.421 to 3,083 and Switzerland's rom 1498 to 1,614. . ~The Joint separtmental committee \ppointed %6 arrive at tho national >rigin basis for the, quotas said an in- | restizntion by tho American Counctt if Learned Socteries indicated that the anptish element ax given in tho een- ury of population growth was too ange, and it Was recommended tliat nia-clement do reauced by 10 pet ‘cont. nd distributed mong other nations presented, in thopoguintion of 37°0. Goldsmith Script Nets - $28,000 at Auction nee ZONTON,. Fed. 28a. cacora: pri -of 5,600 (828,000) was paid for an Oliver Goldsmith manuscript at ‘an ‘auction here this afternoon. “Maggs Brothers, art dealers, were. the sué- cebeful biddere fore volums, “The Game of Ciioss,” oy Vide, uanvinims into. English by-Galdsmith and indited entirely tm’ hie handwriting, constitut- ing’ thé longest. extant Goldemmur poetic mmauseript. toa ah ~-Am offer of £4,000 ($20;000) cabled from Americn was soo surpassed $a (Qe Badan for, the wanpscript, whieh! wat the slot valuable 18 the tamovs Worery of late RH. Rimingten- Wieea. ~ BOYCOTT OF RENCKEN FOR YEAR SUGGESTED Southern Professor Calis Hint ..cading-Exemplar_of Smart. ness at Any.Price’ ‘ - ‘A boycott of the work of H. Ey Mencken for one year was cugkested to members of the Leasue tox Bolitieat Etueatioa in “Town Hal, New ‘York, fast Saturday, by, Dr. Ewin. Mims, profentor of neitwh at , Vanderbis University, Nashyiiie, Tenn. «He leo ‘tired on "The Cult of Smaztness” and “quoted two passages from afr, Mericken, he @tsliked, adding: “f think tho: best was of treating “Mencken, who ts tho Teadinyr 4xemplar -of thy tendency’ to ward sntirtness at any. price, would be for 4. ali-to tnore Rin comptetely fo% ona year, at the end of which he whl have dicapneared from Amerteen evatare. “With esa eatreme representatives of the cult of smartness” De, BMiane contrived, “we muct eeat in. nome other ‘way. Genforship dn Wecless. The Watch and Ward Sdelety of Boston is a tnekinchofjsiitstration of hpw not to Wo. ft. But.we can sive. inereauing: Attention ,and nnplauso to thoxe cree tivo writers who, ‘while thorongaly modern In.spirit and technique, have Kept a certain balance and perspect= tve—atuch:pocts ag Robinson and Froat and Vachel Lindsay, itch ‘novellate 25 Elleh Glasxow and Willa Cather, whore work iiMl_be. red long atter ‘Ener Gahtry’ is forgotten, ait wach-dramae_ ste ds Burene O'Neill. | : em mee. mm Baws? Thia Felks! Zere’s 5 ds ef Solid od FOUNas ¢ GHE Tlach av Manne Boole nite GY money wats Endeeweight meins’ your vitality fe under pare your strengin and emery Relow ormaah 26 ne wonder If see ae Uhine aceawny with sunken cheat and. Rotiows in your cheos you always foct domn—tn—the—month,—diseouraged—ane— rur down‘in health. : ‘There ten't an Uiderwelgbt man or woman on “entth Who” weUlanre ton Petter 6; thelr welght: was what TE ghould be. oe ima: That's why everyman. and wo! whose Sones fo scaniy civorse ooh who ‘want to gain in health and have > an attractive figure should take ad. Vantage of McCoy'b offer, | ¥e @ MibicCay taxes of the Tisk—Road the sixty,cent boxes of McCoy's Tablets or 3 One-Dollar bettien Sey thie ae derwelght ran or woman doten't gata atleast & pounds und feel conipicees satiated with the marked imapromesasy in mectehe-your Grospist te Sooke 2 reture ihe frurchese price ‘The’ samme McCoy's Cod’ Liver Of Tedleta has been _shortéued——juet date foe McCoye Tablets at any acne store fiGer's, Labcretorion, Ine. Oe W, tae eT Ygtecet, New Vert Cie RESULTS OF 9 YEARS OF GANVEYISM REVIEWED BY HON. E. B. KNOX AS WHITE STUDENT BODY LENDS EAR Columbia Students, with Prof. Clarence V. Howell of Reconciliation Trips Committee, Applaud Speakers as They Aggressively State the Aims and Objects of the U. N. I. A—Mma. Ebimber Earns Special Appreciation—Hon. E. B. Knox Says Hon. Marcus Garvey Has Produced a New Negro Who Cannot Be Fooled or Denied LIBERTY HALL, New York, Sunday Night, March 4.—The proceedings at the great forum of Negro Liberty tonight were in the nature of a double-header. In the first place, it was Garvey night, the first Sunday of the month, when members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association throughout the world do special honor to their chieftain. And then it was the night when among the Liberty Hall thousands were a number of white guests, a student group which, like many others, under the aegis of the Reconciliation Trips Committee, of which Professor Clarence V. Howell is one of the directors, tour the country gaining at first hand information as to the points of view of yarious groups and institutions. Hon. J. H. Miller, 1st Vice President of the New York Local, occupied the chair, while on the platform were Hon. E. B. Knox, personal representative of the President-General; Mme. M. L. T. Ebimber, Asst. International Organizer of the Universal Negro Improvement Association; Prof. Clarence V. Howell and a number of visitors. A brief concert program was rendered after which the speechmaking followed, Hon. E. B. Knox delivering the principal address. Toward the close of a very enthusiastic, meeting a splendid military demonstration was made by a crack squad of the Universal African Legion, personnel of the headquarters Royal Guards. WANTED. 500 MEN 500 To join the Uniform Ranks of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, known as the Universal African Legions. Therefore, any male member of the organization that is in good financial standing is eligible to join. The kegiment of Legions known as the Royal Guards, at headquarters, has been allowed to extend its territory, taking in the entire States of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The drive is now on to get 600 men in uniform out of the above mentioned States. Commanders of Legion Posts, get busy and get men to join your Post. Get your name on the Merit Roll in the General's office. All Legions that have uniforms should have their Commanders write to the Adjutant-General's office and get information regarding the correct dress, as every uniform must be the same in this regiment. Let's put it over. Get in line for the big parade Join the Uniform Ranks (Signed) BRIG. GENERAL H. SALTUS Adjut-General Headquarters 142 West 130th St., N. Y. C. MME: EBIMBER'S ADDRESS MME-EBIMBER'S ADDRESS Mme. M. T. L. Eibmer, Assistant International Organizer, was the first speaker. She paid a splendid tribute to the Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. It was very fitting, she said, that on the first Sunday of each month Negroes in their Liberty-Halls throughout the world should pay tribute to the remarkable and gifted leader who in nine brief years had revolutionized not only the thought of Negroes but the thought of the world and had given to Negro men and women a new lease on life. On that Garvey Night the leader of Garvey was the one deported there of the machinations of his enemies, but wherever he was he was still "The Tiger" to the Niger peoples of the world. She thought the name "Tiger" conferred upon Marcus Garvey by a member of an allon race, was indeed very befitting, for the tiger was no respecter of persons. "The tiger will bite you as soon as he will bite me," observed the speaker, and the audience laughed and cheered. Paying the Price. "The Hon. Marcus Garvey," Mime, Ebimber continued, "went to prison. All great men have had to suffer Napoleon was sent to St. Helena, Mahatme Gandhi who leads the Indian movement, suffered in prison, but that did not kill the Indian movement. Trotsky was exiled. McSwainy of Ireland suffered that Ireland might be a republic. All nations have their great men and all nations honor their great men. Then why should not we call Marcus Garvey great and honor him because he is great? Remember "The Universal Negro Improvement Association, which the Hon. Marcus Garvey founded, has circumvigilated the globe. Old Glory, there are lots of things you have told us and done for us which we will never forget. Old Glory, there are lots of things you have done for us we would like to do for you. Old Glory, if there is anything in the world like compensation for the need you have done for us. But at the same time, Old Glory, remember the thousands of our dead, our sons and daughters joined in the South. Remember how the cruel巾裳们 have burned innocent man. Remember, Old Glory, that the tom-tom is going to sound again. Remember, Old Glory, that the Universal Negro Improvement Association, once only a small institution, has taken up its political status in the world today, and the leader of this mighty movement is the bulldog of the Negro race. Take Courage and Go Forward New Racial Conselhouense ... New Racial Consciousness "Yes, white friends and visitors, we revere and honor Marcus Garvey because he is a great teacher. It is he who has not his foot down on the mixing of the races so that today Negroes of the Universal Negro Improvement Association no more want to marry white than white wants, to marry black. He has taught black men to love and appreciate the women, among the beat and noblest in the world. Marcus Garvey has taught the Negro man to keep out, of the other face and see that they keep out of his. The Garvey movement is a movement that is standing up for racial uplift, racial solidarity, and a new and undoubted racial consciousness." (Appeals). MR. C. F. FANNING ADDRESS Mr. C. F. Fannin, a member of the New York Local, came forward to speak against applause. He said he COMING LIBERTY HALL 120 W. 138th St., N. Y. A DRAMA PLAYED BY MEMBERS OF NEW YORK LOCAL WILL BE PRESENTED BY THE CHILDREN OF THE JUVENILES Watch for Date Benefit Liberty University desired, to speak to them, in the five minutes allotted him, on the subject, "Why We Want and Must Have Africa." The Negro, he said, must have Africa primarily because since the advent of Marcus Garvey he has become convinced of the fact that the Negro was torn from the continent of wealth for the specific purpose of fostering the white man's civilization materially, and inasmuch as the introduction of machinery, accompanied with the immigration of alien peoples, has replaced and is fast replacing the Negro more and more in manifold capacities, it is for the Negro to do something specifically for himself or perish as a race of people. And he was there that night to state that 400,000,000 Negroes were no more inclined to die than any others. He desired to state if there were one billion eight hundred millions living in the world; if the white race, conspiring of 550,000,000, considered it necessary to occupy 47,000,000 square miles of earth out of 45,000,000, then Negroes were perfectly reasonable and rational inanking for at least 12,000,000 square miles of earth. Service—Then Denial The Negro wanted Africa, the speaker declared, because, notwithstanding the fact that the Negro had helped to perfect the other race's civilization, in every way, notwithstanding the fact that the Negro had shouldered arms on the various battlefields of the world from time to time and rendered yoyoman service, notwithstanding the fact that the Negro had assisted allen peoples in creating mighty, institutions, access to them had been ingrangibly denied the Negro. Strive as he might, assist all he could, Negro's lot was discrimination and prejudice, the lynch-rops and flaming fire. Black People Also Human The Negro wants Africa because all other contiants have shown that it is impossible for them to treat the Negro as other men, and the Negro thinks that it is necessary that he produce a new status, a new plan. The Negro does not think that others intend to treat-him right until he has established himself on an equal plane. The Negro believes that when he has put himself in the position of Japan as a race it will not be necessary to plead with anybody for a square deal. It had proved too difficult for others to understand that black people were not to be treated as believers when the Negro shall have harnessed the forces necessary and was in a position to employ the means that other races and nationals employed, then it would not be very hard to convince anybody that black men were men. Solidarity "We want to redeem Africa," concluded the speaker, "because we believe there the tyrant shall move our homes mound rent." We want, to redeem Africa because we believe, that the Red, Black and Green should wave over all Africa, and in that Land God should bless a president of our own. When we shall have achieved there a racial status second to none, when we shall have achieved a racial solidarity, we believe all men in the world will know how to respect and consider the Negro race. I believe that the concentrated activity of 400,000,000 Negroes will constitute a problem with which men will have to deal most arrogantly. Tan him to you that you that my God, for it he who has given me and is giving me the urge and inactivity to engage in one of the most noble and glorious and useful tables man, woman on child, any individual, group or race can conceive that lives to that of building a nation by and through white peace and goodness and security must come." (Applause.) HON. E. B. KNOX'S ADDRESS Kon. R. B. Knox, personal representative of the president-general, spoke as follows: "Take joy in lottery years of Garvoyism in the world. I rejoice with pleasure the depth from which Garvoyism has elevated us and the heights we have attained. I rejoice to note the enthusiasm on your faces. I rejoice at the expressions that have been made by various speakers demonstrating to the world that the Negro has imbibed a new spirit and determination for achievement. I am glad to note that the Hon. Marcus Garvoy, in spite of all of the handicap, mental and otherwise, that the Negro has had to encounter through hundreds and hundreds of years of opposition has been able to lift the Negro mind and make him think of his motherland as others think of them. I am glad to know tonight that, as a result of nine years of Garvoying—the world may just, the world may sometimes just upon the Negro as a joke—but I am glad to my tonight that deep in the heart of every man with common sense, regardless of what he be in he regards the Negro, since Garvey comes on in various problems of the wilderness. Found the Negro in land and flight. Garvey found the Negro in very dignified circumstance; sound the Negro a victim of an alien civilization; sound the Negro in the girl of an alien religion; sound the Negro a victim of deep-seated propaganda engineered under the guise of education. The Humans Garvey, after touring the whole world studying the Negro problem, studying his people, studying their virtues and their faults, has been able to make the Negro see the true condition that surrounds him, and sight the Negro stands up telling the world that he shall support, with all his might and main, the principles of truth and justice; that with the Red the Black and the Green as his symbol, he is determined to plant upon the hills of Africa his own educational institutions, his own religious institutions, his own economic, his own governmental institutions, and so govern and control his own deity. "Nine years of Garvylism have made a New Negro. Nine years of Garvylism have reformed the Negro given him courage and confidence; made him understand that his problem must be solved by himself; made him understand that most of the doctrine that had been held out to him under the guese of education was designed to hold him down. The Negro has been the building of Garvylism, that despite the fact of great nations of justice and equality, even in the most advanced institutions of this civilization are to be found deeply contrived schemes to hold the Negro down; but the Negro has realized, the Negro understands well the foundations upon which all good things are built. The foundations, upon which all good things rest are truth and justice. Truth and justice come from the God that made us, believe to it if we will our hands in the Garvyl program, keep our minds contended upon truth and justice, work with all our might and main, with implicit confidence in God. He will not be a respecter of porors. Aims and Objects "In his announcement that he will be hero tonight with his club, Professor Howell asked us to speak upon the aims and objects of the Universal Negro improvement Association, but he will pardon me for choosing to speak, instead, on the past history of the Universal Negro improvement Association. It is a well-known association and objects of the Universal Negro improvement Association are to establish a government in Africa. It is a well-known fact that the Hon. Marcus Garvey has no other ambition than to establish a government owned and controlled by Negroes. So I thought it perhaps useless to speak upon that subject. I thought it would be more appropriate, I would serve the purpose better. But he would picture Marcus Garvey. Hon. Garvey has been able to achieve in nine years in convincing the Negro that Africa must and should be redeemed. Selected Leaders As Other People Are The Hon. Marcus Garvey taught the Negro that no man knew what the color of God was. The Hon. 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He took the Bible, went home into the chamber of heaven, had a hard time with us because we were in bad shape mentally. But in nine years he has, given us courage, he has made us know that we are people in other people. He made us know that there are over 400,000,000 of us in the world. He has made us know that the strongest influence is the influence of love. He has sold 400,000,000. Love each other. He has sold 400,000,000. Love each other. He has sold 400,000,000. Love each other. He has sold 400,000,000. Needs that the day they unite, that the day they love, that the day they firmly mumble the principles of race pride and race love, then Ethiopia, as the Bible, will stretch forth her hands unto God and princes, shall come out of Egypt, and not until that time. Charity Begins at Home "The Hon. Marcus Garvey is the only leader that has been able to convince the Negro that, regardless of all pretenses in the world, nobody had any sympathy for him but himself. The Hon. Marcus Garvey is the only one that made the Negro realise that it was a more meritorious duty to go down in Georgia and Tennessee and places like that, that it was a more pressing duty to go down to the islands of the sea and to the various cities of the country. He grows there who are proclaiming loyalty, to the Stars and Stripes, to the Union Jack; that it was the prime duty to protect these people rather than to sail away over the sea to save souls in China. The Hon. Marcus Garvey has Negroes feeling tonight it is a force to try to induce Negroes to believe that the interests of Nicaragua come before the interests of fifteen million Negroes in America. **Gave the Negro Courage** "The Hon. Marcus Garvey has made the Negro realize that the Negro has not his foot down upon every battlefield fighting for the Stars and Stripes, for the Union Jack, for the Treacher of France, and that it was a bounded duty, if there was any sincerity in the human mind, to start protecting people in their protection before off protecting people in foreign lands. Marcus Garvey is the only man that gave the Negro courage to any those things. Marcus Garvey is the only man that planted deep down in the Negro's mind that he must stand upon the highways and upon the platform and express himself as the spirit moved him to. Marcus Garvey is the only man that has been able to make the Negro realize that the power to do for himself is within him. Marcus Garvey gave the Negro to understand that history reopened itself, and it being a fact that history reopened itself, if stands true then the Negro can be nation, the Negro can may better than he is playing tonight if he will readjust himself and take a chance. Advocate of Christianity. Advocate of Christianity. "What things I could say, tonight about Christianity, I could say, that would not say. There are many things that you voyeur is doing and will do for the Negro that time will not permit, nor would it be entirely within the bounds of propriety to attempt to explain, but it may suffice to say this: that we Negroes, 400,000,000 of us, feel that if there is any affinity in the practice of following after truth and justice, if there is any reality in religion, any from high motives that Christianity from high motives that encouragement, then Marcus Garvey is the central advocate of Christianity in the world tonight. Best Expression of Law of God. "We feel that the spoilies and principles that the Hon. Maraes Garvey advocates are the best expression of the law of God or any other kind of love that is symbolized by any other policy that the word has ever known. I feel that the Hon. Maraes Garvey doing more in his own way to bring about the love to me — the good kingdom on earth—than anybody else. I feel the Hon. Maraes Garvey doing more to bring peace on earth than any other man or any other institution in NEW PEP Start full of Pep! Not new ENERGY, new VDM, new PEP, new VEM of Youth right away. If you are getting played out BEFORE time, you are the age man of your age and able to do your job. POTENTINE! It is now new and the vital ENERGY the AMBITION of a happy-man POTENTINE will restore you. You are growing old too soon, if you are nervous to start, failing and quickly or QUIT! We will help you to be the best PEP, no PEP, no AMBITION—lose no time, order POTENTINE, the wonderful success compound. POTENTINE brings Double written back PEP! Marvellous "Pick Up!" Massive ENERGY! NEW COFFEE, ENERGY BACK! Every new count! Send the order right now! POTENTINE is waiting for you to bring back the Vim of Youth, the Strength of a real MAN! Price $1.00, or two for $3.00. Sent in plain wrapper. Guaranteed or Money Back! Order now! Do it page!. Don't bother to write letters! Inbox a dollar bill for one or two for two with this coupon, and the famous POTENTINE will come to you promptly and all charges prepaid. Do POTENTINE for 15 days, if not satisfied you will get your money back. ADDRESS YOUR ENVELOPES TO: FRANCE N. FINSTON. Box 47, Hamilton Grange, P. O., New York City Name Address Towns the world tonight. I feel that the principal powers of the world, while they are parading under different slogans and banners, they are entirely out of line with the true teachings, of Christ and the principles of love. I believe that if the world keeps on like some people are trying to make it tonight; there is going to be a greater booster than we ever had in years past. "I know in time to blood of mothers and fathers of Negroes long dead is going to rise up, with the same Supreme Being on its side, and is going to demand justice for the people that shed it, demand justice for posterity, going to call people to account for parading under the banner of Christianity while, doing every conceivable form of injustice in the world." Uprooted Fear. "Nine years of Garvoyism have taken fear out of the Negro's heart. Nine years of Garvoyism has relieved the Negro of the inferiority complex. Nine years of Garvoyism has given the Negro standing to stand upon his foot, to stand upon the principles of truth and justice and fight injustices. Nine years of Garvoyism, whether the world hung recouped itself to the fact or not, has plaused the Negro in a sure way of overcoming all obstructions that now-best his path, and we are not the least bit discouraged. The Vision of a New Day. We have no fear of battleships or aeroplanes; we have no fear of those strong nations that are exerting such an influence in the world today. We are not worried about that at all. We have the vision of a new day. We are not worried about the advocates among the race of amalgamation and all that kind of business. We are not worried about the lawn against it or the law that is something that takes care of the people what save you make when they want to amalgamate they will amalgamate. But we are worried about the purity of the Negro race being protected by the Negro with good commonense. I believe the Hon. Marcos Garvey has done the foundation work to well that the welfare of the Negro people of the world is ever assured hereafter, a remembrance of any kind of madness doctrine or teaching that may be broadcast. I honestly believe that 400,000-000 Negroes in conjunction with members of the darker races of the world, in this new day, are going to call somebody to account regardless of all the power they have now. And one thing that Marcos Garvey has given us in ambition and counsel to do for the principle. (Applicant.) "Let me surprise you," said Mr. Knox in conclusion, "That Garvey Jones has such a grip upon the world that although some people are trying to ignore the question, the world is more deeply concerned about this movement among the Negro peoples of the world than anything else. Africa is the broad basket of the world, and Ethiopia and Aland have been forged herself. 300,000,000 of our kith and kin - AfricA have resolved that they shall know up to until the alish has conceded the right of black men to their heritage and the redemption of AfricA is complete." PROFESSOR HOWELL'S ADDRE$$ Professor Clarence V. Howell, director of the Reconciliation Trips Committee, made the closing address. He said he wanted to say a word of appreciation of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Before he did as he wanted to pay tribute to Mme. Ebimber for the splendid work she was doing in challenging those forces that would strike down the rising masses of the world. It was a splendid thing to see that 400,000,000 human beings had rounded themselves from their lithium and were working for and demanding the things that rightfully belonged to them. All over the world the oppressed masses were saying and mulling their voices heard and letting the powerful elites know and understanding that the struggles to be endured the instrument of their own oppression any longer. The millions of China, India, of the Philippines, were all working along the same line determined to secure for themselves a full measure of independence, and with the progressive labor forces of the world standing in a solid phalanx there could not be enough battleships to prevent them from achieving the goal. The U. N. I. A. Splendid Fight Africa, was the right heritage of the Negro peoples of the world, and it was very gratifying to note the splendid fight against great, present day odds which the Negro peoples were making, led and influenced by the Universal Negro Improvement Association, to secure independence and freedom. The groups which under his guidance toured the country were oops to hear the point of view of every other group, regardless of denominations, and were convinced that the more candy group could become reconciled with group, and it was a great pleasure that was their time evening to hear the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association explained no visually and extensively by the various speakers. air les with Plako RESSING SnowWhite 10 Amber 20 BAH! IVE LOST NOTHING IN AFRICA! THOUGHTLESS WESTERN BLACK MAN AFRICAN RESOURCES WHITE MAN OIL PALM NUTS GOLD PALM NUTS OIL PALM NUTS DIAMONDS RUBBER What Africans at Home and Abroad Are Losing in God's Good Country Unparalleled Diamond, Eldorado Discovered in South Africa— $2,500 Worth of Diamonds Picked Up from Surface in One Hour by One Man—To Be Exploited scandalous fact that the rule of the whites and denial of any participation by the blacks, works for the breaking down of law and legal process, because in the efforts to destroy the rights of the minority by class legislation and lawless intimidation, the majority destroy their own rights at the same time. As Dr. Booker Washington used to say, "There can't be one law for the white man and another law for the black man; there must be one law for both." When this is not the case there will be a very general break down of law and legal process and the lowering of the moral standards of all concerned. The Gold Coast Times says, in the beginning of its editorial article, that "The agitation for constitutional reforms is widespread and not conned to one part of the empire or the other inhabited by the Colored peoples, if we may judge from reports that reach us from time to time. It is a sign of the times, and that even in the Dutch East Indies the people of Java should demand a larger share in local administration is a symptom of the growing manhood of the darker races." And the symptoms should grow until it is manifest in all of the black and colored races of the world, and especially such as have been brought into subjection to white rulers. into freedom and have done much to retard the proper development of the race along the high lines of freedom and opportunity. But time and education have been doing their work. We have fewer of the knee-bending, slave-educated Negro to deal with than formerly, but we have more of them than we need. And we have developed a new kind of Negro coward since emancipation. He is the Negro educated in, Negro schools, financed by white people, and whose faculties are composed of white persons. He is educated by white people to look up to white people and to think and do as white people would have him, and the most of his sort find employment under white persons who appreciate their servile attitude and use them in their work. In the presence of white persons the attitude of this type of educated Negro is one of cringing servility which it is not always easy to detect. Far be it from us to insinuate that all of the Negroes educated in Negro schools dominated by white money and teachers are all of them cringing time-servers; a great majority of them are not, but are manly, upstanding persons, going courageously about the serious business of making a place for themselves with little foundation to build upon; but, there are plenty of exceptions to the rule—persons who take their law and gospel from white people without protest and with the servile attitude which marks them as belonging to the cowardly class. In his front page article in The Negro World of last week President-General Garvey speaks of the sort of educated Negro we have in the United States which has shown his presence in Trinidad, where we hardly expected to find such. It appears that the black teachers of Trinidad have allowed it to get into the newspapers that they do not desire to have Mr. Garvey appear and speak to the people, 80 per cent. of whom are black, of their Island, because, as Mr. Garvey expresses it, "it would tend to create a race feeling between the races there; yet, in the same article, they sate t'e terrible economic plight of the blacks whom they are supposed to teach and lead." These Trinidad teachers feel that it is more necessary to stand well with the white people who rule the island than to stand up for the interests of their race, and their own interests in the last analysis. They are to be pitied. They stand in their own light and they will never get out of the darkness until they listen to the truth and teach their less fortunate brethren the truth. T. THOMAS FORTUNE MARCUS GARVEY NORTON G. G. THOMAS PERCY G. THOMAS AMY JACQUES GARVEY PROF. M. A. FIGUEROA ERNEST E. MAIR Editor Managing Editor Acting Managing Editor AMY JACQUES Contributing Editor Spanish Editor Business Manager *PRICES: Five cents in Greater New York; ten cents elsewhere in the U. S. A.; ten cents in foreign countries. 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. IT is the business of the whole membership of the Universal Negro Improvement Association to stand as a unit when any local organization or member of the association is unjustly persecuted by individuals or prosecuted by the officers of law and order. Whenever a member is accused of wrong doing he is entitled to his day in court and a fair hearing. There has been shown an ugly disposition in several States to intimidate and persecute members of the association and to interfero without warrant of law in their peaceable assemblies, and this disposition should be met wherever it appears and fought to a finish. HOMELY PHILOSOPHY THE NEGRO WHO HAS EYES, BUT SEES NOT TOLERANCE ONE of the things in the viewpoint of the Negro people, which has vexed us has always been the attitude of indifference towards Africa, its people and resources, and its future among intelligent Negroes of the United States. This may include, for the most part, those of the Western world, because the Negro is a part of the life and the citizenship of every nation in the Western world. The American Negro does not take the trouble to understand and appreciate the fact that in all of the West Indies and South and Central America, the Negro has become a part of the citizenship of the flag under which he finds himself, and everywhere, in one way and another, he has problems of his own which hold him in restraint of attaining the highest and best in living. That is, he is restricted in his outlook upon life by public opinion and class legislation. Tolerance is a virtue we enjoy in others, and it is one that we may lack unconsciously. To make allowances for the failures, fruits, weaknesses or shortcomings of the other man is the attitude of the tolerant. It is passing easy, and more often our general attitude is to blame and adjudge swiftly and finally when looking beyond ourselves. We are all familiar with the Chattanooga outrage in which four members of the association were indicted. When the cases came to trial the persons were found not guilty of the serious charges, but were sentenced to sixty days' imprisonment and fined on misdemeanor charges. The case has been appealed. It is necessary to have money to properly back up the appeal, and it is expected that the members of the association throughout the country will be glad of an opportunity to contribute something to the defense fund. At the time this article was written some $356.06 had been subscribed and the names of the contributors published in The Negro World, and $543.94 was urgently needed to complete the payment to the distinguished lawyer who has the cases in hand. Those who are disposed to help should send their contributions to Hon. William Ware, chairman of the defense fund, 330 George street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Intolerance is a haughty word and its attitude brings a distress. As we hope to be kindly, passed upon let us be kindly. - Georgia Doughns Johnson. HEALTH TOPICS It would appear that the intelligent Negro has eyes to see but sees not, in those matters which concern him most closely—in his social, civil and economic values—and is disposed to allow others to use these values for their benefit rather than for his. It is easier to engage the attention of the average Negro to his actual condition and in his relation to Africa and its people and its wonderful resources, than to engage the attention of the intelligent Negro. It remained for Marcus Garvey to start the agitation for Negro self-consciousness and his relation to those of his race wherever they may be, especially in Africa, which the white races have appraised at the fabulous values it possesses in all that goes to make for wealth and strength and happiness. "Oh, I haven't lost anything in Africa," is a common expression among Negroes, and it shows conclusively that they are ignorant and do not understand. Mr. Garvey has shown them how to do it, but many of them take it as an offense that he has done so. By DR. M. ALICE ASSERSON Of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association. A Job for Parents Measles in itself is usually not a serious disease. But complications may arise which will make the disease a very serious one. It may even result fatally. WE WANT 20,000,000 MEMBERS FOR 1929 All the parents should recognize this fact and should give their children the best of care during this disease. THE International Convention is coming along and will get here in 1929, and President-General Marcus Garvey, in his front page article in the last issue of The Negro World, says we should go to Toronto with 20,000,000 organized Negroes. That is a big program, but we have the Negroes scattered all over the world from which to get what we want, and the way to get them is to go about getting them. It means work on the part of every member and every local organization, but we are all used to work and not afraid to be about it. Here in the United States it is expected of every member that he will labor to bring in new members to the locals, and that those in authority should labor to fetch back into the Association those locals which have dropped out of regularity for the time being. It is reasonable to conclude that the old members who have lost their membership in the organization for one reason and another have lost none of their interest and enthusiasm for the principles of the Association, and will be glad of the opportunity to become regular again. It is for these members whose locals have become disqualified to get busy with the work of reorganizing their locals and making them regular with the Parent Organization. If your child has been exposed to menules and you know it, be on the lookout for symptoms. They are much like those of a common cold—alight fever, running nose and watering eyes that are sensitive to light. Soon a rash may appear near the ear. Put the child to bed and call a doctor as soon as you notice any of these symptoms. Do not allow any other persons to go into the child's room. Be especially careful not to let any other children into the room. As the ninthpiece of the Universal Negro Improvement Association The Negro World has for years striven to impress the Negro everywhere with the importance of conserving his social, civil and economic resources, making the most and not the least of his opportunities in the places where he is, and of helping the Africans in Africa to a better understanding and assertion of their rights in contact with Europeans, who have overrun the land, and in looking forward to and laboring for the building in Africa of a Negro State which shall be all asylum for those Negroes who want such and which shall command the respect of other races as a Negro state. Follow the doctor's instructions carefully during the child's illness, remember that with good care medicines usually proves a mild disease. - However, serious complications may arise. Pneumonia, ear and eye troubles, and even tuberculosis may follow. In fact, the child's health may be impaired for life. Give your children good care during illness, and save them from lasting injury, if possible. The International Convention at Toronto, August, 1929, should be one of the largest gatherings of Negroes in the history of the world, and the work it should do should be more important and far-reaching than that of any former meeting of Negroes. The indications all are that it will be so, but it is not good always to depend upon indications. They sometimes prove illusive. The thing that is needed to be certain of getting what is desired is to get busy, each in his way and secure as many new members as possible and to help where such help is needed in the reviving of locals which have for one reason and another dropped out of regularity with the Parent Body. What more agreeable and profitable work could a member engage in than seeking to enlarge the membership of the Association? Columbia University Law School is arranging to choose its students by its own tests of its fitness for law school work. It was announced this week by Young B. Smith, acting dean. This is necessary, he said, because of the larger number of applicants and because college records often have been found untratworthy. The tests have been compiled from seven years' experimentation and study, beginning in 1921. By elaborate and carefully prepared examinations of the entering classes, said the acting dean, it was found that more than 30 percent of those who scored below a certain grade on the capacity test later did poor work in the school. President-General Garvey and Hon. E. B. Knox and The High District Commissioners all expect that the members will do each his part in helping to enlarge the membership of the Association, so that we can have the largest and most helpful International Convention at Toronto in the history of the Negro race. We have a grand and noble organization and we have a peerless leader, and we all feel a reasonable pride in what we have and are disposed to go the limit in backing up the organization and in holding up the hands of our leader. SELF-GOVERNMENT FOR WHITES; DICTATORSHIP FOR BLACKS The eligibility requirement of at least three years of general college work will be retained, along with the capacity test. EUROPEAN and American governments have made it very plain that they have adopted a policy of self-government for whites and dictatorships for blacks in their administration of African and Asiatic people. The very illuminating article from the Gold Coast Times, published in The Negro World of last week, shows plainly that wherever in the British-scheme of administration there are enough whites in a given territory the Dominion policy is adopted, with the authority lodged in the white minority of the whole people, the blacks being given little or no voice in their government; while in the colonies where the whites are few and the blacks many, the colonial form of government is maintained and the participation of the blacks in the administration reduced to a minimum. The excuse for adopting so one-sided a policy is given out that the whites are experienced in self-government, while the blacks are not. This policy prevails wherever a European or United States flag flies over a black or a dark race. IT IS COWARDLY TO BE AFRAID OF THOSE WHO OFFEND YOU. COWARDICE is one of the lowest forms of moral degeneration. Nobody cares for a coward. The antipathy extends to dumb creatures. The community distrusts the cowardly person as it does the cowardly dog. And yet it is the misfortune of those who have been oppressed, as well as those who are oppressed, to fear those who own them, or rule them without their consent, and to show an abject cowardice when they are wronged even in the thing dearest to them. White folks everywhere believe in the principle of creating fear in the hearts of the black and colored peoples they have conquered and rule over, and they have been encouraged in making the most of the principle by the disposition of the oppressed to accept it without retaliation. No sensible person thinks it the best way to educate people by keeping them out of school, and no honest person believes that the best way to make good and intelligent citizens is to deny them any participation in their government. We have found that the principle does not work satisfactorily in Haiti, in the Philippines, or in India, and we are sure it works no more so in Africa and the West India. In the States of the United States it is a notorious and Slivery developed a very large number of such people, whom the overseefs' lash and bloodhounds had reduced to nervous perverts too. ungrung to assert the manhood which had been stifled in them. A large number of these wretched creatures came over from slavery. CAPETOWN, South Africa, March 1.—A diamond field in South Africa, which was described in the Assembly today by Minister of Mines F. W. Boyers, as an "Eldorado unparalleled in the history of South Africa," and by Sir David Harris; director of the Do Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd, as the "richest ever discovered in this or any other country," is to be exploited to a limited extent by the South African Government. This wonderful discovery near Alexander Bay at the mouth of the Orange River was first reported last April. Subsequent reports confirmed the fabulous wealth of the diamond field, and last December the Government received offers of £1,000,000 for the right to develop them. Brought Up by Casual Question On December 13, however, Mr. Beyers announced that the field would be worked in the interests of the State. Today's debate in the Assembly, arose over an item of £500 in addition to the estimates under the heading of "District Mining Developments." This might have passed unnoticed but for an almost casual inquiry from one member, who elected from Mr. Beyers that it was for the establishment of State diamond diggings at Alexander Bay. This information brought strong There is an exhibition at this library in the Division of Negro Literature and History, on the third floor, a group "of portraits of St. Holena Islanders," off, South Carolina, by Winokol Neiss, whose studio is in Greenwich Village. Mr. Neiss will be remembered for his cover design, decorative illustrations and portraits which appeared in "The New Negro," edited by Alain Locko. The portraits were exhibited at this library. Mr. Neiss is the son of Fritz Neiss, Bavarian landscape painter and pupil of Franz von Stuck of Munich. He has become a master delineator of folk types and folk character. The portraits of the St. Helena Islanders represent interesting characters on the island, the head of the Community Club, the native doctor who studied medicine at Howard University and returned to his people to practice; the nurse, a teacher, the superintendent and several of the children at the Penn Normal, Industrial and Agricultural School on the island, which was established in 1862. There are other interesting portraits of people on the island of about 6,000 inhabitants. This is an unusual exhibit well worth seeing. It will be here about a month. objections from the Opposition headed by General J. C. Smuts, on the ground that it was a dangerous example of State Socialism, while Sir David Harris expressed fears of its effect on the diamond output and demanded that the Government should exercise strict control. Picked Up £200 in Stones in Hour. Mr. Boyers, in reply, pointed out that the diamond field was on Crown lands and that the diamonds could be picked up on the surface. During a visit of one hour he himself picked up stones worth £600. Dr. Morensky, who with Dr. Haunting, discovered the fields, working with eighteen men, had found in six weeks diamonds valued at £160,000. The area has now been placed under guard. The Government plans to comply sixty Namaqualand residents as diggers to work the field on behalf of the Government, and the profits will be nippled to the capital expenditure of the South African Union. The debate eventually petered out, but the Opposition remained skeptical regarding the wisdom of the Government's action. General Smuts declared that the policy was unprecedented and that the Government would find itself bombarded with demands to open other State digressions. The greatest good that man can do while passing through this great old work, comes of lifting others from the slums of degradation and of keeping the flag of hope unfurled. There is lifting for all. All may lift and all may be lifted. He who goes steadily on with a smile on his face, paying no attention to what's hurled at him to impede his progress, will eventually stand on high with enough goodness about him to cheer, inspire and save. To mould character and make men better, can never be a burden too heavy for those inhinded with the love of lifting. And there is nothing greater. Those who are given thereto are or will be the world's benefactors. And they will move the world—save the world. The greatest good reaches, the least fortunate and rehumbles in strength to him who is given thereto. He who is mindful of others and labors to help them, will live happily in sunshine with a stream of blessings steadily flowing from a fountain that never runs dry. He may not gather material riches, while passing, but he will be rich in things that mean more to him and more to those left in the world. Such men never die eternally—never—Tampa Bulletin. ALBANY, Feb. 16.—Loan sharks are cleaning up $25,000,000 a year in illicit profits in this State, of which nearly $20,000,000 is taken out of the pockets of the poor people of New York City, according to Information given to Assistant Attorney General, George W. Davls today at a public conference at the Capitol. Under instructions of Attorney General Ottinger and with the cooperation of the railroads, whose employees are involved by thousands, of the Russell Sage Foundation and other organizations interested in the relief of distress, Mr. Davls has set out to clean the situation up. It was brought out today that both State and city employees are in the clutches of "520 percenters," that the practice of salary buying, conceived by a group of Atlanta concerns as a means of beating the usury laws, is on the increase, and that methods used in collection go beyond the point of intimidation, almost to blackmail. a ee Ee NEGRO WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, teas. SUC Ia ne Sa “BIG “SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST. || aay MAIN FAP YE _ADDETC A? 1 I Ren eee SEND IN YOUR APPESCATIONS || eee : : 1) Soe + NOW |. |e : Alt Officers of : A CL U.N. 1A. DIVISIONS | chariot «The Entrants Will fave'a Chance at, Three Prizes || Eat Pogiiae ts |- : ast PrizeGent’s 14karat Solid Gold-Watch .. _||] ReFioutes Sh “gn Prize—A~Ten-Dollar Gold Piece... - "fe. "nts totes 7° ard Prize—A Five-Doltur-Gokt Pisce [we nen ee 3 é if ies bérgone than officers care to enter this contest they may ——— “do wo, but ‘niust Have 2 Tecommemtation from the presidant’ or ley Percy ve waine Ane [. ¢xpeutive secretary. of-their division wi Seampen sre ex “| Far rammcucanac wre emeoration pei Rags ae OR -] The Negro World, 142 West 130th St, New York Cay |)" *ustis"ins = - 7 = . Bree vast IT: PAYSTO..ADVERTISE IN’ THE NEGRO WORLD. | PTT PIN “ANF FRONT- AM ~ OFA PONERS ‘The recent announcement of plans in. Japan for a trant-Pacifig ight from ‘Tokio to San Francisco and the subse- ‘quent report which reached this coun- -itry~lust—week-that—goreenment—aishe— tion inepectors: and declined. to. pas ‘98 alrworthy the plane which haa been ‘conatructed tet kttompt the feat st fly ine the, oue erat, eter gn te , world which hing not yet" Boa con! {uryeg by ihe alslane haw senula in & dogrée of interest tn tho subject of “Sapnn'n actual reronaiitienl aedivition "The: ineldent responsible for this In- terest Is a criterion of only one: sido’ oC Japan's wiriin aviation, Tey in no Sénso- taken by. Amoricin onzinsore whbd. have devoted donsiderable study, to the question of the“uirplane in the Imani -Jeiggdom aa « standard of plane conatrictlon: for that country or as fn any way reflecting ‘on tho quality and pirworthiness. of Japanese slreratt Soneraily. me Rather, &¢ ty hela ws « typical stun tration of the governmental control of “néronautiey on the’ ono hand and on. the,other showing-the thoroughness of test work of tho Tapaiiove In Wiation and their-large reliance on the-theory of tho weioneo sasfiying. In tho apheré of aclentine research, tm aeronautics Japan Jo hell ty many Porson. in aviation ta; bo, without a ~peeri—the-world 2 8 ” Aviation: Slump “After War Avtin most other countries, in Japan f0F a considerablo poridd following the wat thére was a decided slump in ‘ovi- ation. ‘The: lewsone of military alreratt iia not deen complotoly correlated. Civil acronmutles was considered a loa ing proposition... Nor wag "Japan the rst to shake oft tho offecia of thin lethargy. ‘Ths, renaaccnee in aviation came late in-Japan; Siut-siice st-com~ ing tho customary, Industry ofthe poopie has been most. apparent in the ‘manner in Which they have undertaken ‘the task of putting Japan in the front ranic of the alr powers of the world. Not the largest but one, of thd most. Interesting’ itera which apncara tn the govorntacnt Budget $9 ono for $800,000 ‘which waa voted.to the Department of Education to bo veed for tho exclunive, gutpose of pibllclaing Janan’s alr pro- ‘gram, and for tho eatablighniont of asrondutieal courses Sn the achooln and colleges of tho, country. Tho annual apprépriation for military, .aviation atnce 1928 has been approzimitely $16,- 000,000. oe Biaurico Holland, director of the ai vision of ensineering andy industrial Feeearch ‘of the, Natfonal Rosdarch Golmnell, who fu a close Suadent of Jap ancar indurtriai problema and whe hai derotsd much timo to studying the growth “of- aviation "ini" Japan, “sys: “Civit aviation and air tranzport-up to tho prevent time have deon developed to only « Hmiled extent,in Jrpan. There avo gut four altings in-operation at} prerent. Ono of the inest potont arsu~ mente for -the. failure for a. faker irowth of elvil Aeronsuties f to that) ato there has heen’ no Incentive. gor} the Industry to. develop purely com mefeia} ty'pe of airplane.” 1 Nb Distinct Japanese Graft. Ro, ulstinct type of ireragt has omersed uh Ueerentivos bupamens wo- tivity fm tho field of aviation. There aro at protege sik airerate manufee= turing conipites In th® country. One of these apcelatizer exclusively ia the desinn of nlleincial craft, bit for the moat part thie desicn haw deen taken over in (te entirety from Jnicopen aeronautics. . a ‘Tho inecntive for thaprémotton..of aviation generally doct Bxist In Jaan. Tho alrplane has been found to be in- valuabia In all types: of work whieh -L90K YEARS YOUNGER. iene your -compjonion “Gf plmiples,_blacke SiSte, “eles Srave: babvithe Menem “wwone’s reatent besatly ereamr.« tient C. O.-Ds 1 un Beauty Cold Croan « 20 © Fine Compteston Cream + 350 ART BEAUTY SCIENCE CO. ‘88 Fdgecimbe Ave New York, N. ¥. | |, ‘The. great God: who: waste to help (suihog mea Suck triendablp « ‘im when: we ged bine has tim ‘among: mex... Gua friendahi 4ar-our-béing-wontertulpewhrr tar. er perish trom@ : purification and improvement; eo that] . on. If Me paryape « oubtan abd’ delusion | “tt done ast Delp out ene i misapprehension af curealved tmpuien. ieee, ‘sraciousnses and"will indice us to fix |Atiter trom ue It fa posstble t forthwith to him, with-all our troubles|are.ae"Neneet; as sincere, aa and to TRE nim to maky adjustuiodte| es: we are; and we demoasire teu Evoy tate tarctvet ant Serie ites sora bo make—Louleville Leader, to on: when We resort | . peptic _{methede Remeraber imays tha ita about ‘tine Tor: colored "paople [tm pet anrument and impress aout -ont-thait-Sorefunhing ap—gnt| {00 SURE of Blom Gown {0-burlgess, In certain games|. Teds all right to Divi tt you have auf-|_ MCh water Dis flowed past Aclent capital to"back you it the bluft|sinee the das. when Noeroas fs called, but in'this game of fe, the{Jone wisttally far & place on stakes aro too high, the rules too rigid [White opinion has asvanced. & and the players-too slick for ‘us'to}6f-all, Negro manhood bas quit fot avway with aaything leea than tye |! And stands upright. We real'thing.—Portland Advocate, . | [mand as a right what we Feat thing —Portiand Advocate, [ya a tavor—Kansas city Cail. Tidy hon cones lige 6d nail dy “Scone sacoal wo nade loat Sut in the game ott, no matier|,, The Nester peenN aro pecs what your benie accoust -may “ve [intelligent and stronger physica St. Louls Argus, “|the large urban cedters, A grex cm or public mpicited Negro sitizer ‘Those who' labor with, thelr handel jmprove sheue esllitions more form tha backbone of any Face. ‘They |es' agitate vaues, raluer more produce tho assoty of the race; they||jn-faney” than in fact--Indla absorb the Mabllitke ‘The Nerro rase| Rocontes, - has no, constant and consintent num= we er of the masses producing, ‘The Ne-| yo ax a mea‘do net believer i gro common laborer depends ‘wtricly | rage imarriages any more. than Upch. thuzconstantly shifting conditions: | wniterace, “We belleverthat Ine In portais.of gencral prosperity, he can | meyviagow’are a wanitural and eat; ih stringent tlmea, he must £orase. |conventont as iptorsnntional, ane Sac eee Looe ee ee er eta suet ‘When friendship cally dut to @ friend in some datk hour and Ughts w torch of cncourigement along hiv gethway to keep hie feet. froma tumbling and fulde thom, through the wollelald pits ells of designing and sinister and hegrtloss fovo thee: feinedahip.chaltene ges tho approval of Heaven, and all Suet men, uch trendshlp wil havo'tts re- Lui Genk oaeaaan’ ath uoldes | Sccks-to-tink.cloxer togather the islands ‘of. tho Japanese group. in adufilon Te [and above this tore, te the greater in- fontlvo. of tho Pacific stecit ait « goa challenging. the highest in all aviation endeavor. “ ‘All of the acronautleat research work 4. being done under tho general super- vision of the Aeronautics Resoareh In- stitute of Japan, ono of the most ro- markable orguntzatfonn of ita_kind in the world, It In headed. by Baron. Shiba, u member of the Houso of Peors of Japan. Intensive work in aystem- aUsing-the:nelonee of aeronautica has doen’ done By tho fnctitute und mgny invaluable secrets hiave’ Bron dirgov~ orca by {ts engineers. The dotgile of most of this work are Usted gkly on tho yoeret Het of the Imporlad/Jaan- ono government, 2 Only ono of ‘many, of they valuable tools of esearch hiey. avy ‘been brought to porfcction bf , the in- stitute 42° a high-apood . cainera Dull. for the. Butane ps photo- ranking the. a" cubenta™ around tho wing of sp aicFiani/is fight. “This cevaern ge Cita at year bY Boron Shiba whilo op WF viett to thfo countrs. Tho camceafieanpabe of tk fing 20,000 pictures H rocond and has ‘doen helptul fa ciaglosing many, oree etl See ay Plano Might ever Bffore known. Wilt Rogers thices . To Hear Us Sing Bee Diynediecapnapitn cele Vistula Rdlelr say MONTGOMERY,'tAls,, Marck 4.— [sige anfubemia fs dro. Mamma on ‘pOM Schools. "That dre ty Auburn sei Compare swith angled", univers [Sha coming over pce spent. th homing at Rupkedien et Met me: tment fo Booka Whshinrton, "Dhey: hav ©. grsas sea there Sot some of ‘our schools are copyine. ‘They teach the puplls|'that thoy are oink fo have to work, and. how to work. “Our old mode of ‘eollegs educa- on vse tes "orm fo tang ine th) wont have te.worle Ye Oka singing! “Ob, vos? Mitr” near ie Ne00-6f those eplored pools sin Necro apiitoaly, fee) sure Tw Shoot, the. nese White pono” that 3 heat tryst one, : ve Sours.” WiLt ROGERS. - The Satellites Spiritual Church - nde ict all Shae Eo Meena thice want ce, BARRE Minocfar.. Pione Biigian’ tan TPR BUITERBEANS AND SUSIE. sesnk poets aah ie cements SSeS ages aan ete seman: ae con seitar (te, wiaeg, Meme, puree, Sune HE. RACE’S MOST PROGRESSIVE PAPER GOES TO EVERY CORNER [amnog men? Such SienBebip afl ne- among’ mex... Gugh friendship shall ce eae “XE does nét belp out"calase to abuse Jand\ impugn. the metives gt-those who [atiter from ue It te possible that they are. aeReneet; as sincere, aa upright Jasrwe are; and. we demonstrate that Jour’ causé“tiqum't sinale: honest, lag ‘tonsthnd on’ when we resort to, eusb methods. Remember always that abuse in pot “argument and fmpresees "but fteR—StaF of Zio > auch “water ‘bis owed: past:the mill ince ‘the daz. when Negros used’ to Jong. wisttally far & piaoe on the ticket: White opinion has advanced, and Dest Stall, Negro manhood bas quit chawl- ing and stands upright. “-We now de- mand-as @ right what we ised to-ask as a. favor—Kansas City Call. , ‘Tho Negro:peopW aro becoming more Intolligent-and stronger physically: But the massou face a grea handloup in| the largo urbin cetera, A great work, for public spirited Nogro citizens is {mprov these cofiitions more: so than to" agitate isrues, rather more striking! infancy than in fact —Indianapolla| Recorder. « ; Wo os a rueo'do nat detiove in inter- rage marriages any more than do the white/race. Wo beltovo"that inter-race marriages’ are as unniatural’and am in- conventent.as Intor-natlonal, and inter- religious marrlages, respective. of races. or” color—Black and White ca re — The. political pot haz commenced to ‘oll end 16e-ous group uve wine Jude mont ia. whichsthey aay aag"do;_fnd ourcyour friends and Govuy oc, aewn rita theme Wo mena’ telonda.* when There te no eicotlons that clase of men that,are approachable by: uot all UimewOktahoma Eagle oe Pins 20,000-Mile =. Air Trip to Africa es Van Leat Blacf, Balttmore: banker und Chairman of the Board of Diree- tore of tho Baltimore Gun, i leave ‘Rineteedara May. 11, for a” 20,000-ealo found trip ight to Cape Town, Albert Piesman, naraging ctvoctor of thenic Le at aie lines In urope, nemounced recently, Ate. Blnole made. a fgad. of apprenintely. the ‘same. iasgth last vot trom Amstaniem to. Sure, end Back ina Fokker plano supped By Am Pleemea’s organisation nd prort- ousiy-hed dono. about, 80.00 men of flying as 9.paysenger in various parte ‘If weather andcother*conditione are favorablo when the Black plano reachos Cairo, on tho retttrn flight from Capo Town, it will turn cast and fly to Hongkghe before returning to Holland, Str, Biosman said. G. J. GoY- jsondofter and Jo.B.-Scholto, KL. M. ‘Mots,- whe mado the Hétiand-Jave Aight Inst yéur, whl he Mr. Black's compantono on the Solith Attica trip. Mr. .Plesman aufivod tn New York recontly from tho’ Woat Coaat after a viait to the Bast Indios, where he ar~ ranged for the opening of an ale aerv- ico tbia fall between Batavia and Sournbayd, Ye has mado a study of ‘alr transport conditions tn .Amoriea and arranged teiitatively-for"% Buro= pean hook-up. with tho alr oxprons service misintufred {% tht counter by tho American Railway Express Come pany. 7 British College Expenses Exceed Those in U, S. LONDON, Feb. 29-—That getting college education in Enyland fo a nore expensive proposttion-than a collece education In tho United States ta re~ vealed in statistics tsaued by tho Bozrd ef Education, whieh fixes $1,100 n-year 3a tho: minirwum wkeeasary for mein= tenance at Gxtord, Somo Scots atudents havo -béon known to manage it on lou, i Lecumatieam : Re SUMacism | & Remarkaile Home “Treatment ; Given by One Who Head It 1h iw year of 1602 1 waa attacked by real Ga ghia Jceneamutaeted By { nurorea ‘wn omy there’ who sto thus salisied Siaste Ear osctaliee sence Hae ra ay eae tanec ; Pinnlig, 't Goima’e tretegelt, EeMPOSy rec catiote sis ane SESS Eat eae ferent e LAT pangs oi taaghiee, NES SE SUlia sete the acim as ea ove cae Svar a AGG 1 BRS 4 Zoi, yi Zi eae Zi Afi Shar Pains te igntaing 1 want every aattater from: any-torm ofan Cea Ee tea ate salagy ae" aay Timbravea tome "aEoats Rant: for 103 cemateabts nesiing, seer Bast sepaa" "canis ising mai? yout ome S60 adam and’ all wend Beta ey, "A yet bate Trot Me and looked sBrogieann of ening ie" of auch She of Saa sale triage ferheng udias asta hart aat er aslnae Seee aa mae” Sate Se i Marit Saba 78 rhein sare is Wr, instante emenainhy, Gio siamemaes ek, $1 Derimy die waine Anes Mair Orwwon, 3 i Fempte ana Selier pelre Sharpen. ied ene 33 faantan, ater Spine mike ioe out be" worth Tar galt Shee ples pest tae, Fortin vane Sao eaves Pere Oe greg cor’ “ares meeury CaNrae WAS creereaae gin” MY Seay ex = SEE A BOGEOR MELE }~ ‘Two Harlem Tpderculosis'and Health Committe, 208 Waet-2960-etreetstn ‘co-operation with the Noith Harlem Medical Soctay, obeked n campales Merch 1, urging all, pértoni to -vialt thelr, doctor once «year for s tom- plote hehith-examtnation ang gheck ap lon theft general bealth,Thefampulsgn will continue. throwshout Starch. It te ‘being condugted by the fecat | bent tea as part of the early dlegnoaje.cum- pale which the Nattontl:Tubetulodle “Aasoéiation ta conducting.'throughout ttre country. ea “Many “diseases din be cured eaglly dotoro: they. have done lasting harra, \ethoy are discovered early and treated immediately." said Dr..Menry 0. Hard- Ing, chalgman of the Harlem Gom: mittoe, in opening the campatsn. “Tuberculonts ix one of these, Wo are putting bn this campaign to shox die ‘renoral public how Important 1 fy to have a yearly cheok-up'on’ thelr health. In tho Fush and husry of-businees and social fe Im New York Clty alt of un nesloct our health too often: "Young people who como to the city attor being brought up. in rural com- ‘munities should: Bo capectatly exeetul of -tifolr henlih. They. rust “adapt thomasives to: zhe new médo of living and the unusval.atrain of'elty.lifo.. Zt fe tmportant that. they, should watch thelr general hosith. "A ‘yearly ox- amination by @ doctor will help us cheek up on oursdves. ‘Tha doctor wlll dtroover phystéal defects, tf Hore aro any, and help ws correct thom.” “Dr Loule T. Wright? presldent. of tho North: Harlem Medical Soclety, an- nounced that the gociety hax co-uprr~ ated ia prepating the pamphict, "Pho Negro and Tuboreulosin;” witch waa Belng divtributed and would civo the campilga {ts ondorsemont and uup- porte Dr. Harding .of the. Harlem, Tutor culosls and. Health’ Committee ‘sald all membora of tho "committeo were on- thualastle. ta” thels. co-operation. —.* Povtera urging poople to go to tho dottor for « yearly examination wilt ba Gistributed throughout tho” com munity. Pamphlets telling the publle why tila th a valuable ald to bealth wilt bp distributed to: persons. through churches, amd~avery riailible source. ‘Talka are bolng arranged to bo given vofore Parent’ Tsichors’ Associations, and plans are boing, mado for radio talks and -moving picture showing. Tho daten of thees will bo announced siese | West Indian Negro Labor Excluded from,.Cuba . HAVANA, Fob, 23 (A."P)~Hotry oe'Weet Indian Nogro labor into Cubs, which has been Authorized e@ary year by, epocingProsidenual- deere gt the Teaque of mugar mille needing harvont Lends, will no Tonger bo permitted, 1¢ au sated in ofllat clecles today. ‘Tho entry of uch lebor was prohibited by & military deereo fanned Ur thg Into Geo, “keonard Wood twenty-neven yeare'ago, . ‘Pho decivion to bar “ne Ikber thik year is wderrioed to have, beoa fenched. at a Gahinet meeting. No legistutive action’ will be necensary be- cause tha dosrs of Cuna ere, auto fratieally close excope when Opened by, Presidential deerea, | ‘Althourh thls. laber te! cupnoced. te be Broucht tn under bond and eltpmed sro 10.000 Brictsh Were Inatens reste ee bes [io Jeera ares. Ha ages Gt tp | Geese eee Bo Bhs neta fa ee eel eae op ae plat § Speers ae oe ae Se) SO ia Ls << ieee PBisscotcs tong sat bons! tiful and easy to arrans HARADE absolutely [moves the cause of dan druff,cures tetter Bre-| Haves itching of the acalp ‘The Best Pomade Made Sind Stamper Coty a OONY TARE SuBsTrrurEs. | ae re HO BARADE BEDO, Sea pure eee os Baio eae oe en Eis Sig Meader ete S a tt ee Ons ‘the Mak Pathe Gs ag oe ben oe Nae 4 }—spiBeeeaen Ser epee etal Oley an toe netted eae | * Reereaat rs COS Bee he EN ee . . Fase tie ee meer Seats ee “Ea G RS es eee ae eee Sita Sime Gis Peer rer Lear ee eee ae a Se Seri Staona kcer ag, one Rian anne haeeae ne ae oa SSS Dares rece be Ra ear terion Rabon mea eet EL Te PRN"zo rontion covrrmins tmicm ron two Pacmades. qr tmerome rorrads tt Cee FOR Ty CONT Ete HOE PNR Aa vine CHER NGEN TY Nowe WRNTEMTET 5 «:' ‘IROQUOIS FAMOUS INDIAN REMEDY: CO. >» oe 186 E. 113th St., N.Y. City, N.Y. Pm et ain o & SASS We a 2 Oy RYISER ae are ASW Ce i aa ee VISERGERT: READ-THIS. ADVERTISEMENT. sci dita : : : Sete ee ioe | sai S. ¥és, We Mean YO! fd p++ Fhese- Offers Will Save-You Money = ‘ - os 3° OFFERNO.T °° WoO -One Copy of ‘Superman to Men” ‘and One, Year's Siihecription t@ the ~~ ____. NEGRO" WORLD oe ee eee ee ee $3.00 te “~The above book sells for S80 retail. ~ \.'2 oo -° = LA. Rogers is our best, writer and “Superman to Man”. is his best book ° { -f 2) OFFER NO. 2 ON ‘Large Photograph of Marcus Garvey (15x13 Inches) - This. photograph sells for 40c. and One Year's Subscription to: the NEGRO WORLD, $2.50, . both “for only 2.009 : : coos. 5, OFFER NO.3 _ Se 1 Box of Statidnery containing. 200 sheets best quality. writing .paper “amd 100 envelepes, all printed with your name aid-addrese: (worth’$2.00 by itself)’ with“one year’s’ subscription fei NEGRO WORLDS oo j.cs..aiicin dng eacsna a aacdeaweas ase ee Se Be-sure to print’ or write plainly your name and,address. FOREIGN ORDERS, 2ic. EXTRA, ‘OFFER NO. 4.(NEW YORK CITY-ONLY) .~ © wn BBS +. New: Until February 29 : “=== | One. Year Sutecription to the NEGRO) | “=——*'-’ 2S —$__WORED—at fini Prive—= 2 $1.28-.. 2 “| Males’ All Remittances by Domestic oF International Money Ordors to 2 ~ -. THE NEGRO WORLD ~~. col > 142 West 130 WStreet: 2 e-? .___ NEW YORK CITY,-U. S.A. ae Ostrich Has“No-Regard— For'Rules- of Diet. :. '- ‘This ontcich ts, tammous- for: Its-com- plete Indifference to the,usual rules 0 diet and digestion, but ‘one that dled recently went farther. than moat of ts ing, -A four-inen nall that pertorated Its Interior cauned its downfall. ~ TNot content with ua, He had tackled tneeo single gloves: an empty Alm spool Urteo fect of thick «tring, threo hand Kereliets, four-hadtpymntes, two fart ings ang a French coin, a key,a glove amtener. and a piece ot "wood four Inches Tong, says tiie Vancouver Erov- ince, a Four inches of téad ponclt, part of 2 celia come, part of «rolled “gold feckinco, © collar stud,-a. bicycle tre valve, &, dren bite ot Wire, mola Mapice, Hcrows, azail nalts nad: copper Fivets, besides another. four-ineh ‘al sand gravel'and-granite-chigpings com- Dlstod the assortment. Proper to. Kill Witch, Court Rules, Frees Four S2BGEDIN, Hungnry.—Toot- ren ee owed thilr freedom to a belief Inlichen, The men hata slck (lend wlio. told thera. that hie iilnces wos dic ‘to visits. of a beERar pvétHiaN"-who-éast .£n ovil apoll over him. An.the frvatia {ld tho taloe the od woman, entered the rom becaing’for_aime, Sho was [Grate bo aaewer quostlons pst SY: the Cour. Thoy secepied tho nlOry sho wns a switch and hacked hor to pieces, They wore accused of murder. The Superior ‘Court roverded. tagte scehvtetton, ons Ing attendant circumstances painted ins ene 2 nel Russians Total 146,989,000; Have'677 Tribes, 150 Tongues MOSCOW, Marchi —Aéeordiug. to uevestiya, est yearn csonvd of the So- viet Union’ gives tho total. population ap 146989,000. “There. are 5.000000 moro woen thin men, although the commun twunty, years, etorg showed surplue o€ tos thes it « tito, ‘Russlane form only £29 percent of tng Sevier Unione population. “in tr siz Buatat o@ tke Caton Gere are 90 fove than GIT dktorent tribes paper Uored as followas The Russian Feder- ation of the ‘Ukealney olghty-olx? tho Gauensian Federation, alnety-nine, and Torkomeniotan, naventy-cight, fn Among thin moss are I60 dictinctly hiessanied eauagon Co Near Crazy from, |. ° Backache? fe. oe, Johncon's’ Red Crose| Kidney * Plasters Give Quicir, wea = Stre Relief | Quick: relict ts: sure, almost from tho moment, you pris ‘a Jehnron’w Red Grose Kidney Blister ever the avontes ng et, Warming, evothing. thio old Felina remody. driven taht awny the sharp painnand dull- aches im the bast ene Dorts and gives the-iveale backe muncles sehance fo Ferin een, Yada Tamenesa dleanpeart almant lilte mck ‘Tho medication ix absorbed throurh tho alan and tees directly to the weal, foro, lathe: mugelon, quigting tho patty Polleving the freitated mores. und re toring the fron uro of the muscles. For aufek rolteg—No Wire to ele for fas buh sohngon'n deed Crone Elance ‘soten Witn ‘the red antel bela oll ee eee {-po vou WANT Goop _LucK?.. fF jg seek Se Festa Theta uhars "Wag ay vere wien foe ea Se Kay aad ES poe eat S Curlous Seorsts Never Bolore Published, Now Yours! Shp eee Se ae ae ae eee 3 ASS tre ed regen yer mere SE, ENS sicent [i aa omen Ay ] FRIEND. | nish abi a ce SPECIAL APPEAL! In ordrthat,we may be better able to carry on to a more : . ssitecessful end the operatiqns of : “UNIVERSAL LIBERTY UNIVERSITY =. (Formerly Sinallwood, Corey Indstrial. Institute) At°CLAREMONT, VIRGINIA 2 amid in keeping with the Wiehe: of/the President-Generai | thas mochbare ave thelr coppert to seifer we’ are few making é;qpeciet ‘ appest to ait membersiand/friende te centribute =| J 7) GNE DOLLAR. or More to e | LESERTY UNIVERSITY DRIVE | This te yuur Universi, thereerejbay should wt. lat to our "Mako all Money Order}-and Baru Drafts payable to Universal Liberty | University and forwarjl to the Seorotery of School,» i c HON, H. BAEFOUR WILLIAMS — j a Universal Biborty University oe Ds + Claremont, SurgF County, Van UaS. AL | i -atlpeontribuitfons will be:edkneisledgéd through the colunins of | : ee » Thi-Negro World met | Those contributing £2500 o rforo will please tend in thelr photograrha | oe Fe mobieetion ‘ #78 (Signed) [-HON, E. BL KNOX m4 Personal Represéniative of the Fresident-Genersl 5 BR Franch Atay fodludes- 100,080 North Africans} - PARIB, (Fo8-20/— France's —tuiur army ‘ll ‘consist, when the reqexan feation bit now’ before. Parllujaen Gomen-into effect, ot 688,469, men 0 that -total,. 240,000. will be one-year Consoripte, within Prange, 96.000 NOt ‘Afcicans, 84,000" Coloniats and 106,000 cnlinted” mot and eMeera oneaxed to At feqst eeven,yeass,. O€ tho. fant Muth te, 8,000 wll be employed on Irstre tion. ae oe Tn thin-reargsintzniion af” the army ‘go as to permit ot one-yene adrvice, corything has been mide’ conditions on Yeerulting the permuntnt’ fore of 108,000, and recently the, nay of offers and: non-comminsloned, ‘officers has Bron raised: 20 as to ninke the wervice more attractive, q Th’ opening tie.dcbate on’ thd “now tortintlon toot Jn. the Chambor, Dep- uty -Aceambray, In. the name of th ‘Army Commirsién, declared that vhile the figuro.of 623,769 waslarge, it was not more thin suMetent.in- vow of Fiadode vinultisle onltutinal Ford. Flivver-Stirs, 9°! Wor in the Desert oe JONDON-—Toni Saud, Arabian oblate tain, rides In model F Ford, and-be- Saetstoe it lant is a new yevell fe Spor wissraivcaivng tloosuhes on oe frontiers of Mevopotamtn nna binging bombing planes inte action, "AL lene the Ford to tre ony téneps arch dettnied mere ees the hal or Soe nolge aie los abe whe lee most of Atabla, helonge-te the atrlet Wahabl, sect Of Iniam, whaler forbid Petco arinking, tobaeco, shaving and Hains in automobiter., When Ibs Saud ere ied Mig auches orere, fein Ertcunabie to slices hia ere vrovake? jn¥-a-froatier war in deflangg of “Ibn Saud’e authority, to show hie ale pleasure with-thelr ruler, - INFORMATION WANTED — sive eaewtnat tee woermte Ea A ie oe vayce wy matey eB 20s, oe Sag Bee WT iee Von neler ene, Oe ator, is Nae Fog Mal non es Hens impertinent ae Hutchings, c/o Negro World: IT PAYS TO.ADVERTISE IN THE NEGRO WORLD. THE*! YONKERS. DIVISION HOLDS Te uae e * —— 1 "a eerléd of meetings was stiged By “the Yonkers Division ‘ot ‘the, U.N.LA~ “tard on Sunauy, Fevruery 19 ae continuing throughout the week. ‘The " sunday--vervioes wore opened in’ the sifuallstio form, with. the President in ho chair. Scripture reading’ was led by.Mr. Bonjiipin of the New York lo- cai and.waa found in the first chapter of St, John, :Arst to “Afteenth verses. ‘The front page of Tho Nesrg World, thovHon, Marcus, Garvey's _mesbaxe, was’ read by Mr Kemp “Rhodes. A short and Inspiring address wan given bythe Presidelit. Ho. tookafor his ehiet topic, "Come. and let “us reason to- ether." Fe made a special appeal. to Ron-mombers tajinle up with’ the Tocieet movémesl ty the wortt=-— ‘Mr. KemphRhédes, visitor, was the mext speaker, His chlet subject was The great works of the Hor. Marcus Garvey and the Universal University at Claremont, Va, also praising ‘his personal , representative, ‘Hon. E. B. Kerlox, who 19 trying hard-to carry the _Kcoat responsibility teft-to him gnd his followers to carry “on at this ond of the pela Mp, Honry 8! James, Probldont.ot the’ Bridgeport Division," brought reotlngs from that ,¢ivision “and “all Other nearby alvisione, Ho! stated tn hig aporeh-tRat the’ U.N. I. A..hew wtltred not a fow people but the entire world, In his closing rematia-he ap- Biled. to. the Negro that has a-drep, ‘ot Black blood running’ through. ble ‘eins, to-link-up with the U.N: L'A. aid proparo to bulld up a government for the lek man. Mr. J. Bensimin of the New“Ta%, local spoke brieny but cncouragingly “on. the, Bible andthe Spleit of Garvoyinia. “To Nationat An- thom was sing. “The eoting wax, then | Alnotnned by the President. *. "On Monday evening, Febiunty 20, tho meeting opened Jn the regular form swith the Prosidose tn the chair., Scrip tofe readinwae led by Mrs. Blizabsth Boyd, Lady President: "Shine, Ons Eternal Dighi,” was suing by alk ‘The weleame adarcan wai glvon- by Rov: William. Jacknon, tho pasise of tho Mt Carmel. Baptint Church, in which The Hreathar Wery INE welk—— Tio ‘wolcomet the Division to bin church, not ofly for a week's meoting. but ho further mtated that tho doore of ie church were’ always open to tho Yonkers Diviston. In hie closing re= marks ho urked the people of the black vace fo Join auch a groat movement as tho U. N. LA: and-atick to {to aime and objects. A short talk was given, by the President, Mr. Wolilam R. Glil. The National Authom wer mung and the meeting Drought to s close by the pantor, the Rov. Mr. Jackion. °° ‘On ‘Tdestay ovening, February 21, pos sivnion opened the meeting with fe ainging of "From Greenland’ Tey Mountains” ad proceeded in’ tho resu~ iar form, with tho Prealdont. Mfr. Will- fan? R Gill, In the chair. Tho fourth chapter of St. John, ‘rat to.sfteenth veraes, wag read ty tho Presideont.The President introduced the pastor of the church, the Ttev Mr. Jackron, to peak. Ho epoke brletecbyt encouracingly on the Great “worke of the Aerociation at ince, and he.etated fy bis apcoch that the. raees should come. torsth and Seecas bar squat rignts an merase are doing. ‘Tho Prenident, after com-| renting on tho former epcaker, sintro- duced Mr. Kemp Rhodes an tho next speaker. “Ho took” for Ma sublect, “Why "are the fovernmenta of the world talking “arainet Mareus Gir~ vos?" A reading was given by Secro- tary Adelena. W. Poag, entitled,” “Tt Couldn't Be, Done, but Ho Did at!" A paper Wan algo read by Mr. Kemp Biiodes. ‘The President, Mr. Willlam R. Gill, gavo tho closing address, ‘The sfotlng: remarks end” Yenedletfon” were siven by Rev. W. E. Jacknon. : ‘On Weanceday evening, February 2, ghe division opened the mesting fa the ida form. ainging “From Greenland’s fey Mountatas.” Seripturo reading war iad by “Mrs, Rebecen Havllns. Tt i6a0| found ts tho 106th Psalm. Priver wa peeres by 36r.Dantel'Gill, "Gor Blres Dur Prowident” waa sung dy all. A eating was given bx Mr. Komp Rhodes, “Tho -peeamble ‘was road by no Preeident. Tho gpeaker of tho eve- ning sae sntrodueed, Rev, Sintor MCI fackson. Sho opoko from the subject, Disarmament” Sho urged the people 0 do away with lying ard with malice, Phon, and not until thea, Will we dew ome tho porseators of the ‘things wo @ much: desire. Mz. Rhodes spoke rlefls. Tho closing remarks and beno- ietton. were gives’ by tho Rev. Afr. Se _ On Thursday evening, February 2%, stho aivicion opened tte meeting fh.tHo ‘usual, manner with the singing. of “From .Greentand'a Tey Mounteine,” cprecedod by,the reading of the sixth cehapter” of Revolations, frat to At- Roonth verses... Tho preamble wan read tthe ‘Negro World waa read ‘by Mr. “Kemp Rhodes. Tho first speaker was ‘Mra. B. Boyd, President of the Ladies’ Uaepertment. Ske took fof her subsect ‘The Ureont Need of a Black Man's SGovernment” The Bresident spoke ‘briefly of the Sone and: Daoghiers’ of ‘Ethtopla and the coming conventlon tn: 3028, Mr: Dennis “Gill was called to tate nie opinion.on the avext works of 4he Association, Ho ‘spoke brief'y on Why, should the Black man sleep Yiite we nite'man i up end doing Mra. % Boya spoke on ‘fe Brilliance jot Marcus Garvey.” Mi. Kamp Rhodes, jeooke on the subject, “tand Up anc’ {ee a-xan~ . 3 The Yonkers Division was also glad ito have with: the President of :the) sMewark,” Division, Mr.’ Chartes I. em, and ‘nome, tam of his, members, ° fres'and nurses. At thi time iar. Jakes, thoagh very iM, was tatre- ytooed abt poke beiedy. A recitation mF oe nay pte BET a ee ‘PAY-YOUR YEARLY ASSESSMENT ; “TAX OF $1.00 NOW! _ was given dy one of the Newatk Juve- Tiles entitled | “The " White, Man's Game”: writisa' by Marous Garvey rhe prnym. The Lay, Presiden rendered a solo; "We! Wi Walk. With the King” Captain Perio of Orange N. Jy spoke om “The- Future ef the Nearo”" Affat thir closing byma, the National —Anthots,—ire—wersaismalaeed by -Hon, Charlo James: = *. February 24 the meoting-was opened 1p. the. usual form. ortpture reading was from Bxekiel, thirty-etxth chapter, frat to, seventeenth verven, “The local arooted the. Hon. Me! Braithwaite, for: mer President of the East, Brooklya Chanter, Mr. Brathwaite spoke from the subject, “The Dry..Bones in the Valley" He explauied thoroughly the many dry bones that the Hon. Merous Garvey Hike putylife into since be was horn {6 the people of the black ‘race, in his speech he appealed for aid for the Universal University at Claremont, Virginia, aiking all that can to send tn &-donation to. hélp fpance the work “Shine- On, Eternal Light,” was sung and ‘tha.cloning: remarks were Riven by the pastor, Rov. W. E. Jackeon. ‘ADELENA WILSON, Reporter BANES, ORIENTE, CUBA Op Sunday, February Bi‘we cole- brated Garvey Day ax ueuol. We tied s moat favorable ‘afteimoon. when a spe- lai aervicd~was held et -4 p.m, ‘The uptformed ranks were all prosent tn thal? unlforma.: Ag.7 o'clock-fn the ovening. a monster mace meeting was stagod in the following manner: Rit- allstie ‘ceremony by our acting chap- lain, "Mr. John“A” Sines, after which the ‘meoting was turned “éver to’ our acting: prosident, fr. ‘Bainuel 13¢un- roo, who presided, nnd. goniducted the following Dropean: One -verns of tho Ethiopian, Anthom: reading. of the front page of The Necro World by tho executive secretary, Mr.’ George C. Dgugins; anthem by choir, “Hear My Prayer”; rotitation by Mlow G. Blake: addrons fF chairman ontitlea_“Gne- voy"; solo "by Ming Hllrod Bamberry: addrees by Mr. Samuel Jordon, «, vie- Mer from Cassnraey,:& very warm: sna atirring Garvoyito: reading of « Letter from our Ieador, the Hon. Marcus Gar- +vey, informing ua of his expected visit to Banea on March 1, watch drousht much enthualam in tho audience; a: thom by the choir: organ sole by Mr Davia Gayle; addvend-by Mr ADT MeCinrty, our ‘honorable ox-prosident, rubjoct, “Action= Prayer: sstection by ‘Mins Hortense Rhoylen “arid others, “Sweat Bo Thy Rest.” Tho meoting wag terminated: with the singing of the Ethiopian Anthom. On Sanday, February 12, n monster moe: meeting Wao also staged: and oll attended, Tho iliattetic core mony Was conducted by Mr. Samvei Jordon. ‘Tho chatr wea occupied. by Se. H, B.Witiiameon, shied vleo prost- dont, and conducted aa Zotlown: Sings Ing of the Prenident-Gonerai's hynin: reading of the front page of The Negro World: rddeens by -chatrman:. anthers hy tho chole; recitation by Mise Rho- don; uct by Stina H. Bamborry, and Manter I. Clarko: addread-by Mr Da- Wa Solomon, who fook for Ils eubject “Father, Fornito ‘Thom, for. ‘They Know Not Wifat Thay Doc" Ho spoke for twenty minuten in a manterly Wa Trio by Miso ‘Trout and others: ad- dresn by Mp. R. &. inke, an ex-presi- dont of the division. ‘The. laxt npeater Wan Mr, AAT. SfeCloxty, who mpoke fora short while in a masterly mane ner. A duct was given bY Mrs.Z Munroe and ‘her, brether, Mester Clarke, -atter whieh tho acting preci= dent, Me. Munroe, gnvo a fev encoure oninn wonle and: thq‘meating termic nated with on anthctn by. che cholt and tho last ‘vores of tho Ethlopian Aq- them, : S. E. GAYNOR, Réporter. _ KINSTON, N. ¢. On February 26 the Kinston Diviston hold a very” onthusiaatlc’ meeting. Everyone went away with addet do- tormination for tho carrying out of the organtestion's program. _ 3 ‘The moctiig. wan “opencd with the usual opening exercizen’ and wan con= tinued by singing “The God of the Right.” Our praldent magn the open tng remarks {n which he sald he would carry oyt. Mr, Garvey's inetructions or dia. ‘The front Dare of ‘The Nesro World was read by the. wcting ascre- tery. It was gvontly applauded. ‘Then ail Joined in’ singing “God Blees Our President," “atter--which communica tlone were read from the Hon: erst Garvey, leo from Commleslo Haynes, miving Instrictions relative to ine local convention, which will be héla hero March’ 11 and 12, Presttent Hayes reminded us thet Sanday. March 4, will be Garcey Day. An in- vitation Was extended to visitors and: new momber was sworn in ‘A, poum, written by the secretary. Mr. David Bryant, was reed and re- ceived: witn ‘prolonged applaisn ‘The sritlance rose and gave him a vote of cheer and encouragement. "The poum was entities “Bow Cas 177. Mr. Pope jook ap the’ altering whils the wud ccice Joined te singing. ‘The meeting sAjourned' ta the wrusl way. Zivery- pedy Watt Liberty ph in high epirtis. ” BAVED WARREN, Reporter. __ ee ta te SN eta alte et Poteet Se eT i a th a lire mt. XX: ees 3 — Ce er ge ne -3 ore 4 “4 ee oe y oo ee : 4 a 2 @ Be. 6 20. SAR YS ENE SS ad save oy “NOTICE. TO. Divisions” * re \ jo SS — sun's Divialgnal activities will be Insreasing weekiy fram ney sm‘ Divisione ere], ATLANTIC CTY; ¥. J. 4H one ey CHAPTERS” qT saeny | salved. to. co-operate with: the editors in obtaining the -waxtimuin amaunt 15 abot’ < .. \DFVISIONS- and” é wis | Satiefection from the publleation ef divielenal owe. Te'thia end, divisions are| | O%F besnch of this, most wonséetal |] J ee Acs aaee | reuuested to striotly adhere to: the following role when sending in news for | Neqroergantention, the Untverenl Wot “ tae et ee ee te . ete [Pubtlntlens ee Tie ingrown Aavortation pea alt F of otice! s the |_._4.-Welte- in ealy One vide of each ahect of paper, - | Temata maze mecting, Sunesa! eve fe SANUS. 2. ‘ee ee 2 Type:manuecript, or write In 0 perfestly tegible hand, leaving.’ - | Ringk-at the, Masonlo Temple. Open: |} J . ta Saye hie 2 Sige yned | —- _ ReuDh epace Between the Hines for correcting sony ° ing prayers ‘wore rendered by brother . éding'| ~~. Confine your repert te nat morg than, twe ordinary-sized shesté_ Wilson, after which ome of our favor- T .* q <n tne S ae SOS nea ha ean ye tenes, ‘ ee cin ee : aw sc = Dralthwalle presided ‘ever the| 5 When ole-:ti inting repertera, divisions. advieed to eelect the ‘ pe ‘ | £0: | paeaon best dtted 80 perform thio gorvice-sThe, Balters 2: ‘shang whe vey eee poeta oll S i sicen 2 oie dice A eee i ie eines Sem Rae aa ee foe ak 7 a * .», Divisional aetivitice will be Increasing weelty fram ney on.‘ Divisione ‘are sched. to. co-operate with: the editers’ in obtaining the -waximuin amount .< satiofection from the publication of diviclenal ows. Te thie end, divisions ‘an requested te strietly adhere to: the following rulee when sending in news for publleatian: oie foe etek ee sti Witte Gn Oaty he -vide of onch shest oF pape <: Soe 2 Type.manueoript, or write In 2 perfectly tegible hand, leaving __. | enough apace between the lines for correcting copy. ZZ ae confine your cemert te! inet were than, tye. eedinary-steed sheetd__ cet pape . mee ores Wien els:ting or appointing repertsra divislons are’ sdvieed to aeleot th paren Seat fitted to perform thle earvice-~The, Eaitere a “On Sunday, February 19, the Newark Branch of the Universal Negro Im- provement Assdélation had a gala'day im hogor of Dr. G. B Piobens pf’ Chi- cago, special representative of” the Patent Body. We staged two succesd= ‘il masa meetings for the dey. ‘A HERE:p. msie had with ua Rev. Barber of ‘Triumph Church of tha New ‘Age. His spoech was very, impressive ‘and. drought numerous cheers from the audfence.ax he spoke on the sub- Joct, “The atone. which the builder Te- feted will Become the Rendifey the corngs'= : AUS p. ma our meoting was’ called ta. order with the. Hon. Charles ZL. James, in the chair. A musical pré- jgram was rondered-by tho choir under the leaderahip of Mr. Alonzo Amos, diregtor sme Bitne Grace Amos, pianist. Maw Nelils Mayo of the Tuvetiles gave g recitation. ‘The-front page message f ‘The Nepro World was read by Mio Ruby Green of the Motor ‘Corps. It was'punctuated by great applause. An addres was.thon, given by our Dat vice president, Reve J. Walker. The presldont-then introduced. the speaker 6f tho:evening, Dr G..B. Pickens, who apoke on the qubjest, "The Black Horse Coniing ‘Through the Valley!” Dr. Pickens poured out his soul, én thelité of tho Hon. Marélis-and declared’ that Garvey was sont by God to lead our race to its destiny. The clositig re- marks wore made by. the “president, gt marten! Diviolon ef thes N. LA had 2 dolightcut en@ entau- slantle ioeting on Februssy 26. Wo ‘oesan eur meoting at 2:30. m. with jour resular opcning. ‘The ‘chilyman ‘opened bg. singing "From Greenland’s Hey Monriaine,” prayer by tho lec pgseldent,end a? sonk, "God Bless Our ‘Proaldent” ‘The chairman turned the meeting over to tho mistrass of core: monies and the program wer aa f0l- ows: Selection by the hand; reclts- tion by Mra. Davis of the Danville, Ii, afvintons remark by 3r. Pembroke, whien were yery Interesting and om: Jord. wy ah euot te te. alberta ‘and Bertha Stinron: selection by the Milwaukee Harmony Singors, of whtch Mr. Flotcher ‘yilllamn, fe. tio. mvafeal director end Me. Hl. Carsén choristor: Interesting tall by Str. J. 3. Washing= tonz reeltatlon by Mina. Mary Mer!- wether: readlfis of tho front ps0 of Tho Newro World by the sncretary, Aire A. ©. Stokes, which received ‘rons#'ot applause: reading of the preamble By Mir. George Nelnon; interesting remarks hy our ‘undertaker; MEO. Heo; rez marke by -Mre. ‘Marla Jones, aponsor of the program. She thankes, qvery- one who had taken a fart. ‘Tho mecting waa ‘then turned over to the prenident, Mr" Ole. Hall, Who prossodea 7 calling for members Six new momsbore onrelied tholr memes. Wo are very thankful to aay the mest ing Sunday was a vory inspiring one, Bveryone. was vory much uplitted ore Inspired to goon with the ght. The offering wan taicen while @ scrloa of selections war plased by out wronder~ ful band. “The preatdont -medo. his closing remarks, thankhig the members and fiends for tholr presence. A well apent evening came’ toa close with the inking. of the National Anthem and prayer by Br. George Nelwon. MATTIB FOUNTAIN, Reporter. | 2 m tm Il ccotitinns socttarton bi Damsten te Binet: eens, ecarene, Mr. Mafiore; sens el wk | et Te Riss JET tunes Possons the showed {| Setinss eottation by Master Black: |ing of Tho Negro, World by Mr-Ar R - - Price-List. of Supplies. : ing. all thoee persons Who showed I! wood; ‘song by the cholr: recitation | Garrison, followed by the presidential 7 k ‘ . thelr regard for and appreciation']] ny Mise J. Wrateon; recitation bz, Mat hymn; short address, Mr. McGee; few . , UNLA : of my services in the U.N.L A. by || C. Howard; yolo by Mee M. Sudiow: |remarkn rs 3. Ac Mewanicn he ratfers | = eat : congratulations and gifts, on the'{| fection by aie Ze Taylor: dialogue ling wee then tqkan by ore, Mosann Hf Krad - Bivtsien Stee ny . De, || BE Mies UE. Bailow ane: i anthern/ with the singing of “Onward; Chriltlan |I 1 edgore...... iver c+cee+e- $1000 each os, : geomston of tay marriage. to Dr. }/ ny tne choir: reoltation by “Mine 1] Soiasere= be report of the rex Hf Comet 20000200002 $8 Br hare. neeSeeeveasacseeeezee oat = [| Bnet sett Wy Dacor Leas | SMR APOE ne rer of he ry acinar RB Es er teense ects ML, de:sema-mmnaomm, |] dset! by Miss MoPariane and others: | rrongus-to a clove t-te eowal ware See Raw ee. i SSiteeeetteanrnoretneese fecttation by Mise 3. HUbberts "recl- Saar cess hited Sioa Ba tiie. : - ‘tion. by Mien. ¥- Harrison; pets UF md a See Spe Ghewttsgsrerreseniven moonevonsscooncsslbocnr gi: WWE Neena WoRLD-AGRNTS. | Treatey ana site! saéren ty Me| sca - ‘Oeties. ot oe | Ptenee ‘Btonts ter! ‘the closing, remaris ahd the imepting " 3 TET doe renters end} Semen eae WS, ales oe We |e see wn en metearene|f _ 942: WEST i320 STREET ; : ptt : mete] tem” 2 a WORK Ory == = __Siroamagion: Degec, [Sat ae Leiiew. "She aeremey, - | Wek LAWIR Repent. . D WORLD. THE= RAC MOST PROGRESSIVE PAPER GOES TO-EVERY. CORNER OF “THE-cLOBE- ‘NOTICE! PORT: LIMON,-€. R:. euneay, February 12,was a red letter ay inthe bistory of the Port Limon Division, No, 98%, when, by Anvitation lof Mr. 8. C. Watcon, président of ihe Limgp, division, 4 the, presidents: of the ‘Various divisions met at 11"a: m {in a conference, relative:to, an. article ubliniod fn ons of the: leading dour: nals of-this cotintry. re:probibiting the fontry ,of “our dear Ieader, the Hon Margua Garvey, from. visiting "this country. ‘The presidents’. tot and paseed resolutions against the infustio meted out to our leader ‘and the Ne- proes om a whole domiciled. in this feountry, and alo drafted, @ -petition which was afterwards signed, wth the signatures of over 5,0(0 members and wellwishers, “Every effort Ja-being put forth and will be put forth until this ban is lifted. The fa our Ure in Costa Rice fr tho fight which wojdo not tn- tend to drop until we, bave achieved out desire, “Never’tn the history of the U.N. 1 A. ih this Conta Rican flelg Bae there ever’ Deen such dster- minatien evincég-among Negroes thai? at the” present; time. We, howover, hope that with. careful-and tateliigent Alrection all will soon bo well. = ‘At 7 p, mo all tho prosidonts attend od miss meetiig;-when a well prepared program waa rendered to entertain them. : ‘The meeting was called to orter by Mr» SB. Nation, President of. tho Port Limon Division, and opened with the dinging of the openisg-ode,. “From Greonland’s Tey Mountains.” ‘Tho ro- ligiov “part of tho:program wan con ducte- x Mr..L. Brown, frat. vico- presidont, and, Mr. Fe Barnog, president of the Ea Africa Division. Mr. Barnon took for is.text the Lor Prayer, ilo fatherly way of acting won for him-honer from.hia peoplo in all the divisions. Tao religlous part of tho mosting terminated with the singing of the President General's Hymn... = ‘The, prosldont. in his Spening ‘ro- marke, thabKed the presidents heartily, for the past which they played, come nienting at length and ‘explaining the situation aa ft faces ua in Costa Rica also roading from the, Negro World the speoch mado by tho Hon. Marcus ar vey in St, Androws, Jamaica. Tho program opened’ with the selection by tho Band. sifter which Mr’. Barnes gave. an-tatroduction-of.all the pres! dents by pormieaion of the char, boing sn older member. - Tho program con- snuod: Address by Mr. Grabam,of th Liverpool “Division, addrese by." Me. Drummond of the Estrada Division, anthem by the cholr, address by Mir Simpoon-ot-tho 2 -Miles Division, ad- Iress by 3tr. Joseph of tho Pacusrite Division, duet by Bre: hava Lated and Mir. J. ‘Sinelaie, notable members of nb Chote; address ‘by Mrs, ME. Hen on, 2hd Indy. vige-prosident; election by the.bane, anthem ‘by the chole. ‘the pfesident, aft. S. C. Natlon, tn complimenting tho prestdenta’ of the! various divietons, thanked them heart ly for the interest. shown bs them, charging them of, the. maered duty whfch rests upon their shoulders. Ail Uie'prezidents vowed renewed co-oper- tlon for the benoit and uplift of the srgentzatlon, . -Tho meeting ‘tormin= ted with tho elnging of the Ethiopian Natfonat Anthem, ©. CONSTANTINE CSkNWALL, -)_ cRpportor, GUACHIG, C- 2 On Sunday ovening, the twoltth of Rebrunry, the La Africa Branch of the U.N, LA otagea-a meoting aeaig- nated a3 & rally tn raising funda for 2 Liberty Hall. -The meoting wa duite enjoyable and mot with auccess,.” ‘The members and friends contributed Ub- erally, Ths mooting wag well at- tended. ‘Tho chaplain, Mr. W. Watlco, 19 nie woual way, opened -the mecting with tho opewing oe, followed by the rituellstip exoretses. Serlpturo Tegoon wee teKen.trom Isalah- 63rd Chapter. ‘Tho mecting was turned over to tho secretary, who mede a wolcomn s4- dress and stated the apecite purporos ofthe mecting. ‘The first vice prest- dent, Mr. R., D. “Samuel, was intro- duced to conduct the program. Ite ac- cepted his appointment with ploxsure and made @ short address. A book portraying the glory af Ethiopia was road BY the Indy president, Misu “F. Morris, and: received with sipplause. ‘The program continued with &' sone by the olor, entitled “Words of Cheer”; recitation by Master, Harrison; song by the choir; recitation’ by Misa J. Coliina; recttation by Master H. ‘Black- wood; ‘song by the choir: recitation by Mise J. Wateon: recitation by, Mise C. Howard; yolo by Mies M. Budlow; rectaton by Mine 1. Tele: dialogue by Mies M. Budlow and-othete: anthem by the chotr; recitation by Mime I Peart; recttqtibe by Master @ Lewis; duet by Miss MoFariane and others; recttation hy Mise M. Hibbert: “rect- tation. by Dies. V. Harrizom; ovag by children; Gialogee by Master. Biack- wood and ethers; sole aibd duet by er. Champary and ethers;' sfdress by Str: A. James; song by thi, chetr; eole by Mist MePuriace; divi oy Ire. Daid and Mise Ledlow, The seeretary made ATLANTIC CITY. (Our breach ot: ‘his. mest wonéectul Megreverpanisation, the Universal Nos (re Imprevunent Association, pad 0 wonderful mass mesting, Sunday evs- ing’-at the, Masonio Temple. Open- tng prayers ‘wore rendered by brother “Wilson, after which one of our tavor- ‘te hymns wae song by the ‘sullen Mr: Byetthwatte. presided “ever the metting, and the program for the eve- ‘ning was .very aicely rendered: The Drinoipal, speakers ox the. program “Wore Mr. 0. ¥.' Okadan, formerty ‘0! Africa, but now-of, New York and Mr. ©. “Mantes, < from: New. Fork. “Mr. Qkedan, ina general Way, spoke on ‘the reat work ‘which the “organiza. Yon" ls accomplishing 10 Africa. He ‘explained the great Reeds of the na- tives for a atable association, as the , Universal Negro improvement - Asso- lation, to emancipate ovr motherland. “Africa.” Mr. Okadan, long with belng & good pull syoaxer, tn sle3'a post ‘and weiter. H6 read and recited any sof Ma poems, in the African Tanguage as well a th Englisk°and: won. very hearty applause, Mr. Montor waa the next apeaiar, “Ete chouy aa Ng sb fect “Alme-tnd Object.” “Ha Yold of Our past conditions, our present con- ditions and our. future conditions tol- Tying tho: principles of the U. N.-L A. Me. J. Jenking, who is prominent 1 voctety at the resort, took am his mub- fect "Unlty tn AU-Things.” which was dolivered.in an excellent manner. The members of the local are attempting « very" worthy, Iterar, program next Sunday. aftefnoon,. A number ofthe talented boys'and girls of the elty will participate tn’ this program. with pooms, papers and. musical selections. This program ‘to glven in the intercet of, tho. Universal: Negro. Impiovertent Association and,"the leader, who is planning European tour. ° <' "D.W, EUDSON, Reporter. | LOS ANGELES, CAL. | Sunday, Fobruary 6 Garvoy Day, ‘Wau celebrated ‘at-the-Chapter’s "hail, 4618. ’Contral’ avenuo, "Mectinis was ‘called to order atthe hour wet apart for thut-purpose, § p, ne. ‘The singing of tho peocesstonal hymn, “Shiiwe On Btermal-Light.” brought tho oficara to thelr respective places. After the ro- Vgioug and dovotional wervices. which wore perforined bythe’ chaplain,~Dr: RA. Scott, tho mooting was tumed over to tho president, Age. Frank'Ful- ton, whe d&tiverod dheropeaing address and who fit, hla brief remarice tm- rested on the members to aupport tho Chapter. Mr, Fulton introduced the master of ééfeniontes in tho person of Mr. G. F, aigtthewa, who presented the audience With a very’ elaborato ‘BrOsTaMproyared eaprendly, for the Garvey Day colebration as. follows: "Ob, Africa, “Awakon"; address, “Mc AT. Garrison; “Aims and Objceta,” Mr. J. Ac McGann, frat viewspresi- ont: seedings trom ‘The Nosro: Word by Miss F. Haguos, “Indy. president, followed by “God” Bless Our Prosl- dont"; addrose, Dro, Simpuon, record tng eceretary, Division 366. ‘The speaker of the oventng was‘then in- troduced, Hon. 24r. Brigga Williame, corresponding sccretary, Division 166. Mig aubject was “very inspiving, but owing to the Inteness 6¢ tho hour he could not speak long. Pho collection was. raleed. white “Where Ho Loads Mo 1 Wil Follow" was being sung. Arter tbo roport of the rocolpte of" tho evening tho meoting. waa Brought to a. closo with the singing of our glorious Ethtoplan National anthem. © Svery ono want away with new inspication and much food for thought. Sunday, February 12, ChafAer S-a held tts Fosular mass meeting at 4018 Central evenuo, tho Chapters hall. Mosting was called to order nt the regular hour.” 8p. m. It was oponed by the chaplain, Dr. RA Szott, After tho. ltualigtle’ ecremiony wan pers formed ho took for his Seripture read ing tho 0th Penim. Hie comment wax intelligently oxpressed. Ho sald in part that the. Negro must prepare to ve on. tho earth before making cx consi prepargtion 26 g9 to, Beaven. ‘The meotingWwas turned over to the président, Mr. Frank Fulton, who do- trorettho-opentng—adress HA who in his brief remarks epoke of the deuth of one of Ethiopia's brave hnd foyal gona, Mr, Cameron, who ‘war porn in Dallas; Texas, aged 65 years. H6 became a membor_of.the organiza~ on whon ftArct organized ofthe pacific Coast and remained a true and jevoted member of tho eatizo which ne no doarly loved up until the tne fis eath. ° Hla leat roqueat as to rap Hii “ithe mmentle~ot the—Red,- Black snd Gross. “I ara. not dead,” 10. 8216, Twill bo only, aleoping pituslly, I will de helping inthe \ght for Negro traedom and. lberty.” This is very fhsplring and interoating. 0 all menibers of the Universal Negro improversent Association. *. ‘The president: then: introduced the mletresé. of ceremonies, ‘Miss F. Harues, who presentéd the program ws" follows: ~Soug, “Oh, Africa Awaken"; address, Mr. Stafford: reed ng. of The Negro World by Mr.-A. 7. jarrison, followed’ by the presidential wymn; short address, Mr. McGee; few emarks, Mr. J. A: Mewanii. ‘The offers ng was then taken by Mra, Mogann vith the singing of “Oaward; Chriddlan caine” Att the reper of the re csin of the ‘the mesting was ronght to a close ta the uewal way. \. MiSs FANNY SAcUms * < pea te ie the closing, remarice abd the menting came to 0 close with the, tioned an- a W..B. LEWIm Reserws. Tow - Notice! -.., FUNCTION AS BEFORE, |. ‘Special‘Message to Officers.and Members of Divicions and Chapters of the Universal Negro Improvement Association Ths Men: Marons Garvey bas desigasisd’ sts ts” Adatinister the affairs of the gS ies Sire ger ness meets te sso Oe Diente teeta ls ta er arene era ae ee ae : Tt this express wish Uiat the divisions, chapters, ote, resmme at ence their ‘provions sermal relstions with the Fareat Body.” * Members are ebpoclaily requested to ses that their secretaries make REGULAR oe ee : ee a oo enintaanqpomaie eax ste ee se ‘Ese INSTRUCTIONS TARE EFFECT IMMEDIATELY—which moans thet son Zanes umpucrroN rate seraor nearmurese-olle aos | sees “Information as te BACK REPORTS will be sent direct te the officers ot divi- aimee oat Officers fniling te comply .with’ these tastructions are not eatttiog te. serve ae: Di ee A cher neem nto : (Slened) E. B. KNOX, ‘aon heater ica asi: ab ene sunning ea, Be Ee ee ». NUTIUE! | All Divisions and Chapters are hereby inotified that. we have in stock the following supplies that ara: necessary for the proper carrying on of the work: _ eo - - Price-List. of Supplies. Dg « 1 UNL A Pao 2 whe Coat te ? Retail is ga ve LOSGOFE. 00. ecseeeeeveeees SIERO each >, >| See SS BE PSE mont Sheets jonoroseescus meseesecessssasesionoresegeccsse: FOG Oa 242 ‘WEST 130th STREET © 4 “re REW.:YORK CITY NUEVITAS, CAM., CUBA® Sunday, Fobruary”17," will be ever momorable to the members and friends of.the Nuovitas Division, when the un- ‘ailing of the “Court of' Arms" was of- fected. Tt began at'6 p.m. The oM- ‘cora, unitormed ranks and cholr, fol- Towed by the congregation, marched from the eastern side of our grand hal and ~entored-at- the™-westérn -door- to their respective places, with the pro- cesnional hymn, “Shine On, Eternal Light” ‘The chaplain, Mi.\J. McKin- zon, ‘moat rolomnly. performed tho ro- Ustous ceremonies. Tho pronident was then. introduced and the, ‘President [Gendeate town, mae man Tle eat ‘dent: expressed “his gratitude for being -peofent on’tuch aft occasion, and was pleased to’ece tho:many felends who ‘had come to sce thio, grand celebration. He delivered a short, innpiring address on “Freedom, With Nd Time to Waste.” ‘The-cholr thon rondored a melodious anther, “Our, Mission To- aay. ‘during which “thes “Court of ‘Arma vas univelled by tho Bilnses Ts Milwood and E. MeGivor. ‘The children marched with tho “Court of Armn” through the middlo of. the. hall, exzorted: by Colonel Watson land guarded by two armed men of, the Togions, fo the rostrum, whero st was Aelivored to the president, who gladly showed the audience, and thanked and congratulated Mr. R. King.qsho £0 seithcully and sencroucly worked In painting thls “Court of Arm: and Dresentod ft to the divislon. It ton marvel of artful workmanshin. Séores fof congratulations wero extended to Br. King when tho program was ren dered, "0 Attica, Awatken," was sing by all. eee ‘Tho chotman, Mr. Jos'Zephfe, was next presented, and ho expressed Ms enthustiem at being appointed, torte | chafr on auch an occasfon, He han- dled well tho: lengthy program. Tho choir rendered a fino aong, “T Wil Sing of the Mercles of the Lord": during which the cotlgetion waa taken. *Our amlablé orator, Mr.,Cameron, second vlee-president, gave & brief address an “Unity.” A duct was metodiduely ren- dered by tho lady’ president and the ex-lndy president. ‘They woro loudly applauded, Aftsa>D. Brown ‘woxt do= ehted tho audience with an tespirine recitation, “Tho Afriean Fins." fol- lowed by another stirring recitation by Mize E. Mckenzie. ‘Tho choir next rendeiéa” mn anthem; “Tio Guiding Stir” Miss L., Milwood was next called and rendered a briot recitation. “Arloo,” followed by Miss M. Cameron; cong by the chiolr, “This ic tho Day"; rScitation by thres lttlo children, “The Vetco of Garvey"; recitation by Afas- tor B. U. Campbell, “Write to Me": gong by chols. “Rost Rematneth''; ad- dress by frst vicé-presidont, “Lot Us Rulld";-reeltation by -AGies: U. James, “Hurrah tor Garvey" address. by”Me. King: eons by tho choir; address by A. Joseph, “Destiny of tho Nogro": cong by tho cholr, “Press On.” . Our jengthy but enjoyable _meeting was brought to a close WIth the singing of che qoxology and benediction. "JOSEPH ZEPHIF. Revorter.- BOSTON,-MASS. ‘Tho regular Suniddy afternoon meet~ tng of the Boston Division of the U.N. 5A. was helawBtareh 264 at Butler's Hall, 095 Tremont Street. Due ta’thie extreme coldness of the dey. the hall wax not.fled: to capacity, ax hax beon the caso recently? i “mike mectng was Spend im the unit vay by. Me. Aikons, the ‘preslent, ‘who snubnequently, gave tt over to-Mfr. Phil- libs, io’ Mat vice-prestdont. ° Upon taking gver tho chairmanship for the attornoon, Afr. Phillips, in’his opentns, romarita, reterred.to.tho diaadvantags under which the division in Boston te uffering and the uphill taak that con fronta tt. s ‘The program for pho afternoon In- eludes Mr. Cooper, a, former ¥fec~ president, who spoké gencrallyvon hin convietion of tho worthiness of ta [Universal Nowra: Improvement Asco- ‘elation and. concluded .by saying that ‘ho Ropes to.dlo with the principles of the -orsantzation deeply imbedded tn Profestor Ransom was noxt_Intro= duced by fr. “Blackman, the “chap- Jain. afr. Ranvom is 1s one of our out= sanding muslelans tn the elty of Bor fon nnd has Neon identifed wit this branch of ort In Ula community Yer over twenty-ono,vears. ‘Tho professor sald, fh part, shat ho war not always im favor of th® “Garvey movement duo to the fuct that he misunderstood the man, Recently, however, after nn investigation,’ he has ‘discovered that Garvoy is ono of tho greatest organ fzerg tho world has over soon. He ox< horted the"youns men of the division to cultivate tho spirit of co-operation and unity and. to feo! within them= oetves that.they mossess the nocesuary power to Yo anything they centre to do. In,closing, the openkor ania dat wo should, by’ tntensive..propagands, Seok to dlsabueo the thought tm the minda of. cur people that only the white man can do anything of orth, ‘A cornet solo,” entitled the “Lost Chord,” was rendered by Mr. Lows, accompanied by Mies Foster, Mfr. Sid ney Blackman renderea a. voex! colo, which was followed by 2 plano solo rendéred by Mr. Corbin. Mr. Corbin in” only’ &: youngster, Dut” Ro-Randled tho instrument-ea e master. ‘Tho band, under the leadership of Str. ‘Thpodore Jones, rindored 2 fow Hopular alrs ae intorvale. : : ‘The division anticipates’ avery packed house oh! Suadoy, March 4, due tS the fact that tho leaders of the proposed newPiymouth Hospital will pe the main speakers. 4, very unique program will be offereq. on thls Suid = ‘A cofmmunteation from the ingom- table Teader of the orcantzation wax read to” tho diviaion’ and the mombera nro aled to hold thomaolves in readie nbs to eontetbute Mbarally to thin Bros posed Duropean tour of the President Soak, a eae LOAVES ROE Y BER Tele A Tro 0S ES RE UR I A Ree ee eS Eee scr LO WORLD RADU MARE Thea ne eee FESTA ea ne N20 8 MNS A Eo a a a eRe ee St eee eee ene a te ee Ok oe ae ae a ae re Bas a RE es pte Ae SE RN a soe 5 tener 3 re ChE; ree om " Boe Aas: er ection. Se 2 A SCH ANGUUR CAG ae | SPECIAL NOTICE_ : DIVISIONS and CHAPTERS im the U.S.A. , You are hereby requested to forward.ts Parent Body Immivdiately the PATE Biviioms noe, Chapters ar te mate tlt cepgrte Geel to the Patent Poti gpd net fee mqmmeeneen Aire Sti ene eS PPS “te the, Farent’ Bey. ES oe ta MecEREE ES row Te Eevora rece seeing te ait ates spprering The rd (fienes) mm. KNOX. ___Ternemal Reprerinive of the President Qeseral: Notice to U.N. LA. Divisions .- ___ No Division. or Chayter: of the” Universil Negte Im /. provement’. Association js to’ :entertain: one “LAURA COFFEY, ‘alias PRINCESS COFFEY and LADY COFFEY, whe has fer sme time boon collecting funds “from ssembers of the Asscciation im the South under "the guise of. sending them to Arica, cle. Should cha fer’ tropd. 0 =: MARCUS GARVEY, - is LO ee a ee EJ comercio da carne kibwans > SECCION EN. ESPAROL:. | Me © tame state de ia por: Lg Asoclactén Unitrersal. pers: Adelante dete: Po pa aan Neary ee 142 Went 180th Bt | |" Chadad de Noova York, N.Y. i ¢ 3 ae PROP. Me Re PQUEROA, Sitter . Learns gn cl Spectator de Loo- Hinepirndo.por un teeeting, telebredc réalentemente en tx cludad'de Hull icon el objeto de patrocinar el és- fiserao para abolir universalments Icomercio de carne humans en todas ‘oue formas.” Se oe f ‘El periddicn en’: cuestiée, 0 jssombra de que noverta y cusire -aBioe despues-de-haber-aprobade Is: |glaterra el acta de emancipactin, el mundo se vea confrontado atm con la rdua-tarea de Iberar cuatrs 6 lcinco’ millones de eselavos;; siendo yous sorprendente aun el que terri- torios bajo el dominio ‘iriglés cuien- ten con doscientos trienta mil escla- ‘vos, por caya’ emancipacién se ha luchado durante los, dltimas quince aio, En di protectorado de Sierra Leona ‘existen en este “huevo afio doscientos quince mil, Abisinia tiene alrededor de dos millones sien- do-l sistema’ de-esclavitud adoptado alli,, el: peor de:. todos “cuantos’ se hayan impueito en el -continénte africanoo, Durante, los tiltimos, ties atic ciento, ochento esélavistas Han sido “arrétadesen. su territotio y sentenciados-a-quince afios-de tra- bajo forzado. El niimero de escla- vos en Arabia s¢ estin:a’que sea cer- ca de un millén.. vy Se dice que la-esclavitud existe en diez y nueve, puntos del gloho. pero nuestro conociniento en fa materia se reduce solamente a ‘siete, La Liga de Naciones’ por medio de su comité inyestigador sqbre esclavitud, trata: de solucionar. dicho problema; y el Spectator manifiésta que la parte anti-esclavista del mundo esta satisfecha con'lz labor en pro de la emancipacién.. Laboremo’, .pues, con mayor ‘determination para que en_nofHejana—dia_se—elimine-pars siempre tal prictica bochomda ¢ fakemmanes hue LA LUCHA INTERNA-COMO EL PEOR DE ~" La fierza de una organizacién prepotente de neustra zaza debe hoy.mas.que nunca dejar-sentir su influencia, por el simple-hecho de que la opottumidad de establecer su firmeza en los asuntos-de la humanidad expira gradu- almente. ee = : La propaganda malsana en-contra de nuestro elemento le-hace sparecer como un desheredado de la fortuna. Es sorprendente:el notar Ia:influencia: ejercida-sobre el riegro. para ‘mantenerle en la ignorancia, haciéndole patrocinar Ja causa de‘los demas y olvidarse de.los miltiples problemas “propios por resolver. .°. Con gran pesar’ leemos en'un’ periddico_de Trinidad “que los maestros de escuela-de la raza-en-aquel pats, éstan en contra de Ia visita del, prsidente-general dé esta.orga-i- zacion,: Porque segun ellas sé crearfa predisposicién. entre las razas all{ establecidas. ‘Sinembargo;en el ‘mismd: artt- culo’ se lamentan de 1a condicién econémica dejuesito pueblo al cual ellos intentan ensefisr-y-dirigir, mienfras los, otros elementos viven felices.en la opulencia: Perono-debe haber _predisposicién, eee fe se Los -negros en Trinidad cohstituyen un’ ochenta por ciento de su .poblaci6n.. Apesar de esto, los maestros de escuela. de la raza influenciados por-los otros elementos, opinan, que serla perjudicial la visita: al Bs ‘de alguien empefiado én la defensa de fos intereses del negro. : Ello prueba evidentemente que la lucha-interna de_nuestro’ ele- mento, es el péor de log males que Ja raza negra tiene que remediar. use ee . oan No los blancos- de’ Trinidad directamente -sino los. maestrgs negros abiertamente se declaran ahora enemigos de-la masa de su propio-pucblo. ‘Esa misma actitud una y otra vez ha sido aSumida por varios profesionales de la raza -en-otros-puntos:—-El- medio ras facil para~descattarnos dé esta mala semilla que compromete los derechos de la raza es el reusar soporte a su profesién, obligindole.de ese modo a buscar su modus.vivendi entre aquellos que fe inspiraron a traicionar a Ios de Su propia raza.” ee . : - Tenemos que siopas el boycott” interfjo. contra los traidores de la raza, del mismo modo que lo. hicieramos contra el enemigo perteheciénte a otros. grupos. Bloquéese, iicomunfquese alenemigo y éste se vera obligado 2 rendirse o a perecer._Tal ks la recompensa que merece un grupo como los,maestros de escuela negros de Trinidad; bastante osado para intentar ¢ohartar a,nuestro pueblo el- derecho de tener entre sus huestes a ‘Saienquiera que’ éste deseg, dentro de todo principio moral y progresistae ge ~ Son tantos fos que temen’a.la verdad y mérito del-gar-| veyismo, que-no pueden ‘soportar Ia preséncia de éste. Ello es un triunfo para los que siguen el Rojo, Negro y Verde, emblema del-magno. movimiento emancipador. Los irresponsables nunca podrén-interceptar el paso de, avance de cualquier causa justificada. Nuestro-elemento en Trini- dad como en todas partes, debe tomar note de-aquellos que ‘se oponen 2 su adelanto, y tratarles de. acento con. sus actuaciones. a Necesitamos hoy dia en los cuatro puntos del globo, hombre y mujeres concientes de la raza para predicar le doctrine y encarriar los grandes principios de la Asociacién Universal para el Adelanto de la Raza Negra, tendentes a la unificaci6n “de las fuerzas, al amor y a-la cooperaci6n mtitua entre los negros. Estos.son hs medios por Ig¢ cuales podremos conquistar el~éxito, ascendiendo a. Ta! cfispide-en fa escala de los pueblos progresistas. - | Perdiendo texreno moral Este pais ha perdido terreno en 1 direccién entré Ins naciones hispano lamericanas; segiin manifestacione: del doctor'J. W. Garner, profesos ide ciencias politicas en Ie universi dad de Wlinois, . Es claro como el dia, dijo, que la repiiblica norteamericana ha perdidé a direccién’ entre las repiblicas his- [panoamericarias. Un tiempo fuimos su heraiano y-dhore. un pélicia inter- nacional. Bae Elles nos acompafisron en fa gue- irra. mundial y pelearon con nosetros durante ‘lla, pero después que ter- miné la guerra los Estados” Unidos noéntraron ala Ligaxde Naciones y los paiits hispahoamericanos deja- ron-de seguir nuestfs direceién in- corporandose a la Liga, El doctor condené fa intervencién de los Estados Unidos en cualquiera nacién. para proteger los intereses norteamericanos. El hombre que va d otra nacién a emplear sus délares pare obtener una genancia, né tiene derécho a pedir a’ su gobierno que proteja sus inversiones, 2 El doctor Garner .presenté ‘cinco sugestiones para ia nueva ‘politica ea Hispano América. - Primero; nada de intervencién; segunda, en Jos casos de flagrante injusticia, re- tira el reconocimiento;. tereera, dar la interpretacién original ‘Ia doc trina Monroe; cuarta, reorganizar [a “Unidn_ Panamericana; quinta, celebtar tratados de. arbitraje con todos esso paises, f - o ¢ “ : SRRBUSE"bSe AE &- EEE RES URIVERSAL LIBERTY : ‘Formerly, Smallwood-Corey Induitrial Institute) CLAREMONT, SURREY COUNTY, VA. USA Situated upon the banke of the historic James, River 12 miles from Jamestown, the oo" old English settlement oo ‘A Nogro slave. pen in ‘1662; now a: cultural training - \ ground: for Negroes ra Siivtcioes snoata IOs 46 than tase doa Lace oe wadead at Liberty University from their Division for the Fall Term 1927. We are offering courses of study covering a wide range of departiments:-among which are Collegints ‘Academic. Gramtnar Grade_for children of the. Practice School, Industrial, Scientific. Ser i, oat aie Pat Rete Be maith Plain Sewing. Typewriting, Stenogrn Ronkkerning. SSeS se eee Bobre-la-compacion do, Haiti ~ Ta evacuaniin, de. Haiti. por lat ogres Se. onte yale cath. de: auevo -ath.en proyecto: de Cane por-el senador King gal bee ‘un resumen de la bi torte ygntervencién en aq\ pals, deade’ Julio.-de- 1918 bast presente. 7 = Bae EL: proyecto en’ cussfién, termina devente’ modo: ans ie delat por oer salar L. simi eo [contrario a "ts Coamttacioa de toa Estados Unidos y « lox ios de bearer “47088 os os el pues Bia de ioe aadoe Unidos, =. ~Resuétvase, entonces, que 1x co- Imision de" Relaciones” Extcriore jconsideraré Jos informes y.tas de- islaraciones en este proyecto conteni- dos, y bar& laa debidas investigacio- net-pare ‘averiguat-la‘cauna de- le ‘toma de poe Y-ocupacién com: tinuda de .Haiti."por los . Estados Unidos," las causas. de Ie dupresion ide la Constitucion de“Haiti.de la supresin de las elecciones, de la de- frogacion de los derechos del pudble de Halt, de le suprewén de fas ga- frantias de libertad’ personal, de; la Nibertid'de palabra ye de la prensa contenidas en’ la SEO at iat a os oad Ce } jalcoinision Sformards al-Senado ae grenades’ de sus investiga fsidnes “y “‘recomendaré las medidas que'deben tomarse para ‘permitir-al puctlo-de Hait-establecer-un go ieno-propio; elegido por el pueblo mismo, y pata permitir al pueblo asumir el control de sus. propibs in- trees ciyiles. +7 politicos, guyas me- didas proveeran la evacuacién del territorio de Haiti por las fuerzas armatias de los Estados Unidos, y por todos los oficiales, ya sean mili- tares, navales 5 de otro servicio al- guno, conta sola excepcion. do.los diplomaticos acreditados y cénsules nombrados por acuerdo de los“go- biemos de fos-Estados Unidos y de Haiti. z * Por otra. parte .el gobierno ‘hai- tismo"ha Strticado ‘al secretario gené- ral de la Sociedad de las Naciones que desea tomar partegnas activa en ia labor dg Ia Liga y que, portant, habia designado ai scfior “Alfredo Nemours, ministro plenipotenciario de Haiti en -Paris, que representase & sit gobierno con el caracter de de- legado permanente ante dicha Se les prohibe’el usar panta: Ng, Jones ~ iis Uns fascismo en piean s ensefarsus'garras, En I Jposesién italiana de Somalitand’ se lies ha prohibido a las tribus de Mi- jjedtin el uso de pantalones. Moha- Imed Shauria Bin Abdi, jefe de dicha triby, se halla gn camino de; Ingla- terra para. exponer a. Sir “Austen Chamberlain dicha arbitrariedad. Un mandato de la Liga de Nacio- nes dio poder a Talia sobre Some land, Sus. habitantes se quejan‘de quedesde el advemimiento del fas- cismo, los italintios han. adoptados medidas insoportables para los na- tivos, siendo la ultima ide éstas Ie decision: en corte de un fuez italiano Feduiendo a prision a todo nativo gue use pantalones, declarando que istos serin solamente usados por los blancos. Raat a iCuAnto arbitrariedad, eudints in- justiciaT >. Religuin histéried En un cable dirigido’a fa ‘sceré- taria de Estado de su-gobierno, el embajador de‘Cubz en Madridha comunicade que el cénsuf cubano Menendez Gracian, ha adquirido ef machete que pertenccié al general Antonio Mateo en fos mortentos-de mori, adquisicién que ha hecivo con justificantes de autenticidad. i Tex s weer 2 atin Ar 8 ee ee - 4 wae ani oe 'CHA y AIVGU bA CASE Bde 2 tal gE DAN Fogr Defendants Found: Not “Guilty-of" Serjeus +2. Charges; but Sestented te: Skity: Days’ Inipeleon- _, bo Be Taken, to Téamessep Supreme Court: CHAIRMAN’ WARE APPEALS: FOR MORE. FUNDS Vicious Attempt to Misropeessat U. NLA. and Injure . Itz Good Name. in: Tennessee Is Defeated—White Jury’s Favorable Verdict Hailed as Great Victory _..._ for U:_N..L_A. Against Great Odda | Hon.* William - Ware, president of the Cincinnati Division, ‘U.N.d, A, and chairman of the Committee formed to take care of the members’. interests_in connection with. thie” Chattatiooga . outrage, reports/that the case is proceeding successfully, All’ four defendants, Messra, Ir Johnson, Emry Bailey, James Jackson and Louis Moore, have Siaslnauiet by the Court of the serious charges preferred against them, but they have been convicted and sentenced'to 60 days’ impfisonment with @ fine of $50.each.on misdemeanor charges. The Gate fide been appEaled. to the Supreme Court of Tennesiee. George W, Chatnlee, a former-Attorney General’ of the State. of Tennessee, is'Fepresenting the men. 9. ~ oy A farther sum of-$543.94 is urgently needed 1o'complete payment of the attorney’s fee-of $1,000, and: members and divisions thfough- out the diintry are. urged by Hon. E. B. Knox, personal représen- tative of the President-General, to {urther rally to, the Chattanooga Dfehse-Fund so that the attorneys miay be paid in full at an éarly date for.the exceptional services they have rendered-to those.unfor- tunate men and to the organization, ~All morieye shayld be sent:to Hon. William Ware, Chairman of Defense Fuad, 330 George Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. ~ . ns ‘The following is « list of previous contributions by, “Divisions to the Defepse Fund: | s eh Ne RS + Chattanooga, Tennessee. o.oeesceeeeseeedeeeeees + $105.00 + Ciftcinnati, ORO. ssseeeenseeeecceteseeseeneeees, 85.44 Cleveland; Ohio: .csesseorscesegseetceerestccseeae” A750 Youngstown, Ohiow..se;ecerecereseeseresveresees, 20.00. St. Louis, Missouriv.....csceeessspecegen ye Teese: 22.36 % ~~ Colititibus, Ohio. ..6 2.0... T0T Tre eee teeeeseee 1515. + Pittsburgh, “Pa crvcteeeeevservegeuewere cess stee FLO Dayton, Ohid..0......ceeee TM eseeelerseescge 1100 Alkron, Ohio. .......-s+eeiseotereeeeesterctentess 1100 Los Angeles, California...ei.eeseeseceererersiores, 1036 Mobile, Alabama..:c.sssccseversreseceeneverees ss 10.00, Mr. and Mes. Jamies Phelps, Colimbus, Ohiow2..2.,. 5.00. College Hill Chapter, Cincinnati, Ohio........:e00. 2225. otal iow Sewes wowace eacsuas des vesscasveaes SOSG08 Aged Bachelor Carried To His Grave by. Women “* . NAPPLE, Eng. ‘Fed; - 20,—Willian Bayar Allen, an $0-year-old bachelos yho erchewed: fomale compantoritbit Zeeing he Sale ie, San beon carrie to" to rave ty four’ women Pal Barr ae ‘Alien ved @ ‘yeoman's ite. He seated hin owa cottage and Ms Bower garden.’ He made his own fine buttor Sa eased afoot for anos fo oleh boring markets. . THanereda ef worn came to the canercl of the-ayed tecluse nit fur of them volunterreé to carry hia cns- tee “ahs coma wan eeouatd with wreath of Idurel and rosea from hie tien giolens They” sled Mar longs titg Senfamin Distal bend Boacones Meld, the great Victorian whore charm- tne wey eth women eaptvated vc. the Queen of Doeload. : AS? CoAR EER OM GEE COB LUCK OUICK — TMs Lees Coie fins acd, Sengga te, Se PEC eth Koo BH Bei se Se a Ey aoe ae Riese” Hos WoxbpuuErouan i Tt irk oS : pak Ste odgt dn mal ea a sane ne malin cook ae Gao sires, Ont aobin Luck Gurcul “oxben | ORIENTAL IMPORT CO. wer oOSIENTAL, IMPORT CO. Men, Women, Boys cece inc sustaa o evteuenp is Seung vane? Byes cate a eae ae ener et Teer ttn See Wee oners Shee Cece Senamitn o. v- a, isan ee ee ee Cree Tear hae ate te 3 oF gone suse wading sot tie Levtaet it ached, De | Xe 'iaw: "A problem has been solved to sepee clon mae, Caemerrts ee, Tel tity Oe delet Sean arene ee ee Bat gua acee aaa seeso PDE, FARRELL BV. Unity Spiritualist Society meek, Bee spiciont’ mectings ct a:38 and Oe es ‘by different. mediums [Berita toate cute eats SE ieee er aie ache aera peer ee cree i ee ‘Ricbarés, leeder. 7 7 ~ . THEcIONT Tat @Ob prec era oe Ses at at) Ro CS Say Tear reat ett ee 7 — 5 Pee bee Oe ena? Sy BH ip oe A. Gee WS 6G) f REE ER p PLO D OF Q NULCAE yee ee se LS Ge ee ro ET 64-yinca ROOK OF HYPNOTISN nnd 16-pago BOOK-OF | FREE! (ce Sitetha "Ban or wesc vitae tose Sea Pe Giveh FREE to all who went, our famous "QUEEN OM Wo have copyrighted thin niume, so no Worthless imitations can do old § agi Sing. Ole PRBS Ease ANY den Tee, Pes Je ae ete onigl eer of te ee eee a AE SGT GCE od Wah WHR age HE" reese eae be” Can Scan ements fers 2 oe Sats Sing neste tee LSS NUNES Mae Te rae tees aes Set See ea ey PR a ae a Sse ear at Naa EES ERCP RANE Ue the nda aug” ctesht (SOSS Lee N ater Basen fens, enn Suet hal Wu Meo you re untae. SERS RB Srontahs “iat adder dete Mehated eae tee outa Bete Oe Gates Rinks wher aT SGUREN Sa" eee ring Sad ts HerPae tiie Seated $5 gSktman cay SESE our eect ne le tie nets Eee rc ee a re ade Se ae ee Teer ee ON ee PRUSL SRS eothe at Sees rel mars tas eit ar ee We Want 1,000 Agents ‘To Sefl Hobb’s Famous Re HAIR GROWER... -- ihe esses ng gro ai Oa f rer compiate trestment or §8 cente. Cor triad Sherrie $9 eat pons "House MANOPRC PURER ; ai 2 wend ote eB OP -Eapah, Prénh, Main lnsretor Sorfag FDA, ‘The OM Bal BROADWAY AUTO SCHOOL 2 at ae ea ‘Wed'a Century, © «*" Dies at i250. GUTGWIGKA, Poland (A. P.).— savin completed 100 youre of Tat jeled ite, Letb Fetd died at this place, aged 125. His widow ja 117. Omctal Teoorda snow Fela wae born tn 163 not far troin'where he dled. = BE A MAN! * om ona you azpont to hess thp.jore-4 spebare SP aTenaaeeny Lees? tee date ant eBethae saree 2 oe Sar move toe Peete ianeree ate a anae tt Bae a Heda het ae ae Blontat, RUE Bi ee, ceed Teac sae earnest ‘siaae BREE Shiite ba ee, ee ~~ “beeons Suny poo “yar ania et the barat, tina send ta di eraaty oe obras ae asahe eeeelal ee Aa Be Ea Baie See se PASE SWany,” Journal of the Weet Afrtican Kg: saree” pata tation audited gee SS, eee eaten, Qube aaes: Sa Hieaigind ee Be EOL. Mako remittances fo Uf currency, aes ea ree Ste LeMans ee is Oh br ae gence pace. aN! I se Bea Sere weivy wobciaa: . ee ee eee We eee i ar *sORSRe 7 tenes $38 ak; pone ie ae GM. vow BONN Mam. Mena eee Ce Me [ey Belay ee A ee Tare” Ie OO Sane western Cpe : ancl, «®. VZON! wetted ndeUunt ten ee * mamione > es Double arremsthy BR je Jost take « dose. It te very ax x it, instant ‘that. ees pain elope. tbe blog bee ry: Somes pare; ho mors Souk, erinr, ACHING = Sonne ne mes soln: OY IGA. LUMBAGO, “NEO. = Rigig—all the RHEU- MATIC PAINS gone. ‘Take tae ait away from the : gavel Detar on too Inte! “Why. mutter Say longer? Here Ie Yost Sppertuptiy- tov get well Quick, Don't’ walt wptir Se ee Ss Ban theenah with ft YOUR NAMB and ADS 8% BRmas on the coupon and Aeall the Goapen right naw? KOE Quick! DO Fr 20-, me 2 Dati - § vee 2 crea iat nate mete eee CF" wrentosnts foe, 8 re aos fo your fied nas tral al ers us asic —oy mcrae eo ery ; TPlaeee ate Mong Many Trestmente 2 ~~ Se WE ec Shite seiossesssioessessosteesstonammne, 3, sabes case eassen toumoieue Oty ai Fle ceescseeeeecsrmeniag Arabs and Jews = Engage in Rioting ..-. ~ _LONDOW—A dlenntch to the Dar Exprenn.trbmi Jerunalem say% fifteen Jowleh watkers wero.wsunded in x rot at "Potak Tiwveh, tho largest Jewink colony In Palestine, whtch in nér{teest of, Jatte. ‘Twenty porons Have bead trrented by Britvh pellee: Th lot oceucreW SxGuraay when sw amployed sJewn tried to provent Arkt eceasns-trom working. i the orange igrovee. ‘The rioters neizta the Councit “house am imprisoned, tbe Councillors there. til nighttaly whea PBritish gonddeinea evicted thom, = = os at Baby You’ve »Longed For * ten sete Advis Wana ao Motharhood’ and” Companionship: rep soca pasate cia th ser econ. “eet ieanees’ Citys St was. tebtorr Snrste Sing’ tabjaot te perigee’ ot orale enerita “aa taoladcnclie Rare E, ams ihe Begsd aieter. of m"hosutn itis eatent’s EnBS Ese Sorspadio Bea tnetentife ts tar Sioned; flere, undeese' ef \giser SOBRE woul We uot the Seeker of.sty Seppifea ang. t wi ily rovenl te aay Geeta Csi ho, ‘wil tele mels9 fey Bleton® tars hed eavien “entree” wheat there “Sue nae. getuing. tose oes SRSUIE: pe eared’ ta Mick Morena ee BOeS,R" Santee ee ia Mae SSR sae Spm (288 paaceantuenthe. Sankan Coz ite LUCK? LUCK LUCK. © Seid the GREAT SOLOMON: Yoet Late furence of Solnian can, noi Rucricren tut, tet one Qaleann senile a O°" PRICE $1.00 a THE EGYPTIAN HERB CO. 12124 East 18th Stroot i KANSAS CINE 300 7 P eo ny ere Ten a a peti Seen uy. REE oe aT ee ae i abel BU Jf meee semen maar | ema, [Enithe Banriatea | GgCOW— thee enieruimmeie elf (| OPPOR' PPC TT Sar ees we bea |S eee a oreo vera a x Bey Neca — ‘ae erat : Lo ieine Fedora fone Seocenae | R.Zztving & costorm tq ep Amertenh IOs, catty ia ao culled ote Lameres | “Inia” caiteetion’ st ian ‘setolondi | "This faite benied vs Raeaiin ofti-| =—-i = AGuete WANTED This frat Te bensied te Rosalin cit! | <a Soeer® wane Mer the Editor of The Negro World: “ting & member of the bryanisstion ‘e¢ the Universal” Negro Improvement erection Oo nine roy sod sin ‘Principles. of the organization my copest thought. ‘T have’ reached the ‘conclusion thal tt ts really the pro- gram ‘for the Negro, for tho solving the problem that confronts) im. “But for the Negro 10, ereot, « gover ‘ment for the protection of Negroes the ‘orig’ Svar, we will bavy Yo change pur way of doing and acelng things. ENegroes must wake up, wlike up out ‘e¢"thelr Jethargy and begin again Clear you? minds of evil; look’ on the SeigM dae —Clake ye nnd noranice; follow the right alwaya: Give zo the. world your, best. Search your- ‘waives and aéo if you are Ot for the Universal Negro Improvement Asso- ciation, ta ideals, are high and must Dertorne to the heights by 00d, de- erat, Roneet,. respectable, inteligent Yam and women. “We who dd't pos- uss hove. sharacterietics, “lot us for, ‘Te, cause of the organization atop paide and Jet good men and women fall fm and carry on If you understand’ the program of the greanization: you know whether. you Sie ae co lead or-not. Honesty Ia what we need. “The organization hae suf- fered wo much for honést men to carry on. Our londer states the grinding of Phe thieves; the: rogues, the robbers’ icin’ and icin %o finent duet, If {8 should. bem hand mm, T pity abe man who will iinvs to contend with tbe handles: He had better be like Sninton, strong. 1 bollove-to grind-the: chiaves and robbera out of thts organi- mation you need x mill big xs Miaml, la. A hopper five thousand feet wide, fve thousand foot deep, and a atoam ghovel to turn thom over-tn-the hopper. And if-thoy grind the least hard, they! will spend many years, Honest men are hard ¢o find. Every~ pody. comes to the U. N.'I. A. to look for something, Gop. help” Str. Garvey Rit takes, no other to carry him brough. Mon of thone localw’need good pMioara to Iead them. And We Are KO- jo to have honest men and decont renpectable women to lead. Honesty a what we need and.sve will have tt Ce LILY CULMER* ‘itenek ties 7 = Now We Know Why - The N, A. A.C..P, Exists 6 the Ealtor of The Negro World! At dant” Da W. 1, Burgbarét Dv ‘ole (whatever that menna) has fur- ninhed vs weith. the Durpowe,end motive underlying the “advancemont” asko- ciation for colored people, , ‘The “secret” wae dlacoverod om the lant page of the Dfarch “Crlsin.” paso 406. "Marvel Jackson, a@itor for “The Browsing Roador;” hea this comment Bake on Eugene Gordon's article, Spero Inbbitions's xctein. ills, Mr. Gordon statna the caso iif wnndvrned—how in the glare of Balosfaced ridicule, dusky Americans have been Inuighed ined curbing thelr Indiviayal inclinations, pfgferences and prodficction. 4 Attor all, is-sanerice tho atandand fe White—as im Africa It “we black,» 3 « And not) ‘The “Nntfonat Association AGENTS WANTED Egyptian Herbs: LaxaGve, Diuretic and Tonie Teider the Mood: cleans the gomotexton B pover cnurey the. shlo, te bres ou Beaker You fool otter, eat better, slong Tatton, work Better and feel hotter, Aad fer forcnie weniinem and irfepulartion tt Soutze saul Leet whellty, ne competition. mime KoxystaN aina~co. ising Post 28th Bt, Nansen Citys Mo, RCN ee ie Re BSS aes FREE ES OEE EE \ ste s a: See a = * ~ B path Pe A AS de) eg te SE |. 19@ WAYS Re 7 GAR cess NJ COLTER BSE 70 GET RICH Large book, “100. WAYS TO GET RICE,” wilt eaitlo your méney probleme, Easee Bests Ato rn Te Ore RG one hills gone mat eects Beery woz eons memes, ut leg ie art aekoee ts Suk renee Bits, "RES tetas womens, Sts" ay wees ecguzuier AENEBSAS Fea NUE ES Loh teteaag GM digas Seas Eeeains BS | etic rm ae eam hae aaa fae My cag rtegs orergtiins my ways aavereane tel ae ahocee tne wf case Screg teen open was, asd cnn inthe Steg Haat acer Set ane a an nena aee giate ee Te RRR SES Silla Te aatete caesarean, fon can, 8 co ean SPLEEN TS EEE god shal” SOWRE alas hese sake SERD'No AONE S5'OB Sear ie Goiy ei pace it Seaarraneaee eee po eon $2.98, BR ele HOO RRMA amt eseerSL ad PORTED ee aor tt ERS PENG hace SAIS RS Zonet ave ae mises Se ORIENTAL IMPORT CO. 227 Broadway Dept @ Now York, N. Ys i F ‘ : oF Bees gat vase, Drpmuet ond. | wonton Ghd children vege ge | | wi ce : redee ee teaee e Haast Canlrar Mies Wy bet o:-2 it F im NOTICE. | ees ene | em ap | All divisions are requested to send in aii orders’ Besta te tea : TCH OT: iS ——— be “+ foruniforms to headquatters —° || piecemenesomerce [BEWIEC ETO TES) on aezieamtttien, (7 “Order blanks are now ready; also price list. "Sk Wks Gea ettnntter tents tare site| <n Bea ea Bn ae | 2 laave © aie Payment by’ “Te 8s p Under Ground | 72h nccir roid a caesar yee | uh “Shenae eo abe masaae, as REASURES (| S222 ss sen | « OVERCOATS Z REGULATION FULL DRESS CORDS. _ ‘HOW and WHERE. ae = FOR OFFICERS, N. C. 0.'s AND PRIVATES ~~. FIND THEM Rese “FROM $2.00 UP soi: ’ + ARE NOW READY . nests Secret: acre. > * « \ cme. - “EVERY MAN IN THE LEGION MUST: ©. San cums Bal Peis At: FRASER’S ©. Si" “SECURE ONE. PRICES ON APPLICATION. .... ||." vauorm we | SORE LEGS HEALED | "irs nd Ratall Clothing 06. es For further information write: °° oo ee BTS SaaS SES 2 gutta an twin wo 90. IP se eg a vos fl. . z BR ies ec Tet eke te en toot Pa Veet, $4 3: UNIFORM DEPARTMENT //E33_LO OD) cer wu emn | eae | ES M2 W.130b SKY In J eee it se Lon ere and], MS Pa Lee s cat Se | Efe aa” 3 .. eae Ae Seren n ines C [sere PRO ae ewer }-TQ--ADVERTISE: IN THE. NEGRO. WORLD.’ ‘THE RACE’S MOST. PROGRESSIVE: PAPER GOES -1 for the ‘Advanctiment af Calows People Tandaree-wnicn tr aclbeeiog standardywhich be to, the etitor’s-comment—whital And theas- Jecelation te founded: for the purbies ‘{edvancing” the colored people fn are the “cored. people” may" ask?, “rom all) indication, they_are thoes parsons who, unfortunately, bave ‘had thetr otherwise white Diced “con- ‘tamineted” with that of Negro extrac- tion, chbsing those #9 alfeated to be ‘classified aa colored. eet ANAS further confirm this conoha- ston, Balter DuBois (p. 94) makes, tn part, the following reply to = young igh school student of Inland who asks .why the” aanie name or—word “ogi? le matstainegs ae torleally, of course,'your dlsiike of the Word” Negro-tw-caally-explained:—e- sroés' among ‘your grandfathers. (take note that the editor avolded the pro- noun’ ‘our’) meant Diack folk; (w most horrid adjective to the Jearned, profes- sor). ‘Colored’ people were mulattoes. Chere you bare it tgs” Colored people were, and stilitremsia mulat- (oeg). ‘The mullatoos hated and de- apteed the-blacks and were insulted if called ‘Negroes’ (ou, gentie reader, no doubt realise, why the N. A. A.C. P. refrains from using the misnomer ‘Ne-| ional Association for’ the advance mont of Negro. People.) But we are not ineulled—not, you and. (Deucedly clever, oh?) We are quite as proud of our black ancewtors aa our white. (For. whom was that latter reference irtended, may we agk?).’ And perhaps » lttte prouder. (Why the ‘pechayis?’) What"hurta’ us ia the mere memory hat any man of Negro descent was ver so.cowardly. a8 to Gounas ane part of hts own bl0OG.” And we might ada hat what is more objectionable than . Facinl pariah, 1s a ractal hypocrite! os ARTHUR 6. GRAY. ‘Giiaine ter a Many French’ Newspapers, More Than 100 Years-Old PARIS “(Ar P)-—When, the’ Fréach heard that a newspapor pubjished in 1654"had been found in the Austrian National ‘Library at Vienna. they dusted off the recordy to show thoy could do better. es Sone ‘ota Gazette de: France, toe a ‘weekly, would have beon .nearly three Centurioe'-old today, But. the War stopped ite publication. “Tt was the frat ronch nowspaper, eapabiohed tn 3831 by ‘Theaphraste: Ronaudoé. “x physictan who came here from Venice, whore azelten were common enough to"give a rame' to. tho small_coln “quzotta," the price charged for them. Lous XI-end Cardinal. Riches took an interest in thle Saturday owapaper and ft became a= sort “of oMctal publication. . ‘ France; howover, hes two ¢ozen other newnpapers thit asd more thas’ centenarians, ‘The oldest of the Livin la La Journal de, Lolret, ataried. 386 years ago. ‘Pacis has the Journal dea Debais, founded im. 2789, induential and at the top rank in the nowspaper worl : ‘Newspapers of the type current to- soy date in Feance trom shortly aCter cee sevatution oe bes, De ae wee | AM-BISH-UN'. | |. TABLETS 2 ee | Beehee Seics : ame ma the iso aor ad SS Taras [> Renee Senos, | mtn acters ae RES is | pmo UO IOTSRE x ; ‘Nei Xork City Origin of Mang: Words ~ Found in Prover Nouns ing to te. Menten te the, duct tut origin 12 found ta proper 1 oun mousing ta 80 called trons Limoges a Franos, wire carriage Dodies ‘ef {this type. were: fret. mae; artesian fre ate stride the, ere ince ot Atte plore thyen, wy gers, dug; the. word. bayonet ‘treed “the-Frynch town of Bayohne, ‘where. bayonets ware mings. . Canter Js ‘an adbreviation of Cantetbury gallop, hls being the easy-gast at which the pilgrims rode: to” Canterbury town: Currants. frst .came from Corinth. ‘Coach comes. from Kooll, Hungary. wheracoachs were frat ust. Cop- per springs from a word derived froms Cyprus, the trland of fte original als- covery. . a ‘The mimes of imany clothe and ma- ferlals have thelr source in. the plates where they” Were, Rist ‘marutactiired. as. calico from, Callcut, damask from Daratscus; cambric from Cambral. In thia latter place a” weaver nared Bap- tlate invented & soft cloth \famiilariy Known aa batiste. Muslin tase called from Mosul, « city on the banks of the Tigris, which was once the chiot seat of ts manutactura Worsted.te alsa nama after’ the town'of Its rat pro- duction, Worsted, in Norfolic; England. This ls true also of gingham, named for Guingemp, Brittany. ‘The names of rainy flowers also.fnd thelr ongin tm proper nouns. Back of chem are often blographies. ‘Tho beatr- titul Japgneso flower.” wistarin, dis- covered by Nuttall, was, not named after him, hut in honor ‘ot ‘orie.of is sclenting frlonds, Casper Wistar, professor of anatomy. at the Univer- city .of Ponnsylvania.(-The gentian inite name from thédlyrien_ king Dentlus, who was the frst to dlecover ite properties. " Quassia ‘wns named uiter Quassl, a Negro siave tn: Suri- nam, Dutch Gulana, who ured its bark as. remedy for fever. Moscow Rid of 2,000 ‘Homeless Children MOSCOW.—Cynien who dubbed the elganup of more than 209)_“harpris- corny” (homeless children)” from: ee streets of Moscow in anticipation ot the, foreign visitors lant November ‘si “The Potiomkin Vileges of the Tenth Anniyoretry" have been _ pleasantly fiuryrieed, an the ragamumin thtoves have not yot returned. = Thousands wander in other parts of tho, country. Dut. the Morcow. author!- elon have Gholra corralled, which, te no amall task, The formor famous’ palecé of Count Uvarov Inthe Sojainke din- trict, .lghty-aix milen. from. Noscom, waa selected an x home, for 200 of the unwashed and “hopetuly chrintoned “Prudavaya Djizen." n life of. work: ‘Awa divernion his month the: pliy- ful Inde chased out thalr teachers, broke all tho windows, mashed ,the furniture, plctarer and other wérks of art which bad boen ‘ett to incul- cato an atmosphere of refinement and had started to migrate actpes the snow to munnfor Crimea, when '@ squad of cavalry arrived and rounded them up. Authorities say the day's sport coat $10,090. ERE NCH, 2 SESIRCR GUS casi Lacs tee gdih had Marat “trulte Por lath Rei, See oi atin Seat Pages sti ME. aR ET, a aORCE DEANE Talamine Stic” TEE GUICHESTERS PLCS SUE ASee note BY DRUCCIETS Beret ors, [erage ee AG oe bei sd aN yp Bis wae o EF Ay 2, ey iS eet bests ant i i _ Beater net ace MATE wea eee Lite Bihar ae me Pade one ee Bee ce ots ae . RoR ES Bic agate wie ars SO ee | CE sie alae sons SPSS ned yout: predict Tae d wre ard don't know bew I coald ” Bruel de eg teed alt BRE tne ofa ee Beod Be in ats for = package i Ure Borst rama (ia teak gare Bega, Aare enavine rowven co. Dern rene ."& WE Under Ground REASURES: - ‘HOW and WHERE ae : ed : Santana BLOOD epg ete Sree pee we eS sataeehengiene at’ ania moe ausband — 1400~'B. 6. _ vartety —ap- preety smomred Samal! seat te More serious Gomentic di 23 Jn-@ ‘cellection: of 100 Bebyieniia tadeG- given to-Cernell University By HLL. Patten, of Chicago, ts « marrige ‘contract of the firs dynasty Grafted 0 8m eerthew cone'tn gunelform char- ecters, which ‘sets forth that:~ ‘tiniaya,- tbe ‘sos ot . Sin-Drighans, bas takgn ax Ais wife Lamasory the éaughter ‘of Tbic. Should Lamasum aay tq her husband, “Thou are not aly ‘bubbant.” end-showis-her ohlldren say to thelr. father, “Thou are. not_our father, they wit lose claim (6. al ponseesions and pay one-half jane’ of silver.” * ‘The document ‘led names four per vons who bave been: adopted as holrs of: innaya, and saya that “boise, ald. orchard, office and furniture of every kdnd.he-bae_xiven_to_them."" Bight witnesses signed the contract, which ts dated “in the month of Azagya, the year (a which. Samsu-tluna, the-kins, made a brasea standing object deco: rated with representations of moun ting and rivera” ‘The collection ootprises letters, ‘re- colpta, Dilla. of sale, inheritance divi. slons; “mathematical ‘calcuiatione and public documents. Their legal: ter ainology closely resembles that “of modern’ times, and."shows. that ‘many’ principles of law in vore more than ,000 years ago are still tn use ‘The untversity has had the earthen manuscripts’ preserved by an’ electric baking Drocess, and plans to exhibit hem, with tranalations, in tho brary. They. date from the Ur dynasty, about 3400 B, C. through the Neo-Babylonian Asnanty, approximately 625 B: C. Mr. Patten purchased, then in Bagead. Moth's Tongue Six Inches Long Tae, tongue of the ant phms moth ta nonietimes six inches Jong. -_enowing tou ero opeande the sultocaa Eattaad oy ebesatnen tte Pea Romar rar Svemin: Feta, "Booringeay, Ti, as thai‘ Naving Read erage inet Sue of note mae ae in segue fs ah Shee uncer at an etc Hd of utr torture by a aingie wy"St fe a “hie; Hurst haa nothing tos aferly gat ou nia nadie mat fe fekek hE Seu dng Roles wd darn, teks TEI giedl"amna Mu tele Unt ee iermition oBtlsiy tree Wiles hes ak ae before You forge ~HURRY—LUCK! LUCK Hien Jona the Conqueror. $00: choter quale. tury fea Cange: Ber sha see Hips Sie rank Bh, tae Tih, Devk ot “adssen: Bebe! Mtaatar “basic ies’ Breall der et, eee ee ES WER Cutlets eel ore Mining, aca atarraats Hadid a Je Sater GND 9: LOTeTIAN AEnp eTORE test wa ears ee Dee le. = Sass pas FREES ESS eee Oy eee PAS EVES - oes EE SRS a Ee i ae SSUCATOAPRICS, 9cSee Teli Jot Chy. 5 3.Dee. n-1¢3 | fey FRENCH - 658 ops. Gab Tie poopie torte tablet RS? Be reas ee action oti, consgowin Peter. Heipfoy £9 Sno pteazs sou RESULTSor money acic. SAP HEPUstninpa Saab “ots tronay. grésrhe oF Sethe act See ise eee Soe Sa me Stes Sees JommisreereatRe Tse cate tasaa’ weses HP EMEA, Wendin, "Ban! oor 38, -GCOD LUCK QUICK © ' : - kot goer Goce 5 BESET Hee Leos, fove and cemga: Cao ey, Wee EUS RY ZEN SLX TSN Ee lt eo ee Sees Be ee NG faigiag tocky Gaps important ed vies and instructions ts, civen PRED. ty ail | HRS ame EES cine Raa aE Tee ald ean eaten Sr $e Ben Fee EEN oat ait } Bisbee aes ha ede Here dinentea” Sek BRE Peele Sbre Gar seo SE EEE fe Now BROADWAY JEWELRY CO. 331 Broudwea7, Dopie bs Nowe Yorks N.S. Wonder Hair Grower- Straightener _ faltea to. give ransifar'en loog ag, fre Date eee s2, Sno. "SCRE te TOR, Mostar a oo ocpramte g nSuigr growin nod cleo 10> BeNothine woeteas ‘on tho, market for een, weg Ble age. by stat Agen Wetea”tateral Ome ‘ McELLIS SALES CO. Pig eo orl igo Mog IBEWITCH OTHERS = ‘The French Way hi te ganeediGnal Soek-neauiok Wks fe—aely tee: Wee nett ene nee SORE LEGS HEALED Rane cese NEGRO WORLD AGENTS eee ‘Wine'and Bananas for’ ; MOROOW—tNeo oretigyutana ip the Mossow,” 208 Renostorih WA. be. the only, beings tn Soviet Rosie to epdor dally ration of bananan, ~~ ‘This frait Iv benmed to Rinsalin ott sens by the Boviet Goversment, but's upply-for. the:apes wit! be brought ip ‘ertodically by airplane trois Germany {Spd other countaten. "Anzlety over the tate of thelr Health, Prompted the de- "eck: mornthay “and “evening. the orange ate -civen ©, good drink of French wine (o' prevent thele-cétching pee re Women, Weak,. Tired, Rundows and Nervous - 2 he sata! ovarian’ paiaa paine to, the setts Fembie!waskneana, Beasacwen, suck’ Seana tine ties nrc ine periage ahowi8 wren te" aire Biles CSeoRe ORE alenee abeas che See" auarfe ovine’ inquirer: adviee ot S' eese sabe a aes chnca, Rava Wintec. “The, sort common expromien of these annie? Soisee te” =e teat tee Se a os ae Bae’ Gene ag much asca-torcan te sates disntGie? "Welds Tite hatloe i eile tie whe. as ane nas Eboe and Congo Distributing Co. fro Areas Rotate, ett bie Wad chattel ace Gey diet pean rtp eee Regnier is chap gine abn Prosi sites Plats ore egie rcbie ews omdaee ena ase eames poe norte Saoie ate tea tivee tare aets Seeks ae eee Fe a easements EBOE AND CONGO DIST. CO. 105 Went 127th Street ~ = Rboe 16K. Phone Morningside 0048 + catilipn’ BRN, !8, Maur Oy Cea & fe: Bearers BS 2 aS Sy esol, ee SU drenttt atte 2, eereee BurMharwua the MEP etett te erat ieee eeaaatesa eran taerice and Hei yatuabla Ea ntrocions | PER: Wee Su Sai aaa Soba ‘Devt. 8, P. 6. BUREAU, Generit F. 0. TESTES Bereen eer EO. DOUBLE STRENGTH | Hiebalife <RUNBOWS: wiEKEIEe cos fecte NEIL (AUSHION. |i Pate TABLETS Bevo s direct exhitas Rtlaeedece ae the slags wis Sr Sarin SUAS Seer faulty “entoy" Lite, you must’ iensre the] Sy SESSA “Shame FG oxxp xo Moxex a’eamcers, #230) 700 TANLETS, 800 STEFFENS LABORATORY Station Ht, 376 Wr. loca Mer N- . City] STRAIGHT BLACK HAIRS YOURS IN 30 MINUTES ~ Mien and Women Se ee sy ser eerie Te Sotnuerss Saeco Ce Sore 7 sso = Bis, Bee punleeae "sMOORISH STRATE-BLACK SMS MAG SE - It Is SAFE and SURE Absaldtely Harmless tien Sh aN ee pee ee Soe ee Serta elite ee er nh Fee Pee nae a git tae ee ey FREE. 2.* Sater epee ri ne Sgro aa REE tA Pa ia Sette Weoeenrtae Maat EER eMedia Fee ‘Sound totrogoctery Price, $1.90 Ba Siri Hts “a NS Tetum 28. Du G00 Lechter (Hair” Bonuty "Specialiet)' 569 W. 181s St., Now York | - Rabbit Foot x | ; lage thet. ramet ie we “OVERCOATS ‘FROM $2.00 UP .At: FRASER’S ©. Wholesale and Retail Clothing Go. oC tite aw lowe 90. A000 Ode, Sante,and Pants and Vest: #1 op ty aan, oe so oe fo tag ad nin 2 -GUR-CLASSIFIED: It You:Are' Unlucky You-Need the Wondertut hae MONEY MAGNET = ig) and WISHING RING! ~ ue Sy Eee ON oN ee BRIERE 1 souere Wawra‘: eC eR bees amma oy ay RaeAaS Sierra tens set pee Seer en Oe casemate See ae eats Sia be sitar eee amas Rat ante Seen . fem 3100 mreatways Ce x Fag, ean, wep ai hae Me atthe Ra ‘SSagcesetry. Sea Rauwey tooream Bast Bt em : SeepReNRES wine SP crgien riay, tuna gee Mog tpt rheatad “bahte sae ae tent rene rel ies ieee tat SCE gaat a OF WHER codratt Kovineen Burceoa, Dente ik Gy ins se a ee ER ppteesimen aelebatae” ears: Sora are Miscellaneous ST He Ge SSia tad aaa aaah oe Tint tl saveais avenue, Rew fore Guy. Were PEARCE, tie, SapaTL es SA SACF IAT, Setar, aa he = SSRTEPORS ASS pe ©. "a! sMukiw Msatsiee Cov 118. marae street. Lima, Onion... Raye SREP RTUACET CRORE, wary night “ona ‘Sonaay” Bvaning ot 40 ENE UAW ace wotcome,” aa MOE FLOYD, Soy LE aise ie be aaa ae Biecs, Rew Boren eRe *h ii SauPDSERTarseean, GEOL RT wt willing. Altzender Besmagten'€ Wont 1380S, Streets W. T2 G Phone Harlem 0°79. SORT EST gp er ae oO an ad meee So Se FR, TEASE aa PHahe, PEARCE paiera a ti Sane laa hase saTURDAy, Toss an GL ea sat doctes soca? : ‘BUTTERBEANS AND SUSIE favs ante tgp ine comatnn wit Cow St East 430d Street, New Yorks TAPE Re garth tate LS pee Bencig Peedaces Reeeaty, Atlante OBI. S——-GRERRRN ROARDED ar sate cer sia: ADE ei sna tea acc? THY ecw y axa. aor SweLvh TASIS TORU ee dumb with wurpries. "Kittle Graves, Ede aes em SEE She SRS oe RELEASE Pee i ae my Hecate, cap gup, aeeeo CaO YOUNG 9 women ZY MAKE .$20 to $40 A WEEK Wenig un ghWleato Beoten i tess ne ee seas we itace te waniions ed sansa E..B, WILLIAMS (6, fac. 2350 Seventh Ave. NEW YORK ‘ orcs E.-B.. WILLIAMS. C0, Inc. 51 Chambers St. | NEW YORK —__ - a NO MORE BAD LUCK WEAR NEW EVCEY SUNG: SS ES gst THRILL OF VIGOR Re 82, ~ Fee ee suctale oot Cc Rep be Le eas R00 GO Dale wraboet vod ndBtERE Re SSBB an Se wa AO ARTES “y. WHY WORK FOR LESS? eS oe os beeen et tre Se tte name toe es Ea, ae Se ae Eriol Kiar eegoet ite Westra faeces ee TEE Pea nis cende cao naw a Binge PROBUSTS Sh | TNR ee --": Furnished Rooms to let te Tey Wrest he weet sage 1M Trgpa et, a woanariment TH pen | Beets tk Mgnt mass pee ee yen a z nd test’ Sit isrormmeets ae nae Hoeot SMES in wrc 14. Capt 42) _—Papauaed i fart tain’ ARiaphtnn"glevatoe Big RR Ra, aes, Nase se Hie w_aefis ent Ape, 0 Nicely. furs humea ake Vouin Rouble or" kee me pepieriea: "eal sveotage perder oR -eveefee oT Tan Bt, Wicnoles Svonue, room aug beara. a Matbse' sient, "eebobabia, bassece pespie sete Wile: bape EP are, Wane ebbpe ss TI W, 240th street” AGE AW, rede Seay TaMtinbed, ali toiprateiaents Ena ooerene sen ear aerated elation: ‘Gixtiacond pest prgieeg eon 00 oo Samacae SWE cece SS Fai Bt Nicholas ayenve, beawtifel taraiened fobtiny respectable pachies couple'oF Youta aioe pracGnreds convenienena ne a Ww, 220te atest. newly Terabe geome alt coavenisncen; ena’ Inapovamoua Te apestabic people only. ee TAROR, Front Parlor, awe Dasmeat eat AEGMiar docign hanarenst, emnpiey oan oslen' of othe Virmtann "Lanow ‘ate, aeat EG Steck Gagatre tis Wart Unt berec Sane PARGH FORNIGHED roomn gopeapavie, 306 Aram atest yeriasant C8 Thompore: ‘FURNIOHED ROOM, private, for gontiemey EEN URtn Bere wis aventey ooertsoane t Ghar ES eéraat, ETE APRN ‘RBATEY forsbed_ wan, pense, BRAT BAST adPper ann 30 We Tnith, eres snoundasor ware it Wor HGR wreel L, Fayo Moola ia uted sttrate Faraty, dekh EEE ~~ UNDERTAKERS, aaaghy &,RAgNDERy FONERAL ROMP. LPidita esriagy med, ebcigney, Hee We. “1acch St New Vane Chg. Bbawe ‘Broed: Shwe fio, : wero Ungertatere apa _gm Seine, Rulon foe tee Noted aS 208 ae Tan att Boor onus Site, Phone Woaghuret “eats “Branth, 44 Pais "Sts Brssehetpnose Newtne Bees. ingle Anderson Prat, funeral @iyotae, Mi oluss"82ce,“iipaggate; 58. Ista atiect” Beadpteat SOE = Sroae yon RENT Gaewe store pace te. rent Salle for Kiet balgest wedte btineee” pontine chen. Soe See Ree es ’ OPPORTUNITY TO AGENTS REGRG “DOLLS poke gray BOC: Tonio Rigo pietaree, 13" Mainerent wander atte Tere, Parise! caltndere: {igs Woe.s® aarorteds eth athere 8 “tor Sica: “Ouida Wats “Au sen oxen, for Soatre, Slcteaucnte waited “ARSE PUR: Pienitio “Got HW Basseatiba, Ate, Row pcre rae Jewelera ST. GEO. V. CORINALDI JEWELRY, MUSIC, NOVELTIES’ DEVELOPING dad PROTO PRINTING * sabe Sevnth eee Teer haath Be | ey" V4 rT I5G i el PILL Led BS QA) skete ees pon aeyraieeareee er Saesehed wae oe oe | iF YOU WANT- } [| -Monoy, Love, Easy Lifo t GOOD: LUCK © | ibs anes snecgne omen, wef Set as SS PSYCHOLOGICAL AID | a 1625 Cheietian Street * i - PHILADELPHIA, PA. S i 7 Ss FREE es Proof 3p Save, Sotenr Bie Balog Sendee Seger ae” pees Sosa areata fe eee are DRC. M. SIMPSON CO. , zerb tah Reticle, 6. ——— gi IF U DON'T Cc i Eee x conse The ‘Eyesight Specialist “RELIABLE and REASONABLE EVES EMRinNES PACE 531 LENOX AVENUE _ | New york Uo cont MN ots ” WAEURE ONEAT ERD ECerTS eine Bice thorses ok ae aan vu siemneer 408 Haake Bt Depts Sr Srenneneee ia.