The Negro World

Saturday, March 17, 1928

New York, New York

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NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1928 What We Believe THE Universal Negro Improvement Association advocates the uniting and blending of all Negroes into one strong, healthy race. It is against miscegenation and race suicide. It believes that the Negro race is as good as any other, and therefore should be as proud of itself as others are. It believes in the purity of the Negro race and the purity of the white race. It is against the rich blacks marrying poor whites. It is against rich or poor whites taking advantage of Negro women. It believes in the spiritual Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man. It believes in the social and political physical separation of all peoples to the extent that they promote their own ideals and civilization, with the privilege of trading and doing business with each other. It believes in the promotion of a strong and powerful Negro nation in Africa. It believes in the rights of all men. UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION MARCUS GARVEY, President-General. 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 PHILOSOPHY of MARCUS GARVEY as A PRESENT FOR THE NEW YEAR. All Leaders in the U. N. I. A. should have a copy to study the principles of the greatest Negro continent. Vol. I, $1.75; Vol. II, with 25 Illustrations, $3.00, combined offer, $4.50 post paid Large Size Pictures of Hom, Maroon Gowning (For Branding), Magazines, African Printing (For Branding), 40 pages. Song Hit of the Season, "KEEP COOL" AND ORDERS TO: MARY ANNIE MAYERS, MARY ANNIE MAYERS, 40 acres. Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Safe Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Hardy "Bayer" home of 18 tablets Also bottel of 24 and 100—Drugrists. Adhere to the safe use of Bayer medication at the instruction of your doctor. NGLE SAM MUST CHANGE POLICY IN NIGARAGUA Capitalist Group Will Let Him —When Sandino Is Called Bad Names Even Wall Street Can't Refrain from Tittering In the course of an editorial on What Price Sandino? the New York World says: week by west, only to leave Sandin where he was before? Are we to send a large enough army to Nicaragua really to "exterminate" him in a war in which the geography of the bad lands is fighting on his side? Are we to decide that, after all, the territory which he controls holds only a twop- tenth of the population of Nicaragua, which is not a large area around him but we can give him the run of his own bad lands, hold a fair election in the rest of Nicaragua and then leave a only constituted Nicaragua Government to deal with him? Or is there the alternative of attempting to mika jeans with Sandin by persuading him to submit his alms to a retribution of his own own? Or is there the only regularly constituted parties, in a fair election? "For ourselves, we believe that the last of these alternatives is at least worth trying, even though the possibility of peace may seem remote. Henry L. Stilson went to Nilegua last May, and from a situation apparently as hopeless as the present situation succeeded in effecting a truce between the two factions which were then belligerents. What has been done once can be done again. It is significant that the whole Sandino episode post-dates the Stilson meeting, that it prepares to violently violate Mr. Stilson did not have to face when he was there, and that since his departure we have left this problem wholly in the hands of then whose specialty is not peace but bullets. Twenty-one Americans have been killed in a war which does no one the least good. Forty have been injured. Nicaraguan casualties have been still heavier. It is little time we believe, for another Stimson mission, a change of policy and a new effort to arrange a truce. Suppose it falls? We shall have lost nothing. We may gain substantially. Anything is worth trying as an alternative to the present tragic policy of letting drift and wasting lives." Sandino's Defi **MEXICO CITY, March 10**—General Augustine·Sindino declares he will continue fighting "as long as there is one goa hand's breadth of Nicaraguan soil occupied by the barbarous invader," in a letter attributed to him sent to the Mexico City organization of the Union of Central and South America, and the Antilles and given out by that body today. To the Editor of the New York Times, GREENSBORO, N. C., March 2- The Senate says that the mariners were eant to Nigarama of supervise an ection and have to stay until it held, which is next October. In the meantime the mariners are do- ing all they can to see that there are fewer votes to supervise and Sandino is doing all he can to see that there are fewer mariners to supervise. We are not sure how many some ambitious republican ection, why go in so early? "drum on the day of election." We are the only motion that over supervised 'anything a year be- fore it was supposed to come off. Yours for shorter and fewer sup- vivions. WILL. ROGERS. Ministers to Meet The third annual session of the Nati- onal Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance of America will convene on June 15 in Washington. Cox the Multimillion Dollar Street, R street, between Twelfth and Thir- teenth streets, N. W. LONDON. March 4 — a new and costly airplane airplane capable of pre- paring maps of impassable country with landing grounds as far apart as 500 miles, is the latest development of British aircraft enterprise. The machine is being built on the order of an aircraft operating company and will be in operation before the coming winter on a survey of the Zambesi River for the Northern Rhodesian Government, preparing maps of an area of 6,000 square miles. An expedition also will be dispatched to Zagad to survey 1,000 square miles on a scale of six inches to the mile. One company has representatives in South America now arranging an aerial survey of nine sites for an ongoing out of date. Hitherto most aerial surveyors have considered that landing grounds at intervals of twenty miles were necessary for safety, but the new machine will have such reserve power that it will be able to take off from the ground and cruise comfortably at an altitude of 10,000 feet on only one of its two engines. BALTIMORE. March 5. — Charges that the color line had been drawn for Friday night's dinner at the Southern Hotel in honor of Oswald Garilson Villard's ten-year editorship of "The Nation" are made in the current issue of "The Afro-American." According to Carl Murphy, editor of "The Afro-American," invitations to the dinner were sent out about the day ago to go to the dinner. "The Nation," "The Afro-American" article asserts that last week Mrs. R. A. Spaeth, secretary of the local committee arranging the dinner, sent out a notice to Negro subscribers to "The Nation" in which she said that "It is unnecessary for me to point out the difficulties that might arise if you attempted to attend the dinner." According to the article, Mrs. Spaeth closed the notice as follows: "Please believe that the policy of the Southern Hotel is that we secret very much unpleasant to take advantage of your kind willingness to co-operate with us in this celebration." Mr. Villard, in New York, was notified of the notice by the Aloy-American" and on Thursday replied by a telegraph which is quoted in the article as follows: "Program is our first intimation of hotel, difficulty in Baltimore. Local committee has acted on its own initiative and made all arrangements. The Nation always has opposed race discrimination of any kind at any time. Thank you for informing us." Patrick Egan, manager of the Southern Hotel, denied today that he or, so far, has been informed of the hotel notified. Speech that Negroes would not be admitted to the dinner. No mention of Negroes being invited, he said, was made when the dinner was arranged. FILIPINO LEAVES CONGRESS: RETURNS TO HOMELAND TO EIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE WASHINGTON. March 6. Holling that every dollar of American investment in the Philippines "is an additional mail. In the case of our independent Tajuque Gabahon, one of the independent commissioners from the islands to the American Congress, declared in a statement in the Congressional Record today that he was resigning his seat to return home to fight for complete freedom." Gabahon, who already has been elected to the Philippine Legislature, said he could never be convinced that the "soul of the Filipino people is not for independence" and that he did not believe the Filipinos could ever expect "to enjoy the maximum of happiness under American sovereignty." Referring to the scandals, growing out of the Teopat Domo and other naval oil investigations, the commissioner said that what "frightens me as a Filipino is the knowledge that those American "captains of industry" who have invested in the Philippines also are heavy contributors to the campaign chest of the "Republican party." REVOLT OF ARABS UNDER IBN SAUD ALARMS BRITAIN Wahabi King, Once in Pay of Britain, Breaks Away and Joins Big Arab Revolt—England, Alarmed, Assembles Forces for Arabia LONDON, March 8.—British officialdom tonight seemed to view the "holy war" with Arabia with less concern. But despatches from the district near the head of the Persian Gulf painted a different picture. Official observers gave out a report that Ibn Saud, King of the Hedjas and Sultan of the Nad, was planning a campaign against the Wahabis are not friendly toward the holy city of Mohammedanin and, deduced that Ibn Saud was not likely to leave Royah, his capital, in the centre of Arabia. If there was any immediate prospect of putting his own forces into the field. This estimate was easily coupled with previous analyses of Ibn Saud's character, which made him out as more anxious for restoration or his yearly subsidy from the British Government than for extension of his domain. Despatches from Baaras, Tink, showed an anxious man for restoration or his yearly subsidy for possible early rulings on the frontiers. Airplanes, armored cars and transport cars have been stationed outside the walls of Kowolf, ready for a dash to any threatened point, and marines and blimpjackets from the British cruiser Emerald are patrolling the streets daily. Unconfirmed reports have reached Baaras that the western edge of the desert is already blazing with desert fire, and Jordanian captured and looted by Wahabis. All officers and men of the Transjordania—pursuirs who, are on leave have been recalled and frontier patrols have been strengthened. Another report said that the motor route across the Syrian Desert from Baghdad to Damascus had been closed. BASINA, Iraq, March 5.—The Wahabi King, whose political position has become precarious, has thrown in his lot with the tribes, and a recrudescence of Wahabi attacks in Iraq. Kowett and Transjordania may now be expected. The important Altaban and Aljman tribes, as well as the Mutair, have definitely entered the arena, and the Wahabi King, faced apprightly with the likelihood of the loss of their allegiance, called a meeting of the heads of these tribes and the chief leaders of his realm. It is reported that he told them that at last he had accepted their point of view, sooting all arguments against the sword useless with the Mushrekin or infidels of Iraq, Kowelti and Transjordan. The King is represented, as hosting assured the chiefs that they could dispense his support, and on having given them rites, ammunition, provisions and tents, and saying: "Go forth! Allah will be with you!". Brikin Subsidized Ibn Saud LONDON, March 6, 2013 Saud, the Walshal King, who assassinated against Great Britain, was once subsidized by this country to the extent of $300,000 yearly. Britain, under the League of Nations mandate system, is responsible for the protection of Iraq and Transjordan, and recent incursions into Iraq by Wahhab rebelmen from Ibn Saud's territories brought heavy punishment at the hands of the Royal Air Force, to which the defense of Iraq is mainly entrusted. The Royal Air Force has baned it at Ur of the Chaldees and Kowtet, and is supported by armored trains and tanks. Three British warships—the cruiser Emerald and ships Cylamen and Lupth—are off Kowtet. Ibn Saud is the most powerful Cylamen of the King of Heddah, which includes the Mohammedan holy cities of Mecca and Medina. He won Heddah in a war three years ago and when he put to flight King Hussain, father of the King of Iraq and of the Emir of Transjordan. For, a holy war on Iraq, with Ben Saud in command, the Arabs can master a formidable force, which may be an large as 500,000. On the assumption that he was loyal to Britain, Ben Saud had been entirely furnished by the British Government with prior information about the action to be taken to repel raiders in Iraq. What further British military preparations will be taken to meet the new situation is not digested, but it was officially denied today that troops are being sent to Kowitw from India. Jewels of Turkish Sultans May Fund Bank for Republic CONSTANTINOPLE, March 8. The Turkish Government, credited with the intention of founding a national bank, today announced that treasures and jewels which belonged to thirty former Sultans of the house of Othman have been valued by foreign experts with a view to their employment as a guarantee against a monetary advance from abroad. It is stated that the value of this imperial treasure is at least $50,000,000. The jewelied peacock tryshe of Shahil of Pernia alone is worth $10,000,000. It is with this sum that the Government is expected to start its national bank. One of the chief aims of the bank would be the stabilisation, of Turkish treasures, doubt whether the value of the imperial treasure will be sufficient foundation. THE NEGRO FACES DIRE PROBLEM IN GROWDED CITIES Survey Reveals Attriming Conditions as Result of Drift of Negroes from Country to Cities High Rents, Poor Living Standards ATLANTA, Ga.—From 1900 to 1922 there was a shift of 2,100,000 Negroes from the country to the cities, more than doubling the urban Negro population, according to an exhaustive study of Negro life and conditions just completed by the Institute of Social and Religious Research. Made under the direction of the University of North Carolina, this study covers sixteen typical American cities, North and South, and is the first scientific investigation of Negro conditions ever made on anything like a national scale. The report of the investigation has just been issued in a book entitled "Negro Problems in Cities" which treats of the problems of Negro life and conditions, the resulting problems of friction; congestion, segregation; exploitation, schools, recreation and delinquency. Contary to the general impression, the report reveals that a little more than half the 2,000,000 Negro migrants stopped in Southern cities, though the percentage of gain was very much heavier North than South. In consequence of this rapid shift, overcrowding and congestion in Negro districts were found to be very general. In New York City, for example, Negro populations are a significant factor against the institution-Soham eleven tenement houses in Philadelphia, 175 families were found living in 334 rooms. Along with this crowding has gone an unnormally high death race, particularly to tuberculosis, pneumonia, and the diseases of infants. Rents, it was found, were very much higher North than South, with a weekly average of $7.15 per dwelling in the North as against $7.74 in the South, Lynchburg, showed the minimum, of 60 cents a room, per week, and Gary the maximum of $17.8. In the case of 74 it was found that rentes took more than 23 per cent of the total family income. The investigators, discovered a general lack of public recreation facilities in Negro neighborhoods and, in consequence, a high rate of juvenile delinquency. The conditions of commercialized recreation, such as pool rooms and swimming pools, were found to be deplorable. "School funds are not adequate, to meet the needs, either North or South," says the report. "Where there are separate Negro schools they are usually a secondary consideration, with fewer seats in proportion than the white schools, more pupils per teacher, more double sessions, poorer salaries, fewer teachers, poorer grounds, less adequate provisions for pupils and few, if any, extrafacts such as libraries, gymnasiums, etc." One of the encouraging signs revealed by the survey is the tendency among Negroes toward homeownership in every city studied except New Orleans the number of Negro home owners is highest in Northern cities quite often most cases the slum areas have remained relatively constant in population, while the population of the homeowning sections have been increasing. INDIA'S LLITERACY LAID TO WHITE RULE White denomination has destroyed education in India, and the schooling of native children in 'today wholly in the hands of missionary establishments, according to Professor Ernest Wood, of Madras, who spells last Sunday at the Manhattan Congregational Church, Broadway, near Seventy-sixth Street, New York City. "Hillary in India can be trained directly to the white race," he said. "Originally the country had a system of community enterprise which provided not only village schools to care for the poor but also farming-forms, but doctors, mechanics and certain tradesmen. The new Government has destroyed this system without offering any real substitute. "In matters of practical psychology they are far in advance of the Western World. The knowledge is held by men who deserve the title given them—that of 'holy men.' They treat their powers with great reservation and are unwilling to even indicate that they possess them unless they feel that they are talking to a person who is highly religious." ROME — Announcement that King Victor Emmanuel will soon visit the Italian colonies in North Africa was taken as an indication that the Libyan District of Cyrenaica is nearly pacified. Fighting has been going on there for more than a year, and reports reported to number 10,000 troops having captured several cases, numerous prisoners and, hundreds of cannets, sheep and much other war booty. Signor Luigi Federoni, Minister of Colonies, announced the King's trip at the opening of the Fascist Colonial Institute. Moroccan Jews to Farm PARIS, March 11 — Program of Jewish colonisation in Russia, the Argentine and Palestine has started a landward movement among Jewish inhabitants of Morocco. The government will aid settlement of Jews on Morocc HON. MARCUS GARVEY TELLS BLACK MEN HOW AND WHY AFRICA WILL SOON TAKE HER PLACE. AMONG THE GREAT NATIONS EGYPTIANS ORGANIZE A LABOR FEDERATION Central Body of Union Workers To Co-operate with Amsterdam International Reports from Cairo recently received at the Amsterdam headquarters of the International "Federation of Trade Unions" announce the organization of a nation-wide central labor body called the Federation of Trade Unions of Egypt. In the organizing convention an Executive Committee was elected comprising twenty-four representatives of the twelve affiliated unions and the following general officers: Ahmed Bey Mohamed Agha, president; Sobhy Sand and Ahmed Farahu, vice-president; Ahmed Imad, secretary; Salman Mikhail, assistant secretary, and Sald Abdel Azim, treasurer. About four years ago the number of organized workers in Egypt was estimated at 75,000, consisting mainly of railroad men and textile workers. In reporting the founding of the new national body, the Amsterdam Bureau of the International Federation of Trade Unions says: "The national centre is heartily to be welcomed, and the more so because conditions are favorable to practical work. There are well developed unions representing individual trades, such as the railwaymen and trammen, who have already done a good deal to help form a loosely constructed national federation. As early as 1924 a so-called. General. Labor Federation was formed, which, however, was more local than national, as is evident from the first article of its rules, which provided for the establishment of a national center of all labor organization of Egypt. The International Federation took the highlight in founding the present national centre; it has discharged the function for which it was created. "The rules of this earlier organization provided for the forming of relations with foreign labor organizations and attending their congresses, etc. The new national centre has gone a step further and decided to enter into the closest relations with the I.F.T.U. It is to be hoped that these relations will soon lead to regular co-operation and to an intensive collaboration of the Egyptian trade unions in the promotion of international trade union objects. The great need for this is evident from the many branches of wagearning, especially agriculture, where are extremely low and housing extremes of the population. The service of the State obtain considerably better conditions, and even within certain limits, old-age pension, while for the rest of the workers there is no social legislation, the existing conditions for State workers will form a basis for further action and will facilitate the wider organization of the working class." ALGIEIS, March 9-11. If the Societies des Amis du Sahara (Society of the Friends of the Sahara) has its way with the Sahara Desert, camel caravans may be displaced by flocks of carn and the palm trees at each oasis may give way to hot-dog stands and billboards. The society is mapping out routes through the sand waste in an effort to facilitate government administration and military command, develop a country- and link Algeib with the Sahara. This route real highways, many being merely tricks indicated only by the marks of previous vehicles. Modern low-pried motor cars traveled some of their last year, however, and it is believed that where one car can go others will follow. Nations Cut Forces of Imperialism at Shanghai 5. ANGHAH MARCH 5- The Shanghai defense force, composed of American marines and troops of Britain, France, Japan and Italy, is steadily growing smaller. From a total of 36,000 at the height of the disturbances of a year ago, which brought them have the force is reduced to approximately 10,000 men. A recent check-up of the men ashore from the various powers showed the United States; 1,200; Great Britain; 5,000; France; 800; Japan; 900, and Italy; 150. In addition, there are upward of 1,000 men available from various men of war in Shanghai Harbor and nearby waters. The reduced force could be quickly augmented, however, should the need arise. "Underground Railway" Tunnel Found in Detroit DETROIT. March 2. A tunnel, jealous to have been a link in an underground railway through which Southern slaves occupied into Canada in the days before the Civil War, has been discovered beneath a downtown street here in occupying for a building. The tunnel is twenty feet below the surface, high enough for a man to walk in and a wide wide. The Negro Is No Longer Asleep and Now Thoroughly Realizes the Strength That Comes with Organized Government—The Wheel Turns, and in the Great Cycle of Human Events Africa Will Rise Again, Buttressed by Outstanding Experience NEGRO'S EXCEPTIONAL UNDERSTANDING OF HUMAN NATURE A SOURCE OF STRENGTH The Race Needs Scientists Who by Their Genius Will Render the Battleships and Armies of the Oppressor Obsolete—The World's Most Successful Movements Had No Such Auspicious Start as Furnished by the Universal Negro Improvement Association On Sunday evening, February 5, Hon. Marcus Garvey, President-General of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, addressed members and friends of the organization, in Jamestown at a meeting at the Liberty Hall of the Kingston Division, over which he presided. Associated with him on the plattform were Mrs. Amy Lecoutre, the Executive wife of the President-General; Lady Henrietta Vinton Davis, Fourth Assistant President-General and Miss Hajar J. Esderridge, executive secretary to the Chief Executive. LADY DAVIS ON THE TRAINING OF CHILDREN The first speaker of the evening was Lady Hempstead Vinton Davis, she said. Honorable President-General, officers, members and friends of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. It is again my privilege to say a few words to you. I shall speak about the children tonight. "Train' up a child in the Navy he should go and when he he'doin he will not depart their front. We as a race have been very careless about the training of our children. We have only to realize the great responsibility that rests upon our shoulders, as parents. The children of today are the future men and women of tomorrow. (Heart; Heart!) Therefore it is. Siam Winning Place On Map of the World The foreign language press of Simla's capital, including the Bangkok Dally Math, Johns the vernacular press in rejoicing that the country is finally getting on the map of the world. However, opinion is divided as to how this is being achieved. Some papers say it is entirely due to the deplorable organization of the capital's police, whose corruption permits the most sensational crimes, and that this situation naturally attracts attention in those Occidental countries where the same condition prevails. Others declare that the fame is due to more worthy achievements — the "sedate" activities of the Siamese delegates at the League of Nations; where they have supported the great powers in the Chinese policy without incurring county at Peking; the new Japanese contempt in the markets offered for their artworks; and, finally, Siam's ideal immigration law, which excludes, without exception, all undesirables, whether "Bobshcheit or captors of social morals." Some of the papers have none to history and are tracing the development of Slam from the days of its discovery by Marce. Bob down to its position in the World War. They are reprinting from The Atlantic Monthly the article by Francis Bowes Sayre, former American advisor to the Bangkok Foreign Office, "oil" "smashing" light for Sovereignity." Only 1 Man in 20 Knows His Wife's Maiden.Nam ALDANY: March 11. Only one man in twenty knows his wife's midden name, according to Miss Mary R. Thomas, for fifteen years executive secretary of Albany County, Chapter, American Red Cross. Miss Thomas says she made this discovery while working on applications of World War veterans for adjusted compensation. "We found," she said, "that only about five percent of the applicants knew the middle names or the midden names of their wives. It was the same with the midden games of their mothers, which had to be filled in on the basis of the names of those who knew the midden names their children or the date of their children's birthdays was even smaller." Miss Thomas recalled one applicant who knew his mother's midden name, but after a moment's thought, remarked in all seriousness, "I don't know what my father's name was before he was married." To Atone for Nude Dances VILMAR, Santiago, March 11. The Vienna Roman Catholic Church教堂 has announced that services for three days in atonement for outrages on immorality allegedly committed by Josephine Baker and other performers in recent revues have been ordered at St. Paul's Church, which adjoins the Johann Strauss Theater. Where the American Negro was beating, the audience of 500 at Mile High in New York, Negro, have brought many protestors numbering about 600. memniment upon us, it is our duty; to train up our children in the way they should go. **Look for the Future** "I'll desire to achieve greatness as a race in the future we must prepare for that greatness by training up our children today. There is a great and glorious future before the race; but the race must work for that future. We all have to go much later to do everything—and we freely put off until tomorrow what we should do today, and our children following our example to do tomorrow what they should do today. But we must inspire them by our example of fulfilling days." "In thinking of the work of 'America's poets, Longfellow, I think of his poem on 'The Children's Hour.' How few of us set aside an hour in the day to give to the training and the culture of our children. I wonder how many parents here tonight think that they should take one hour of the day to give to the training of their children. But Lonely-low and Trennyson thought over this training of the children; and therefore they wrote a poem, advising parents that they should give to their children one hour of the day—the hour of twilight. Twilight in the United States lasts over one hour—from mid- CHICAGO. March 11.—A hornotnest was stirred up by Mayor Thompson when he summoned his Negro supporters to a main meeting to boost the Smilil-Thompson State and county candidates. There'probably would have been no disturbance if the Mayor had ended his program there, but he spoke on behalf of Representative' Martin B. Madden, who is opposed this year by a strong' Negro movement, the backers of which are supporting one of their number. William L. Dawson, with a demand that a district four-fifths black be represented, told the backers of As Mr. Thompson talked to Madden, the noise, particularly from the gallery of the meeting hall, where it consisted chiefly of the stamping of feet, became deafening, Chairman Dan Jackson pounded his gavel. Several leaders on the platform held up their blades for quiet. But the Mayor was compelled to stop speaking, and it was several minutes before he could be heard again. Turkey Opens Art Academy As Mohammed's Ban Fails CONSTANTINOPLE, March 6.—Mustapha Kemal's numerous statues and portraits by foreign artists have spurred Turkey to open an Academy of Fine Arts further to encourage Turkish sculpture and painting, neglected under the old regime because Islam forbids images of living beings. Academy will also foster the art of collage, the writing of beautiful Arabic script, having always been honored in the Moslem world, where it will be special demand-for-copying the Koran. This step indicates Angoraf's reluctance to adopt Latin characters, one reason for which is that in the critical economic period of transition Turkey is now experiencing it cannot risk the endless confusion entailed by such Who is the Skinniest Man in the World? If the lives in this town you ought to chip out this notice and send it to him. Perhaps he has naver, heard of McCoy's read of the fair in Cuartero or McCoy's all underweight men and women who need a few more pounds of food to gain in health, vitkor and attractiveness. McCoy falses all the risk—Read this book. McCoy's thirty boxes of McCoy's Tablets or one. Dollary boxes any thin, underweight man or woman doesn't gain at all, and feel completely satisfied with the health—your drugstore is authorized to return the purchase price. The name McCoy's Cod Liver Oil On Tablets has been shortened—just add for McCoy's Tablets at any drug store in America. McCoy's Laboratory, 22 W. 14th Street, New York City IS DEPRIVATION OF FREEDOM WORSE THAN DEATH? SO THE WISE QUERY, AND THE NEW NEGRO ANSWERS 'YES' Better by Far to Undergo Untold Sacrifice and Hardships Fighting for Africa's Freedom Than Exist as Bondamen, Says Hon. E. B. Knox Mrte. M. L. T. Ebimber Says Marcus Garvey. Deserves Thanks of the Whole World, for He Has Wrought Well for Oppressed Peoples Everywhere LIBERTY HALL, NEW YORK, Sunday Night, March II.—A mass meeting lasting until near midnight was held by the New York Local tonight, hundreds of devoted members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and their friends being in attendance and listening with rapt attention to every word that fell from the various speakers' lips. Mme. M. L. T. Ebimber, Assistant International Organizer, occupied the centre of the stage until the arrival of Hon. E. B. Knox, personal representative of the President-General, urging her hearers in her eloquent and engaging way to give honor where honor was due and show their appreciation of the splendid achievements of their brilliant leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey, who had not only wrought a noble work in the interest of the Negro peoples of the world, but had inspired the peoples of the East to take a stand without further delay in the cause of freedom and independence. Mr. Knox arrived at the hall late, having just returned from Philadelphia, where he had spoken to an enthusiastic gathering of Negroes who were engaged in making the Quaker City one of the citadels of Garveyism. In a brief address, which was prefaced by an announcement that he was about to depart soon on a brief visit to the chief in Jamaica, he called upon the membership to rally to the standard of the Red, Black and Green, pointing out that death was preferable to a life that knew no freedom. Mr. J. H. Miller, the genial Vice-President of the New York Local, occupied the chair and introduced the various speakers, among whom were Mr. J. Harrison and Mr. J. Smith. MR. HARRISON'S ADDRESS. Mr. J. Harrison, the first speaker, expressed his pleasure at being once more in Liberty Hall among Negro men and women who had dedicated their lives to the cause of Africa. Since he had been born anew, since he had become a new Negro, a follower of Garvey, he felt an indescribable happiness whenever he came within the walls of Liberty Hall. He was a man of courage, inspiring the spirit, in shouting and praying to God, but Garveyvelum had changed all that. He had now come to realize that God helped those, who helped themselves, and that the only thing any one got from aouting was heartiness. Marcus Garvey was not present in Liberty Hall in the flesh, and that was all the more reason why all those who had imbibed his teachings should do their utmost now to hold up his hands, the green ones would soon be burned up by Burning at Oxford, there to plead the cause of the Negro and Africa, and it was the plain duty of Negroes in America to hold up his hands, to stand behind him four-square and let the world know they were standing solidly behind him. MR. J. SMITH'S ADDRESS Mr. J. Smith, a member of the New York Local, was the next speaker. He said he desired to remind members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association—if, indeed, they needed to be reminded—that this was not a movement for dispensing charity. Some years, also there were many Negroes who felt that way, who expected Marcus Garvey to shower charity upon them, who would go to the office expecting to receive gifts, but when they found that Marcus Garvey had a different conception of leadership from the different leaders of society in the United States—that he had not come to build a Jargo fraternal organization, but to work toward the restoration of Africa's ancient glory—many turned away, disappointed, and refused to come into the doors of Liberty Hall again. No Longer Fooled... Ho, the speaker, was glad to find that, now that the Negro had been awakened and had gotton racial pride and self-respect, he had begun to see movement in his life. King Jimmy upon his throne could beguile Negroes into believing that he could be their leader. Thirty years ago he, the speaker, in his ignorance, had been fooled and had been led off to Africa to assist in the subjugation of the native Afro-Asians. But he knew, bottom now. The Negro regarded it just as ridiculous to export a white man to and from Africa and an indomitable as white British would laugh at the idea of following a black man. No man could lead the new Negro but a Negro. The Relief from the sharp, knife-like pain, the dull, never-ending aches of Rheumatism that is what soothes the sore, stiff skin. Simply apply a Johnson's Red Cross Kidney Plaster right over the seat of pain. You will be surrounded and delighted with the comfort and delight it brings almost, insecurity. It warms and soothes the affected parts, stops the pain and, in some cases, softens and soothes the swollen painful flesh and joints. It gently magnifies the skin with every movement of the body, and its softness helps to dry out and through the skin into the thinner. Don't endure the aversion of Rheumatism another day. You can get preset, gentle rubs at the feet, and soothing massages at the Red Cross Disney Park with the red flower book. Negro race had found such a man in the Hom: Marcus Garvey, and it was just as well that the world knew and understood that the Negro race thought more of Marcus Garvey and his leadership than any leadership that could emanate from alien ranks. The Negro had cut himself away from his father, Goda, where he no longer African in the robbers, and the Negro was determined to rest neither night nor day until it was retrieved. MME. M. L. T. EBIMBER'S ADDRESS Mine. M. L. T. Elbember Assistant International Organizer, followed, choosing as her subject, "Honor to whom honor is due." "We read in the newspaper today," said the speaker, "that Dr. Zimmerman, the great leader of the Zionist movement, is on his way to America at this time to raise seven million five hundred thousand dollars for the rehabilitation of Palestine. A lifetime of work, we are Presbyterian Church is preparing to raise over five million dollars, and three hundred thousand homes are to be visited by thousands of Presbyterian members to raise that money for the purpose of fostering the principles as advocated by the Presbyterian Church. Raising the Wherewithal We also see where the Methodist Episcopal Church is nailing for money for foreign missions and calling upon the ministry throughout the world to help the poor in the special assessment before the general conference that is preparing to sit soon, so that they will have sufficient funds to carry on a great propaganda for the cause which they serve. Now we, the Universal Negro Improvement Association and members of the Garvey, movement, we come together in our Liberty Halls in America and all over the world seeking to propagate racial consciousness, racial solidarity and the necessity for morality, and it is our duty to sacrifice and serve our people. We do so with ideals they desire to foster and to see that sufficient funds are provided to carry on the good work. All honor to whom honor is due." Brought Something New Proceding, Mino. Ebimber pointed out that if Marcus Garvey had come with the old-time request, making for millions of dollars for something that was not really important and not touching the very life and future of the Negro, there would be support from stranger places, and the millions would be not long in coming, but the Hon. Marcus Garvey had come and old Negro Garvey that a football and, rounding him that he was really the equal of other men and their superior in many respects, had appealed to his self-respect and racial pride. Hence the obstacles placed in the way. Asia's Brilliant Effort Mrs. Ebimber then referred to the work of the Nationalists in India and in China as worthy of the admiration of Negroes everywhere. All honor to them, who, realizing their inherent strength and refusing to be trapped underfoot any longer, were standing shoulder to shoulder in the fight for freedom and independence. The speaker ended her address by an eloquent reference to the riches and resources of Africa and the genius and strength of her people, much of it now lying dormant but which, was slowly but surely being mobilized against the great day when Africa and Africans would strike a blow for freedom. It was Marion_Garvey to whom honor was due for roaring from their arseny not only the people of Africa and Nearwest throughout the world, but with them. This eminent to entire the indications and impulses helped upon them by the expresser. Garvey Garvey had given experience peoples the world over new context, and she was certain that in the distant future he would be able COMING TO LIBERTY HALL 120 W. 138th St., N. Y. A DRAMA PLAVED BY MEMBERS OF NEW YORK LOCAL WILL BE PERFORMED BY THE CHILDREN OF THE JUVENILES Watch for Date Benefit Liberty University nally honored for the good that he had done. HON. E. B. KNOX'S ADDRESS Hon. E. E. Knox, personal representative of the President-General, next spoke. He said, owing to the lagness of the hour, he would not intrude upon the patience of his hearers. He had just come from Philadelphia, where he was glad to report the organization had taken on renewed strength. That afternoon a great mass meeting was staged in the Royal Theatre and men and women of every walk of the great city attended anxious to hear news of the famous leader and the progress of the work of the Universal Negro Improvement Association throughout the world. Slavery Worao Than Death: Slavery Worse Than Death. In a few well chosen words Mr. Knox inspired, the membership the world over to go forward relentlessly toward liberty and freedom. Teddy's the great thinker of the age were agrievably debating whether depriving the criminal of his freedom was not a worse punishment than death. The Negro was not free, and it were better he died than that he should remain in his present condition. Every right-thinking man and woman of the rises should unanimously for the redemption of Africa and the rearing of the continent of Africa of a government of, for and by Negroes, for only that way freedom say. Independence Issue Splits South African Assembly CAPETOWN, South Africa—Asserting the 1926 Imperial Conference resolutions gave South Africa the status of Independence, General Hertzog, the South African Premier, moved approval of the conference report in the Assembly. This view was combated by Hertzog's dependence talk by declaring this question was not raised at the conference itself. "I want the relations between Britain and South Africa to be so friendly that we shall never have to raise the question of Independence," General Sims pleaded. He urged, however, with Hertzog that the question of South African neutrality while Britain was engaged in war would be a difficult one, but he would not second Hertzog contention that South Africa would be neutral—a contention which he characterized as—fraught with the greavest of difficulties. Negroes Not Required to Live by Farming Alone HAMPTON, Va., March 5.—The day is past, "declared J. B. Pierce, field agent of the Department of Agriculture, in chapel of farm and home demonstration acres in eight Southern States. In an address before students of Hampton Institute at Sunday evening chapel in connection with Home Ownership Week, "when people look upon the Negro race as best suited to farming alone." He said: "Don't get the idea that I want all of you to be farmers. We don't need all farmers, or all doctors, or all of any one class. We do need people who are interested. in various walks of life and who are happy in the work they are doing. One of the greatest causes of this concern is if concerns the Negro, has been that there are persons out in the country on the farms who are not suited to farming." In spite of the exodus from farming districts; more crops and more stock are now being raised, according to Mr. Pierce; and raised cheaper and with a good deal more ease. Speaking of the importance of land ownership, Mr. Pierce said: "Go into any community and begin to look up people who are worth whiles and you will find that they own property in that community. A man who owns something is more thoughtful of his conduct, it stabilizes him; he isn't likely to to unwise things. He wants to stay there with the things he has labored for. Conditions in the country do not seem to be what they should be, but there are more difficult problems to cope with in the cities. Because of poor educational facilities, humble homes and lack of doctors, because of many things that are short out there in the country, are we going to turn our faces away? Go into the crowded cities, back in some of the places where there are many problems to cope with, and realize the opportunities of the country." Mr. Dun A. Davis, authorly on building and loan associations, and a member of the staff of Hampton Institute, opus widely on the development and use of the Property Building and Loan Association of Hampton. IN AFRICA. In Vortex. Three Africa has ever been a name to thrill the romantic and adventurous a land of wind-blown deserts, of trackless forests, of wild and desolate veld, where a pitiless sun has sent many a magnetor to the grave; where lions roar and maddened elephants crash their way through the jungle. All these are parts of the vision conjured up at the mere mention of diamonds, for from the African soil has been taken vast wealth in the form of these coveted bits of crystallized carbon. And the world has been stirred again reverberating with the dazzling redondo of diamonds "unparalleled in the history of South Africa." Such, at least, was the official description given to the Assembly at Cape Town a few days ago. The exploitation of old diamond fields and the search for new have continued feverishly for centuries, for the fascination of the glittering stones in perennial and universal. Men and women, Kings, Queens and commoners, savage Princess and cultured society leader alike feel the spell of the glittering faceted gems. A loot and desperate glory of crime could be woven around the diamond industry, and the histories of many of the more valuable stones in the records of, blood and struggle and violence. The Spell of Diamonds Diamonds have played an important part in the affairs of more than one nation, in India especially. Nor have the more civilized nations of the eastern world been so obsessed with the spell. The now waveless of England are a part of the court glory of the nation; and the fate of the gorgeous gems of the Czars court, now a resource of the Soviet Government, led to endless speculation in the early days of the Russian revolution. Rulers in the course of time came to look upon jewels, particularly diamonds, as a wise investment, readily transferable into cash - in time of trouble. And it is also, as an investment as well as for purposes of lavish display that the modern world looks upon these chance products of the South African wilds. The recent discovery near Alexander Bay, at the mouth of the Orange River, in a desert region inhabited by Hottentots, was not altogether unexpected. Early in 1920, *gold* "finds" were reported, but the inaccessibility of the region, making transport almost impossible, proved a deterrent even to famous hunters who follow the trail of diamonds. In the light of recent developments, it will take more than transport difficulties to stem the human tide. Reports of the Orange River fields, though they come from official sources, strain the imagination. The Finds Already Made The Minister of Mines in the Union House of Assembly, stated that he had visited these now diamond fields and had picked up $3,000 worth of stones in an hour, and South Africa's leading geologist, Dr. Hana Morensky, already famous for his discovery of platinum in the Transvaal and the discoverer of this digger's dream, found, with the assistance of eleventeen mon, $600,000 worth of diamonds in eighteen days. He visited the mines at Kimberley, stated that "this is the biggest diamond field discovered anywhere." The Government, to avoid a recurrence of the wild "rushes" which have occurred in recent years, leaving in their wake genesis of poverty and destitution unparalleled even in South Africa's picturesque history, and also to keep the diamond market stable, has decided to develop the diggers a Government enterprise, the societies of new fields made within the last two years, of which those of Grassfontein, Wetland and Lichtenburg are, the most notable, were all thrown open to the public. Any one who had the desire to "get rich quick" could obtain a license; and, as a result, thousands from every walk of life made their way to those dirigings. Among them were school teachers on vacation, clerks taking "kick leave," men of lore, and children. All flocked to the spot to wait while preparations were made for the crude method of apportioning claims. Opening Up New Fields Before a diamond hold is thrown open to the public it is proclaimed in the Government Gargate a long time in advance and a date is set for the pegging of claims. At the appointed time the matter throng is lined up under police supervision, a mile or more from the proclaimed area, and at a given signal the rush begins. Each person in the crowd provides himself with four steel regulation pegs, stamped with his name, with which to mark out a claim, and everybody's object is to reach some spot previously decided on an particularly desirable. There is more luck than good judgment, however, in the attainment of a good claim. Owing to the nature of the claim within a few yards of each other may have considerably diffused it. And the race is not always to the strong. This fact was well illustrated in the Graefenstein rush, where athletes hired by syndicates formed themselves into groups for the purpose of pegging out the choicest claim. Although some twenty of the Transvaal's leading athletes took part in the rush and Opera Checks the Bowl the Few Sings the Cold Tones the Piano COLDS Four things to do to end a cold quickly. KILL B Cust. to end a cold. Quit smoking. Do all four as one time. Stop a cold in one day. Red bus. All events. All struggles. obtained what wage, theoretically, the pick of the skidman, not one of them did more than pay expenses, while less desirable claims raked in a pinhardt manner by less fast man yielded fortunes. After the pepa have been placed the owners rush back to the Government official in charge to register the claim, and although police supervision is provided, it is not an inquefrequence for some man to substitute his own for that of the pinhardt and to forestall him in the registration. Severa Natural Barriere. Severe Natural Harriers All of the recent discoveries have been made in barren stretches of veil, mud with boulders and thorn bushes. The lack of water has proved a severe headache. Water was transported from the lowest source of supply by means of a boat, in cases sold at prices ranging from 20 to 50 cents a gallon. It can, therefore, be readily understood that the scene of the average diggings is one of barrenness and desolation. The South African earth guards its treasures jealously. Overhair a relentless sun shines from a steel-blue, sky and on all sides as far as oye can reach, stretches the flat and limitless void. Even the game watch once overgrown the country has migrated blewhere in search of more invading pastures. Physicians Prepare for Tuskegee April Clinic TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala. March 12—Some 200 physicians and surgeons, colored and white, from North and South, are expected to attend the seventh annual clinic of the John A. Andrew Memorial Hospital and the eleventh annual meeting of the John A. Andrew Clinical Society, which meet here April 1-4, according to announcement of Dr. Eugene H. Dibble, Jr., secretary-treasurer of the society and medical director of Tukegoe Institute. Organized in 1928 for the advancement of Negro physicians and surgeons in the science and art of medicine and for the study and treatment of morbid conditions of affecting thousands of needy sufferers in this section of the South," the Clinical Society has steadily grown in membership and extended its services. To the meetings of this society annually come some of the most outstanding men of medical science in America. These meetings make available for the people of this section first chas medical and surgical aid which otherwise would be difficult for them to secure. The availability of a careful training program is instructive and interesting session. A full program with papers, operations, demonstrations—and hospital inspection has been arranged. Prominent among those who will attend are: Dr. Louis I. Dublin, statistician, Metropolitan Insurance Company and author of "Life, Death and the Negro" published in a recent number of The American Mercury; Dr. Walter Gray Crump, Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, of New York; Dr. E. R. Alexander, dermatologist of New York; Dr. W. W. Peters of the Cleanliness Institute of New York; Dr. H. D. Kleinschmidt of the American Public Health Association, New York; Dr. H. B. Burrow of the American Social Hygiene Association of New York; Dr. U. G. Dalloy of the Dalley Saturation, Chicago; Dr. M. O. Dunnas of the Freedman's Hospital, Washington, D. C.; Dr. Charles H. Garvin of the Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland; Dr. Charles W. Reeves and Dr. G. A. Howell of Atlanta; Dr. C. B. Bognan of Meharry Medical College, Nashville; Dr. S. M. Charles of Knoxville; Dr. J. L. Lafaye of Lexington, Kentucky, president of the Clinical Society; physicians and surgeons of Tuskegee Institute and the United States Veterans' Hospital, and others. During the week of the meeting of the Clinical Society annual Founder's Day will be observed* commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Tinkegee Institute Board of Trisbee will also be meeting fit the same time. Pacific States Prefer Congress is again at work to settle on some definite basis, the much-mooted and the much-footballed question of immigration. The House committee is engaged in hearings on the box bill, which would put Mexico and the Latin-American countries on a quota basis. It would not make much difference except with Mexico. Most of the opposition to the box bill comes from the Pacific coast, where Mexican labor is in great demand. The West coast states fear an influx of Negro labor from the Southwest if Mexican labor is shut off. There are twenty-eight bills in the Senate, but the Committee on Immigration there has not taken up the subject because of the many conflor-verals involved, and since word had been received from the Pan-American Conference at Havana that considera- tion of the subject with unfavorable publicity might have an adverse effect. Now, however, the decks are cleared for action. CORNS REMOUVED ENTIRELY Corns press on corns saving enormous pains. For persons the permitting will found only in this scientific report have brought quid, were relied to continue without risk of infection. Pati- ness to droughts. Small size 12s. Remainance 7s. 1s. KONLER THE NIGHT CORN CURE NEGRO WORLD EXPANSION FUND 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 Regiment 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 500 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. Cuts Army in Morocco PARIS - France's army in Morocco has during the last twelve months been reduced by 111 officers and 3,187 men, affecting thereby a saving of nearly 22,000,000 francs. The total figures for the regular force in the protectorate now are stated to be 2,655 officers and 67,540 men, distributed among the four military centers of Fez, Melkhen, Taza and Marrakech. There is also being maintained an auxiliary Moroccan formation, for police purposes in the southern district, of twelve officers and 12,181 men, of whom 405 are French. Unhappy Guianese A Canadian Press cable from London stated that J. A. Tine, Conservative Member of Parliament, declared in the House of Commons that the possibility of the anexation of British Gulana to Canada was being discussed by residents of Gulana. OTTAWA, Ont. — The Dominion government is not aware of any discussions looking to the 'Anexation of British Gulana, it was said here. If such discussions are taking place, they are, it is understood, continued to British Gulana. Health Committee Fixes May as 'Membership Month' The Harlem Tuberculosis and Health Committee, held its March meeting at the offices, 202 West 136th street, Tuesday evening, March 8. Dr. Henry O. Harding, chairman, presided. Plans were made for the maintenance committee to meet with the chairman, Mrs. E. P. Roberts, next Tuesday evening. It was decided by the committee to make May "Membership Month" when a drive to acquire more members will be launched. Those present at the committee meeting were: Dr. Henry O. Harding, Dr. P. F. Anderson, Dr. and Mrs. E. P. Roberts, Dr. W. J. Carter, Mrs. W. McNelhoa, Mrs. Adah Thomas Smith, Mrs. E. Parks, Mrs. Mabel Doyle Keaton, executive secretary, and Miss Gatesdale-Sheridan Tails on the importance of the early diagnosis of tuberculosis are, to be given in: five Harlem schools this month. They have been arranged by the Harlem Committee in connection with the campaign to get people to treat TB. They are also in order to check up on their health. Tuberculosis and many other diseases are much more easily cured if they are discovered early. Negro World Advertising Representatives, W. B. Ziff Co., Transportation Bldg., Chicago, Ill. 171 Madison avenue, New York City 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. THE WORKING-PROGRAMME PEOPLE who do things methodically always have a system by which they work, and they are the people who accomplish most in the big world of thought and effort. No one can get far in any direction without knowing in advance where he is going and what he is going after. It is the drifting person, the happy-go-lucky creature, who is always a dragon on the industrious and thrifty who have an objective and work towards it. By looking around in the community where you reside you can easily single out the persons who think and work with a definite idea of accomplishing certain things, and it is just as easy to single out those who simply drift with the current; or are dragged by it, and who are a liability rather than an asset to the community and the race group with which they may be classed. It is easy in any community to single out the persons who amount to something and to separate them from the persons who do not amount to anything. Which group do you belong to? It is impossible for any person to be a member in good standing of the Universal Negro Improvement Association unless he understands the principles of the Association and seeks to promote them in happy and cheerful co-operation with others. That is understood: President-General Marcus Garvey has taught us to get together and think alike and work together as one person for the carrying on of the work of the Association: The member who does not understand all this will prove a hindrance rather than a help in the good work. Besides the principles for which the Association stands and which each member is expected to do his share in making effective there must be a working programme, systematically worked out and lived up to, in order to get the desired and best results. What is this working programme? It is as follows: 1. Each member is expected to pay promptly the annual tax of $1 and his local assessments. The annual tax for 1928 is now past due and should be paid in cases where it has not been, and we understand there are very many cases where it has not been paid. How can an unfinancial member expect the Parent and Local bodies to properly function unless he pays promptly what he promised when he becomes a member to pay? It is out of the question. An unfinancial member is a drag and discouragement on the Association. 2. Each member is expected to subscribe for The Negro World; or buy it an authorized agent, and there should be such an agent in every Local organization. Each Local should see to that. How can any member know what is going on in the Association; or what its responsible officers think and do, unless he takes and reads The Negro World? For his own benefit, and because The Negro World is the authorized medium through which to get the news and opinion of the Association, it is necessary that The Negro World should be read each week, by each member of the Association. Find out if your neighbor is doing this, and if he is not, encourage him to do so. 3. Each member is expected to contribute reasonably to the support of the Universal Liberty University on the James River and to supply it with students by sending his own children to it and by encouraging his neighbors to do likewise. Our children need to be educated in our own university to understand the principles of the Association and to be the better able to carry on the work of propaganda intelligently in this country and in all other countries where the Association has been planted and taken root. 4. Each member is expected to do all he can to promote the success of the International Convention, to be held in Toronto, Canada, in August, 1929. He will be told how best he can help as we go along, from time to time, in The Negro World by Hon. E. B. Knox, the personal representative of President-General Marcus Garvey in the United States. We want 20,000,000 new members by the time the International Convention convenes, President-General Garvey has declared, and each member is expected to encourage one or more persons to become members. This programme is a standing one, and has been thought out and published in The Negro World for you and for your benefit. BRITISH TROUBLES IN NEAR AND FAR EAST GREAT BRITAIN is so situated that anything which threatens to interfere with her communication with India in the Far East, serves as a disturbing influence. A crisis has arisen in Egypt by the refusal of the British High Commissioner to accept a draft of a treaty of alliance between Egypt and Great Britain and the tendering of the resignation of the Egyptian cabinet to King Fuad. The crisis may be smoothed over, but the situation will remain tense, as the Egyptians have become very sensitive over the interference of Great Britain in their affairs. In India the relations of the British have reached the snapping point because of the presence in the country of a British commission to reorganize the government without any East Indian representative on it. The King of the Hedjaz and Sultan of Nedj has begun a Holy War "aimed only at infidel tribesmen in British protected territory, and not against Great Britain," according to a cablegram. But it is necessary that Great Britain protect her interests and keep open communication with India, and she must therefore take sides against the Arabian king, who is a fanatic Puritan of Mbslemism, who has control of Mecca, the sacred city of the Moslems, and is in some sort the head of the Moslem hosts of Asia and Africa. Once the little war is started it can easily grow into a big war, and war of any size is just what the British taxpayers do not want at this time. Asia and Africa are both in a ferment of exasperation at the policies Great Britain has adopted in dealing with native interests in those countries, and the unrest and confusion, with violent outbreaks always possible, increase instead of decrease. They reap the whirlwind who sow to the wind. THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY MANY incidents which have transpired since the release of the Honqrable Marcus Garvey from Atlanta prison and his arrival in Kingston, Jamaica, have served to emphasize the distressing fact that the Negro is his own worst enemy. The fight within the race is more deadly and devastating than the fight from without. The New Negro is fighting with all that is in him to obtain complete political and economic emancipation. The Old Negro, saturated with a love and reverence for the least utterance or desire of the white man, fights his forward-looking brother to the bitter end, believing that the white man is a better friend to him than his black brother. The Old Negro leader says: "In union there is strength," but does not mean it. He sells his racial soul daily for a mess of pottage disguised as individual favors from a white group whose only aim is to lull him to sleep because he is capable of playing an important part in holding the masses together. This condition is not new. It is a hangover, so to speak, from the days of slavery when the Negro, who lived in the house and enjoyed certain privileges, paid for them by betraying his less fortunate brothers. This very same evil, difficult to discern in its 1928 garb, is sapping the life blood of the Negro today. The New Negro is tearing away the veil and is refusing to be blinded with small favors, compromises and false promises. He has rolled up his sleeves and is determined to fight his misguided black brother to the bitter end. The New Negro is bound to win. Are you helping to hasten the victory? FOUR MILLION UNEMPLOYED IN UNITED STATES of production and a greater volume of money than ever before; but a counter claim has been put in by Mr. William Green; President of the American Federation of Labor, who says there are some 500,000 union workers unemployed, and by Senator Wagner of New York, who in this maiden speech in the Federal Senate, stated that there are some 4,000,000 workers idle in the country. He is something of an authority on labor questions and could hardly afford to make a random statement about so grave a matter. With so much production and money in the land why should there be so much unemployment and want among the workers? There is too much concentration and monopoly in necessary things and in money. The few have too much and the many too little of what they need in the necessary things of life. IS THE WHITE SOUTH-CIVILIZED? long time ago the editor of The Negro World asked the question, "Is the White South Civilized?" and there was wide discussion of the question in the responsible newspapers of the country, which were more open-minded on the problems involved in the face question than they are now. Forty years ago there was an open discussion of such a question, which has never been satisfactorily answered, but today the most atrocious outrages are committed by white mobs in the Southern States which are ignored almost entirely by the responsible newspapers of the country. The news reports of such outrages are excluded entirely or only given in the briefest way. The white pulpit is almost equally as silent and non-committal on these outrages, and the answer to the main question here, as the white newspapers. This is a great misfortune, as such wrongs can never be righted if the responsible white press and pulpit of the country are silent about them, or negligible in their notice of them. The vital business of contending against mob law and overriding of law and legal process and of legalized wrong and outrage and there is far too much of this latter in every Southern State, has devolved in large part upon the Negro newspapers, some of the editors of which, as in the Kentucky cases, are being persecuted for publishing the truth. The State of Florida, which has become a hot bed of lawlessness of late years, is squirming over the gruesome facts surrounding the alleged lynching of a Miami bellboy by officers of the law. The alleged offense of the Negro boy was that he had insulted a guest of a white hotel. This happened in July of last year, The two offending officers, at last accounts, were in jail, and a judge had denied their appeal for release, and the grand jury was investigating the whole matter. It is too much to expect the grand jury to find indictments against the two white officers, because that is not the way such things are worked out in Florida. To punish a white person for any sort of offense against a Negro, even if it be murder, is not looked upon with favor by the dominant white race group. That is because they are not really civilized. They are still barbarous, and revert to savagery on occasion. Then, again, in Jackson, Miss., two Negro men were found with two white women in a room in a local hotel and they were arrested on a disorderly charge. In the progress of the case, the white women being still locked up, the two men were taken from the sheriff by a mob and castrated. These two Negro men, knowing the prevailing prejudice against such association, had no business mixing it with white women, but they were entitled to their day in court, and were not legally punishable in the barabarious way employed by the mob, which would not have been guilty of such a crime if they were really civilized. We have no sympathy whatever for criminals of any race, but we insist that alleged criminals shall have a fair and impartial trial by a judge and a jury of their peers. We are led to believe that a growing sentiment against mob law and personal irresponsibility of law officers is making itself felt in the Southern States, and that some church organizations and newspapers are beginning to wage a determined and courageous warfare against mob violence, and it is to be hoped that the manifestations are more than skin thick. The Miami and Jackson mob crimes discourage our belief and constrain us to still ask, "Is the White South Civilized?" Birthplace of National Anthem to Be Shrine WASHINGTON—Congress has provided an appropriation of $81,678 for restoration and preservation of Fort McHenry, Md., birthplace of "The Star-Spangled Banner." The authorization will serve ultimately to provide a splendid national monument commemorating the defense of Fort McHenry against the bombardment of the British foot in 1814, and the birth of the American national anthem. While the original flagstaff on which the Stars and Stripes flow long shop has disappeared, the flag still flies over the Imperial spot on which Francis Boot Key viewed it from the British vessel whom he was detained. Scientist Revising Estimate Of the World's Weight WASHINGTON, March 8. Another attempt to determine the exact weight of the world is under way at the Bureau of Standards. Dr Paul B. Heyl a bureau physician, who made a series of observations on the subject a year ago, is now undertaking a check of his former work, with some modifications of the apparatus used. By his original work, the weight of the earth was figured in tons to be 4,693, followed by eighteen ciphera. The new experiments will not change his original figures much, the scientists say, but the difference will nevertheless be important from a scientific GO TO IT GEORGE KNOCK HIM OUT! GEORGE THE OLD NEGRO NEW NEGRO REGINALD GREENWOOD PALF SERVICE NY The Morals of Our Time! It is remarkable to contemplate the deception of man, as practiced upon his brothers. The human race has degenerated into select groups of liairs and thieves, who practice their profession and carry out their depredations through the media of high-sounding philosophies. Chief among the deceivers who parade as sanctified moralists and reformers are some of the leading statesmen of the white rue. The white man has given ua morals from his head, and lies from his heart. Marcus Garvey. HEALTH TOPICS BY DR. M. ALICE ASSERSON Of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association DRINK PLENTY OF WATER No matter what other liquids we drink we should not forget to drink plenty of water. It is healthful, and, after all, it is perhaps the most refreshing of all beverages. Our bodies consist of a large per- centage of water. Practically every part of them needs it to function properly and to keep in good condition. The blood needs it. The kidneys need it. The intestines need it to help them carry on their function. Opinions differ on the exact amount of water we should drink to keep in good health. However, all physicians are agreed that from six to eight glasses a day are necessary to good health. It is a good plan to drink one or two glasses when you get up in the morning, one with each meal, one between each meal, and one before going to bed at night. Some persons may drink even more than this amount. The question of drinking water with meals is often debated. Drinking it with meals is not a bad habit. In fact, it should be encouraged. The only disadvantage is that many people drink it to assist in swallowing food before it has been chewed properly. Drink after you have finished chewing food, and not to wash it down in a partially chewed state. Get the habit of drinking a sufficient amount every day. You will find it an aid to health. It also helps keep the skin in good condition and thus may be said to be an aid to beauty. Lack of Alphabet Hampers Telegraph Service in China The transmission and receipt of telegraphs in China is not so easy as in Western countries, because the Chinese language lacks an alphabet and expresses itself by characters and signs that represent words. In consequence, for purpose of telegraphing, an exact list has been made of signs in quantity sufficient for ordinary correspondence and to each of the signs a different number is given which is transmitted by the Morse telegraph system. The code consists of 9,800 ciphers, the whole forming a panphot of forty-nine pages, each one of which contains ten series of twenty characters with its corresponding number. On receipt of a telegraph the operator looks up in his book the characters represented by the numbers transmitted by the apparatus and transcribes them into legible Chinese—Washington Sunday Star. High Price Bid For a Silver Dollar WATCROSS, Ga. — An-1804 silver dollar presented at the ticket window of a movie picture theatre here attracted the attention of Mrs. Frank G. Hedams, wife of the owner. Now the coin has become the center of spirted bidding, and the latest offer was made to be from a Fort Worth (Tux) coin dealer, who will now $240 for it. EDITORIAL OPINION OF THE NEGRO PRESS THE BETTER PART It is better to lose with a conscience clean Than to win by a trick unfair; It is better to fall and to know you've been. Whatever the prize was, square. Than to claim the joy of a far-off goal And the cheers of standers-by. And to know down deep in your in- Who wins by trick may take the prize, And at first he may think it sweet. But many a day in the future lies When he'll wish he had met defeat; For the man who lost shall be glad at heart And walk with his head up high. While his companion knows he must play the part Of a cheat and a living lie. The prize seems fair when the fight is on. But, save it is truly won. You will hate the thing when the crowds are gone. For it stands for a false deed done. And it's better you never should reach your goal Than ever success to buy At the price of knowing down in your soul That your glory is all a lie. JUST A MINUTE I have only just a minute, Only sixty seconds in it. Forced upon me—can't refuse it. But it's up to me to use it. I must suffer if I lose it. Give account if I abuse it. Just a tiny little minute. But eternity is in it—Anon. Why the Shock? Mexico is reported badly shocked by telegraphic news from Washington to the effect that a governmental commission treating the question of Mexican immigration to the United States has under serious consideration a proposal whereby all immigrants from Latin America, unless whites, would be excluded. Elevation to office will change no once nature and general characteristics. What he was and in fundamentally he will be. Elevation to office will make him bolder in the assertion of his real self, whether of good or evil. Know your man or woman: campaign palver amounts to but little.—Star of Zion. Sensible people of observing kon look on sorrowfully while the egotist, unmindful of his pilight; estruts out his or her belof role of egotistic tragedy on a stage of self-importance; then the curtain falls and the egotist disappears to the rolloff of all beholders and goes down to confusion unwept, unhonored and unsung. The sense of justice to others is a great and invaluable human asset, having stood the favorable test of human intercourse and experience throughout the ages. Negro business in the South opens itself to attack the moment its size makes it worth plundering. The price of peace for Negroes, as proven by Georgia and Tennessee, is a dead level of bare existence. Because no court exists there which will defend Negro money—Kansas City Call. Brevity is the order of the present age and no less so in german delivering than in conversation. To continue to preach after the people become non-responsive is to preach vainly—Tampa Bulletin. As long as judges will sit on the bench during the trial of Negroes, or any other citizens for that matter, and state that this is a "white man's country, the Negro will costing to be mistreated, and his rights disreserved by both officers and all of the dominant race—Shreveport Sun. It is a well known fact throughout the country that Nervous of this day and these are not well satisfied by any HOMELY PHILOSOPHY When trouble comes and storm after storm of adversity breaks above the head, then is a man's mettle tested. If he can weather shock after shock and rise up after the repeated blows and struggle onward, his face turned toward a vision, a calling hope, he has mettle. Such a man is rare—he is a peer though clothing in rags—he is the world's Great. He has rent mottle. Georgia Doughass Johnson. Noah Webster To Benefit by Copyright Noh Webster, the dictionary marker, was the first American to benefit by the copyright law. In 1753 Webster published "A Grammatical Institute of the English Language." He described it as "an elementary book for facilitating the acquisition of our vernacular tongue and for correcting a vicious pronunciation which prevailed among the common people," say the Mentor. The first part was known as "Webster's Spelling Book." It is still in print and has sold over 60,000,000 copies. Shortly after the publication of this book Webster made a tour of the Southern States in the interests of a copyright law. The federal copyright law was passed in 1760. It was especially appropriate that the first author to take advantage of this law should have both one who labored to promote it. Interracial Marriages Increase in Hawaii HONOLULU—With gradual downfall of the language barrier, intermarriages between Japanese and other races in Hawaii are increasing. Of 810 Japanese women married in 1927, 41 took non-Japanese husbands, and of 798 Japanese men who married, 29 took non-Japanese wives. The largest percentage of interracial marriages, however, is made up of those contracted by white men. one party; that the Negro who votes now votes for personal conviction, and that he is not a Democrat because his great-grandfather was, nor is he a Republican because his father was. We believe that the day has come when man are able to discern for themselves what they want and why they want it. —Houston Sentinel. It is up to the press to undertake the very work which the churches have been best prepared to do, but have not done as an organized body. We must labor to raise a peasantry to citizenship, purpose, opportunity and cooperative endeavor while ours works to keep alive —Washington Tribune. We must attempt something if we intend to gain anything. Sixty-four years of freedom are enough. Nor are we making the progress now that our father made. If this age we are spending too much time in simply getting by—Western American. We need to become economically independent and to make our own institutions of learning increasingly more secure financially ourselves. The supreme value and necessity of education demand it.—Norfolk Journal and Guide. The World War, out of which we thought and confidently believed would issue a much-vaunted world democracy, has left instead in the wake a trail of racial prejudice, wider, deeper and more engulfing than existed before—Cleveland Call-Peet. The multi-colored aspect of the Negro race did not evolve of itself port through the white man's endeavors to insure racial distinction; such a motive ground must have come out of the proximity of the white man and his unwillingness to keep a "golden rule" with the Negro. Atlanta independence Aliens Seek to Tighten Their Grip On Africa While Negroes Squabble GARVEY ON "AFRIGA'S PLACE" BY MARC I. GREENS 'In the New York New York Telephone PORT SUDAH.—According to a group of cotton planters passing through the region from Kenya to Colombia to England; there are corn in British East Africa, especially in Tanganyika Territory, over the rapid increase in the German population of the district. The planters declare that 'no doubt existe of German's intention to colonize Tanganyika to an extent which will within a definite time, give the Germans a num- numerous preponderance and thus make their country a part of Nations to change the mandate on the ground that a superior German population should not be governed by a British administration. Germany Worked Secretly Tanganyika was a very prosperous and rapidly growing German colony before the war. But what is not so well known is that Germany hoped to make it the point of departure for a future vast German empire in Central Africa, and that her plans to that end were developing very successfully, but what is different from what is understood by "colonization" Comparatively, few Germans were emigrating to East Africa, nor were they encouraged to do so. The plan was to exploit the resources of the country for the benefit of home industries by forced native labor under the direction of a few German administrators. In this way it was expected not only to develop the German economy but to gain a great strategic advantage by a continued extension of German holdings as well as by the building of harbors and large naval bases. "Penetration" Planned These plans, which were more far-reaching and more-definitive than was generally known, were, of course, defeated by the war. That is to say, they were apparently defeated; but it is the belief in British East Africa, that they were but temporarily陋后 later to be put into operation about somewhat different lines. The trend now is in the direction of "penetration," in other words, by German settlement in the districts concerned. During the last five or six years this has been going on to an extent apparently overlooked by anyone outside East Africa. The relationship between Tanganyika, Kenya, and Uganda has, however, brought it to the fore, and so convinced are the British settlers in all three of the dependencies that they are insisting upon federation as the only means of reinforcing British interests in East Africa, and especially in the vast Tanganyika territory. District Is British - District is British - The present citation that Tanganyika, - the name of the seaport in Darsa-Salem, is administered by England under a mandate from the League light to darkness is the twilight hour. And so Longwelltear to his children more longwelltear to the twilight hour —the hour that he could hear their little voice—hear their little counsellor. Decam of Noble, Dorea "It is this early training of the children that has made them the builders of a great race. Let us train their minds that subconsciously they should carry these thoughts into their sleep and dream of great and noble deeds. And that is our duty to our children; and let the parents make in their minds that the training of the lives of their children is of so much value. Often in the day you have not the twilight hour here, but yet within the moments, the twilight hour you can spent a little time with the children on your lines, with the children standing by your chair; and you can talk to them and try to train them to go great men and women. The 'Children's Hour'—let us give that to the children. Liberty University "The Universal Negro Improvement Association as founded by our great leader, the Hon. Marcia Carvey, is a great training school for all Negroes in the world. (Applause.) The program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in this great universe of Negroism must not only train me and you, but train the little ones as they so along. With that in thought, there is being established for Negroes a great university which is situated on the banks of the glorious James River, the historic river whose once the Negroes of America dwelt as slaves; the river whose name should no longer be forgotten in the annals of the history of the Negroes in this Western world; the river whose name is still in the Universal Negro Improvement Association. This university has been founded to train them for the great future that is before them. We will move these boys and girls in the scene of action by and by; and therefore we must all assist in致使 that they may no able to take our places to carry through with greater results the program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. (Applause.) HON. MARCUS GARVEY'S ADDRESS The President-General then rose to speak on 'Africa's place, among the races, and nations.' 'AFRICA'S PLACE AMONG THE RACES AND NATIONS,' said he, in a voice that rang and re-echoed through the hall. 'We are living in a world of modern thought and changes; all around us there is change and, in some places decay. These changes affect human groups. Naturally, as a group we are also affected by the changes. The greatest and most penetrating change of our time is political. The Power of Politics "Politics protects those human rights that protects those human rights that of Nations, Kenya, whose post is Mombasa, is a British colony, and the interior district of Uganda is a British protectorate. These are of course, little more than political distinctions. The fact is that the whole district made up of the three dependencies, which is a very large district, is British. Moreover, the British government and the thousands of British settlers intend it to remain British, and hence their farm over what they profess are German plans to get back the lost colonies, ganylka. Meanwhile there is a perceptible decrease in British trade and an increase in German trade, due, according to British, opinion, to the rapid increase in the number of German stores and to their custom of hurling more bar German-produced goods. Indian Agitators Active Indian Agitators Active Other difficulties face the British in each of the three dependencies, and those difficulties center largely about the truculent and hostile attitude of the large number of Indians as well as of many of the natives. Indeed, it is declared that the latter are being made restless by the Indian agitators. For some time the Indians have been objecting to British administration, esp. in Kenya, where the British Government. Struggling, is persons not granted to the Hindu. Colicident with the agitation resulting from the visit to India of the Simon commission the East African Indians are breaking out again. They are opposing, and will continue to oppose; by every possible means the federation scheme on the ground that it will give Britain added power in East Africa, and that that power will be used against the interests and welfare of the East Indian colonists. Leading African natives oppose federation on the same ground. Commission. Investigates These are some of the difficulties that the British Hillion Young commission now in East Africa, investigating the situation is confronting. Nor does the commission find entire accord even among the British themselves, for such is the jealousy between the settlers in the three dependencies that a federation in which one shall dominate also other two is unacceptable to the. Manohla-twined shows unmistakable signs of being affected by political unrest, and of this the Germans are taking prompt advantage. Moreover, the situation is not without its effect upon the vast Sudan territory, where immigrate and ever-increasing amounts of British capital are invested and where hundreds of thousands of pounds have been expended during the last four years upon irrigation schemes and a vast network of modern highways. are not protected by law. Therefore, all people who desire to protect themselves and their rights resort sooner or later to political action. Political action institutes government. Government is the organization of a community of people for their protection. You will find every white group of people in the world having a government of their own as a means of protection, for the exercise of their political rights. In the arrangement of government and in the exercise of political rights they establish certain customer; they establish certain fields of operation where these custom are applied as different to and differently related to other customers. This man has done for the one and particular reason of orderly and permanently protecting himself. It is not ignore the fact that all this is necessary—it is not necessary that the whole thing has developed into a science; and an a science it is practised today with more persuasion, with more determination, with more pride than anything else in the world—the science of government is really the same of all man's spiritual and material reach for peace, happiness and earthly satisfaction. It is the politics of the one people in its arrangement, that makes them greater than another not or another group of people. It is the popular politics of Great Britain that makes her much greater than other branches of her own race. It is the politics of the one people that makes her the greatest republic in the world. And so, materialistically or otherwise, you and all people seeking protection under this supreme establishment, under this supreme law of men's peaceful existence—of scientific politics. Africa and the Law "Today I want to place Africa within not law (frost, freeze) because it is as essential to protect the lives of Africans as it is to protect the lives of any other group in a similar environment (applause). Anything that made it possible to produce the great British Empire, anything that made it possible to make the great American Empire, for America is no longer known and an indication of States that looked like empires—anything that made it possible for the Chinese, the French, the Germans, the Englishman to create an empire should also make it possible for the creation of an African Empire (applause). We want you to look upon it from the most: reasonable viewpoint, the most righteous viewpoint—man's rights that are equal, irrespective of color. The best viewpoint is much natural and rights to the world and in the world as anybody also under the plan of creation. We are inspired to the meeting of these rights with the same human organization with the same human reason as given other creatures. Why this should be regarded with strangers is impossible for the reasonable man to tell that there is anything strange or anything new about this effort to place Africa among the nations. The world holds record of great events in history of the rise, growth, fall and decline of races, pea, peoples, of nations and empires. At every turn of human progress, the one group or the other has always manifested in its political, racial, national growth. Even the people that you are relics of have played their part at some time of the world's History in the bringing about of this nationalistic perfection that is so much indulged in by the greater peoples of today. No Argument Against "Going down the lilie, every group has had its day. England had her way of nation building, empire building and scientific political protection. So that there is absolutely no argument, no reason to be found and to be adducted why even at this late hour your group has been able to take care of any other group—cannot that it justifiable to indulge in the 'same escapade' with the same intention of nationalistic development. There is no argument against your effort, because all history supports you in the idea that BIC is right. (Applause.) And you yourselves indulged in it to such an extent that at one period of the world's history you get on the topmost rung of the political ladder. You were the leaders of thought and civilization as it were, just as the Anglo-Saxon it is, and the Americans are related by blood and are the leaders of the Anglo-Saxon race, the leaders of the empires of Anglo-Saxonism, the leaders of civilization, culture and advanced thought. "The whole world looks to them as leaders—in war, in industry, in commerce, in education, in literature, and even now, in art. As the world looks to them today in the terms of progress and European civilization, so thousands of years ago the world looked to your fathers, and to mine, for leadership, in the higher arts, in the higher arts in the higher civilization. You the search-bearers, the advaged guard of all life was worth while in the world. Evolutionarily you lost your place, and you reverted back to a state of inertia, inactivity, a state of haxity, a state of almost savagery and barbarism and cannibalism—out of which through the same laws of evolution you are gradually emerging, proving that life is one great cycle of events. No group has ever permanently held the world. There is something in the human mind that is divided internally individually in internal figure. He develops so much and then he retrogrades; and as to the case of the individual so it has been with the groups and clans and tribes and nations. They have all reached a certain pinchach, a certain height and then they go back. Shakespeare's Version "Shakespeare applies it to before the 'Svenen Aces of attendlk.' We are in the lowest. But as you observe it in daily life, the child grows up, receives an education, becomes highly cultured, reflects at middle age probably the best in him, and gradually marches on to a state of dotage; and at the end we find him incompetent—entirely, worn out, deceptive and practically forgetting the past culture of his maturer age. As of the individual rating to a height and going back, so of groups or matrimp, and so of empires. That accounts for the many material changes and national changes that have come to the world. This argument for the Greece of the past and the Hygme of the past, of the Carthage and the Babylon of the past, of the Ethiopia and Egypt of the past. As we speak of them now in the terms of past history, so shall it, a hundred, two hundred, five hundred, one thousand years from now, men will speak of present empires and nations in the terms of past history. Evolution Behind It All Understand Human Nature Most. Greece, Rome and the earlier empires lost their position and place in the world because of their unpreparedness in universal knowledge to satisfy the desires and the urge of men. Today we have reached a higher stigma of understanding man's nature and satisfying man's nature. Among the people who understand human nature most because of his universal problems is the black man. He has had to undergo most of the world's difficulties and hardship, which opposed him in all the different schemes. His suffering appears to me to fit him in human sympathy, and is more prevalent than many of the experiences of any other group now in existence. "With such an experience, with such a knowledge, such a man who returns to power—being hair to all the experiences in the past is bound to make a better ruler, a better governor than the fellow who has seen the soft and only the one side of Hic." **Blind to Peace** "The races of the world now in power do not see that peace and prosperity can be guaranteed and best sided by a universal scheme of human love, human fallibility, human brotherhood. They cannot see that, but they can see because of their present mortality and advantages that they are superior to others. That is an attitude that has been the real cause of the destruction of rices and natives and empires without number. That destroyed Greece—the same pompity that exists in Europe today, the same conceit and pompity that exists in America today. The Greek nobles thought themselves better than the common Greek people, than the slaves they brought to Greece, than the world they conquered; and in the maintenance of the common people, than the support they by falling to mortil the support the companionship and reason of the people below—who were below because of the injustice of society, because of the unfairness, because of the inhumanity and because of the selfishness of the class above. Beginning of the End: "That was the beginning of Greece's decline; that was the beginning of the loss of power in the state. It was not long before the entire state was no longer putting together for the common purpose. The common people by copiousity of oppression, by peculiarity of poverty, want and slavery were forced to organize among themselves for their protection. The result was that the state instead of having constructive organization for its preservation had two other objectives. That was the organization that weakened the state of Greece, that made her so unable to withstand the tide of enemy invasion and attack; and because the citizenry was not united in defence, ultimately the Greek fabric of enire crumbed. And as of Greece so of Rome, Rome started out to succeed her in a new kind of democracy—injustice it was, democratic, then after certain manners of the class consciousness similar to the class consciousness that destroyed the Greeks. They developed an aristocracy, they developed a patriotic society that elevated itself among the common people. The mobility in time divided themselves from the common head of organized citizens and organized shades and organized captives. The result was that the patriotic nobles of Rome took advantage of the common head of organized shades and organized captives. And the common people organized in the same way the Greeks did, and through the same organization Rome followed Greece into oblivion. "We who have studied history from the time of Egypt to Assyria and Babylon, from the time of Macedonia to Persia, from the time of Greece to Rome, from the time of Greece to Rome, to the kingdom of the Frank's up to the other organized empires of today can see no change in the attitude of man toward his brother. The same top-heavy superstructure that caused the decline, the fall of Greece and Rome and Babylon and Assyria, Egypt and Macedonia, Persia and Euboea, is in existence today. (Applause.) "And if we are to benefit by the experiences of the past, in reason and logic we must conclude that the same future facing the empires of today has faced the empires of the past (Applause). Therefore, those who are unfortunate suffering under the dominion, the thrashion, the oppression and the slavery, the infliction of the slaves that has always sought to abuse the people, the Romans and what the Romans did. In doing what the Greeks did, evidently, the time must come for us to get there. We are getting there bravely. Even some of our own may not understand me; but this putting together of sums and thousands of people as we are doing here in the meetings of the Universal Negro Improvement Association—that manifests, demonstrates, testifies to the fact that there is an urge among the people—particularly that 'change which will place them in central of empires' (Applause). African's Rise to Power Through the H. N. L. "Some may look at the idea of Artificial taking her place in the world of empires and nations as far-fetched in that it is almost impossible with the organism of politics and government that surrounds us. But, then, look at the world from the religious aspect, look at the world from the holding of historical knowledge, look at the World from human evidence, and you will realize that the Universal Negro Improvement Association is doing nothing more and nothing less than what has been done to bring about changes for humanity's good and humanity's great and powerful provision that have organized the world, most of them started with lesser significance than did the Universal Negro Improvement Association. (Apnausee.) MUNDIALS OF PROFESSION THESE were the ways that the Indians did mok or wounded what did they do, to get better? The Medicine-man was called; and all he would do was to look him over, swamp for weeds, to a forest for leaves, into the woods for barks, or to a mountain for other Mysterious plants. The Indians got well because they know the secrets of medicine and healing. They know how to treat illnesses. They know how to treat illnesses. Thousands of people have rygained their health, where everything else failed them. Do not get disgusted by the not give up. Are you troubled with Nervousness, Rheumatism, Headaches, Bronchitis, Asthma, Fluoridation, Sour Stomach, Indigestion and Constipation? Bend for and try the remedy that has amused suffering people throughout the country. The Remedy that has made many people happy that will again make them happy. Is Your Health Worth It? Then send us $1.00 money order or currency. # of the Tuvaluian Negro improvement Association. (Applicant). Determined to Put the Program Over "It can be done. It must be done. And if all the 400,000,000 Negroes of the world must die, it shall be done before we die (appliance); and if we must do it, to reap African imperialism there shall be no other imperialism because all will be gone in the same detritus. We are going to travel with the riche of humanity. We are not going to subdue or backstep. We are going to run on the same machine." (A voice: "We are are the mainline.") "We are on the mainline to imperialism and our imperialism will not be one of unrighteousness. We do not want to carry our imperialism to the point where it is going to affect the lives of the people of our own home and triumph. We are going to respect the white men so long as he respects us. And 400,000,000 Negroes, as the stars shine, as the moon shines in light, as the sun gives its light, are going to impress black imperialism on the world or report to God Almighty the reason why. (Cloud imprisonment.) The black man must be reassembled in his native clan. As the Scotch are in their native clan. As the French are in their native clan. As the Indians are moved in the urge of being together an fraternion, as the Chinese are moved in the urge of being together an Chinamen. Marcus Garvey is moved with the desire of being together with the deep man into his native clan. So the Universal Negro Improvement is urging black men to the possibility of being African at home and Africans abroad. (Appliance). And the world is going to be made industrially, economically, physically, financially, politically, politically, financially, politically, in their own way to bring about this imperialism or African as a remedy. (Appliance.) That in the mood of the world—of the black world. "Some black men may criticize, but it is how they are organized of the facts surrounding us. They may tell you that they are not members of the organization. I won't say anything about black men who are organizing Marcus Garvey. The black men who are opposing Marcus Garvey may yet surprise the other fellow, because when that great day comes I am sure of this, that 500,000,000 Negroes will stand together in the world no one can. And it is not Marcus Garvey who is going to be about that—but the common people are about that. Everywhere that is going to drive him into the field of African population (Applause)." Organized Because of Suffering "You are here because you suffer, and because I am talking to you about the things you suffer is why you are here. So that it is not I who am doing the organizing of the Negroes. It is the folks who are keeping down Negroes who are organizing the Negroes in the Negroes Association. So my organizers organizing the Negroes in these roles will keep Negroes down." Fair Play and No Compromise "If they want to weaken Garvey, they had better get off the head of Garvey. By giving Negroes better jobs and pay, and running it with a contract—by giving Negroes everywhere a square deal, in the only way they can weaken Marcus Garvey. I have given the secret to the whole world." (Lancaster) Attitude of World Unchangeable "The world is the same all the time. It was in Rome and Greece. It is human nature. You cannot regulate it except with power. There is no other force in the world that regulates right-counsell and liberty and freedom and equality as power. Now, it may seem funny to say that the supreme force of life is power-power in the hand of the empire or power in the hand of the nation. Negroes in getting everything in life got power. Power is slow in coming to you because you have started late to get power. Get it, anyhow, because it is your only integral in the world. Africa'u Secret "Some people say, 'How can you be talking about a Negro nation?' In Africa there are big governmentmen—how are you going to oppose or light them?—expecting that I am going to tell how I am going to organize to do that. That is African's secret. (Loud applause). We may not have to fight with armies and battleships, but we must fight them always with brain—that is the weapon of the future: brains, developed brains, scientific brains. No man knows what is enclosed in the other man's brain. And we must know what world does not know what is looked at with a fierce brain. They may be looking for us with battleships and big armies and deadly guns; but who is to tell that our scientists are not on the way with something more read, more quick, more satisfying than battleships or armies. (Loud applause). Nature's Mysterious Still Unveiled The mysteries of the world are still hidden from our highly developed, apparent civilization. Today civilization does not know one-million-of the SPECIAL.....$1500, for Rhoda Beauty Southern, Touchstone MADAM SHOBA. Box 58, College Station, or 210 West 18th Street, New York, NY, Apartment POISON BLOOD H. H. Vorr, Schickl Herb specialist and manufacturer of the famous Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea, tells people that almost all diseases are caused by impure, poisoned blood. When the stomach, lick you feel miserable, you are constipated and the potions go into the blood. When the liver refuses to work, the potions go into the blood; when the kidneys are weak and out of order, more potions go into the blood; and the result is that your blood and your health are weak. For many years I have been told people, slick with diseases caused by poisoned blood, that my Bulgarian Herb (Blood) Tea gives relief to those who suffer from stomach, liver, kidney and blood trouble. A Baby in Your Home Doctor in Prescription Sent Free Hundreds of married women, children for women, suddenly and made to love the most biblical con- tention due to the in- fectious most wonderful pres- cension that overcomes erility due to failure, wilt, weakness, Mr. A. G. Smith, 115 Kentucky St. Louis, Kansas, says: "I wrote to HDC baby girl and it was Dr. Elders prescription that made it possible I did not have a baby." Every married people who really want children should write once a month to send for packing and beware for this, together with an invaluable hook on instruction. 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Work just吧 Shaping Plan If you willing! Work just吧 NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED mystery that is held by the universe. With all that you see in our civilization we are only at the point of child's play with nature's laws and nature's play with nature's will—the return of his power as a creator taking his universal place in the universe of the All-Greatest God. As God out of chaos created the universe, so He has given power to man to create out of the universe, out of nature, things that may appear to himimest. And out of the element that have the art and the mind and the will, out of this mystery of nature we may make things greater than armaments and battleships. And we are not going to tell it to the world until we are ready. *Matthew and the "Death-Ray" (7).* "You know it is amusing to see how civilization is deciphering itself. The other day a fellow (his name was Matthews) I think had apologized upon the discovery of the Death-Ray. He was working at this discovery for a number of years to give to the whites a greater advantage over civilization in the scientific development of the Death-Ray—something that would put all life to sleep within a certain time. He thought he had accomplished the feat in perfecting this scientific device, and all the world thought (as in English, English, English, English, French, the Germans rushed after him to get it—but the thing wasn't worth anything." *Laughter.* The Black Man Is Wide Awake "But whilst Matthews was working at the Death-Ray there was a black man down in Canada working at the剧院 of controlling universal motion for the Negro. (Applause). And he sent his experiment to where he should go but he was not ready. He thought he had hit upon the secret of controlling motion whereby he could put an arm of the man in position, by the power of the man who controls the power of the engine the motion of all the world would come to a standstill—an engine that would stop all hostile motion in Africa. (Applause). That is only to show you that the black man is not asleep. He was getting ready to arrive at the point where he only had to control him. I am only saying that for you to know that all Africa is not as lazy as you are. A Medical Change Needs Care "Instead of going to jive rummages and getting drunk, go into libraries and reading genius to get something in relics or illiterature. We will want millions of black selections for African redemption." ```markdown ``` Why更新? New discovery. And Rheumatoid arthritis. Pain, pain, pain, gony and discomfort. Compared on an age. which if properly worn according to our directions will greatly relax the patient and will reduce the risk of infection. Neutrals and other organics derived from them, do not money, pay payment only 200, postage prepaid. THE SCHOOL COMPANY, Dept. 202 4129 N. Powers Avenue, Chicago, IL. Short Hours — Plenty of Time for formation No more bosom — time clock. Go to barn, game, movie, where you can leave plenty of carry. BRMA NO MONEY Lots of Friends Don't, insist, and be happy. Please post pictures everywhere. ```markdown ``` AUTO Start in new Make good with in you. I'll give you brace. New auto FREE! THE NEWS AND VIEWS OF U.N.I.A. DIVISIONS IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE NEGRO WORLD. THE RACE'S MOST PROGRESSIVE PAPER GOES TO EVERY CORNER OF THE GLOBE. A very lively educational program was rendered at the division's quarters, Masonic Temple, on Sunday afternoon, March 4. The program, which was arranged for the bonoff of our President-General's European tour, had on it a variety of participants and contributions. There were musical numbers, recitations, papers, poems and addresses from a number of our faithful prominent members, as well as from our group of high school boys, and girls. After the opening ode, "From Greenland, it is Mountains," was sung, Mgr. Burroughs read and commented on the "almus and objects" of the organization. The welcome address was delivered by our financial secretary, Mr. London, after which Miss Nogni Rogers made a fine, recitation with much meaning. Miss Luther D. Byrd was the next on the program with her very melodious voice. She sang a song, and with her sweet voice, much applause was won. Mr. Aristrict Graves recited a poem. The next on the program was Miss S. McKim, of Pleasantville, who also contributed with a song to the afternoon's program. The next speaker was the Rev. Mr. Davia, pastor from Pleasantville. An excellent address was made by him. This man is well known, in this city. The significance of his eloquent speech was easily interpreted and very stimulating. The last speaker was our beloved ex-president, Mr. Simmons, who very remarkably explained the support we need in order to carry on the great work of this organization. Sinciting the "Anthian," the meeting adjourned until 8:30 p.m. in which time the overseeing program began. The evening program was conducted by Mrs. Ruth Rogers, who acted as Matrress of Ceremonies. The great number was a selection by the U. N. L. A. chorus. The members of the chorus are Misa Irene Greaves, Miss Camper, Miss Battle, Miss Ethel Burroughs, Miss Winifred Burroughs, Mr. London and Mr. James Burroughs, with Mr. Johnny Coppin, piano accompaniment, Mr. Daniel W. Hudson, read and commented on the Hon. Marcus Garvey's "Message." A trio was sung by Missa Winifred Burroughs, Ethel Burroughs and Irene Greaves, Mr. Russell McMillan, formerly a Hamiltonian, made a few brief but impressive remarks about the future of the organization. The chorus of gifts appeared next with "We Arg Marching On" in a very brilliant number. Next a poem, entitled "Sporting Chance," was explained and recited by Mr. Arduret Graves. Mr. Graves seems to be talented along these lines, for he is an exceedingly good interpreter. Our next speaker was Mr. Killz Gelffin, who, as always, very impressed and has a way of holding all of his heavens quite spellbound. The last address was delivered by our president, Mr. Joseph Britomatto. His spoke very interestingly concerning the members' duty: DANIEL MAYNARD MURDON The New Orleans Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, located at 2919 Dapel Street, held one of the greatest mass meetings of the season in Liberty Hall in June of the greatest. Nero the world has ever known on Sunday, March 4, 1928, at 6 p.m., this day was called Gayevo's Day. As our President, General In about to visit the leading political powers of the European Governments, which we view as the greatest effort that Nero has ever made to seek justice for his race, all of the members, friends and sympathizers, were present to contribute towards his tribe. At 8 p.m. the uniformed ranks, including Loupias, Black Cresas Nurses, Motor Corps and Juveniles, lined up for the procession of the chair and official staff. Liberty Hall was filled to its utmost capacity and all faces beamed with delight. After each auxiliary had matched to its respective place the opening odo was sung. The stream of melodious voices as it reminded one of the great talent that Negroes possess in expressing their inner feelings. The ritual was read by the chapelman, Ravendor James Reed and the program continued, with the reading of the President General's weekly message from the front page of the Negro World by Miss Ida Vollson; violin selection by Mr. A. Alexander; accompanied by A. Alexander, Jr.; excitation by Miss Llewellyn Hawkins, entitled "Visions of Nigeria" by Hon. Marcus Garvey; solo by Mrs. J. A. McCoy. Keep calm; by Hon. Marcus Garvey. The song was so beautifully sung that Mrs. McCoy was forced to sing it again. Dr. J. K. Peters, president, conquered an aneurysm on "The Negro Tomorrow." Vocal duced by Messrs. Lawrence Nelson and Albert Johnson. Mr. Foster, manager of the Economical Printing Company, addressed the gathering, after which Messrs. Nelson and Johnson sang "Get off Board the Old Ship of Zion." A short address was delivered by Reverend R. Carter, a great spokesman for the U. N. I. A., in his community. The meeting was enjoyed by all and each contributed liberally towards Hon. Marcus Garvey's trip. The meeting closed with singing the National Anthem, "Ethiopia." The New Orleans Division is marching to success under the leadership of Dr. J. J. Peters, High Commissioner for the States of Louisiana and Alabama and Mississippi. L. A. JONES, Reporter. The Satellites Spiritual Church 800 E. 163rd St., N.Y. N. Y. West Midwood street, 81st st., 81st N. Y. Hawkeye Ave., 10th st., 10th N. Y. BARRELL W. S. Stroker, Phane Dayton, 176th. The Honorable Marcus Garvey arrived in America the first time on March 23, 1916. The New York Division is planning a series of social and educational entertainments in honor of this event. We know that divisions throughout the world are interested in this anniversary and will wish to celebrate it with one or more meetings. The program arranged by the New York Division may suggest to other divisions the character of meetings which may be held in honor of this very important incident in the history of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. The program follows: Beginning with Saturday, March 10, a Red, Black and Green ball will be held each Saturday night, including March 24. Every night, beginning March 4 and ending March 26, a special program will be rendered and a membership drive put on. On Sunday, March 25, mass meetings will be held at 3 and 8 p.m., with special programs and demonstrations by the Uniform Departments. On Monday, March 12 and 19, basketball games will be held, followed by dancing. The public is cordially invited to attend these affairs. PAY YOUR YEARLY ASSESSMENT TAX OF $1.00 NOW! TORONTO, CANADA A special maz meeting was held on Sunday, March 4. The meeting opened with the singing of the ode "From Greenland's Ice Mountains." The religious ceremonies were conducted by the chapelman, Mr. P. Fox, acting president, was in the chair and gave the opening remarks, which were very appropriate for the occasion. Hymn was sung, "Onward, Christian Soldiers." The Rev. L. McNeal was the first speaker and took for his subject "The Neogessity for the Unification of the Negro People." At the close of his talk a hymn was sung, "All Praise to Our Redeeming Lord." After the reading of the Negro World by Mr. S. W. Williams, S. Pitt, L.L.B., spoke briefly to the mothers on the training of their children. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem. At 9 p. m. the meeting opened in the usual manner, with M. P. Fox, acting president, in the chair. The religious ceremonies were conducted by M. J. M. Willfaus, chaplain. Scripture lesson was read by the Rev. F. O. Stewart. Hymn was sung, "How man a Foundation." An address was given by Rev. F. O. Stewart, "The Making of a People (or-Nation)." It was very inspiring. In closing, he exhorted the fol- lowers' of the organization to stand firmly by their leader and help to carry on the work to a successful end. A hymn was sung, "God In Us With Us"; selection by the choir; address by Mr. S.-Pitt, L.L.B., "Wither Wilt Thou Lead me?" He spoke on that suspicious subject for forty minutes, and held the audience spellbound. The president gave the announcements for the coming week. The meeting closed with the singing of the National Anthem, and all went home with a new hope and determination to put the program over. COLON, PANAMA On Sunday, February 12, the Colon Division staged in monster mass meeting, at Liberty Hall, 10-155 Hudson Lane. The meeting was called to order by Acting President Mr. C. O. Hudson and opened with the singing of the Processional Hymn, "Shine On, Eternal Light," followed by the opening ode "From Greenland's Ice Mountain." The religious service was conducted by the chapelman, Mr. J. A. Mitchell. The lesson was taken from Ezekiel 37, "And he said unto me, Son of Man can these bones lie." After a longy discourse on the subject, the religious part of the meeting was brought to a close with the singing of Hymn 16 from the song book. The social side of the program then followed, with the opening remarks by the Acting President, during which he introduced the presiding officer of the session in the presence of Mrs. Olive Carson, first Vice Lady President. Riding amid loud cheers, the presiding officer delivered an address which was warmly applauded. Hymn No. 10 from the song book was sung by the audience followed with a recitation by Master C. Yearwood, which was well rendered. Reading of the rant page of The Negro World of February 4 by the Second Vice Lady President, Miss Susan White, was followed by a solo by Miss Amy Powell, which was well rendered. The song, "Oh That Man," was sung by the audience, while the offering was being taken up. The Acting President, Mr. C. O. Hudson, delivered a message on the theme, "Woman, Man's Better Half." Those who were present to enjoy this wonderful address by the speaker, missed a treat. The announcements for the week were made and the meeting came to a close with the singing of the Ethiopian National Anthem and prayer. The Chileco Diviston held a successful mass meeting on March 4, which was Garvoy Day. This day was celebrated enthusiastically. Our apacious hall was filled to its capacity. The choir rendered a song, "Shine. On Eternal Light," white the officers marched to the rostrum. A march was then played while the Universal African Legions, Motor Corps, Nurses and Juveniles marched to their scats. The meeting was then called to order by our president, Mr. Robert L. Ephirium, and opened with the singing of the opening ade, "From Greenland's Ice Mountain." You had a religious program arranged for the occasion. The religious program was brought to a close with the singing of "God Bless Our President." On riding the president congratulated the uniform reads on the splendid way that they marched in. The choir sang another selection, after which we had a new remark by Rev. Coleman. Our vice-president also gave us a new inspiring remarks. The membership sang 'God Bless, Our President' with much enthusiasm. Our president read The Negro World. which was received with much applause. Our celebrated chair chanted "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." And the membership joined in singing the chorus. Hon. S. R. Wheat, the principal speaker of the afternoon, spoke on the subject, "I Want a Man." His wonderful address will never be forgotten. We cannot give the Hon. S. R. Wheat enough praise for the good work which he has done for the association. During our membership drive Mr. Wheat added 74 new members to our roll. The grand and glorious meeting was brought to a close with the sharing of the Ethiopian National Anthem. BLANCHE NEELEY, Reporter. On Sunday, February 15, the member, friends and well-wishers of the organization wended their way to Liberty Hall because of the announcement of a special mass meeting. Presidately at 7:30 p. m. the meeting was called to order with the singing of the processional hymn, "Shine On, Eternal Light," with Mr. S. C. Nation, president of the division, occupying the chair. Divine service was conducted on customary by Mr. L. Brown, first vice-president. The president, after reunining command of the chair, told the reason for making special announcement for a mass meeting, and in his opening remarks outlined the proposed plan. He spoke for half an hour, emphasizing the seriousness of the occasion, also explaining certain matters. His remarks were well appreciated by every one. The reading of the front page of The Negro World brought his remarks to a close. The following well-selected program was rendered "during the evening"; Anthem by the choir; address by Mr. Gayle, subject, "The Sower; the Seed and the Gardener"; solo by Mrs. Daly Hawkhan, first lady vice-president and member of the choir; address by Mr. Cunning, who made a strong appeal to the Negroes of Costa Rica to assist in lifting the ban placed on the Hom; Marcus Garvey prohibiting his entry into the country; prayer was offered by Mr. James Baker by request of the choir; solo by Mrs. Jeannette Brown, member of the choir; address by Mr. Young; duet by Mrs. Mabel-Williams and Miss Minnie Brink, songbird and organist, respectively. The meeting was brought to a close with the singing of the National Anthem. CONSTANTINE NORWALK Situated upon the banks of the historic James River 12 miles from Jamestown, the old English settlement Divisions should see to it that there is at least one student at Liberty University from their Division for the Fall Term 1927. We are offering courses of study covering a wide range of departments, among which are Collegiate, Academic, Grammar Grade for children of the Practice School, Industrial, Scientific, Agricultural, Business, Domestic Science, Vocal and Instrumental Music, Normal, Bible Training, Physical Culture, Dressmaking, Plain Sewing, Typewriting, Stenography/Bookkeeping. Students coming from points South and West can make connections for Liberty University at Chelsea High School daily by taking train No. 4 on the Norfolk & Western ad-140-141, driving to Chelsea, Va., ad 831 p. m., and from there will move motor transportation to school. From point North and East take any train to Richmond or Waverly, Va., and secure major transportation or train from Richmond, which leaves daily at 9 a.m. Claremont, Surrey County, Va., U. S. A. Never before has East Brooklyn witnessed anything greater than the mass meeting held in our U. N. I. A. Hall, 669 Herkimer street, on Sunday, March 4. The president, Mr. Milton E. Kelly, appointed Mr. Sydney Dalkyple, secretary of the Chapter, to not as chairman for the occasion. The meeting was called to order at 4:30 p.m. in the usual ritualistic form, followed by the reading of the alms and objects of the constitution, and the program continued with a piano selection, Mrs. Alice. Storey; recitation, Master Clarence Dalkyple; soprano Solo, Miss Irene Miller, accompanied by Mr. Cecil Grosvenor. The chairman gave the welcome address. Among our officers and special guests seated on the platform were following: Mr. Milton E. Kelly, president; Madame M. L. T. Ebimber, Dr. Milton Ebimber, Mr. Sydney Dalrymple, Mr. Thomas Johnson, assistant secretary, Mr. Levi Lord, Mr. Fred Brathwaite, Mrs. Dalrymple, lady president; Mrs. Jackson, first lady vice-president. The program continued with an address by Mr. F. Lord; address, Mr. Milton Kelly; president, Mr. Kelly then introduced the principal speaker of the evening in the person of Madame M. L. T. Ebimber, Assistant International Organizer. Madame Ebimber's topic was "Bo Yourself." It brought thunderous applause at frequent intervals. A letter coming from the Chief, Hon. Marcus Garey, brought great response from the members and friends which was thrilling to note: After singing the Ethiopian National Anthem meeting was adjourned. ALICE STOREY, Reporter. LA'CEIBA, SPAN. HON. The LaColba Division, held a very successful mass meeting on, Sunday, February 26, at 3 p.m. The principal officiella being unavailably absent, Miss A. Kelly, first lady vico-president, occupied the chair. A splendid program was presented. The devotional exercises were conducted by Miss Anita Flowers, who acted as chaplain. Mr. James A. Yarwood, second Vice-president, entered the meeting during the course of the program, and the chair was turned over to him. The program was as follows: Opening ode, "From Greenland's Ice Mountains"; Scripture reading and prayers from ritual; opening remarks by Miss Kelly; recitation, Miss Pearl; and Miss Alice Ewing; solo, Miss Ella Stevenson; recitation, Miss Joycein and Flora Yarwood; recitation, Miss Bernico Singleton; solo, Mrs. C. Stevenson; recitation, Miss Hesle; Forrere; reading front page of Negro World by Mr. James A. Yarwood; hymn, "God Bless Our President"; by congregation; recitation, Miss Mintha Hendricks; song by the choir, "The Flight Is On"; recitation, Miss Eula Webster; quartet, Mr. James Yarwood, Miss R. Banes, Miss H. Forrere and Miss J. Yarwood; recitation, Mr. Alexander Bodden; solo, Miss Adela Bodden; recitation, Miss Ruby Banes; Hymn no.124, "Oh Africa, Awaken"; by congregation; recitation, Master Brodell Bodden; song and performance, by children, "O. Chain of Love"; closing address by Mr. James A. Yarwood; singing of Ethiopian National Anthem and prayer. The very interesting meeting came to its close at 6 p.m. ADELIA, KELLY, Reporter. INFORMATION WANTED Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Drew D. Lewis. please notify his name, Elizabeth Lewis. Lewis. 425 58th street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Very urgent. UNIVERSAL The Cleveland Division held its regular mass meeting at Liberty Hall, 2206 East 40th Street, Sunday, March 4. The meeting opened at 2 p.m. with the usual opening ode, "From Greenland's Ice Mountain," and other anthems were sung with great spirit. The hall was packed to its capacity, and there were many visiting friends to out learn of the real program of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, and hear Garveyism preached. Before the meeting was closed the association was favored with many new members. The Cleveland Division is making great headway in its membership drive, and, every one is looking forward to that great day. In 1929, The front page of the Negro World was read by Mrs. Ollie Cardwell, after which the President General's Hymn was sung by the audience. First speaker was the lady third vice-president, Mrs. Rosie Bryant, who said in her short but inspiring address that Mr. Garvey is the cornerstone, and he who falls upon this stone will be ground into powder. Next on program was a presentation of flowers by one of the Motor Corps, Mrs. Alfoe Green, to the president, Hon. S. V. Robertson. The principal speaker of the evening was Mme. A. I. Robertson, who took for her subject "The Three First Steps, using three great words, Faithfulness, Truthfulness and Earnestness." Her address was beautiful in conception, consistency and in exegectal interpretation. Announcements were made and the enjoyable meeting came to a close with the singing of the National Anthem, "Ethiopia." LOUISE EDWARDS, Reporter. The Detroit Division regrets to announce that the Hon. J. A. Craigson, executive secretary of Detroit Division and high commissioner for the States of Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, has been confined to bed since his return from Florida and other points of the South in the early part of February. He is in suffering with an attack of muscular rheumatism and a nervous breakdown. We sincerely hope that the divisions over which he has control will hold themselves intact and function as usual until he shall be able to visit them. RUTF N. SMITH, Reporter. BUTTERBEANS AND SUSIE Want agents to sell their cosmetics. Write for "How to Make Money." Rach Supply Co. El East 42nd Street, New York. FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS Free Trial of a Method That Anyone Can Usa. Without Discomfort or Loss of Time We have a method for—the control of Asthma, and we want you to try it at our long standing, or recent development, whether in present, occasional or trial of our method. No matter in what situation, in what manner, you are able to work with asthma, our method should relieve you We especially want to send it to those of us who are inhaling, doctores, oculum preparations, fumes, "patent smoker", etc. have failed to show us some of our end expenses that our method is designed to difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all tiredness. This free offer is too important to neglect a single dose. Send one, two, or more money. Simply mail coupon below. Do it Today. FREE 10% GUIPON FRONTIER ASTIMA CO. 1654 P. Frontier Blvd. 462 Nigarra St. Tulsa, N. K. Send free trial of your method to: --- Divisional activities will be increasing weekly from now on. Divisions are asked to co-operate, with the editors in obtaining the maximum amount of satisfaction from the publication of divisional news. To this end, divisions are requested to strictly adhere to the following rules when sending in news for publication: When electing or appointing reporters, divisions are advised to select the person best fitted to perform this service. - The Editors. THE PARENT BODY Special Message to Officers and Members of Divisions and Chapters of the Universal Negro Improvement Association The Hon. Marens Garvey has designated me to administer the affairs of the present Body in the United States uniform, next convention, and has ordered me to return it, and they return once more to their normal functions as units of the organization. It is his express wish that the divisions, chapters, etc., resume at once their previous normal relations with the present Body. Spatial attention is also directed to the YEARLY ASSESSMENT TAX of One Dollar, due on January 1 of each year, NOW PAYABLE. THESE INSTRUCTIONS TAKE EFFECT IMMEDIATELY—which means that reports should at once be made for the month of January, 1925, and regularly each month thereafter. Informate us as to BACK EXPORTS will be sent direct to the officers of directions within a few days. Officers failing to comply with their instructions are not entitled to serve as officials of any division or chapter of our beloved organization. All Divisions and Chapters are hereby notified that, we have in stock the following supplies that are necessary for the proper carrying on of the work: Secretary-General's Office at Headquarters 142 WEST 130th STREET NEW YORK CITY SOLA, CAM., CUBA On Sunday, February 8, the very atmosphere around Liberty Hall was impregnated with Garveyism. This was the day set aside by the Hon. Marcuss Garvey for a special meeting. Although the gathering was not as anticipated, yet every one contributed joyfully and finally left satisfied. Too much cannot be mentioned of the group of workers, members of an auxiliary of the Nuevitas Division, which staged a very interesting concert on Saturday night, and rendered invaluable help, to the mass meeting on Sunday. After this meeting, another never-to-beforegone concert was staged, which was both amusing and educational. A magnificent drama was staged, entitled "The Prince and Princess of Ethiopia." How well the actors impersonated the Hon. Marcuss Garvey and wife, introducing themselves to the Prince and Princess. He told of his struggles and ingercation for the liberation of his people. The Prince congratulated him for his courage and pledged his military honor in supporting the righteous cause. This left a lasting impression on the audience. The program of the mass meeting was interspersed with recitations, anthems, quotes, addresses and a special eulogy to the Hon. Marcuss Garvey. Thus, a well-spent evening came to its close with the National Anthem and prayer. LUCK! HAMTRAMCK, MICH Hamtamck hold a patrolio Garvey Day program. The meeting was opened as usual by the chaplain, Mr. Shellman, who gave a few remarks. The program was then turned over to the vice-president, Mr. T. T. Suttles. First on the program was a song by the congregation, "Onward Christian Soldier." The president, Mr. Gordon, came forward and gave a few interciting remarks which were encouraging to all. Captain Louis of the Legions gave a short talk. The Negro World was read by Mr. Johnnie Vincere after which "God Bless Our President" was sung by the congregation. Trustees came forward and lifted the collection. Ex-Captain Charles Popo gave a few "high spots" in Negro history. Singing of "Ethiopia" brought the meeting to a close. TOLBERT W. COLLINS, Reporter. INFORMATION WANTED Anyone, knowing the whereabouts of my mother, Mrs. Eliza Joy or Joyce, who married J. W. Hutchings, my father, in New York, kindly notify me. Very important. 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Get free instructions and Lucky Seven Secrets, only $2.43 and postage. Then they're yourself. SINGLAC IMPORTING CO. Dept. 2050, 3317 Archer Ave, Chicago, IL. LE MEGRD WORLD, SRPORDAV WRG ie OEE eS Oo ee _@ BEPIAR A DRE al | _& Be PLA ia : SPEGIAL-_APPEAL!. In order that we may be Better able to esrry on te csora successful end the operations of . - . ae —— - UNIVERSAL’ LIBERTY UNIVERSITY: ' (Formerly Smallwood, Corey -Industrial Institinte) 2 |_. At CLAREMONT, ViRGINIA— and i& keoping wit the wishes of the President-General = “HON. MARCUS GARVEY that_ members give their support to same, we are’now miaking @ special openi to alt members and friends te contribute “| ONE, DOLLAR or More to © ~ LIBERTY UNIVERSITY DRIVE. - Thi ta your University, therefore you phould Tot hesitate te support it = Make ail Money Orders gig Wank Drafta payable te Universal Liberty, aoene ae Univarsty and tarward to the Secrotary of Bhool .. =” <0 ls HON, Hi. BALFOUR, WILLIAMS: °° i + Universal Liberty University : “* -Claremont, Surrey County, Va.yU: S.A. | +! All contributions will be aaknowtedaed through the’ eetumns of 4 Fated iy The Negra Werte | - > on —throse-contvibwting- $2800-0 minse_sill pléass send In their shotographe a er pallette ee on "_ (Signed) HON. EB. KNOX =|. +. Personal Representative of the President-Genere] ln. SECCION EN ESPANOL): “por La’ Asociacién Universal para el’ Adelanto de ta phy oo: Rema Negpa so Js + "dae West 130th ster) ES! ae iy t Cin eva) is eS ace S SFM. A. FIQUEROA:RSlion = . Desde. 1898 nuestro gobierno: ha Sido muy “imperialista y agresivo en Nicaragua, Haiti, la ‘Republica Do- minicana, Cuba, y otros paises de Ia “Aanietica Espanola, Hemos destrui- Uo las Jibertades.de los citidadanos-y hemos’ derribadg le sobergnia-politi ‘ca de estos estados. Hemos inter- vénido con fuerza de armas en trein- ta distintas ocasiones' nos , hema’ ‘apropiado-de.ti' autoridad oficial y fivanciera ‘de’ once dé Jas veintiurg Fepublicas, y. hemos, convertido. cinco de elias én protectorados de tos ‘Estados Unidos. -- rs ! La-coftsecuencia de estas inter- venciones’ha sido. cl fomento de un odid. violento. contra ‘Ids “Estado: Unidos. Hemos , perdido... nuestro Prestigio politico, no solo en este he- misferig*sivo ‘también en todo, el mundo:, Ademés, atrostramos una coalicién econoiniea en todos los .paists americano. - Se dice. que nuestras, especulacio- nes hacen bien a los paises: deta América Espatiola, Si, es verdad: pero la proteccién mititar que dains 2 estas especuliciones, ha hecho zhi ial'que bier. 2 Quéderectiosene- Mos nosotros de “civilizar” 4 estos piieblos que quigren segtiy Viviendo como vivieron stis antepasadlos, estos pueblos que nada tena gear muestra constructién é ferrocarriles no para la transporigcidn dela iehte productos’ de os especuladores noFteamertcangé? » Enviamos £-nuéstros. marinos a ‘Nicaragua Alo. para mantener a Diaz en elpoder. Pusimos a gste sefior efi’ Ja. silla_presidencial .des- pues de'la revolucién d0,1909, con: tra of deseo del 90 por ciento| del puchlo nicaragiense, porque favo- récia a los interéses norteamerica- xs. En aquella época nuestro py- nistrd de Estado explicd Ia interven- cidn en estos térmios :.Los banque- ros americanos que han colocado. sti dinero en ferrocarriles y. lintas” dé vapores han pedido proteccién. Establecinios un protectorado en Haiti para desatroitar. los intereses econdmicas norteamericanos.. Bajo el preteXto de proteger, durante la revolucin de 1915, 2 prgpiedad’ del National City Bank de'Nueva York, nos encargamos ‘de las aduanas’' rentas dé Haiti, E1 National City Bank habia obtenido sus concesiones de 1914 ala instigacién del ministro ie Estado “nortésmericano y, tos apoderamos de les aduanas sdlo des- pués que-hubimos fallado de obte- nerlas en seis“tistinias ocasiones el iio anterior, ‘eon segaciaciones pa- ilicas, 7 : eepend En le Reptblica Dominicsind et ninistro de Estado Knox_explicd nuestra intervencion en 1913.y el stablecimicnto. de ana dictadura jorteamericana en aque! pais con es- as palabras. La consecuencia,de la peracion de este arreglo ha sido"que og acreedores (norteamericanos) eciben ahora su int¥réé punctual- nente. _Nada podria sér-mis claro. La intérvencién pary’proteger a los restamistas. Aungoe los marinos| ian “salido de aq#ella desgraciada epiiblica, el pais/es todavia un pro- etorado de Wall Street, > Aunque hicimos guerra para “lib | rar” a Cuba, nos reservamos el de- echo de intervenir alli a nuestro incer. Hicimos -asi cn” 1995, en 912, y en otras ccasiones para ‘proteger_los. interesas” norteamieri- anos.” Gracias a nuestros inétodos erfeéios de protegerios, iencnios, 7 - UN MEJOR ENTENDIMIENTO ENTRE LOS GRUPOS ~. DE LA’ FAMILIA’ HUMANA‘SE IMPONE . ~ Zando.lo importancia de tan: grandes exposiciones, es la ra- zon por ia:cual los mas geandes,reformadores del mundo han Juchado ‘lo: indecible, por hacer una: raza humana’ ‘todo amor, toda simpatia, sin que no existan ‘distingos de grupos; donde blancos y: negros se odien, se repulsen y se antago- nicep;"en. vez'de vivir en paz con una buena voluntad y una@-hermandad sincera; donde ‘los-derechos de’ cada cual sean respetados; sin menoscabo alo inalienable en cada ser. “Ello ser4 ‘Gna reformacién tal que salvaré al mundo de muchos frastornos, de muchas amargutas y de muchos-do- lores; porque no es la fabricacién de grandes barcos de guerra, immensos.cafiones, podtrosos aereoplanos’ 6 Ia invenvién de gases mortiferos lo’ que hard. conseguir. una paz, estable;-sino ‘el enterdimiento.de todos los. grupos hu- ‘manos; una fé sincera,una lealtad de hermanos sera lo que “ rescatar4 al universo-de-esta caverna humania,’donde sola- ‘mente hay vicio, intrigas;-maldad-y odio_sempiterno-entre : Jos hijos de un mismo Padre. 7 re ae = Silos grandes €stadistas y los directores dela ‘concién- “cia espiritual del—mundo,- olvidasen_por ‘un_momento_el _egoismo .dés! i y Jlamasen las. mismas a conferencias en donde los edictos que se presentasem. 110 traigan ‘el sello, exclusivo del. anglo-sajon__del teuténico, def celta 6 del anglo-americano, sino esos mismos .edictos tuviesen inspirados bajo un punto ‘de vista de consideracion trumanitaria, entonces no habria duda que nos encontraria- mos frente ‘a frente:con-un mundo nuevo, envuelto-en-una “hueva civilizacion. . | A Los amigos blancos no’ pueden. prospetar con las des- ventajas del tamizado; si tal se hiciese, no harfamos nada m4s qué fevantar una montafia de‘confusién.y dé remor- -dimiento para nuestros hijos. Esto ¢&€ historia; ella nos: relata los mismos acontecimientos de} pasado y-nos dird lo mismo del futuro. . Si es asi, ¢porqué no. guiar fae esfuerzos a un porvenir verdad y desapasionado? . , . Pocos son los reformadores.que luchan por tan hermo- 30 ideal. Aqui y allé un hombre blanco, un amarilo, ur tamizado 6 un*hombre negro, mientras-el gran ejército de egoistas engolfados en el placer y con.eltos ung’ millonada de serviles, marchan indiferentes hacia una, migma destruc- cién. Pero'.aquel ‘hombre solitario, sea do/la*raza -que fuere, que clame justicia para toda la hurpanidad, yd'sea Europa, con ‘sus blancos, Asia con sus indios y amarillos, Africa con sus negros y America-y el regto def mundo con su poblacién’ mixta, no importe. ef sinnitimero de persecu- ‘siones que se le tiendan 6 la injustici que se.haga, tarde 6 temprano’traeré un socorro y wpa aydds para cl resto. de nosotros, mortales*todos,.y vistumbraré una: vita mas: Mevadera y mas perdurable.” / - : : Existe una fraternidgd de humanitarismo ‘que | aunqué desconocida hasta la Sécha, hay que buscarla; hay que ponerla.en ‘practica parg/tracr una verdadera solycién ‘de todos nuestros problemds*humanos. Sinembargo, en | medio. de ntiestros dolores,en medio de'ese pensamiento, de. “venganza.racial en-que fos encontramos, se‘levanten los espiritus de.grandes hymanitaristas, silenciando, asi la len=| gua dela maldad. se eg | Esperamos que/los -humanitaristas del -presente de todds las razas, continuaran Ia labor én perseguimiento de ese ideal, de esa justicta, libertad, dominio de si mismo, verdadera indepefidencia humana desprovista de todo egois- mo,-donde fo haya distingos de color ni Ifsites. raciales de ninguna-espetie. Nuestra reza tiene la'imperiosa necesi- dad de su propia patria, con todas las opottunidades y todos, los. privilegiés de cualquier ofra raza-”-- aa Si laboramos en‘ pro de tal -realizacién, gporqué bur-j large dé/nosotros? ¢Porqué tildarnos de ignorantes? é Fue ighdrancia el libertar-a la Gran Bretafta-de las garras del invasor?’ ¢Fué tambien ignorancia él. libertar 2 Ame- rica-de la planta del opresor? Entonces,. ¢ porque es igno- rantia—de-parte-del-negre-el_luchar por Iarestituciss Africa? Hombres de visién preclara y con. utta, imagina- cién liberal, apesar de girar en un circuld de predisposi-. ‘ciones materlales mesquinas,-no,.han de condenar la labor. de reforma humana de cualquier ser, sino que en ‘honor a | la justicia han de dar al ceggr-lo que es del cesar. 2 sf SPECIAL - NOTICE — TO ALL : DIVISIONS and CHAPTERS ‘in the U.S. A. ——youara hersby requested to forward to Parent Bedy. immediately the namgs and adtcwcaey of your president and’ Secretary’ 2 ie "SH BUiSoe nat Chants ate terme thee tepare gc fo te Parent Qed IRSA eahecige fr nay nonchalant tamara oP" eee ing ane RE tence See = (digaea)’” 3B. KXOX, i <__Ternmat Raprotatatlys 3 the Provident General. ———— — a . .. ° Notice to'U; N: L A. Divisions «© : "No Division “or Chapter of. the Universal. Negro Ja- | provement “Association is. io: enieriain’ ome’ LAURA - COFFEY, alias. ‘PRINCESS COFFEY -‘and™ LADY [SQFFEY. whe hes for soshe time ean collentga’ Fends members. af. the: Aveociation ‘im the ander. -the- qiisaof sending them to. Africn, ete. Shoal aber make further appeals, irembers Inve her arrested’; for fraed. =. * MARCUS GARVEY, ae un dominig Seonneice: sobre ‘aquel pais que asciendé a la suma de'mil quipientos millories, + Las especulaciaries ‘no se confis- ‘carian ni s¢ retirdrian'ai se quitara “ld proteccién por fuerza de armas, Hay .otsas :métodge ‘de proteger-es- peculaciones,. 1a_correspodénicia..di- ‘cin econémica. Aquellos snismos jpaisea extranjetos protegerian las ‘Gspeculaciones. que “son' deseables. ‘Ademis, las compatiias y Jas nacio- nes, en todas partes, ya no hacen uso deila proteccién por armas; péro hi por ésto, tropiezan con tificultades/ El argumento de que los. pate de Europa protegerian sus especulacio- nes ¥ que eausatian agiaciones.en estas replicas bajo la hipdtesis que las repiblicas tendrian’ gobiernos instables para’ siempre, es. falso. Cuando los Estados "Unidds se re- tiraran de estos paises sélo entonices se podriqn establecer gobierrios esta- bles alli.’ Nuestra dotninacién es fa catisa de muchas revoluciones y esta retatda’ ‘el progreso’ ‘en - aquellos paises masque ninguna otra coSa. El comercio no seria perjudicado. Nuestro cdmereio con’la América Espafiola es sélo. la mitad del uno por ciente de nuestro comercio’en- tero,. Nuestra especulaciones en la América Central_son_sélo_el cinco por ‘cietto, y. en Nicaragua, Haiti, y la Repabtica Dominica el uno por Cento de nuestras - espectilaciones Ademis, no hay. motivos’ para ‘su- poner que s¢ perjudicarin nuestro comercio y_nuesteas especnlaciones si quitasemds la prateeciog por fuer za de armas én dichos paises. * Su_ situacién politica .se agrava ss. | -La situaciér politica en Egipto se ha agravado iiltimamente al hacerse piblica la note oficial det gobierno Inglés, concebida ‘et Jonds,.duiros -y a:cual se-riega;:pon2hora; Tt cor exsion de la. independencia absoluta. Paralelamente.a este aconteci- miento se ha suscitado en’,Arabia seria insurreccién que stvealifica_de guerra santa, que ha planteado otro problema de sunza-importancia para la metrdpoli, en alencién a las co: Lnexiones que puedan establecerse entre ambos conflictos. Despgchos récibidos ‘de Egipto anuggian. un ambiente politico muy ‘agitado, y: confuso.?” Egipto so en- ‘cuentre 8in gabinete, pues el leader nacianalista.-Naha Pasha,” despaés de ana hora de conferencia con, el Fuad, ha dedlatado que el-g0- bienio'eenssituciolil exists tanto tiempo-como existexe Iacconstiti: oon Ser ~ La nota britinica, Yue hat caido como una bomba en los circulos po- litlicos todos, : después: de ‘haberse Jfoto'las negociacisues para Negar a ‘ina’ aliahia anglo-epipcia, expone claramente que ix Gian Bretafia no toltrara ninguna lepislacién que em- barace su soberania-y la proteccién ide ia vida extranjera y ‘sus propie- dades en Egipto. co _ Sarwat Pasha dimitié como vitrey jinmediatamente que fallaron las ne- gociaciones para Ia. clianza englo-' egipcia. El resultado de ello ha sido: Ia confusion, ° = | “Egipto se niega a firmar tratedo| alguno con Inglaterra en el gual se permite Ia cstancia de tropasbrits-| nicas en aquet pais, 6 bien cualquier control sobre ‘la politica inferior, Por otra parte, Iz metrépoli se n:an= tiene frmemente en su posicién de consérvar sus tropas alli, alegando razones de seguridad en vistas al Canal de: Suez, on “La insistencia devintervenir en ta politica de Ezipté se apoya el! deseo de privar q¢e intervenga en celia cualquier influensiaexteaiia. | All ° Fouud__Defendanga - Found, . Not_' Guilty “ of *’Serious “*- \Chalrgea, but- Seritenced to Sixty Days’ fprison- | meat and Fined’ ot Misdemeanor. Charges—Appeal to net Be Noceeee Supreme Court BES, t+ Se) pee nore! ‘ CHAIRMAN WARE APPEALS FOR MORE FUNDS hs ree etc Vicioys. Attempt to Mispresent U; .N. I. A. and: Injure ’.<" ts Good Name, in Tennesseé Is Defeated—White °7/ Jury's: Favorable. Verdict Hailed’ as Great: Victory: “tor U, N. L_A: Against Great Odds : «Hon. William’. Ware, -president-of-4the—Cincinnati Division, UsNeI_A., aiid: chairman of the Committee formed'to take care of the meitibers’ interests in=confiection with-the-Chattanooga outrage, reports that the case is proceeding successfully. All four defendants, Messrs, 1a Johnson, Emry Bailey, James Jackson and Louis Moore, haveboon acquitted by-the, Court of the serious chatges preverrad against thern, but they have been convicted and sentenced to 60 day's’ imptisonment with a fine of $50 cach on misdemeanor charges. ‘The case-has-heen appealed to the Supreme Court of Tenhessec. George W. Chainlee,.a former Attorney General of the State of Tempessee; is representing the men. * 33 : . A farther sum of $543.94 is urgently A@éfed to coniplete payment of the'attotncy’s fee of $1,000, and members and divisions throngh- out the country’are urgéd by: Hon. E. B. Knox, personal represen- tativezof the President-General, to ftifther-rally to the Chattanooga Defense Fund so-that the-attorneys may be paid in full at any early date. forthe exceptional services they have rendered to thése’ unfor- ‘tunate men and.to the ocgealaation: moneys should be sent to Hon. William Ware, Chairman of Defeitse Fund, 330 George Street, Ciricinnati, Ohio. : 5 The following isa list of previous contributions by Divisions to the Defense Find: SOR eae” 7 Chattanooga, Tennessee. o..eseeceeceecadeecnses sQhUoRr Cincinnati, Ohiow es... ceceecesresyere ren eicin BA Ago CHEVEANG. OMG en ese ne see seceeeeesesteeeesseeees A750" 7 “Moungstowan, Ohio.....sceceecetecsebedecereetsee 20008 “SL Lots, Missouri... cceeswerectedergeeecass 2236 Colunibus. O80: 1. ccsavesqenagneatcgeetecaseendy 1815: — | Pittsburgh. Pass... lees eteecieeumeesetseeeen st HOO, Y Dastoity Qhigss tits ea. econ eaaea sn eesestesess T1LOO mo Akron Ohio 83 Beer FEE Lee terete ree A LOO * [Los Angeles, California,......ecccecesicescreesee’ 10.36 * EMobile, Alabama...... 0. ee eee eects ee 10,00 “SMrvand Mrs. James Phelps, Columbus, Ohio...... 5.00 College Hill Chapter, Citicinnati, Ohiow.........22 2.25 + Total so 2 werecaseetanlesvetanerese de, TSO Finds Womeg.Gained - “Say It With Flowers” Stature in Century > © “[JMiade Easier in Germany Womet- have grown during the tat] BERLIN.—"Say §¢ with flowers” weil century, according fo @ discovers:.that| be mando, éaater,by thi adoption of Hoy haa ntartled Harding Scholle, dirsotor | postal faciithes. of tho Sfusoum.of the City of Now|. “When Angelltid hus a birttiday al Yorie, Ho-made this dincovery while | Edvein sill havo to do fa to wate Ant trying’ to cant his chardetérs for,tho| the Mgarest. telegraphs office, All up cemenary dinner gf the American In-| formeuurkod BU (tor bouauot? an stitute ofthe City of Now York. to'brhaay according to achiedile for the hela’ Mareh 21 in tho Waldorf. In try { Bowery, tacether with an extra ware Ing to arrange Ila revue depleting thi Yor delivery “by speci! messenger. changg. 0 costumes, Schotiy found that | —_ > tanay’n pled of fourteen yeare ie nearer] De Spanien eas the aigturd “or an aavit of » wndred | DROPSY. exee seating nae shat yeaza’ao than, her mother, [ite aymotorne rapidly dieabpeurs Liver eet \ I Arne 7h 1" NCE? COND LUCK QUICK! Loo Ee a Misa ob Breet ik i oe pes SE) Rate el a Se mates ae git ois hate meatal gc © poe eee ences oan Ha Miah SAA LORE Ws Mai ORIENTAL IMPORT Co... sor ton oe el MET GOu, 5. Men. Wonse i Men, Women, Boys elt BO th iat its Pree trate wag cre Pe Moni PEER, DINE aon yeu how. twill Go” yur” parsonad Bohol eadupatiotind Sf fiom fetta Wie at ye Aisi Regist wreck antares gia at, rac ea Bie le, oabe ES Sonate EH erin Aid a gad idee, mets fanning it range me “Sonemer F MTs a GUS en boon elved to ewer gies "SURE Sry eS Shar ege ite seiceetad Sar tae BARE AST sbedP ese he BODIE FERRELL, 0. 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Burton Advizoo Women an . _, Mothorhood and Companionship ‘bor novernt year Fmae denied tho Deane se Toe Sguthguiced 2 writen Sere Sencweree rene Sng aabicer te" pergaa ot Ser Whorte ana malachite” Now fan the BG°S RS compation nua‘ inapiratiog te 79 Minband. 4 Boltewo, nundteds. of other SOMME oul se ter near the seer fem ssepinests anced weil nate event te tony aca Sena eel“ uae Glee oa ice rains ron ines INOUE, pe ahaténeddc iy Kp Nneeeat Dare IM LES SUISGLG, cae f8iee, ae Some ae enemmetvarecin, Hanees Ce ee “RUCKER LUCK: |; Sal the GREAT-SOLOMON | | wena geinet tae aac | i AERO ihe Tel ts Rae | PRICE $700" | THE EGYPTIAN HERB-CO., 212}; Enet 18th Street } Tasco oa. tf beeen net Ri A BS AME B EAL RANE ewe cat 70u ect! eg hb fore Go aida Se fom ecueat Ua ge dave 4 Gate, aa Paneer cats Saco teae ay adore ie ate ERS GattneMhoaadte. St SHY Chas Seale “easliticee, Ba ES, Sel | mes HDIN AR Y sanmims cee y Ri R&R ¥ Seastenceliy writes RaAaR Re Man A OG CEE THE PEOPLE'S FORUM the other fellow understand his condition. Now that our President General is planning, to go abroad in the interest of 400,000,000 Negroes of the world, let us encourage him by stitching together. WILLIAM DUNCAN, (From the New York World) Recent legislation, according to the Supreme Court of the State of Georgia, has played the cat and banjo with the abolition of slavery. "By sweeping changes in the law governing civil rights of married women," it says in an opinion, "the doctrine of the merger of the civil exaltation of the wife and husband has been practically swept away. While the husband is still declared by statute to be the head of the family, he, like that of England, is largely a figurehead." And without question the court is right. In fact, if it errs at all it errs on the side of moderation, for figureheads a little grandiose to describe most husbands. Say what you will, a figurehead does sell at the front of the ship. Spare the would probably accurate and do no violence to the main idea that the court, had in mind. But is this a new condition? We doubt it. Recent legislation may have recognized it, but it, certainly, did not create it. The plain truth is that the husband has always been a spare tire in popular fancy, there was a time when he hanged his prospector wife when he off to his cave by her hair and then rushed in and my children in might he swim with a fast like iron and a voice like brass. All that we can aboutly is that we do not bother it. It lies in the face of the female nature as recorded, from the beginning of time. We do not contest, mind you, the club as a feature of early wooding. No doubt it was used, although we suggest that the lady procured more often than she actually was. But that fat of iron and voice of brass business we find it quite impossible to picture. You may be sure that when the proper time came she put her head out of the cave and twanged, "Elmer, you stop scratching pictures, on that rock and go milk that deer right away. I declare, I don't see how a man can expect me (9) braise fifteen children if he does nothing but make pictures all the time. I see him. I see him. And Elmer, you may be sure, put down his scratcher, picked up the old granite bucket and milked Bassole, the family reindeer, just as he would do today. In other words, the court had an怒 ideas, but it didn't go far enough. Nova Lisbon Capital Of Portuguese Africa NOVA LISBOA, Angola. March 9. The world's newest capital, Nova Lisbon, is to be most up-to-date in every particular. The first plot to be later out in preparing Nova Lisbon, formerly Huambo, as the new official capital of the country, and all of the addelem, hungries and all, which have now been completed. Four new hotels have also been built. Preparations to transfer the government offices from Loanda, the old capital, have already begun, and the foreign consulates have made arrangements to move their offices here in the near future. Lisbon is one of the highest capital. In the world, the altitude being 5,000 feet. The distance to the coast from here is 250 miles. FREE! "100 WAYS TO GET RICH" CH, will settle your money problem. follow the instructions in this wonderful I will wear the popular SERPENTS I have from Japan and an e-mail to inform you for myself. I am a winner in all games. one can feel the change that will come it time. That's from a man who owes one do it to this SERPENTS in the FRDE book. The ring is genuine gems. SEND NO MONEY! $2.98 measure. Pay postman only. I am not more than please return it. ACT AT ONCE-ORDER NOW! roadway Dept. 5 New York, N. Y. FREE! "100 WAYS TO GET RICH" Large book, "100 WAYS TO GET RICH," will settle your money problems. No more, worry about money. Just follow the instructions in this wonderful book. It will help you with all the money you want to get RICH. Read this letter from Mr. S. J. Thipper of Chicago, Ill.: I have received the Serpont's Ring I ordered from you and an good to inform you that I could have done nothing better for myself. I am a winner in all games. I have given you everything my way. Anyone can feel the change that will come upon ship after ship with the ring in their hand. That is what you are one! Yes, friend, the luckiest thing you can do is to get this SERPENTS RING and follow the important advice in the FRDE book. The ring is genuine and is made of gorgeous semi- precious stone. ONESHOT $2.98 Just send strip of paper for finger measure. Pay postmaster only. Then wear the ring five days and if you are not more than pleased return it and your money will be quickly refunded. ACT AT ONCE-ORDER NOW! ORIENTAL IMPORT CO. 257 Broadway Dept. B. New York, N. Y. NOTICE ted to send in all orders to headquarters ready; also price list Payment by Private. Check express Money Order ALL DRESS CORDS O.'S AND PRIVATES READY THE LEGION MUST USE ON APPLICATION. Information write DEPARTMENT All divisions are requested to send in all orders for uniforms to headquarters Order blanks are now ready; also price list REGULATION FULL DRESS CORDS FOR OFFICERS, N. C. O.'S AND PRIVATE ARE NOW READY African Redemption Must Be a Personal Matter To the Editor of The Negro World: The Negro race will never succeed until it becomes more united. Unity with one alm, and courage and force to carry out that aim, will bring final victory. Negroes should make the redemption of the race more of a personal matter. We might as well not have lived if we have not contributed anything to the progress of our people. Deeds, not merely words, are the big thing. We must not become discouraged and give up because the battle is hard. We must not become too content with conditions. We must be willing to suffer to gain something better. If we have race pride, we will realize that, when we better our own condition, we also help our people. For are we not each a part of the great whole? We are living in a modern age and the fight is hard in many worthy members of the race who are willing and capable of doing the things that our leaders must do. It is up to the great mass to follow the direction of our great leader, the Hon. Marcus Garvey. We will accomplish much if we have force and courage behind our alms. We will get nowhere if we weaken and fall by the wayside. If all Negroes would see to the program as I see it, it would only be a question of time when our objective would be reached and the 400,000 Negroes face the world over. Man's Inspiration Is the God Within To the Editor of The Negro World. Gentlemen of the civilized world, I appeal to you, taking into consideration your intelligence, to give Marcus Garvey a chance. See what that great Negro intends to do for his fellowmen of the Negro race. Some of the members of the race look upon him as a great monster, and other believe in him for his great leadership. The time has come when you can no longer hold the other fellow down, and he is in his full sonnace and prepared in every way. In some of the walls of life, first place must be conceded to him! All that great Negro and his friends need is a chance, and ten years hence I am sure that he will establish a new civilization where all can find fellowship with God and man. I am a GARVEYITE. In God we trust. G. K. FOOTE. Colon, Panama. Remain United To Gain Success To the Editor of The Negro World. To the Editor of The Negro World: Men and women of the Negro race, it is now high time that we should make up our minds to unite all and, and do it now. Do it today, for tomorrow may be too late. I want to urge you who have been members of divisions which have been fighting to go back, work harder than ever to join more members, and lay to them. "We cannot stop now; so we must make up our minds to unite to redeem our motherland, and with the help of God and the leadership of Garvey we will triumph." Let us one and all rally around the American leader, the Hena, E. R. Knox, and make him know the members in America are truly with him. Let us not get weary, for the journey is long. Let us all work for the success of our alma. If we stick together, there is no doubt that all our hopes will be realized. We that understand our condition must work hard to make PAIRS, March 4.—There is one country, in the world where women enjoy greater privileges, than they do in other countries. To be a dispatch from the Paris correspondent of Excelsior, the Tibetan males are tiring of female domination and are beginning to assert themselves—so much so that in one province, Excelsouan, they actually organized a union and marched 400 strong men to demand the demanded government recognition of men's rights. The standard of revolt was first raised in October by one Amoukil, a dealer in pelts. In Tibet women's power is almost supreme. She exercises a depotism without control. Men to-her are simply playthings. If she like them she keeps them; if not, she like them and amuses them. Her husband is then an outcast from society. Every woman is obliged to have at least three husbands and one bronshe that is a Buddhist priest. All husbands except the favorite over works for the wife. Amoukil won a favorite. Perhaps that is why he became, a musculist. For ten years he labored incessantly, always turning to women for help. He worked compelled him to travel great distances and he reached home only once every two years. · Amouki Gots an idea But during those voyages he encountered strange peoples and he observed that among these men were free from female domination. In a few remote instances, in fact, he even found that the shoe was on the other foot. "Aroused by the thought that his fellow men should be subjected to such bondage," Amoukud determined to become the liberator of his sex. By dint of much zeolous missionary work he gained a few adherents. These helped to spread the doctrine of revolt. They organized independence unions in many towns, and when they felt that they were grievously strong they begged upon Lhasa. They carried out an insurrection "striking husbands of That." Each husband carried a placard labeled variously "Down with tyrannical women!" "Men must have financial independence" "Abstijb polyandry" and "One husband should summe for any woman!" All along the route of march the striking husbands distributed tracts outlining their marital views and many a Tibetan woman when the strikers had passed herself left with only two or three husbands. Finally, the manifestations reached Lhasa, the manifestation supplicated the Lama, who wield great influence among the populace, to aid them in obtaining their "rights." Lama Played False But the Lama were aware who headed the household in Tibet. While pretending to listen sympathetically to Amouk, and his followers, they secretly tipped off the feminist leaders INFORMATION WANTED Appointed by the authorities of my niece, Mrs. Monde Blant, please notify her aunt, Mary Willett 245 W. 137th street, New York City. Very important. MEDICAL HERBS AND ROOTS Used and recommended for the treatment of scores of illness and disease. We have the knowledge and training needed to you—all first quality and also, lately fresh. We are known to a million customers as America's largest growers and important medicinal herbs and Room. AM-BIRG-ISN TABLETS are used by new orders. You'll never attend at the results. You can now envision taking the work you have done and putting it to good use. They give you a new supply of firm, high-quality plant operation, with all the jobs you do. $100 MONEY. Trial Nike 24 Tablets $1.00 Computers Treatment 200 Tablets $5.00 RUBY COMPANY New York City OPTORTUNITY FINE BUILDING LOTS for $15 each. $5 warranty. Write a letter to JEORGIE BLASS, Wichita, Mich. Under Ground TREASURES HOW and WHERE TO FIND THEM A Secret you should know, It may mean a fortune to the DIE partitions. Write today. MODEL CO. Dept. 823. Comte Bldr. CHIAGOAG. TLL. STURDOR BLOOD DEADNESS? Humberville Residence Cooperated and Wheat and advised them to take medicine to break the strike. But it was too late. The men out- numbered women and were better-organised, and they were not to be de- tered by feminine wiles. "For many years we have been subjected to feminine domination. They look upon us as cattle and horses. Their farcidious acts are so numerous that it is impossible to mention them all, but here are some: They are provided with many husbands. If they do not please her she abandons them. Husbands dare not resist them. That is how the female sex scorns us. "Under feminine control we work day and night in different sections of the country. We gain money by the sweat of our brains. Women never, interest themselves in providing us with employment. We are denied. If we have not lucrative employment we are evicted and abandoned. What slaves we are!" Army Desertions Are Increasing WASHINGTON. - Figures compiled by the Judge Advocate General for the first six months of the current fiscal year, show a considerable increase in desertions from the army. Should the ratio continue until June 30 it is stated that desertions will be no more numerous than for many years, despite the fact that enlisted personnel now receives the increased ration, which was expected to cut down the number of disaffected. Adjutant General Walt told the Senate Appropriations Committee the latest figures indicate an 8.55 rate of desertions, compared with the highest rate of 7.39 in recent years. BARGAIN WATCH FREE NEW LEGY KARNE CHARM Get the New Lucky Kafka Charm FREE with this watch, 144k gold effect, antique effect. Get the new "Lucky Kufo Knife 434k gold effect case, 434k solid gold effect case, genuine American mournment. NO MONEY. Pay postmaster only 21.50 for the chain free. SUCH ORDER. Monetary base guarantee. THE JACKMAN MING CO. Dent, I-11, Dear Mrs. Hudson Terminal, New York, N. X. LADIES: From the this Arabian Love and Love package Think what solo distributors for the U. S. 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A.** BEWITCH OTHERS Secure clever woman's 'secret methods, animal bookkeeping like it--100 stores, 100 locations, 100 days. curved sleeps in world, May change your home, work, school, vacation, Dpt. £1. Paris, France. (French postage, £6) ARE YOU LORESOME? Many Young Lovers, You will contend some to figure out of compromises to achieve your goals. You will be invited to 21 & 24 concerts in Downtown, Milwaukee. SORE LEGS HEALED Cause LEGS. Great. Biological. Chronic. Infected legs per week. Wear for free. Go to www.sorelegshealed.com. 1-800-333-3333. LONDON. Eng. --- The dreg and the wate are at loggerheads over the government's decision not to introduce legislation during the present session to permit persons to get intoxicating liquor from public houses, as the saloons in England are called. Captain Bourne, member of Parliament for Oxford, was prepared to reintroduce his loosening bill when his party leaders decided they would not allow liquor to be sold in selling of liquor leaf restricted. He acquiesced, and 1 introduced instead a bill to stabilize the Date of Easter. British liquor interesta say that the licensing act of 1921 is too strict and retains too much of the oppression of liquor laws, sometimes during the day within which the public houses may be open and when they must close. PUBLIC NOTICE Gibbons, Lewis Sydney. ... Anyone knowing his present whateaus, or how he came to communicate with his aliant, Mrs. R. Clark, c/o the. Amsterdam News. He was a man of the street. He will want him to communicate with him. Eboe and Congo Distributing Co. West African Scientist and Hebrist has taught, and powerful incase that will touch the apot, namely, Ebola and Congo and Amatiho Gandwe Income and the Jemm and Amatiho Gandwe Income and the price of 80 cents per life. 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Near 123rd Street OUR CLASSIFIED OPPORTUNITY COLUMNS BUMMAGE AXEZ - BAKES from $80.00 for this message? Write for e-mail and send special greetings for our inaugural event. Call Chelsea St. 111 111 1111, Newark City. Street, 111 111 1111, Newark City. BALA KEEL WANTED **DISTRUCTIVE** - Travel; make sure food is provided. **Free** Write American Depositary story. **2199** Broadway, N. Y. **PIRMEN** Braunstein, Birmingham (white colored); $116-$149 monthly; Experience unsecured. **209** Railway Bound, East St. **OPERATIVES** will will you in house direct from factory. Teach you how to play and keep it in perfect condition. Mr. Wirt. N. T. City. Phone Morningburg $137. DENTIST Miscellaneous CECILIE's gown, hats, hockey, novelties, 3197 Seventh avenue, New York City. WILLIAMS PHARMACY, 716 Seventh avenue, E. R. corner 1218th street, Phone Morn, 1814. CONSUMPTION—associated conditions of present and heal. Prep booklet, C. H. Johnson Medioles Co., 719 W. Erskine street, Limbo Ohio. INVESTIGATION—CHURCH, 2093 Stadium Ave., N. Y. C.—Services every night and Sunday Evening at 4:20p all are welcome. SARAUEL FLOYD, Soar. KNOWLEDGE-LEARN. Learn your possibilities. Sand birth date and 18c. for for-love place. Dept. II, 92 p. Place, New York. COMPOSER, arranger, and publisher of writing. Alexander Saymore, 6 W. 829th Street, N. Y. C. Phone Harlem 4772. ELDERLY LADY to help mother care for Negro World, good home. E. W. W. WILLIAMS PHARMACY—Soda, luncheon services of distinctive quality. 2161 18th street. E. R. corner 1218th street. Phone Morn, 1214. SATURDAY, Feb. 4, 1925, $1.00 bargain day; hats, novelties, Cecilie, 2257 Seventh avenue. BUTTERBEANS AND SUSIE Want agenda to spill their cosmetics. Write booklet. E. R. corner 1218th street. Phone Morn, 1814. WILLIAMS PHARMACY—Soda, luncheon services of distinctive quality. 2161 18th street. E. R. corner 1218th street. Phone Morn, 1214. *LADY ROSE* - will WHITEN and BEAUTI- FUL Beauty Products Company, Akron, Ohio. KING TT TWELVE MAGIC WORDS is a sure way to get anything you want. Yourll love Harwood, Toxas. Murpure, Kittle Graves. SWEETMAMA HAIR DRESSING makes coarse, stubborn, hair straight, silky and fluffy. Murpure, $1.50. Trussell Company, Augusta, Ga. FOR SALE RESTAURANT for sale: location excellent; business good; rent low; long lease. Selling on account. Accounts apply. Green River, 1200 N. 4th St. and 7th Ave. Phone: Edgecombe 1280. STORE FOR RENT Large space stores to rent. Suitable for Industrial, Office, Retail, and Hospitality. 256 North Avondale. Avondale 914-546-3200. WANTED 20 YOUNG WOMEN 20 YOUNG WOMEN 20 MAKE $20 to $40 A WEEK Working for the Willectro Processa Hair Straightening Machine Company Must be ambitious and dependable Call at the E. B. WILLIAMS CO., Inc. 51 Chambers St. NEW YORK NO MORE BAD LUCK WEAR NEW LUCKY RING KING Beautiful ring encrusted in silver and the anemone symbol = Swatika, symbol = Swatika, Clover, Wlhone-keep away bad luck in love, business, games, nautil, nautil, games, nautil, ring encrusted in their own hand, and mysterious symbol Swatkin, Swatkin, Clover, Wlobone- and bring you luck in love, business, wealth and happi- ness. Regular prizes are your choice. Get your deck of luck; take this Wonder- ful toy, Lucky Ring. Pay postman upon your call. Order Owl Co. Dept. box No. 20 of Hidden Terminal Station, New York, NY. THRILL OF VIGOR The amat- ease of organization. Lift a gift from the "Fountain of this poppy crestion. bring you quick pen and a knife for harm. Harn- line. Also C. O. D. Plain wrapper. YOUTH PRODUCTS CO. D. KOXKO. FLA. VU VLUQGJ a fringe a from the "Mountain of the Titans" shinny poppy cression. it brings you quick pam and Viger. So far, Sogam for you. $2 box postage $2 O. D: Plain wrapper. O. X: X, O, KQFORD. FLA. B Furnished Rooms to Let FURNISHED ROOMS to be 'let' by 8p and 10p WEEK 1214th street, apt 11 Room to rent: 10 private rooms, 10 lat) responsible people; men or women girls. 60 West 113rd street. Rooms to 'let' large rooms, 10 lat) improvement spaces; good host. 182D BD 15: 187 W. (Apt. 12)—Furnished bathroom, plentiful, plenty heat. Day by day bathroom, plentiful, plenty heat. Day by day 839 W. 146th street, Apt. 6W. Nobly fit- ter suite. 462 W. 146th street, 462 W. 146th street, call evening. 838 St. Nicholas avenue, room and board, all room and board, because people, Mr. William Phillips. 407 W. 146th street, Apt. 2W, room neatly cleaned, all improvements and conveni- ences. LARGE and small furnished rooms, all conveni- ences. 839 W. 146th street. 138 B. Nicholas avenue, beautiful furnished room, young adults or young people or young children, convenience. 48 W. 146th street, nicely furnished room, all convenience and improvement; respectable people only. LARGO room for family. Also convenient, safe for children, good furniture, employment office or other business. Less awe, near BAILEY. 145 W. 146th street, 183 W. 146th street, BAILEY. LARGO FURNISHED room resonance. 8 W. 145th street, apartment G.K. Thompson. FURNISHED ROOM, private, for gentlemen (near 1926 street). NEATLY furnished room, private, plenty storage. 8 per week. 14 W. 147th street, apartment (near 1926 street). 139 W. 145th street (apt. 3), FURNISHED rooms in quiet private family. 8-18. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES WANTED--Partner with capital, or capital without partner, for live paying business; World World, 143 West 190th St. N. E. C. World, 143 West 190th St. N. E. C. 181 BUTS Royal Mineral Dead to Internet Texas Mineral Belt, Map, particulari Free, Texas Mineral Belt, Map, particulari Free, Dan Wagner, Belt, Fort Worth, Texas. A RARE opportunity to invest in a large white industrial concern with a large distribution network. Colored and white help. Write Desk. Co. Negro World, 143 West 190th St. N. E. C. UNDERTAKERS ALBERT T. S.AUNDERS FUNERAL HOME boutique, coats and, efficiency, 129 W. New York City. Phone: Bradhurst 4160 EASTWICK BROS.-Undertakers and sun- wear. 129 W. Brooklyn BL. New York City. Phone: W. 129 W. Brooklyn BL. New York City. Phone: F. 129 W. Brooklyn. Phone: 609 625 625 Mamie's Anderson Pratt, funeral director, 129 W. 131st Street. Phone: 219 W. 131st Street. Bradhurst 609 625 625 OPPORTUNITY TO AGENTS NEGRO DOLLS, 12, in lochroom, picture, $6.00; beautiful. Negro pictures, 12, different large size. Negro pictures, 12, different large size. 6, for $16.00; Florence Mille picture, $1.00; U.S. Mille picture, $1.00; $1.00; U.S. A. S., centr. for picture. More agents wanted. AIT PUH City, $8. 85 Edgcombia Ave. New City, C. Jewelers ST. GEO. V. CORINALI JEWELRY. MUSIC, NOVELTIES DEVELOPING and PHOTO PRINTING View and Greeting Cards for All Occasions AGENTS WANTED Egyptian Herbs Laxative Diuretic and-Tonic Purifies the blood; cleans the complexion. If never cause the skin to break out, shave, yell, or sweat it better, sheer, better, work better and feel better. An formal weakness and irregularities it has no equal. Lost Mighty, no competition. THE EGYPTIAN HERE CO. 121235, Fort 18th St., Kansas City, Mo. FITS FREE Proof If you have Epilepsy, Fit. Failing Sickness qualifies you for any of our programs today without fail. Attention stopped over night in many cases. NO NARCOTICS— no harmful drugs. Money back. DR. C. M. SIMPSON CO. 2012 W. 44th St., Cleveland, O. IF U DON'T CONSULT DR. 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