nothing. ‘ L ..0I1e. 5 I Testimony "of ‘One-.Whom God Is Using to ;. . ;_- o '. Demonstrated-,lHis Pd»wert. Among Men . ’iEaith__f_u_1_o .Mu’aroy:~‘sp.ent ‘the weekend I ’;Aiin"Newark,5‘Ne', ‘fJersefy, from.:.'oApri1 7 ivuthei Kingdom on Bedford Street phat‘ Father ::oivine_ hes. blessed joher. - v _: before u she'.jopened} the‘**K5ing'clom. [fin 5New‘Yorki city at 160 W..126th ‘Street. On her arrival, the Kingdom was ‘crowded lwitlrpeople and ab won- derful banquet was served. _ The an- gels from Losti.-Angeles,: California, ,.A had . just arrived and enthusiasm was A running. high, The table was beau. I tifully decorated with cut flowers and thamany“ good things, which are a all "banquets “given by Father }jo](3:ivine,A whether‘ ‘he s is personally pres- em ‘or not, His "spirit being suificient. In? 1 the midst of_ applause Faithful "arose iinlijher usual meek way and said: Thank Father - for -5 the I trip from ‘York, ‘i_or-“ii it I had not _ been for Father‘.Divinei I L eouid not have been “neither «would , I have had? the o portunity’ ‘to .-,he_" present, today." I again want to thank Father-foir giving e!" an obedient spirit, forthe Spirit f Father 'h_ad,not registered in me to 'y~al1'night'::in Newark frond,“ the _e ‘I’ was placed‘ in the Kingdom in ew YorkfCityait 126th Street.’’' After the lb‘aniquet,_ she wellt around looking . e I every,-thin_'g,i_ even into the pantry, , seeing thiugsfiwere in “good ape. and that they were in ‘keeping ithl ithe policylfolloweidjpbyo Father ex as she ‘wanted {to please Him lcally. C She - _v I it 'ble.andf ‘ 1, ast Iof‘ Fatl_ler’s._ little o.ne__s.«7 Faithful: 0 Mary : talked Sunday : Morning at - the ‘Banquet table at ‘-51 Bedford Street, . i‘especia1ly=‘to the Los Angeles, Cali- ‘fornia, group "that had recently ear-I rived. Her exhortation‘ to theznwas ; (sound and practical. “Among many ‘rfpthinigsoékishe said: 3 . I ' V P I want to thank Father for his great. PEACE and LOVE, for‘: It is Wonderful, this great work of Father ;. ] ~_Div-i_i1e’S.f I want to‘ say —a word to ;you,~ the.-. children ‘from’ Los Angeles, qfwlio wanted to see Faithful'Maryi and ~‘ . o havelbeen waiting for Faithful Mary slug"/tojcomei to California. . In one way -it wasioalright, ifjit was to see God’s -work through FAITI-IFUL MARY, for without Father Divine I .could{. do For, when nothing else could help,‘ Father Divine lifted -me from all my many sins.~ M ' i 7 V In this ,sa.me‘Vo Street that we are ~ on ‘now, If used‘ to walk lonely hours of the night wondering where I could get a‘ place to sleep- A fe‘w.blocks from here is where I_ lived the life, eating outuof the garbage cans, and ' ‘with no “home. Now, where can any of us, see to exalt any one but‘God- forj - I-leis‘ God? and the ‘only One. Man "f*has:r‘ been -trying for 1900 years — to V ‘—‘.1‘Ob'GV0'd of His glory, but now; they might ; 4 shall--reign. I would not try to get‘ »well stop, for God alone in between God My Father and any tlike Faithful Mary. or anyone else except ‘God, w11o,is Father Divine. I .3, For the ..-‘arms of flesh. -will fail you. A ‘lot of us don’t know what repre- sentative _is. -Representative is tes- tifying and telling what God has done =.-for us and telling the truth and not _putting self in-the way, and trying I to take’ God’s, place wanting the praise- to go. to man or woman as'”it-may be "called. I j I hope Father will let me ‘go to V A California. If He will go in me and speak‘ tlirough» me, I will tell the truthand telllwhat He has done for ‘Vine; for I cannot do anything unless; - Father ,!7'doe‘si it ,thr.ough-me. ‘I'do not to do anything” unless He tells} me todo it. -) Howvcould I tell you 1" 0: -am this or that, when I "was not any- sithingbefore Father came, and after ._ the clea.n,ed me, jtry, lotto p-take. Hist praises? He said l'1e‘would“cl‘ean fup’ ;, gybodies and work] through them; — Now, ?:uiter‘,I-le.-cleaned up vbodies, He ‘did not clean thempup forthem tovget self 1 'in‘—'the ‘sway and wantfto be P exalted I and _sti1l_ try to rob. GOf1f‘0f. His works; *;;E[ow can'manfdo anything except God ‘I ;be4wi,th;.‘I—Iim7?} CI, couldsay many more things but ‘ ill ,notI'allow«;_o butfil Don’t‘ you 'wish _.to try_ ..to bet‘ [ continues, ‘-‘we must launch a pitiless. -I suasion,”fiiticoncludes, r“.we shallli in a " few -‘years i’b‘e1-fable to see‘ -the peoplelwho was dd elllollstrationsin .NeWalk.VieWedbyi Father from Plane -Selfridge Take, Part in ‘Great "Parade Sunday, April 8, crowds of buses, cars, portation carried thousands of people from everylsection’ of New.York and New Jersey ‘to againj take part in a mammoth parade of Father» Divine’s_ followersf The ‘Father ;andathe.chi1.,- dren heldla sumptuous banquet at 763d Street in the morning and thetF.ather (God) left, with His immediate stafi early thereafter for .-the air field to board his, plane._. they joined 5 e“a;éi’i'~ ‘ other 1“ at 3 School Street. It was a lgreat‘§"day‘T’of? re- the streets as thegreat parade swung out. Faithful Mary and B\ishopoi~'oSel- ‘fridge, who head the ‘Divine Peace Missions in Newark, were the pro- moters of the spirit of our Father on ‘Sunday. , it , ,'V,'I‘he demonstration was b_eaut_iful as the great parade,;svgu_ng,,,o tmon,,_the streets V that were: is ' / who once’ ‘knew in liiiul'“"l\/Iary. [As it e \ v ‘S . '8. - ‘ : -.cleanedup by Fat er-Divinexand when ..they, {gazed upon ‘ her ’ they V-exclaiinted -“Truly ~ Father ,Divine .. is; ,,(3‘r,0d. for no.0 one scouldgchange-.h,e_ ’ He is God,” ,_ ,,,_ is , ‘Father Divine, Sayville ‘and,-_over. Newark, returned to Newark in; the air and viewedthe parade from his beautiful _, Bellanca plane ~carrying'12 passengers. The ‘plane was piloted by the War Ace, Col. Roger Williams. He was assisted by Col. Hubert _.I.ulian_. Our Father left for an un,kJ1.QW11:...destination Tuoesday. It is rea_l:ly,..,wonderfu1. i~u.,i....u.. Attack Aiming 19 Abolish Religion ‘Newspaper Brands Re- ligion as a Cause of - iCivi1f.War . , ISTANBUL-.—i-eForwthe, first time in- Turkeyia ‘strong anti-religious cam- -paign has been opened by the local press. . x A » — “Religion is a cause of civil and of international“ war,’_’ the Istanbul week-‘ 1y The Torch said, .-“and if only for the hearts.“ of men.” Thearticle’ ap-g to “the war’ against religion.” .’l‘ho'ugl1. Turkey now has a laic government, -this paper complains, too many people still frequent the mosques. “If'this country is to». progress,” it fight against‘ the‘ black-frocked, im- perialists. ‘The. history of the Turkish revolution shows that it was they who opposed all-i reformsj’ Mustafa Kemal’s fseparation i ‘of Church and State. reduced»-ithe for- merly;co1os‘s‘al'powér bf the Moslem is not satisfied."-. It urges Turkey to found atheistio‘ clubs, to get out anti- religious publications," and» to found an anti-religibusv museum, “where all the turpitudes of’-i»all Ithe‘ religions will be exposed and“‘all religious‘ superstitions- held up to ridicule.” 9 ,- Further, the paper would like to see an anti-religious .cat'echi_sm taught in all the schoolsflof Turke"Y.,,«' ‘‘‘Thanks to such methods. of per- ”F0aithful Mary and Eisliop » Again in Newark, New Jersey,‘ and every savailable means ‘of; trans- I __ '1_‘_he., followers ' thronged the‘: Centers andfrom there . joicing in Newark. Thousands zfilled ‘ 0' ‘famifliad "fltioiithdse . Sher: carfswung out those -‘streets, he ..that.;u_n1éss -_ who .-had ,.fi9W.fi. over’. , _ this reason must be pulled out from- peared on a- page especially: devoted clergy almost"-to nil,‘ but The Torch i ii. fI v.F_iather .Diyine and _P'a’.‘rty= Amazing Had s F alvleni Show _ ‘ Power V of ,,Fa't_he,rf to ‘-Save o. " and Confession , Of ’ MISS ELVITA so _Wes—t 129th Street New York City From all parts of the Nation they can come rejoicing, forwhat. Father Testimony} ‘Divine. is doing in cleaning up vice ' and crime. As the accompanying testimony shows, _ the effects of His . Work are not confined to the under- world of »\Newark, or New York City, but His Spirit reaches out and re- moves those who area menace to So- u ciety, actually transforming them and making them law-abiding citizens, willing to make right that which is wrong; The following testimony and . confession was heard around the Ban- quet Table of Father, {at 20 West 115th Street, on Tuesday,. March 27th: M Peace, Father. I want to thank You, Father, for being here, and, for the place -that You have brought me - from, Father. It is a. long way off.’ And I -want to thank You for giving‘ us the privilege of confessing our sins before You in Person, and for You forgiving us" and freeing us from all those connections of the flesh, Father. I have some confession that I want to make, and I ask You to bring it to me, Father. Whatever is Your Will, bring ‘it’ up. Thank You, Father. V " I ‘ When I was avery small child, I think may be seven, nine or ten, ‘I be- came very angry at what I; thought was my father: and I wanted to kill him, but I “didn’t know how, so after everybody had gone to-bed-and his lunch was done up I put carbolic. init. I don’t remember what fillappened, be- cause it is so’ long ago, but he became very ill. -1 think in the morning the one I thought was my mother». looked ‘the ‘lunch over and put some more in when she smelled it, or something, but ‘very ill. . . - ‘ And when. I was even smaller than that Iwas very ‘mean, and at the age of three or four I started to try to commit the act of adultery with a very small boy. lThen'at thelage of fifteen, perhaps, I was married, and I ‘performed on myself illegal opera- tions five or six times, and I became very. ill, and was ill fora long time. Ihad what they called blood poison, and was taken to the Hospital several times. ' I did not knot.‘ I hadothese things to confess, "Father, but 2 was always into something,.from lonegthing to an,otl1er,;a11ds.I will confess them as .— 'yd1ir‘Ho1y,S.piritib1‘ings,j_ittome» And, ’ Viewed P=0:1ra,Vde'.ifiin.- N5e_wark' fro Wickedlmedibl I epellialll. Woman 4 - Revelations»?- 'D3e'pths 1 to hichj -She . anyway there was“enough tomake him - Treasury ' off on Ma ’ on Febru ry_ .28," 1933.” V then, Father, there was a child born, because I was told if I had any more that way I would die,‘and.I was afraid. Then I left my. husband, because it was too quiet a life. I just couldn’t be quiet, and couldn’t be still. I went to a very large city and went to work there in an ice cream factory. I went out to cabarets and met some of the underworld, and I did ‘not work in thatplace very long. Before long I was in a so-called red-light house, and I want Youjtoh forgive, me for that, Then I was taught different things, and I was known as,“So-and-So’s girl,” and all of that. Then‘ I didn’t like that so well, but I couldn’t get away.‘ when I wanted “to, and then I got ac- customed, to thatlife, and lived in it so long I couldn't get awayfbecause I knew things that had gone on, and I ,didn’t-. dare say anything about it, or tell anything. about it. ‘ I am trying to ‘go’ throughthis brief- ly as I can, ’-Father. I lived in that kind of life,‘:i.n -such places, all over the State of Washington, the State of ‘ California, and down into Mexico, and I did all the things that went along with -that, in all‘ ways, with all men. I can’t remember all the instances of crime, and all that went along with it, and other things, but I want .to get the main partlout, Father. Then, thank You Father for bring- ing‘ it to me',»‘I9'*was only in my teens when I learned. to smoke opium, and I used to go to the dens, and when I wasn’t busy doing something I laid in the opium‘ “ dens all night long and smoked with all kinds from the under- world, and everything that went on at that time,~ils not fit to tell, Father. Then‘ when Iwas twenty-one, I be- gan toipay for it. Atthe Age of twenty-one- had what the doctors called an-“incurable disease in a very bad state. ‘ *Il also had T.B., and Asthma,..and was*in» a very bad con- dition. ‘-There was in particular, one man, and he-took the same treatment I did. He paid for the treatment I took, and for.» the things If wasgtaking at that time.‘fAnd_ they sent him to the insane asylum from -the effect of it. I thank You Father, - that You spared -me. You spared me through so many: things,~I ‘want to thank You W for ‘ saving [me of‘ mi all of that. , :'IThen, Fathc went too. Alaska, an} , in Air on Sunday, April 8, 1934. Twelve,- Williams and‘ Col.‘ Hubert Julian ‘ ~ Interest of European Cculillies I In the develcpmeht of Africa C°“5ld9'edE3“°m¢1YSi‘ .PhiIippine ACon_”stab_u1ary Gets irst Native Leader, of ‘lucle -to“ Independence l gwns 1 . y . .t.0dav.’¢ féitt. ‘constabulary had been completely». re-7 organized and would 01 be Vcommanded for the first time by a Filipino. Frank Murphy, »Governor~General of . the Philippines, has reported to George H. Dern, Secretary of War,,tha.t after several months{ study and considera- tion he has just issuedorders for re- organization to reform, enlarge and revitalize the island’s police force. Colonel Basilo Valdez has been named chief of constabulary, succeeding Brigadier General Clarence H. -Bowers, who retires. I I . other contemplated changes in the government of the Philippines which given their independence under pro- visions of the bill recentlypassed by Congress. Under the reorganization the merit system ‘will be instituted, foreign influence eradicated, constables will be relieved from non-police duties and retirement and pension plans will be’ started. ‘ Strength of New Bea] to Be Tested in SprillgV0iillg toration to Power Through Primaries in Ofl’Year WASHINGTON.——-A nation-wide. bal- lot box test of the New Deal will start soon. A _ , Illinois voters, lining up for the first of the primaries of the off-year elections, twill inaugurate activities that in‘ the next seven months will reach into every State. November will finish the election of thirty-five Sena- tors, about tlieisame number of Gover- nors and the entire House. Republicanslare voicing openly the hope that thefipusual ofi-year tide will restore themto, many ofiices they lost in the Roosevelt /landslide of 1932. Democrats predict ,that gainslin the Senate will offset any immaterial loss of seats in the House; I o \, Speaker Rainey brought the White House angle strongly into the picture, however, when he , reported advices from his friends that financial inter- ests in New York were planning to donate funds in an oeffolftto defeat him because,-. of his}. stand [for §RQOseveltian measuI';e[S.c - 0- i ’ i A F orize Reorganized as Pre- 1. The reorganization is in line with will be completed when the islands are Republicans Hope for Res-. rogument continues: . _ ‘Excluding. ;temp.erate ; f r in a --. P?remtcr_, Mussolini, in a recent . specchpagain reminded the world of Italg/’s desire-for expansion, economic and political, in Africa. This re- minder was the latest in a series of doe-ezopmenotsi which have called at-‘ tention to ‘Em~opc’s increasing inter-. est in the Dark Continent. Tfic sig- nificance of these developments is dis- ‘ cussed here. ...._._....._,.. By FERDlNAND TUOHY’ The word “Africa” is finding its way more and more into the press and into the ether and onto the screen of Europe. While it would belvfrankl exaggerationto suggest that harassed Europeans are beginning’ to contem- plate empty, -undeveloped and rich Africa much as their forebears glanced across at the ‘American Con- tinent in the sixteenth century, there exists an indisputable and steadily growing tendency to “think African.” Seventy years have gone by since Livingstontfocused Europe’s attention on the- Dark Continent—decades dur- ing which British, French, Germans, Spanish, Portuguese, Belgians, Ital- ians have not ceased to go hard at it. What people are asking -now is: Has everything. possible been done with Africa that could be? May there not exist here both a possible market and a possible home for Europe’s factory and human surpluses? _ Africa is three times the size of Europe, with only about one-fourth, the number of inhabitants. It could . produce inexhaustible raw materials, minerals, edibles, if only taken prop- erly in hand. Yet it has but 4,000,000 white settlers, three-quarters ‘of them in Frenclr North Africa and Cape Colony and the rest scattered in an immense area. , . The difficulties. are. realized, of course; to be greatwnot the least of’ them the insects of Africa and the natural lay of the land. To hear some tell it: ' “The locust alone, even in the rare high-lying territory, . are utterly un-. conquerable. They continue to de- vour Africa. Moreover, people are apt toforget that most of Africa is desert, jungle or swamp, with inter- mittent stretches of flooded country as ‘big as Belgium or Holland.” A Area-for Settlement Governing everything, inithese es- timates, is the severely restrictediarea «yet remaining open, on health grounds, to further white settlement. [Tile ‘ar- Passenger Bellanca Was Piloted‘ by col. Rogerfi; Egypt, Tunis, ‘Algeria, Morocco, Cap, Colony, 0 already overpopulated _ also tropical and desert Africa,.;:whos’e climatic and other conditions reluler, European habitation entirely out o the question, only I-Iigh/Africa,o itlia V regions rising from 3,000 to '6,000,feet ’ above sea level, can reasonably be »-ex» pected to lend themselves toany fun-1 ther white organization. ‘.‘Kenya, Uganda, .T_ai1ganyika, tanga, Mozambique, Rhodesia and ..A7n _ gola might be made to absorb‘.-Euros pean emigration such as formerlyse tled in South Africa and_Austra1ia. There is also a chance to do some? thing with Abyssinia. But i White,‘ simply ‘cannot live in the rest We Africa except as you see a handful carrying on now.” V ‘ After such statements, whatl,i,on may well ask, can pro-development’ people have by way or reply? , . Essentially, they can advance twofold program: Slowly settle «tom-} . perate and High Africa toil/the‘ limit with surplus whites from Western. Europe, and develop the‘ continent a whole on a fixed plan calculated} ~ progressively to improve and multiply 7 I .buyetu native stock and make thisa of European goods. 9 Months’ Eixpendiitulre" By 5. Pass Billion National‘ Income . lions More Than. WASHINGTON, . April - 0,7.-—-Fed a spending in the fiscal year whichfend June 30 passed. $5,000,000,0'00y today on April .5, the latest date‘ ion; which. figures are available, the government had spent $5,oo5,4s2,333, as compared- with $3_,833,25Z,776 at,tliatCtimj ' year. ’ The deficit tliat“ day lstood-tat $2,655,1o7,34i, compared with $2,287,; 945,312 a year ago. Of the =$5;0o0,o0 000out1ay, $2,o1s,95o,oo0 wentlto rode} tine‘ expenditures, $2,986,5l2,000. Alto} en‘fel~gency recovery costs. , The public debt was listed by the Treasury today at $26,179,420, 0.0,; compared with $21,457,652,O00,l 0‘ ago» ~ U > 1 . ; 'I‘he‘$5,000,0.00,000 spent in ’a.,;.1i tl’ more than nine months of the-0l9;34-:1 fiscal year was nearly the I’-total 0 entire spending in the 1932}or‘1,9/ 3.. fiscal year. jIn-.1932 ~govern1I1en.t lit" lays’ were $5,I54,000,000, in _ A5 143,000,000. l -I - Governmellt income” for, year to date , is .,$2,35oo,i35.4.,o992\ ‘pared. with $1 45 307464 “est: eel: last.