Y L K E E W Featuring The Messages of FATHER DIVINE PUBLISHED SEMI- fl//fin VIM, \\|I \wa «Rx. ........_........._..........._....___.._........._. ..........._...................__.......... ..................._...._._.. a.._....._....._....._........____.. ..................... ....._........................ ................_..._........ .._.._.........._........... ..........._....._..................._ ...... ........ ..u........_.............._..._............................ ............................ p.::.a_.... ......._ .._................._........._........................_.._..... .. ._.... . ..._..........._.___........... ‘Io .................._._ ........_...._... .. ...__....... ._......__........._... .. ......._......_....._._......._.. ......_..._._.........._......... . .................._............................ ....................... ....._.................. ........ _...................... ........ ..........._ - .2... —--: - -=—: — ...3.....2.....3..................=.... .3... '5 - :-...:-.3.-.3............=.-1.3:.-. FATHER DIVINE OL. III TL1€SdaY, Page 2 The “SPOKEN WORD” Tuesday, May 11 CLASSIFIED] POSITION wanted by first class cook. Write Ada Butler, 54 W. llfith St. Apt. 2—W. PEACE——FOR Sale: Capitol Hill busi- ness location. 12-roomed duplex, full basement. Two baths, laundry. Hart Automatic tank. Capacity 8.48 331- Water heater. Lot 43x120,_ clear. Price $8,000. Mr. Holtfreter. 51“2~—15th Ave.. N. Seattle. Wash. PEACE PEACE DINING ROOM In FATHERS Mind and Spirit EXCELLENT MEALS 15c. and 10c. 5 East 118th Street, N. Y. C. ‘- COME AND DINE AT THE Peace Restaurant Best Meals 10 & 15 Cents 1682 FULTON ST. B’KLYN, N.Y. I Thank You Father. PEACE Greenfields Hosiery Shop LINGERIES. GLOVES, SKIRTS, BLOUSES, NEGLIGEES & COB- SETS. Also Extra Sizes. 42 w. mu. s'r., N. r. (2. PEACE HIGH GRADE CLEANING & REPAIRING ——Lowest pri(~.es—- 39c Dry Cleaning Supreme Cleaners & Tailors 1401 Fifth Ave., Cor. 115 St., N.Y. C. The SPOKEN wo Interfational Commercial Mag Published Semi-Weekly Issue of TUESDAY, MAY 11th,‘? 1937 A.D.F.D. V01... Ill N-o. ' Publication Office: 4422 Eighth Ave., Brooklyn, N. » Editor and Manager A. HONAEEL Associate Editors STEPHEN BLISS Daniel Love, Business Manager Executive Office 36 W. 115th St., New York, N. 0‘ “Entered as second-class matter, V I-nary 4th, 1936, at the Post 0 ~- Brooklyn, N. 11., under the Actoi 3rd. 1879.” GRAND MILLINERY snor Specializing in large head sizes 106 WEST 125th STREET NEW’ YORK CITY R. A. BROWN ‘PEACE HEITNER’S SPECIALTY 5110? 54 West 116 Street Hosiery - Gloves - Corsets Blouses and Skirts Extra Sizes Low Prices PEACE New York National Meat&Provision Shop Retail VVe supply Hotels & Restaurants Souvenirs given Sa_turda_v Best grade meats WHOLESALE PRICES 486 LENOX AVE., N. Y. CITY Bet. 134th&135th Sts. II-§_|IllII'II|DnlIIIIIIII- DONNELLY-NASI-I LUMBER C0. LUMBER & MOULDINGS MASON MATERIALS 3.1 E. 135th Street, New Ygk City Ax! A WANTED 1 on Sunshine Cabs BIG B 0 O K I N G S because the I SUMlVIl‘}R ROOF OPENS WIDE ‘ __0__ Good Men Are Always Welcome and W'ilI Benefit by Brotherly Surroundings CALL DAY & NIGHT SHIFTS S tatler Transportation Corp. 2165 Madison Ave., N. Y. (135 St.) ‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||||I|||IIu|.1II-3I|.........'.............I'll...- PEACE I WASHINGTON BEEF , COMPANY 573-575 NINTH AVE.- Near 42nd St. NEW YORK CITY V Wholesale 8; Retail Meats 8; Poultry Hotels & Restaurants Supplied We T-hank You FATHER! U ;.,.q¢-natupu-n-o- TABLE or coNTI.~:Nif§ At the Auditorium, 468-470 Broad Street, Bridgeport, Conn., Thursday evening, May 6th, 1937 A.D.F.D. Time: 11:25 P. M. _ At the Banquet Table, 20 W. 115th St., N. Y. 0., Thurs- day, April 30th, 1937 A.D.- F.D. Time: 4 P. M. At the Righteous Gov’t Fo- rum, King’s Town Mansion -—Pro.mised Land—Tuesday, : April 17th, 1937 A.D.F.D. Time: 10:30 P. M. FATHER DIVINE Hosts in Great Newark, N. J ., Peace Demonstration Explaining the Honest. Money System Guiding a City’.s Growth An Interesting Letter from Our Alberta Correspondent Random Thoughts from the Poets , Righteousness Marches On 10-_ VVhat’s Happening in the ’ World‘? News in Brief Soviet Resettlement of Op- pressed Peoples . How England Makes a King V Educator Comments on Pub-. lic Forums . X—Ray Government I incuuunuliunllllillllIllIIllIllIlIIIlllI\' Radio Review ‘*1 THE SPOKEN WORD N OW. In Greater New York Q . INFORMATION FOR SUBSCB . i -' SUBSCRIPTION $4.00 a year; 6 A» 82.00; 3 months 31.20; 1 month 45 ~ single copy 5 cents. — The “Spoken Word” is Published ‘I; Weekly by The Spoken \Vord in: Co. (not Inc.). A. Honaeel ; tutu, Manager. DIST. DISTRIBUTOR«§ £5 Lol Angoles, CaIif.: MARIE ;, TON, 1102 East Adams Blvd. “- Adams £5053. ?- Monoy sent by mail to The gt WW1 Ilhewiid bx ’ clock. Currency of st“the"‘io 'l FATHER D.IvINE’s Messages j F ' ghteous P o K 5 ‘The Positive Magazine :L..m BROOKLYN, NEW YORK (New Jerusalem), TUESDAY, MAY 11th, 1937 A.D.F.D. NO. 59 fiewark, J., Captured by a ‘FATHER DIVINE and His Hosts in Great Peace 2. f‘ Demonstration .5Azure skies aiid_g-‘olden sunlight the command of their MAS- T.-"J1' to bless the great demonstra- ilvfheld at Newark, New Jersey, on "day, May -9th. Led by the cus- ,'.,-~-: troop of mounted angels procession wound through the ,'et.s of the city——battalions of lowers, in almost military form- 5,3» and with flying banners pro- ’_ ing their DIVINE HEADER, 4...; and voices joining in praise ',-~' thanksgiving. ‘.’,As the marchers turned corners n rose on elevations, it was an "wiring sight to see the unbroken es of banners, placards and gar- of many colors and shades. j¢.The«parade reached the Newark I dom headquarters at 5 o'clock, there a. praise and testimony meet- began at once, continuing the Ibilation that had been manifested M the streets. ~__At 6:30 the banquet was served in ‘he’ dining room, continuing until e, when the multitule of march- u , ' {era were massed in the: auditorium ii’-.. enjoy one of the most powerful _;demonstration.s in the hiStJ.‘Y of the Government movement. lltical leaders from the city gave »-tribute to FATHER DIVINE and Work for Righteousness, Just- _ ' and Truth; the meeting closing th .3. mighty Message from the ii. of FATHER DIVINE HIM- _§.-;' in which HE explained still fully the method in which the IT and PRINCIPLE of CHRIST '7' to triumph throughout the ' e world. detailed report of the indoor 1"’ utdoor demonstration will ap- So Free As You Allow ME in You to Be in Words, Deeds and Actions, Even So Free Will I Act A ‘ ln You—-FATHER DIVINE Consider How Significant It IS to Usethe Negative As a I:esson——-“Each Victory Will Help You Some Other to Win" FATHER’S MESSAGE, AUDITORL UM, 468-470’ BROAD STREET, BRIDGEPORT, ' CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 6, 1937 A.D.F.D. TIME: 11:25 P.M. Majestically, FATHER DIVINE, -the Dean of the Universe, teaches and unfolds momently and hourly of His Wisdom, Knowledge and Understand- ing from His Infinite Storehouse of , Salvation. Dynamically and spontaneously come forth these marvelous lessons of Truth, for the good of the Nations of the Earth in the evidence of His Characteristics and Nature, expressed outwardly and manifestedly in the blessings of Joy, Peace, Life, Love, Health and Happiness and Success and Prosperity,—that of which man and his worldly connections cannot give, even in return for the wealth of the world, These attributes are the reward of GOD, that He Alone carries with Him, and daily He is rewarding those who are living and doing according to his Plan and ac- cording to His Purpose. While traveling from Sayville, Long Island to Bridgeport, Connecticut to attend the Righteous Government Fo- rum, the news of the Hindenburg disaster came over the radio. This apparent tragedy is shocking to the mortal mind, it is true, but the Mind of GOD tells us differently, as He speak-s in Words so -Scientific, Logical and Practical they can neither be disputed nor refuted,——and not even so much as to be questioned -‘by those analytically inclined. In this pro- found Message FATHER touches briefly in portion, upon this subject which, in itself is enlightening and explains clearly why such disasters as these happen at times in the World -of Science and Invention. The children from Bridgeport -and nearby towns, and those who had driven from New York to attend the Forum Meeting, gloried in the Per- fect Contact that had been made in the privilege of being in the Person- al Presence of the Great CREATOR I-Iimself,——a conscious conviction in the hearts and minds of millions the world over. Although the meeting was for the specific purpose of discussing that which pertains to Righteous Govern- ment, several testified in thanksto FATHER for their new-fou-nd free- dom from the shackles of material- ‘ -I ism and, apparently, it was this=sub- ject that brought forth the most’- glorious Message herewith recorded, ‘ for all who will receive it. Read these beautiful WOl‘dS of Life , J and gain the benefits derived there- from! A At the conclusion of one of such testimonies, FATHER sang: “If you let Me, I will let you,‘-_, If you let Me, I will let you, If you let Me, I will let you; I will let you go through. If you will love Me, I will love’ my ' I ‘Page’ 4 If you will love Me, I will love you, If you will love Me, I will love you, I will love you more and more,” PEACE EVERYONE: That is just a little Composition (If a few words I «brought forth as a Message for consideration: ‘If you -let Me, I will let you.’ _-In speaking of your freedom, your freedom comes by the letting,——i:f you « let go and let GOD, GOD will let ‘you. This is an often rehearsed statement but it is your experience, after many of you were forced or in other words, obliged to do so; but how marvelous it is when you can be volunteer Sol- diers who are willing to let go and let GOD without any opposition, with- out any coercing, but by your own volunteer volition and by you being governed by your Highest Intuition and -by you, individually cracking the shell of mortal limitation,——breaking through the adverse and undesirable , conditions and all of the versions and ideas and opinions of the people. Freeing yourselves from their ver- sions comp1etely,———such an act of your dutyis the act of giving birth, in other words being born out of the , Adamic State of Consciousness to the Christ Consciousness. Then I say: ‘If you let Me, I will let you, if you let Me, I will let you, Iwill let you go through.’ It is a privilege to realize, so free as you allow Me in you to be, in words, deeds and actions, even so free will I set you; I will set you as free as you allow Me to be, ‘ , RISE ABOVE EVERY MORTAL VERSION Now remember, I am your Highest Intuition, Intuitively speaking with- ‘in you, Intuitively moving within you, desiring to have free access to move Volitionally, to speak Volition- ally and to act otherwise Volitional- ly; but when you allow your mortal concept of things to bind you -by the mortal versions of men, you will find yourselves led captive back into con- demnation and -sin, if you will let I ‘ them,—-but if you will let Me, I will let you; and if you will be Faithful and if you will be True, I will let you go through. Now, as far as what men or man- .kind" might say, you should rise in The «SPQKEN wean’? consciousness aboveevery mortal ver- sion, over and above all of the the- ories and doctrines of the children of men and revel into the Glorious Liberty of the Sons of GOD, know- ing within yourself your Emancipa- tion can or will,—and only can come throughby the letting. BRINGING YOUR REAL EMANCIPATION So long as you will allow yourself to be handicapped mentally, spiritual- ly or physically -by what others may think or say, it is a matter of im- possibility for you to Joe Eternally Free. Your Emancipation comes by the Realization of such an Idea and .all such opinions that may -come from the mortal version; by the Realiza- tion of your conscious mentality, by the stilling of yourself as an indi- vidua.l,—each of you will bring to yourself into outer expression, your Real Emancipation. As the Emancipator, it is true, I am here, but yet you cannot be eman- cipated unless you let Me,~in other words, unless you let Him, as it may be termed. Your letting must be a living Reality even as your Eman- cipation can and will -be a living Re- ality if you will let Me. OPPOSITIONS MUST RISE So the Mystery is reveale-d: So fre-e as you free yourself in thoughts, words, deeds and Righteous actions, even so free will I free you in your physical Bodily form, as well as in your mind For this cause it was essential for oppositions to rise that you might get your real Emancipa- tion f-rom those things that tend to bind. There are many mortal versions in t-he minds of the children of men that will handicap you. By the dif- ferent ways of expression, the ver- sions will come at times: ‘You are here and you should be mindful and think on those ‘things that pertain to you and yourself,’ here or there. Many thoughts will come from the mortal versions of -men, interjected and ‘under-mineingly’ inserted in your Words, ‘deeds and actions and in your expressions, telling you you should not do this or you should not do the other or you should do this or you should do the other. « So’ you must rise above the ver- sions of men by being governed, by Tuesday, May 11th, I your Highest Intuition and kno your Intutor by Inspiration, that yo , Intuition might be the Tutor, Whom you -say I am,~—Inspirational-C, ly and Intuitively teaching you leading you to your Real Eman-‘ -cipation, giving you your freedom ' from every angle expressible. “ YOU MAY BE FREE TO-DAY, BOUND T0-MORROW , You may be emancipated -today, " from some things and from all things that may have bound you heretofore, but tomorrow, yea even in an hour from now, there may come forth an T‘ expression in consideration by inspi- ration that you might allow the mor- tal version t-o bind you in and pro- I hibit you from speaking intuitively‘ or «moving volitionally or speaking f‘ Inspirati~onally,——or some other ex- " pression that the very Spirit of My ‘_ Presence would speak and act in you. At times the different ideas, the ‘ different opinions will come to test " you out to see whether you havga, arisen above .the mortal version of " men, I to bind you, such versions that would '. tend to handicap you from one angle . -or another, whenthose things get the upper hand of you just in the slight- " est degree, it will eventually bring '; you back captive into condemnation and bondage of sin and folly. ’Of course, it is for you to know intuitive- ’ : ly just what you should do. By con- ‘I centration on the Fundamental the ‘ reaction of your concentration will , give you an inspiration that will teach you or inspire you Intuitively ‘and your Intuition will be the Tutor H‘ speaking, but as I ‘speak externally apparently at this time by Intuition, 1 \I am speaking Inspirationally and In- ,5 That is the tuitively within you. Mystery. "“WE SHALL BE LIKE HIM” -so GOD speaks without and He ~ That is why I stress the significance of being governed by If. speaks within. your Highest Intuition and of mov- ing by your own individual Volunteer volition,—and I stress it especially" , for the purpose of -convincing you, f the Reality of the Christ within you J and of you bringing the Christ to 4, Fruition by moving Volitionally and being -governed ,I~ntui_tive1y. That the Mystery, ‘ So that which is without is spea "Such versions that would tend fir Ma.y 11th," 1937“ , within Intuitively by Inspiration , _ 5d by Volition. Such an expression when it is coming forth from your ‘-.. concentrated thoughts on the exter- 3; n,a.l Fundamental, the reaction move by your own of such a concentrated thought Intui- tively within you, will be your High- est Intuition Inspirationally speak- ing. So then I say, -be governed by your Highest Intuition and be moved _ individual ‘I Volunteer Volition,—if you do, you will bring .the Christ’ within you to I fruition whereby the Christ Intuitive- ly will tell you everything that I would tell you Personally, and your Intuition would not be different from what I would Personally tell you. Then and there the Scripture is ful- -filled, in other words, the Gospel of the Epistle: ‘We shall be like Him.“ Intuitively you are like Him when you think and speak and act just as I do or would have you do, con- sciously from this point o-f view. 1'!‘ IS NO LONGER YOU From this point of view you are looking for Me to tell you. From this point of view‘ you are looking for me to tell you as your Tutor, but as I am Impersonal and am In- spirational, as I am Spiritual, -as I -am within you, then I say: Be gov- erned by your Highest Intuition, By so doing, you will be letting Me speak within you and I will be there Intui- tively, to tell you just what you would desire Me to tell you Personally,—— and just what I would say Personal- ly I will tell you Intuitively. That is the Mystery. That is why I stress the signifi- cance of your concentration on the Fundamental and of your self-den-ial and consecration to the Fundamental, that you might have no other inlet for information saving from and to Him of Whom you are conc-entra.ting on. By transmission through your concentration, you will get the di- rect Intuitive Message, for I will tell you Intuitively by My Spirit within -you and by My Mind. Then, ‘It is no longer you,’ as the Apostle said, ‘but it is the Christ that dwells with- in you,’——and it is no longer Me to you as a. Person Alone, but to you then, in ‘Reality, I AM GOD; for man ‘tively, but another can speak , tell you something personally. fooutcl riot speak and act Within you « The <'s1=.-oximn wonn’ KNOW GOD IS TELLING YOU For this cause, I refrain from speaking as a person in touching along certain lines,——especially con- cerning yourself and concerning things that concern you, that you might be governed Intuitively, that My Spirit Intuitively might tell you within you, by My Mind. VVhen this is done you know within yourself definitely, it is not man, it is GOD Who is telling you, That is the Mys- tery,——and that is why the millions are sincerely believing Me and be- lieving My Message, because I did not tell them especially, Personally, but I told them Intuitively; and the very Spirit of My Presence speaking within them, fulfilled the Scripture, orthe «Gospel, whichever: ‘It is better revealed than told.’ If I would have constantly told you something Personally, try to convert you into something through My Per- sonally Consciously telling you, it would not have been in -Reality an In- spiration and you would not have, known Me in Reality, as your Savi- our. But, because I have told you and I am telling you daily Intuitively and Inspirationally, it is -a Message that is convincing when it comes In- tuitively, because you know man could not tell you Internally, man could only tell you externally,-um less it was done unconsciously by an individual through mental telepathy. LOST IN WAKE OF PRESENCE OF GOD But upon this Foundation, while you stand and concentrate on the Fundamental, man is lost in the wake of the Presence of GOD by the great Exhibitation of GOD’S Actual Pres- ence as He expresses Himselxf Men- tally and Spiritually Intuitively. -So that is the Mystery. When this is done, mankind is lost sight of «by the great exhibitation of GOD"S Actual Presence I am show- ing you definitely, by the Spirit of My Presence. It is indeed Wonder- ful, Manikind is lost in the great Un- foldment and in the great Mystery as I reveal it, and mankind as well as yourself, they lose their identity as individuals, and GOD will speak within" you Intuitively and will tell ycm of all the Myst.e.riie$- By this. yet; will knew Me dis- tinctly and will get all of the infers mation necessary, if you are sel£-'de- Page Q nied and consecrated and are a liv- ing sacrifice,——if you are a living sac- rifice once and forever, throughout all Eternity. But remember, thoughts and things will rise and wane.,—— thoughts and things will materialize, as -being termed the children of (hen; but remember the Positive thoughts and things can be materialized as well as the negative thoughts and things can be materialized. ‘PERFECT THOUGHTS C-OUNTERACT NEGATIVE Hence, for every negative thought presented for reproduction and for germination in your conscious or sub- -conscious mentality, conceive in your mental and -spiritual Conception -a_ Perfect Thought to counteract that negative thought you have conceived, and the Positive Perfect thought will also germinate in your mentality and in your physical body through your ‘spiritual development, as well as.‘Yha_,_t of the negative, which can and will germinate if you let it. ‘ - If a person would but stop and con- sider how significant it is to use the , negative as a lesson,—-for you no,t-h- ing would be wasteful and nothing would be unprofitable; for each and every failure would help you some Victory to win, in -going forward. You have heard the original Composition: ‘Each Victory will help you some Oth- er to win,’—-but as GOD Is GOD, and can and will change all things, each failure will help you some victory to win; therefore, all things work to- gether for good. FAILURES CAN ADVANCE YOU Your diificulties, your your short-comin-gs and your failures and your disappointments, and all of the adverse and undesirable expres- sions, you can use them con,struc- I You can u»s_e"‘ tively if you WILL to_ ‘them for the advancement of your- self and more constructive for a pur- pose than that of the positive, if you wish to. As I was saying about the Hind_en- burg tonight, as -the message came about it going down,—going up into , .~ flame. I have declared many years ago, there will be many great giant ships to go down,——rise an-d wane,—- _ 7 and many of the great men of sci- ence, the inventors and .-builders of them, for the specific handicaps, - I Purpose of V bringing that skill and ability, knowl- according to His Purpose_’ "fore, there is nothing left from the pgreat Universal Mind Substance. .irageie S I The “s1‘>oKi:N, _ wonn" Tuesday, ‘May ,1lth, edge -and understanding, into a more perfect state of ‘expression where it "can work more accurately and more perfectly in the way'of Righteous- ’. IICSS. DISASTERS WILL PROVE OONSTRUCTIVE The Spirit declares: ‘He is calling ‘ His Own.’—All Wisdom, all Knowl- edge and all Understanding, all Skill and all Ability, all Culture and a1’; Talent, must come ‘to Him to Whom those Qualities and Attributes and Characteristics are due, that they , .might -be used to His Glory and Hon- S. or, in Righteousness, Truth and Jus- tice instead of being used in sin and folly and selfishness. Then I say. every seeming -disaster will prove more constructive than de- structive when the reaction of that destruction shall have built many structures of much more a greater power and an unfoldment of the skill and the ability of GOD in man. There- fore, it is not a failure, as far as Higher things and broad-mindedness .of'ftJ1e minds of the. children of men are" concerned, but of lower things , and of the narrow-mindedness of the , clzvildren of men, they may see things likethat, and other things to be a, failure and a total loss, because of a certain disaster,——but GOD, in His ' Own Infinite Mind, can bring to the _. conscious conviction and the realiza- T...tion of the children of men: ‘All things work together for good to those who love Him and are called There- TRAVAIL -‘ . BEFORE BIRTH GOD in the midst of you is Mighty , -to Save,——will take the wrath of man to praise Him and cause it to rise :in opposition from time to time to ‘ spread His Name from shore to shore and from land to land. That is the Mission of GOD -on earth among men; therefore, I say, ‘be not dis- a , mayed what’er betides, GOD will take __care of you.’ Criticisms, accusations and fault-finding, and even condem- égnation, if such could be an expres- sion from any angle, all of these "things are but for the purpose of es- "tablishin-g the Truth and advancing ‘-‘the Kingdom, further and further, to ,‘Hi‘g-her. Perfected State of Expres- n,.,‘where, those conditions cannot oinen. Aren’t ‘you, glaidlx , ’ ‘It is Eternal Life to know the Only True GOD." Before anything is born, there must be a travail,———and the shell or outer covering of that which is to be delivered will give it some trouble in getting out, apparently. It is necessary that it should do it, that that which is coming forth into the world might have Victory over that from whence and out of which it is coming, If I would speak of an egg, that might be a. little more suitable and a little more modestly explained. If the chick could not pick its way out of the egg shell, he could not and would not have the Victory over the egg,—-but because it can, once it picks its way out of the egg s-hell, it does not have to return from whence it came. NOT NECESSARY TO RETURN TO OLD CONDITIONS Now, one says in the’ mortal con- cept of things, you must return to the place from whence you came, but once you have been completely delivered in Reality, you will not have to return to the place from whence you came. Even Nicodemus caught a thought from that, from the angle of expression wherein he was speaking: ‘How can a man -be born when he is old,-—can he enter again the second time and be born?’ In this he caught the glimpse of the Mystery of which I am stressing this evening. ‘ * S ‘ How can a man return back to the place from whence he came when he has won the victory over those con- ditions and over those things? Then what are you going back there for? Now aren’t you glad! And a chicken cannot turn back and be an egg. It can make an egg, -but it cannot turn back itself and be an egg. Aren't you glad! UNDESIRABLE CONDITIONS ONCE ESSENTIAL From sinking sand you have been lifted,—-from undesirable conditions you have been lifted,—~you have been given birth through and out of the mortal version and out" of und-esir- able c-onditions wherein you were handicapped; but it was essential for you to be in those conditions until you developed to the place in ex-_ pression whereby you could get, «or give yourself, your real deliverance by picking: , When you pick through the sh of mortal limitation, you have w the victory over the egg shell. ’1The,, egg shell had a business to hold any: thing in it it could hold in it, and anything that can be held under such ‘ a condition, it is not fit for the King- dom,, neither is it fit meet for the -1, Master’s use. This is an actual proof, -—the chicken in the shell tha-t does 1" not come out, it is not fit meet,——I. _ say it is not fit for the bird iKing- " dom, neither is it fit meet for the Master’s use. ,_ " WISDOM FROM THE BIRD KINGDOM .. Now i-f there be a question in any-.," _ one of whom now, or in the future, , may hear this Message, tell them to go down to the bird Kingdom and _ get a little information Truly might -it have Solomon said on one occasion: , ‘Go to the ant, thou sluggard; con- sider her ways and be wise.’ Tell ‘ them to go down to the bird King- dom, of all of the different species of, the birds__ of the forest and of then, dunghills, and see if an egg that can- *. not be opened by the chick, or the little bird, and cannot be free from that shell, that chick is not fit meet fior the Master’s use,——neither is that chick or egg fit for the Bird King- .. dom, It is cast out on the dunghill, it is not fit meet for the Master’s use, neither is it good for the Bird , Kingdom, for it did not get its real * deliverance, its real emancipation, from the shell «of limitation; there- fore, it could not live in the Bird Kingdom because it did not get itsj‘-.; freedom_ Aren’t you glad! BREAK BONDS OF LIMITATION . Crack the shell of mortal limita- 5 tion. from every angle expressible and get your real emancipation and you will be fit meet for the Master’s use 1. and you will be fit and worthy of the Kingdom,—but unless you do, you are.7_' not and will not be, if you cannot‘? free yourself from the mortal limi‘-. tation of the shell and that which.!, has striven to hold you in bondage.” It is the egg shell’s duty to do it. 3 -So it is with everything from whence all. things came. It is t ’ duty of the seed to hold the Life Sub-, stance in -it, if it can; «but it is th duty of that lit-tle plant, through ge minati-on, to crack the shell of li tation and come out of the corn i , . -, -plant itself, that ‘it might ‘Hand express as perfectly as :1» seed did in itself by reproduc- ’——.and reproduce that of its own I ess that it might be increased "» multiplied according to the p1arL_ GOD. ‘wt or SHELL ,7 « CHAFF [Everything must free itself,——then -’ is the duty of .the shell, -or what- « ver it may be termed, it is the ‘ty of those things to hold it if L I y can. Mortality should hold you I it can. I said, let the wheat and 5 e tares grow together, and at the of Resurrection I will separate em,—and again I say: ‘He shall «I T - tthe chaff He shall burn with fire Imquenchable,’ you see, , The chaff was something the wheat not have ‘grown without. It is the chaff’s d-uty to hold the wheat ‘as long as it can, but it is your duty,:_ f-in other words it is the ’wheat’s duty .to develop and be bnought to Ifrui-A ijtion that it might automatically ;get -its real emancipation from the chaff ;.state of expression. I thank you. , “I THANK YQU FATHER.” THE SUN IS A STAR A The sun is a huge seething furnace, ‘_:_'.864,100 miles in diameter and about " 93,000,000 miles from the earth. It 2 is a -typical star, larger than a few ifof the other suns that one may see Lin the heavens on a clear night, and ._<'yet 8. puny body when compared to .;_«such celestial giants as Betelgeuse, ‘(which is so big that 25,000,000 suns f5/like ours could «be packed into it.) The mass -of the earth is 6,000,000,- o0o,0o0,000,000,000 tons. The sun is ,1 ’more than a million times as big «.3 as the earth and about 300,000 times as massive. ,In spite of what appears to be an enormous weight for the '-.-’ sun, its huge bulk indicates that for the most part it must be exceedingly tenuous in texture. At its core, the -‘A sun has a density of a high order, But this density decreases with in- _ Q‘ reasing distance from the center, and ;'to judge from the best scientific ‘gvidence now available the gases at ve surface of the luminary must be re ' than a hundred times more us than the rarest atmosphere our loftiest mountains. er the good wheat in His garner,‘ The “SPOKEN worm” Pa‘-S‘l?‘'§fi'.'‘ :9 Explaining The Honest 1 Money System» From “The Truth About Money” An Honest Money System must exhibit two types of honesty. It must be honest in a scientific sense, as are scales, weights and mea- sures, which conform to the require- ments of law and custom. It must be honest in a social sense, by pro- viding the greatest possible good to the greatest possible number. From the facts set forth in this booklet, it is beyond argument ‘that our pres- ent banker-controlled, gold-standard money system is both unscienti- fic and anti-social—unscientific as proven by its complete breakdown in seven great panics’ since 1873, panics which robbed the majority of our people of their entire savings in stocks, bonds, insurance and property. That it is anti-social is proven by the fact that in each of these panics the savings lost by the people were Won by ‘the men who had created the panics by mani- pulating their gold-standard money system and the bank credit founded thereon. If this gold-standard system could not function permanently in the days of hand labor and agricultural su- premacy, how can it possibly func- tion in this new age of mechanical production? Now that we have en- tered the era of electricity and pow- er machinery wherein production has been reduced to a‘ science, we must create a money system which will distribute the nation’s goods with the same scientific precision as was used in producing these goods. In brief, money must now cease to be a master and must become a servant. It must cease to control industry and trade, and become in- stead a mere conveyor-system by which goods are transferred from producer to consumer. In other words, money must now be created and controlled by the government and not by private bankers—for use by the people, and not for profit to the bankers. In the Saturday Evening Post of Feb. 1st, 1936, Henry Ford is quoted as follows: “We gain our living by production, distribution and service . . . I have faith that when we go in to produce all sorts of usable wealth for the purpose of supplying everybody, distribution will take care of itself. The only way ‘the govern- ment can help is to give us a mon- ey system that will easily convey this wealth from producer to con- sumer.” - ~ There can be no higher authority in these matters than Henry Ford. (?) Here in substance, the man who was the first to reduce mass pro- duction to a science, has declaredi that we can distribute all the goods the nation can produce—when the government has created a money system for the sole and singfe pur- pose of “conveying goods from pro- ducer to consumer.” To summarize——An honest money system will involve these essential principles :-— (a) It must be created and con- trolled by Congress. x (b) It must be free from inter- ference by politicians and private. bankers. (c) The money must be interest- free at the point of origin and be based on the total wealth of the nation and not on bonds or gold /owned by the bankers. _ V (d) The amount of money issued will be exactly sufficient to trans- fer the nation’s goods and services -no more and no less. Such a money system created and controlled by Congress will have these immediate and permanent ef- “ fects :- (1) It will remove forever the dangers of reckless inflation and banker-inspired deflation. (2) It will create a free and open market for the nation’s goods and services. (3) It will free industry and com- merce, labor and agriculture from all fears of panics and depressions -—because money would then be created and controlled for use by the people and not for profit by ' private bankers; and such _money once injected in the veins of’ indus- try and trade would never there-_ after be arbitrarily withdrawn. Churches Urge Pasage of Anti-Lynch Bill Indinanapolis, May 10 (FDP). The Mt. Zion Baptist church congregation of this city, of which the Reverend Marshall A. Talley is minister, ,jon‘ 5 _ _ Sunday, April 25, passed a reso1u- -- ltion deploringplynching and calling upon the two senators from Indiana, the Honorable Fred Van Nuys and Sherman Minton to speed the pas- sage‘ of the Wagner-Van Nuys anti- . j lynching bill in "the Senate. ' ‘ and playgrounds. L tween them. \ . .Tuésd‘a3r,'i iitii-, 8 / Wise Planning Safeguards Beauty and Assures a Sensibly Laid- Out City. ‘John Jones is the richest man in the world. He has billions and bil- lions of dollars to spend. _,He decides to spend them by building a great and. beautiful city. He buys a hundred square miles of land at a point where a river runs into the sea.‘ “Now,” says he, “I am going to lay out my city. I want it to be a busy city, but a beautiful one as well. There will be factories in it, railroad terminals, shipping wharves, airports, office buildings, and subways. I am not going to for- ‘get for a moment that possibly a million persons will make their homes here, and I don’t want factory smoke blowing into their windows or the noise of trains disturbing them at night.” , The Ideal city, «So Mr. Jones does a sensible thing. «_I-Ie picks out a certain district along the water front for shipping and for factories_ Into this section he runs a railroad, so that the manufacturers can ship their goods not «only by sea but by land. He picks out another district for residences. It is on high ground, overlooking the sea on one side and -the river on the other. Through this section he scatters many lovely parks H.e connects this ‘section with other parts of the city means of subways and under- ground highways. _ In another section, perhaps be- tween the residential and manufactur- cgnters, he builds office build- ings, stores, and theaters. This is the region of skyscrapers. But the tall buildings do not crowd upon each other. There is plenty of space .be- . T-he streets here are wide and straight, able to accommo- ‘date heavy traffic without congestion. There are parking spaces beneath the street level for automobiles, Air- planes land on and take off from" the flat roof of an immense build-i ing designed for the purpose. _ No Such City. '_Jones plans city from be-' .i'gf1fining"_'to ,,end., knows. ‘where schools. will ‘be, where the water GUIDINGEA CITY’S GROWTH 0 supply system will be laid, ‘how sew- age will be disposed of, where the railroad (terminals and subway sta- tions will be built while his city is still a wilderness. That is city planning in its sim- plest form. Sensible, isn’t it? It is_ just as sensible and necessary, really, as planning a house and know- ing where the dining room and kitchen are to be before a single «brick is laid, , Unfortunately, there is no Mr. Jones and no such city as the one he dreamed about. Most cities—in- -cluding our own—weren’t planned; they “just grew”, like Topsy. A large city is never the work or_ pro- perty of one man. New York was built and is owned by thousands of landowners. Each built what he wanted whenever he wanted——or very nearly so. What has been the result? Nar- row, crooked streets, such as we have in the lower part of Manhat- tan, where the Dutch first settled along Indian trails; slums in which there is much crime and sickness; skyscrapers which shut out the sun- light from whole blocks and cause congestion in the street and sub- ways, “L” lines, and buses, smoke and dirt from factories which spoil otherwise good playgrounds. Early Planning. It would not be fair to say that no planning at all went into the making of New ,York City. It is true that for the first 185 years of its history the city grew without plan. planning step was taken. A plan- ning -board laid out Manhattan’s streets from the northern rim of the downtown section all the way up to 155th Street. The region laid out was mostly rolling hills, woodland, and farms at the time. People laughed at the idea of planning streets in a wilder- ness_ They laughed still more when the planners cut out a rectangle from 59th ‘Street to 110th Street, and from ‘Fifth Avenue to Eighth Avenue, and said, *"We will allow no one to build .here. This ‘win be kept asa park." _ Even the _plaiiners__t-heIriselves_ felt that they should make some ‘sort of apology for their daring scheme._._ “It .diti-on, the Zoning Law But, in 1811, an important“ _ _ _ , _ _ . ‘building heights in relation to the‘ may seem funny to some people our small city that we have prov s-pace for a population greater at any city this side -of China,” one oi} the board members wrote. Today; we know that what they did, fine as: it wasgwas not enough. The city has ' pushed nearly -100 blocks beyond? 115th Street. I We do not laugh at these early-f: planners for having set aside a rect- ‘, angle for a park, We are very gra- "1 teful. If it had not been for their " forethought, Central Park would not be in existence today. ' The Zoning Law. Greater New York as it exists to-{T day was formed in 1898, when Man- hattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens, and Richmond became a single cit-y._'_ This ,union was desirable in many ‘_ -ways, but it certainly did not help i‘ make New York a better planned“-. city. It merely gave us five un-; planned communities instead of one. 1, In another way the union was help"; ful, however. It opened the way to sensible, broad planning for the fu-7 ture—planning that would meet the ‘ ‘needs not only of one community but f of all. Unfortunately, little a-dvant- ".- age was taken of this possibility un- I ‘til 1916, when the Zoning Law was , passed. 1. The Zoning Law divided the city- into four kinds of zones: dence, (2) business, (3) retail, and ‘ (4) unrestricted. No shops, facto- ries, or garages were to be permit- ted in the residence zone-s. No ' factories were to be permitted in the * business and retail zones. In ad- restricted : width «of the streets unless the build- -. ‘dings were “set back” to allow for sun and air. The Zoning Law is still in op- 9. eration. ‘ The Board of Estimate has j the power to change zones or to/i enlarge them, or to make ex-cep—tionB_~ to .them_ Everyone admits that the 1 law is sound, but many say that f it has not been applied strictly 9, enough and that she zones weren't; always Well chosen. , Slow Rebuilding , ,5 ‘The chief -difficulty about appiyi’ c-ity planning, to New York is course, that the-_ city, is al-ready up. It would the ‘neither practic (1) resi- A, The «srorhhr worth" ‘ rable to tear down all of Wall k"ét’s skyscrapers and to build a -there, although it might have glen better if a park had been built ti-.l‘11ere in the first place. What wecan do and are doing is We rebuild slowly, -bit by bit, and to Ian carefully for the future with L ch step we take. A great deal of flfiformation has already been gath- {ered by the Regional Plan Associa- ':;:tion,. Inc., (a planning agency) and %'other groups. We know how popu- _.;'.la-tion and business is distributed, ‘.]We know where we have too little frtransportation and where we. have much. We know where we need ;schools, parks, sewers, and so on. In gaddition, Mayor La Guardia has ap- ‘gpolnted a City Planning‘ Committee -to make further suggestions. Today we can see signs of city ‘ all about us. New bridges d"tunnels——-the George Washington §1"“idg"e,. the Holland Tunnel, the Tri- rough_ Bridge-—are examples. The }_"Wést Side Highway and the East giver Drive are other examples. The .V1¢)1'iilding‘ of agreat sewage disposal .“§)eht on Ward’s Island is the result city planning. So is the Delaware vfiatér-supply system, which we are 7 xiovéi beginning to build_ When the city’s new charter goes if into effect in 1937, we shall have a " City Planning Commission as a per- inanent part of our municipal gov- fernment for the first time. :» . ——From “Current Events.” Science Brings New ‘F acts Regarding Opals .I. , M"1neral,Calif.——Opals in the mak- -tng, in the depths of lava caves in “the Lava Beds National Monument, i«T~alre_ described in the Journal of Geology by Dr. Carl R. Swartzlow, jnaturalist of Lassen Volcanic Park, I‘ and W. D. Keller of -the University bf Missouri. ' _,":I‘~he deposit, known as coralloidal fig is found in many of the lava and caves in the monument, in‘ general resembles some vari- ",';.‘,'3 of organic coral, although it no connection with coral either _,_.mode of occurrence’ or origin. dole" of =-the c»o:r.alloi=da1 opal An Interesting ‘Letter from the Spoken Wordis Ziiliberta.‘ I Canada, Correspondent . . Rosebud Flour Mills Company Ltd, Didsbury, Alberta, Canada April 1V1, 1937 I Mr. A. Hnonaeel, Editor _ Spoken Word New York Dear Editor: Peace ‘In your edition of The “Spoken Word” dated April 3rd I notice un- der News Briefs that Premier Aber- hart was to have offered his resigna- tion to the legislature April 2nd. Due to the unscrupulous reports of newspaper propaganda prompted by and owned by International Fi- rgance, you may expect anything in the line of misrepresentation, scan- dal and determined attempt to block the progress of our Social Credit Government, headed by Premier Aberhart. Listening to the radio at 3:30 P.M. today our premier made the definite statement denying any in- tention of resigning unless the ma- jority of the Alberta electorate should demand the same, Reports that he has sold out to the financiers and deposited his money in Seattle banks have been vig-orous’.y denied. Quote: “I have no intention of double crossing my constituencies, nor am I less determined to tee So- cial Credit brought to fruition in Al- berta. Difficulties of every descrip- tion are thrown in «our way; discrim- ination by the Federal Government has become_ more conspicuous.” This latter clause is also the expression of Rt. Hon. R.‘B. Bennett, conserva- tive leader of the opposition in Ot- tawa, There are over eleven hundred So- cial Credit groups in Alberta (and with the exception of a few fictitious or manufactured groups) they are expressing a firm support and loyalty to the Government. ' . There are several members in the Legislature who are trying to cause aniti-Aberhart sentiment yet claim to be good Social creditors. At a’ re- cent demand, for a vote of non-con- fidence in the Government, made by the Provincial ' Oonservative leader, the S~oc_ial _ Credit body was 100 per cent‘ opposit'ion_,_—mem- s. ».¢i~3"< 1 hers -Were‘? against‘ the. Governmen I Premier Aberhart’s policy is to set up a sound, sane and safe adminis- tration, despite the fact that un- scrupulous tactics of every descrip- tion are laid to blunder him into fail’- ure. This takes more time than is anticipated by many who have no knowledge of the situation. It may be expected that such are wavering under pressure. Yours respectfully, M. Weber. P. S. The “Spoken Word" is a wel- come bi-weekly- M. W_ Random Tliougihts from the Poets Swift years, but teach me how to bear, v . To feel and act with strength and skill, . To reason wisely, nobly dare, And speed your courses as ye will. :1: =l= >l< I seek not great things, For I have learned how vain such seeking is; L But let me seek Thy Will, 0 King of kings, . And find therein my bliss. —O, E. Fuller. * * * What need of faith, if all were visibly clear? ’Tis for the trial time that this wee given. . Though cl-ouds be‘ just as near, thick, the sim * is And faith will find Him in the heart of Heaven. 2:‘ >1: Noble souls‘, ‘through dust and heat, , Rise from disaster and defeat‘ The stronger, . And conscious still of the divine Within them, lie on earth supine. ‘ No longer. —Long€fe1lb\2v. >14 * * ' It is thus each year of life” comes to us—for each day a clean vitfiitie page; and we are artists‘ whose" duty = it is to put something beaiiitiriil‘ the pages one by one; or we" are his--I torieiiis, eiiicl rifust give tn the‘ pet§?e.__ diff er The “SPOKEN worm" Tuesday, May 11th, 1 "Righteousness.' -- Marches On!" In "7939 Pages will be found Letters from the World of Business, Profession and Labor to FATHER DIVINE in Acknowledgment and Appreciation of HIS Peace Mission Movement, also ' Some of HIS Wonderful Letters in Reply. ‘ ................nu.........ueuuuuuuuuuunu-nu..nu.u-.................................fi...................... -- Old Bill Paid in Full FRANKLINTON, N. C. April 6th, 1937. Amount of debt $28.00 Rev. M. J. DIVINE .20 West 115th Street New York City. N.Y. This is to certify that Saint Paul of 223 West 123rd Street has this day paid up all indebtedness owing to me. Yours truly, A. B. Wester. By A. B. Webster, Jr. Franklinton, N. C. Lives Produce Positive Results ‘PEACE - A MAY 5, -1937 A.D.F.D. Mr. A. B. Wester, Jr. I Franklihton, N. C. ~My dear Mr. Wester:—— Please be advi:sed of the receipt of your acknowledgment for the sum of "$28.00 you have received from one of MY followers, Saint Paul, as he has faithfully complied With this Teaching, that calls for each and everyone to square up their old debts and obligations, matters ‘I ‘_ not how small or how large the amount, or how long,they were. or are due. Standing upon this Foundation as . '2 '. represented in MY Righteous Gov- ‘ -'.- ernrnent Plaltform, MY followers are {xbuilding up lives that must of neces- ;; sity produce positive results. . As they whole-heartedly walk upon these‘ Planks, stepping neither to the’ right nor to the left, but square- firrnlyk upon the Principle of \ . +.tf'.he.=§,.-same, they are led directly into ,3 -0 «i$uccess ‘and _ for as they tread sure-footed upon this Law of Righteousness, Justice and Truth, as I have incorporalted the same within these Planks of MY Righteous Government Plat- form, the reaction is True—-the re- action is Positive, for it is reci- procal. Hence, as I incarnate these quali- ties within the hearts and within the consciousness of men, they re- flect and enact such attributes of Righteousness in all of their daily affairs, and as the same is mani- fested among others, Righteousness shall be reproduced and unfolded within their lives, wherein We Shall Have a Righteous Government. With best wishes to you, this leaves ME Ever Well, Healthy, Joy- ful, Peaceful, Lively, Loving, Suc- cessful, Prosperous and Happy in Spirit, Body and Mind and in every organ, muscle, sinew, joint, limb, vein and bone and even in every atom, fibre and cell of MY Bodily Form. Respectfully and Sincere, I AM REV. M. J. DIVINE (Better known as FATHER DIVINE) MJDIVINE.r Paid Rent Four Years Overdue April 29, 1937. Rev. M. J. DIVINE 20 West 115th St. New Yonk City. Dear Sir:— Please be advised that Wise Grace, Mrs. Edward, paid me Thirty dollars fo-r back rent which she owed me since 1932. I wish to thank YOU for YOUR " good Work. Very truly yours, Mrs. E. Saacke, ,, WC|o -‘V. Mead & Co. P‘ 225 West 34th st. -r The work of GOD Astound- ing Mankind ' PEACE MAY 5, 1937 A.D.F.D. Mrs. E. Saacke Clo H. V. Mead & ‘Co. 225 West 34th St. New York City. My dear Mrs. Saacke:—— I have your ulto. in which you express your - thanks for the Good Work I AM accomplishing among men, of which ‘_ I AM appreciative of your ackno=wl- _» edgment of the same. Transcending all mortal under- standing, transcending all human im-agin-ations, going far above the 7 limited conceptions of men, the Work of God, Marching OninRighIt- eousness is astounding all mankind. Never before have men bowed to I Righteousness, Justice and Truth,as they are doing today. Never before f have men found a panacea from physical ills, and from the pressing problems of life, as they are find- ing in the Light of this Teaching " that I AM ministering unto: them in this Fatherhood Dispensation; and the‘ answer is plain to see, for 1 Righteousness, Justice and Truth " have come forth within the hearts -3; of men by their recognition of the it Presence of God among them, the which, by this Presence, Salvation is I accounted. Hence, as the =Spirit of this Teach- _ ing unfolds within the lives of all ._ mankind, men universally will revel H’: into the Glorious ‘Liberty «of the Sons if of God, enjoying the Fruits of ‘Sal- vation and of this Inheritance, where- » ~ in as I Stand, I desire that you and all, might partake of the same, asff this leaves ME Well, Healthy, Joyf‘ul,f Peaceful, Lively, Loving, Successful; Prosperous and Happy in S ‘ . ‘Body, and and in every 0 .’must:le, sinew, gjoint ~I-‘lin,lb,- .vein -4 ., letter of the 291th 4 1 of MY Bodily ‘Form. _ctfu1ly and Sincere, I AM ._ REV. M. J. DIVINE _t,ter known as FATHER DIVINE ; ,IVINE.r I Welfare Aid Repaid April 1st, 1937. Jackson Duzzine (or Divine) ‘ j’ West 115th St., 9 York City, N. Y. .. File No. 86541 . Yr Sir: - received your Post Office or- for $3.56‘ and thank you for it. The help you received is as fol- 'é: , “cries in February, March jglnd April, .1932 T: in February, March and ’.—Apri1, 1932 "ii"1g in March, 1932 (Bes- .fsi’e) , 2.72 ,, Total $69.47 «fflllr «official receipt is enclosed. Sfvve appreciate the fact, that your X. to refund to this department for Help rendered to you, has been by FATHER DIVINE. “ Yours very truly, William J. O’Brian, Director, Dept. of Social Welfare $48.00 18.75 April 29th, 1937. ] .,Watson Torbit, W, 123rd Street, 2nd floor ,'w York City, N. Y. , File No. 86541 -9:: Sir: ._‘W_e received the amount of $69.47 mailed you a letter on April 23rd '_oWledging it. That letter evi- ’tly got into the wrong hands. We-will write to FATHER DIVINE _, ting HIM know that you have paid T1» : department back the whole val- iit-_..of the aid you received in 1932, luv you lived in Buffalo We -ap- 'ecia.te the fact that your action j‘,-: inspired by FATHER DIVINE. ‘i'l§§e.Amefican Red Cross is located i_-Z58 Main -Street, Buffalo. Yours very truly, William, J. 0’Brian, Dir"-é'ctor_ Dept. of _Social- Welfare. Showing Who1e~hearted Conversion MAY 5, 1937 A.D.F‘.D. Mr. William J. O’BriaI1 Director, Dept. of Social Welfare, _ 102 Elm St. Buffalo, New York RE; 86541 My -dear Mr. O’Brian:— I AM writing to acknowledge‘ the two letters of April 1st and of April 29th for the refund of $69.47 made by one of MY followers, of which copies you have acknowledged to ME. I AM glad to see such actions on the part of those of MY followers who have refunded money to the , Welfare Departments, when the same was not required, for such shows their whole-hearted Conversion and desire to live exactly according’to this Principle‘ and Fundamental of Righteousness, Justice and Truth that ‘ I AM and have instilled in the hearts and minds and lives of men. As men‘ the world over, ponder on ,questions of world progress, sitting behind closed doors to discuss meth- -ods of invention and various projects ' for world betterment, MY Spirit and MY Mind have been on Active Duty, establishing the Actual Facts and Figures as the answer to all of their problems. They have produced such figures in concrete form in the affairs of men, for they were produced unto‘ Righteousness. This is seen in the lives of millions everywhere, as MY followers prove the practicality of this Teaching that I AM giving to all mankind. I prac- tise what I preach, for I have said and verify the same: I will preach Christ in Words, but MORE ‘SO in Deeds and in Actions and I will put MY spirit in them and CAUSE them to walk in MY Statutes. Righteous- ness, Justice and Truth is the Key and the Solution to bring about world progress and world betterment, Hence, "MY Mission among men is to tear down the work of desecrators. It is to establish the Truth firstly in the hearts and in the minds of men, even as the same is observed among the millions of MY followers, believ- ers and friends. By this inculca- tion, you can readily see, as you are a. witness to the same, that Right- eousness, Justice and Truth is bring- ging .about,va moral betterment, a..;Spir- ,‘ :‘O !Z()E()Zl)j(ijnjt)3!)f()fZ()ZUf()f()KU2-()Z()fU:\)j(I Z itual upli:ft'men,t and a physi-cal re- action to the same, as Honesty, as Competence and as Truth are exer- cised and exhibited in all of their ex- periences and in all of their daily af- fairs. With sincere wishes to you and those concerned, this leaves ME Well, Healthy, Joyful, Peaceful, Live- ly, Loving, Successful, Prosperous ‘ and Happy in Spirit, Body and Mind and in every organ, muscle, sinew, joint, limb, vein and bone and even in every atom, fibre and cell of MY Bodily Form. Respectfully and Sincere, I AM REV. M. J, DIVINE (Better known as FATHER DIVINE) V MJ DIVINE.I' )j()j(b()X()j()j()Z()Z(lj . PEACE , PIANO PLA YIN ,The Short Way ‘JUDE 5. LOVE 36 \Vest 115t_h Street, N. Y. CITY - Telephone 1\I0nument 2-3977 o ‘o’ :11 :34 »:~‘ 04. o:»:o:o:o:oz¢ .:‘.).().‘0.'()-(3-(D-()‘().().().()‘()’l 0:0 , PEACE Better butter bread Tennis taste tells NEWTON BAKERY, , 1.452 Fifth .A.venu.e, New_. _Y_or_k,_Ci,.ty 9.0 2101030 9:9 9 H ‘ . V . " ‘ ' ~-4.. pm» o.o>1o<1.)1(.101010})101o1o101 .3 PEACE . O » 0 .. . . , A Stirring Feature of Park Ave. Market Every housewife knows how quickly. her dollars vanish in these days of rising prices. That’s why thousands of people look to PARK AVE. MARKET. The MARKET has called a halt to rising prices! We’re against price fixing! We’re against rais- ing of prices! We’re out to lower them! And we prove it can be done. VISIT Park Ave. Market lllth to 116th ST., N. Y. CITY Dry Goods — Fruitsi Shoes — Groceries 9 Vegetabiti bozoxoto . handle employee grievances. ‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllillllllllllllllillIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllloulli What’s Happening In The Wiorldg C IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IlIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IlllllIllIIlllllllllIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH Commerce, Navy Departments lnaugurate Investigation of Hindenburg Explosion Today Lak-ehurst, N. J., May 10. The De- partment of Commerce will open pub- lic hearings here at 10 o’clock to- morrow morning in its investigation of the Hindenburg disaster of last Thursday night, which caused the death of 35 per.sons. South Trimble, J r., chairman of the. board, and its other members, Major R. W. Schroeder and Dennis Mulli- gan, chief of the Regulations and En- forcement -division of the bureau, ar- ‘rived here today and set up offices. They select-ed for their hearing a large room in a -corner of the hangar ‘in which the navy berths its diri— gibles, and in which the Hindenburg I was lodged overnight on its trips. Since the disaster the room has been used as first aid headquarters for the rescue squad, but it has been renovated in readiness for the bu- reau members. It was «understood that even the official -board would be limited to an investigation of the damage to navy property and injury to navy person- nel, and would not go into the causes of the disaster or the responsibility for it, unless the Commerce inquiry attaches any blame to the navy’s ground crew in -connection with the accident. Packard Employes Vote UAW As "Sole Bargaining Agency Detroit, May 10 (FDP).——An agree- ment which recognizes the United Au- to workers as the sole bargaining‘ agency for Packard Motor Car Com- pany employees has been effected to- day. The pact was ratified ‘by Com- pany workers and will be efffective until May the 1st, 1938. Terms of the agreement include besides bar- gaining rights, wage increases of three cents per hour, vacations,with- out pay and ‘shop steward system to The pay raises will go to the workers who are on an hourly rate from May 16th on. _ War Plane Harries Neutrality Bill. to President Roosevelt, Cruising in Southern Waters The other day an army plane wing- ed southward from Washington, bearing a document that finally reached the President at sea, and quickly signed ‘by him. This was the new neutrality act, hurried through House and Senate by congressmen with an anxious eye on the turbid European war situation. The act is a compromise between the advocates of mandatory neutral- ity and discretionary neutrality——that is, a law which forces the President to forbid trade with ‘belligerent na- tions, and one which permits him to use his judgment in the light of cir- cumstances. The new act is not perfect—but it is regarded as being about as good as could be had, and great hopes for keeping America out of war are bound up in it. It places an embar- go on arms shipments to fighting na- tions. And, in the event of war, it gives the President discretionary power to list goods that cannot be exported to belli-gerents; to deny bel- ligerents use of our ports, etc, Im- portant provision extends this au- thority to civil as well as inter-na- tion wars. “War in Europe this summer, per- haps; this fall, sure,” is being talked by some. But there has been much talk of that kind for several years, and no general war has broken out yet. It looks as if the powers are un- certain of their relative strengths, are doing a considerable amount of blus- tery bluffing. Berlin, May 10 (FDP).—~German officials began raising a fund today to build a. new Zeppelin to replace the wrec'ked Hindenburg. The first contribution to the new Zeppelin came from Burgomaster Leipeck. He sent 20,000 reichmarks to Ger- man Air Minister Georing to be used as a nuclens fo-r the fund. Pulblic subscription to the -movement prob- ably will be asked. I ‘~ *. Mussolini, Irked by Reports 0!’ Defeats in Spain, Clam,‘ Ban on Britain’s Newspap _ Rome, May 10 (FDP).—The Ital" Government clamped a tight b it today 0-n most of the English net papers and ordered all Italian 1, eign correspondents today to ret home at once. The action was : ‘ to have been due to anti-Italian ports printed by the British p -: Facist, officials were underst to have resented English news ports regarding the defeats suff by Italian troops fighting -~*.'. Rebel forces in Spain. The reutumi Italian newspaper men from Lon is expected to prevent the publi tion of news in Italian papers of ' Coronation of King George week. To-day’s Italian papers made f mention of news from Ldndon. , official ban includes all daily , lish newspapers except the don Daily Mail, The Observer :~ The Evening News. CIO Claims Another Victo As Transit Men Desert AF _ CIO——AFL Peace Hint New York, May 10 (FDP). 6, leaders claimed an important A tory today in the decision of Transit Workers Union to desert _, A. F. L. in favor of the Jenn. Lewis group. I Members of the Union voted 8.‘ mass meeting to seek affili, with the CIO and to drop their 1 nection with the Green organrzzi. _ The Union also adopted ,a resol J‘ empowering its executive board issue a strike call on the In boro-ugh Rapid Transit System HQ in a week if sole bargaining ;, . were not granted. Atlantic City, May 10 (FDP), move for reconciliation between} CIO and the A F. of L. may ommended today at the Con 5‘ of the International Ladies Workers Union. .‘ ‘ ‘ Minneapolis, Minn., May 10 (FDP). :1 -_——The Rural Electrification Admin- f -3 istration this week signed two con- tract-s to ‘provide electric service, in as the farming areas of the state, ac- {cording to information received from '3 Senator E-rnest Lundeen. _ _ Washington, May 10 (FDP).- ‘ President Roosevelt’s— announcement ;._;-that he would con-fer with Congres- fsional leaders on the general leg- -‘ islative situation immediately after ‘+’f;his return to the White House Fri- “day » aroused speculation in legisla- 4 tive circles today on what would be _ V,’-;’.t.alken up first. 1 , Hollywood, May 10 (FDP).- Screen stars rubbed elbows with bit ,' players and extras tonight as they gathered in Legion Stadium to de- '.- cide whether to strike tomorrow or ,_ ~ not. g‘ The stars, striking in symnpathy « ‘with the “under dogs,” will prob- -Jv ably hasten recognition of all the latter’s demands. w Rome, May 10 (FDP).——The first anniversary of the Italian Empire was celebrated this niorning with a gigantic military review, but it was __;.. marked by an event with greater 3 significance from a political angle, namely, the carrying out of the'-boy- ff cott decided on yesterday of all news relating to the coronation of King f :George of England. London, May 10 (FDP). Bus serv- '2; ice may not be resumed here in gjtime for the coronation. . The busmen’s committee of the ' Transport and General Workers :‘_ Union will meet at 5 o’clock tomor- 'f'. rotw afternoon to decide whether to gfcall off the strike pending investi- ilygation of its demands by the man- ‘~,__ agement. Chicago, May 10 (FDP).——Losses due to robbery of freight on rail- roads in the United States and Can- ~;a..da in 1936 were the smallest on " s d, averaging 1.8 cents for each ed’ car; the Association of Am- :. Railroads revealed this -week, London, May 9 (FDP).—A thou- sand years’ precedents immortalized in the coronation ceremonies were brushed aside today when at noon :1. company of Canadian solders, alien to British soil, took -over sentry duty at Buckingham and St. James’ Palaces for six hours as the King's bodyguards. For the first time non-- British troops guarded the visible heart of the Empire. Warsaw, Poland, May 10 (FDP). —‘Two leading professional unions today passed anti—Semitic resolutions. The Union of Barristers, with a membership of 500, resolved to limit Semitic menibership to 10 per cent of the total number of members. They formerly formed 53 per cent of the group. The physicians group resolved to admit no Semitics at all. Moscow, May 10 (FDP).—~Dlstrict Judge A. M. Abramson, who sen- tenced himself to prison, was dis- missed today by the Moscow Dis- trict Judicial Committee as “unfit- ted to hold a responsible position.” Washington, May 10 (FD-P). Sen- ator Morris does not like Washing- ton’s summer weather. “If we are not through by late June or early July, I think Congress should adjourn until the latter part of September or the first of Octo- ber,” he announced. “Congress can’t do good wor-k when everybody is suffering from the heat.” ' San Francisco, May 10 (FDP).- Contin-uing efforts to free Tom Mooney who has spent more than 20 yea-rs in prison, George Davis, counsel for Mooney, argued before the California Supreme Court last week on Mooney’s application for a writ of habeas corpus which had previously been refused. Chicago, May 10 (FDP). Declar- ing usurpation of power by the U. S. Supreme Court “deploralble,” sev- en University of Chicago law pro- fessors gave unqualified approval to President Rooseve1t’s judicial re- formation project last week. Page New York City, May 10 (FDP) The first attempt at Trans-Atlantic flight by air this year st;arted.at 4:3-6 yesterday (Sunday) afternoon, when “Dick” Merrill, famous trans- port pilot, Lambie, took off from Flo-yd Ben- net Field on a pr‘o_'je—cted non-stop flight to C1-oy(.Ion Airfield, London. Bonham, Texas, May [I10 (FDP).- —~Co-rporation lawyers a.nd other reactionaries have organized the “Supreme Court Defense Association of Texas,” and are urging members of the bar to bombard Congress in op.position to the President’s Court’ Reform plan. Rome, May 10 (FDP).-—It*aly and Germany today agreement with renewed determina- tion to go to war if necessary to prevent formation of a Communist state in Spain or any other West- ern European nation. After the conference between Premier Mussolini and I-Ierlr Von Murdock, German foreign minister, a communique was issued, saying: “The two countries have decided to continue to follow a “concordant course on all major questions.” London, May 10 (FDP).——-All differe.nces between the delegates to the International Sugar Confer- ence were settled tonight. Spokes- men for the conference insisted that the final draft of the agreement on suga-r production and export will be -signed tomorrow. It was understood ‘ that the regulations fixed the total export quotations at three million times what the first agreed of the new agreement. Holland, which in- cluded the Island of Java, received the largest quota. Paris, May 10 (.FDP).——T'he Cabi- net of Premier Blum is expected to receive another vote of confidence today from the Chamber o-f Depu- ties’ vote on the Government’s labor policy. Premier Blum told the De- puties that industrial peace was nec- essary if the French democracy was to combine the spirit of -progress with the spirit of order and wisdom. The Premier pleaded with workers’ organizations to do their share to-’"_\ ward-k making peace in industry possible. and his partner, John, reached complete. ll lYou Express the Nature, Characteristics and Love of GOD Accurately at Perfectly, GOD Will Always Be I Operative—FATHER DlVlNE i’ 0 Express {_ Unless You Deny Yourself Completely, It Is a Matter «of Impossibility for You t :- FATHERS MESSAGE AT THE BANQUET TABLE,——20 WEST 1,l5TH ST.,—NEW YORK CITY, THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1937 A.D.F.D.' 4:00 P. M. I When GOD was on Earth in the .Sonship Degree in the Body called JESUS, being despised and rejected of men, He Said,—‘Oh Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets and stonest them that are sent un- to thee,’ how oft would Ihave hovered thee as a hen hovers her brood, but ye would not.’ He came in outer ex- pression from the Invisible Realm to save mankind, that they who trust- ed in Him and believed in Him as their Saviour, might not perish but have Eternal Life. V In this New Day and Dispensation lhistory is repeating itself. There are /those who refuse to be hovered under the CHRIST Consciousness Personi- Tied. They place themselves outside the protection of GOD by declaring, —‘It is GOD in ME Who has saved X me,’ denying the reality of the Per- .»sonified Presence of GOD that has ‘really delivered them and millions of others. They place themselves un- der the protection of the limited de- gree of unfoldment of GOD in them, with its mixture of self and mortal- ity, and then when disaster comes ‘there is no help for them, GOD is in a snake also, but who would want to place himself under the protection of that degree of expression? Those who are going on to Per- fection will have the attitude of Da- v_id,—‘I will lift up mine eyes to the Hills from whence cometh my help,’ instead of looking to themselves. , They will shout,——‘Glory to GOD in -the HIGHEST dwelling on Earth among men, better known as FA- DIVINE,’ for nothing but GOD in the highest degree can save them. Singing and shouting His Praises, thousands gathered at FATHER’S ll ~ New,York City Headquarters, Thtirs- , . OO]d'a.y', April 30th,, as they do, daily. .- Lpress effectively. It is a ‘matte-r The cesisoinis woinr» ME Perfectly __.__._._...Q._____._. While FATHER served the Banquet Table with material food He also poured forth His Words of Spirit and of Life to them in two mighty Mes- sages. The second of these, which was most significant, was as fol- lows:——. THANK YOU FATHER. “PEACE EVERYONE! Here we all are again, sp-eaking from One, but many speaking within as though they were many, and yet one in reality. While I was Singing that little Song I Thought of the word that was spo- ken, which is true in a way, I am as operative at My Personal absence as I am in My Personal Presence. If you are absolutely perfect, and per- fectly contented, and nothing can add to your perfection or advancement, then and there I can express through you distinctly, as I can through My Tabernacle. If you are completely self-denied and if you are the un- adulterated GOD, then and there I am as operative at My Personal ab- sence with you, as I am when I am Personally Present. But unless you can and will express the unadulter- ated Spirit of GOD and Mind of GOD unadulterated, and the Life and the Love and everything of GOD unadul- teratedly, it is a matter of impossi- bility for Me as far as you are con- cerned, to be as operative, or oper- ate as effectively in the Spirit of Ae- curateness, as I can and as I do when I am Personally Present. SPIRIT OPERATES THROUGH BODIES These Thoughts are well worth considering. Truly I am OPERA- TIVE, and the Invisible Spirit has al- ways been operative, but it mu-st needs have a BODY and BODIES to «operate through, Unless you bring your body into subjection to RIGHT- E‘OUSNE‘S.S, TRUTH and JUSTICE whole-hearted.ly', and deny yourself completely from every angle, it is _a matter of ifnp6"s's-ibilit-y foI-~y_ou.t‘o_ex- / li~ue;s:.i;:.’,‘+, stay '1i‘tii, of impossibility for you to express "My operativeness, for I can and will» operate and be as operative at ’ your personal presence, but as the broad?» Personal absence as I am cast message comes through the eth- 5 er and is just as operative in a home« where there is no receiving set as ._ it is in the home where there IS 3.: receiving -set, but it cannot operate, "' it cannot express, unless you have something to express it through. Now do not get an misunderstand- ing of the Truth and go off in self-,5 ishness as you usually do, for tlie” majority of those who are self-exalt-..l ed and do not desire to be controlled as it may be termed, by another, they". usually go off in selfishness to do 5 something and say I am just as op- I AM just as operative, but} erative. I AM as operative as the very broad-A” cast message is operative going; through the ether, when it has not_h-,~ ing to catch it. I still remain Invis-. ible, and I st,_i1l remain inactive, ,bii_t, I am OPERATIVE, but I need soniegj,’ thing to express it through. That is what is the matter! EXPRESS FATHER FROM EVERY ANGLE _ , There are those who desire to be‘ what they may term it to be,-—‘Il,. don’t want anyone to boss me, I want’ to have my way,’—~and go off and‘, try to establish something in MY,[ Name and say I told them to do il'..., It is absolutely untrue unless they‘; come in My Spirit and My"-‘Mind com-‘‘_ pletely, an-d express ME from every’? angle expressible by being honest“ competent and true in every ,degree.,. Now that is why there are those,‘ who have opposed Me and have risen?‘ in opposition to Me,——it is because refused to endorse their dishonesty: and selfishness, and graft and greed; Now aren’t you glad! That is with it is all about! There are t-hosevlv come even among us, who claim be My Eoiiowers, who ‘would :1‘ to get you to do son'1‘ethli‘ng‘forj_. for a selfish ,purpo.s,e,—,—get I ' A .‘..the'1n, get you to work for ,3,‘ and yet to use the means for purpose and to hoard it up ., themselves and try to organize ption in order to keep you from '_" ting your rightful inheritance. . G0 AND LET GOD method of organizing is inves- 'table. "It has been investigated ,« it is investigatable. Those who giving their time and service, 'I_have a right to the Tree of Life «a tothe Inheritance, even though .COULD have a right apparently, if ‘was My method to seek it, but i. an Individual carrying the Mes-, ,e of Truth gratis to mankind and _ "a free Gift to humanity, I feel as ,though all I must needs do contin- -_ y is to be without any claim on Sing and let those who are giv- ’ practical service and investing 3- r‘means, be the owners of such ‘ion as might be under our Juris- tion organizationally-, ‘jOh it is a privilege to realize what V» can do if you will only let Me. ’ you let go and let GOD, GOD will you, but if you go with YOUR 'd, with YOUR ideas, and with UR opinions, it is a matter of im- _sibi1ity for Me to express My Op- , veness at My Personal absence- ectively, the same as I do in My ,' nal Presence, or when I am Per- 3).; ly Present. ‘_l.-«- IN worms, _e AND ACTIONS ‘These Thoughts are well worth con- '«»~ because I desire to see eve- ‘ I ‘_.‘-... recognize the Impersonal Pres-_ ‘e of GOD and the Operativeness, f‘His Ever—presence. Nevertheless, must express and do the same -GOD does, in words, deeds and tions, and refuse to deviate from '_~. Fimdamental. Do just’ as He ; ',s from these angles -of ex-pression, ’.» and there GOD will be as oper- ve at His Personal absence as He {when He is Personally Present. .l;«.: is the mystery! _rk the Spirit and Mind of GOD ‘, accurately and as perfectly and ‘expertly as GOD Himself can, why So if you can "GOD can be and will be as Op- ntive at His Personal absence as ‘7"i"s when He is Personally Pres- »-B_ut if you cannot work the ‘ fGOD, the Mind of GOD and ‘ “e of GOD as accurately, and ,,t1y‘and-'expertly as,.GOD 3 ,0 The “SPOKEN WORD” can Himself from this angle of ex- pression, 'then and there to you GOD is not as operative at His Personal absence as He is when He is Per- sonally Present. WHOLE-HEARTEDLY CON- SECRATED T0 FUNDAMENTAL These Thoughts are well worth con- sidering. Jot these Thoughts down in your memory and live according to the Fundamental, and lo I will be with you, now, henceforth and for- ever. If you express the Nature, the Characteristics, and the Love of GOD ac"curately and perfectly from every angle expressible, then and there GOD will always be operative, the same as in His Personal Presence. That is why it is required of you,— ‘Let this Mind be in you that was also in CHRIST JESUS.’ One must be converted from that Adamic state of consciousness_ One must live whole-heartedly consecrated to the Fundamental, relax his or her con- scious mentality, and live Evangeli- cally whole-heartedly, which is to say, live exactly according to the Life and the Teaching of JESUS as recorded in the four Gospels. Then and there GOD to you and among you will be operative, and will be expressive, and will be expressed as effectively at His Personal absence as He is when He is Personally Present. HAVE THE MIND OF CHRIST I desire to see all of these things, accomplished and experienced in you. I desire to see all of you reflect and manifest Perfection from every angle expressible by letting this Mind be in you that was also in CHRIST JE- SUS, by you expressing it accurate- ‘ ly and perfectly by nature and by characteristics, by deeds and by ac- tions. Then_and there GOD is Op- erative at His Personal absence. Up- on this Foundation if you will stand, Perfection will be your portion an-d you will become to be the outward expressers of «RIGHTEOUSNESS, TRUTH and JUSTICE, the Founda- tion upon which we stand, When this shall have been established in your words, deeds and actions and in your affairs, and in all of your deal- ings, then and there you are- in the actual Kingdom of Heaven. ONE HEAVEN, ONE .. GOVERNMENT , There ‘are not’ Heavens. many, as Page 15 I Said to the Press across the Ocean,, There is one ‘Kingdom of GOD, there is one Heaven for one and all, but manifested in the different places wheresoever the materialization and the visibilizati-on of such an expres- sion can take effect. Then and there the Kingdom of GOD is at hand. I {know mankind observes the different Assemblies. As an outward expres- sion they observe it to be as if though we are representing a whole bunch of Heavens We are not even repre- senting a whole bunch of govern- ments. We are representing one Gov- ernment, the Government of GOD on Earth among men. This Govern- ment as an outstanding figure and as extended through the very name of it,——The United States of Ameri—, ca,——-is an abstract expression of the Universal Government that shall be universallly established, for they all shall be united together ‘as one man at Jerusalem.’ The seed idea of this G-over-nmenvt is a Government for all Governments,———-e pluribus unu.m,— one composed of many. So shall it be universally when it shall have been rightfully established under the -Constitution of this Country_ All of ‘the Governments of our present Civ- ilization will unify themselves to- gether with this Fundamental Prin- ciple of this Country, and all shall recognize GOD'S Presence as the, Su- per-ruling Power among us. I Thank you.” , THANK YOU FATHER. New Psychology Affects ‘ Table Manners “Let them talk at the table,” is the advice of Mary ‘Katherine Mc- Means, who believes that by proper training in early childhood with the tools of conversation intelligently used, youth will be at a greater ad- vantage in school and socially. With- out such training they talk, but their words are not products of thought. If the family concern themselves with more than idle gossip at times when they are all together, the child will be better equipped. “Show him how to use the conversational tools we all have, encourage him, insist on the improvement -of his thinking speech, an-d remember that the best place, the best work bench in the world, is the dinner table,” the author advises ’M-ay Hygeia. , , ~ ‘ ’ ' fage 165' The “SPOKEN W6’R"l5“‘ Tuesday, May 11 Great S-oviet Venture in Resettlement of Oppressed‘ Peoples to Be Studied by Graphic Arts Official The Soviet Government has agreed to receive for the time being ONE THOUSAND JEWISH FAMILIES AND FIVE HUNDRED SINGLE PERSONS from the great mass "of suffering Jewry in Europe. It is hoped that this will be the beginning of a great movement to help tens of thousands of Jews find a real haven and permanent refuge from the hor- rors and oppression in other lands. The only payment required is $200 per family, regardless of size, for food, care and transportation from the border to Biobidjan. Additional ex- penditures outside of Russia for transportation .to the border, cloth- ing, supplies, etc», will bring the to- tal cost -of establishing a family in Birobidjan to approximately $350.’ Thus a family of five or more -can be rescued from hopeless misery and transferred to a country where they will enjoy. economic security and equality of opportunity. Homes, live-stock, etc., will be -sold to them by the Soviet Govern- ment. on a" 21-year payment plan, without interest, the first payment to fall due six years after arrival in the territory. About two and one-half acres of land will be given to each family for gardening‘ pur- poses free of charge. Opportunities to join collective farms will be open to those who prefer such work. The settler will be given economic oppor- tunities from which he at present is excluded in the countries where he is now under cruel subjection and in abject misery. He will have a. chance to secure the means of sub- sistence for himself and his family under conditions far more favorable than exist elsewhere in Eastern and Central Europe to-day. In addition, Birobidjan extends political, social and cultural rights to the settlers. The genius of the settlers may freely develop its liter- ature, its music and other cultural values. New-comers will share with their ’Russ'i'an brothers all the benefits of this new life. They will acquire citi- zensiiip the moment they arrive in ‘ ‘-Birobidjan. their .chi1d-rien will enjoy amet uc ' ‘ social opportunities as the children of Russians. The above interesting facts are brought out in a circular announc- ing a “Bon Voyage: Party” to be tendered tomorrow’ evening, May 12th at Mecca Temple Casino, 135 West 55th Street, New York, to‘ Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Kriegel, who are beginning a tour of investigation to the Near East, studying the condi- tion of oppressed peoples there. In the course of ’Mr. Kriegel’s tour in Eastern and Central Europe, he will investigate at first hand the actual conditions in Europe}, “ tine and Biroidjan :and the bilities for permanent securityi: peaceful refuge for his ha” brethren. .~ Millions are in dire misery . great distress. Birobidjan can; at least a part of these suff people. It is a region that holds; great promise because of its and natural resources. _ Mr. Kriegel is chairman of membership committee of theG ic Arts Fraternity and treas”; the Graphic’ Arts division of American Birobidjan Committee? has volunteered to make the hi posed tour entirely at his own“ pense. Defenders of Civil Liberties’ Differ on Rights of “Sit-‘Do’ ' Strikers i n 2 d I New York, May 12.—Sharp differ- ences among defenders of civil lib- erty as to the issues involved in sit- down strikes prompted the American Civil Liberties Union last week to release to its branches and attorneys a statement defining its position, fol- lowing a vote of the sixty-nine mem- bers of its national committee throughout the United ‘States. The Union’s statement reflects the conflict of View between those who “regard sit-downs and sit-in strikes as a simple issue of trespass involv- ing only property right” and those who hold that the tactics “raise debatable qtiestions in a; field in which public policy is yet to be de- termined?’ The memorandum cites various forms of sit-down strikes followed- by the unemployed in occupying pub- lic «offices, workers engaging in the tactic only during working hours and strikers occupying plants after work- ing hours, The Union concludes that “how far the law may hold that la- bor relations are subject to public regulation and therefore whether such a tactic might be recognized in any circums’ta.nces is still of course a matter of speculation.” The position of defenders of civil liberties, says the Union, should be “to keep open the process’ of discus- sion and negotiation as agaiinst coer- cion and vio1,en.c-e.” The’ Union de- \ <'_clar'e’si.that it‘: will 2tcti»in\1“e_latioii“’ to’ I Q ' ".‘-$9. keep sirens eih°i- channels of negotiation and or zation, to maintain intact the " to strike and in particular cas protest and take action against necessary force or violence, by w, ever employed.” The Union holds; “ordinarily ways can be found force the law without " price of bloodshed for such tac =_, the peaceful occupation of pl if employment.” ° The Union’s board of directo further taken a position again’ pending legislati-on designed to -T late trade unions or strike tacti the ground that it is ‘‘n‘ hasty and ill-advised.” At — committee is giving the pro" further study: ’ ‘,1. One Hundreth of a Mi Of a Céhffinetér! Washington, May 10'(FDP). Th tional Academy -of Sciences ~,_ ly in session here has dealt. many bewildering problems",;. brought forward many sta views, which are for the most" results of actual laboratory e" ments. Evidence for the existencef “time-clock” in the brain Whi’ on tiicking in a‘ cyclic rhythm. own‘ when we are‘ asleep 0' in Was‘ presented. ‘ands of them have -_~-’.. «diamonds, and other V new ENGLAND MAKES A KING ' (A Graphic Preview of Next Wednesday’ 3 Coronation Ceremonies) I 4" , ce television has not yet been * ected, radio listeners to next We-d- ’..y’s coronation ceremonies will ;. terested in the following details hm various colorful events which ‘I be described by more than fifty in announcers in the British capi- j that day. Zia: article in which the following _,. raphs appear is taken from 1,3 ént Events.” Wednesday, with ceremonies years old, the new King of Eng- will be crowned. _ ugh London’s streets, gay with ‘i and bunting, the coronation pa- ‘. win wind. More than 5,000,000 ‘-.- s are expected to watch it. _, already the ocean from our country to in England on May 12. F‘: ii glimpse of the King and his . e of nobles, many persons will ‘v seats on curbstones or railings the night before. They will sit _' for eight hour-s until the pro- no starts, More fortuna-te per- "fwith full purses have already arrangements for seats in the I‘?-tands Which line the streets. of them paid $200 for such A Others have rented rooms in ‘and boarding houses, with win- overlooking the street. They ,‘ p'¥y as high as $600 for such the British people, the Crown for organized government and ’ and kindly authority. To it pledge their loyalty-—just as we «-,, loyalty to the Flag, which X»: for our Government and its ; ‘F. The Dazzling Procession 3-’ i-the sun shines next Wednesday, ‘ Tayes of watchers along the line «int: will be dazzled as the coro- -,' parade winds by. ' ‘ pre- 7:” ‘gems will flash on every side. and purple velvet, shining snowy ermine will -adorn ‘ or peers and peere-sses in VVestminster__ tower 22» soifltliand crystal . coach drawn by eight white horses will leave Buckingham’ Palace. In it will sit -sober King George and smiling Queen Elizabeth. The King will'wear a red velvet coat and white satin breeches, with long white silk stockings. A robe of red velvet bordered with ermine will hang from his shoulders. Queen Eli- zabeth will be dressed inawhite sat- in robe embroidered with gold and trimmed with a six—foot train of Vel- vet_ The 175—year-old coach, looking for all the world like Cinderella’s, will carry them to Westminster Ab- bey, where kings have been crowned for more than 800 years. Nearly 8,000. peers and peeresses, high oflicials, and guests from other lands will crowd into the Abbey to watch the coronation. Among them will be Uncle Sam’s oflicial dele- gates to the ceremony—James W. Gerard, former Ambassador to Ger- many, Gen. John J. Pershing, and Admiral Hugh Rodman. Four-Fold Ceremony The four-hour ooronation ceremony‘ will be divided into four separate stages These are called the recog- nition, the oath, the anointing and crowning, and the homage. The recognition is a reminder of the time when kings were elected to the throne by the people. King George will be led to a platform at one end of the Abbey by the Arch- bishop of ‘Canterbury. The Arch- bishop will present him to the peo- ple from each of the four sides of the platform. He will ask. four times whether the people are willing to ac- cept George VI as King. Four times the people will shout, “God -save ‘King George the Sixth.” After this, trumpets will sound and the second stage of the ceremony will begin, The King will take an oath that he will govern justly and wisely, according to law, and that he will keep the Church of England . as the official religion of the empire. He will -sign a copy of the written on vellum (calfskin). Thegn comes the “most -solemn part of -the ceremony. King George will oath, be led to the ancient oaken Corona- tion Chair, on which British kings have been crowned for generations. The King Will Be Anointed With Holy Oil He will be anointed with holy oil: by the Archbishop, and dressed in a rich cloth-of—gold tunic. To him will be brought many emblems-—richly, jeweled objects which stand for qual- ities which -the British people wish their kings to have. Gold spurs, emblem of knighthood and honor, will be touched to his heels. Four swords, emblems of jus- tice and of mercy, are used in the ceremony, A great gold orb, em- blem of the spread of Christianity over the earth, will be placed for a moment in his hand. A ruby ring, will circle the King’s finger, to “Wed” him to his people. Then a magnificent gold robe will. be wrapped around his shoulders, and a scepter placed in each hand. One scepter, bearing at its tip the largest, diamond in the world, is an emblem of power. The other, tipped with a dove, is an emblem of mercy. Lifting the heavy gold Crown of England from its pillow, the Arch-__ bishop of Canterbury will set it rev- erently on the King's head, praying, “O God, the Crown of the faithful,‘ bless this Thy servant George our King; and as Thou dost this day set a crown of pure gold upon his head, so enrich his royal heart with Thine abundant grace and crown him with; all princely virtues.” At that minute, gloomy Westmin- ster Abbey will suddenly flash with light Thousands of electric bulbs have been put in place for this part of the program. The light will fall on hundreds of glittering circles, as peers in scarlet and purple robes raise coronets above their heads. The. jewels in the coronets will dance like living flames. From thousands of throats the shout will rise, “God Save the King.” Trumpets Will split the air with sound. In a much shorter ceremony, Queen Elizabeth will be crowned, and the peeresses will don their coronets. The Queen’s crown is a new one, made especially for the occasion, It is of platinum, set entirely with diamonds. Among them is the famous Koh-i- poor. 0 . ._ -..-._.. ...___._..__.._1 Page 18 , The “SPOKEN -worm" 7 I Tuesday. May The Work of the Spirit Can Only Be Accomplished by Bringing Your Through the Spirit of Purification Until You Shall Express Perfectioii§ The Scripture Must Be Fulfilled: “Be Ye Perfect Even as Your FATHER Which Is} Heaven Is Perfect”--FATHER FATHER’S LECTURE AT RIGHT- EOUS GOVERNMENT FORUM, KING’S TOWN MANSION, PROM- ISED LAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1937 A.D.F.D. TIME: 10:30 P.M. For the enjoyment and pleasure of the ‘Kingston Angels and those who had joined them from the ‘various Extensions, FATHER served the eve- ning Banquet and also remained over for the Righteous Government Meet- ing. Drifting away from the purpose for which they were assembled, the An- gels began singing and testifying, but none bore record to speak on Righteous Government, but their tes- timonies were perverted to the reg- ular testimonials they give daily in the meetings. For this cause FA- THER was obliged to remind them of the significance of being moved spon- taneously by the -Spirit, and speak- ing volitionally in accord with that for which the Meeting has been called. We «do not especially care to ac-. custom ourselves to conduct our meetings according to the habits and customs of men, in the way of ap- pointing someone as .a Leader or a Master of Ceremonies,—as we would rather see the different individuals move and speak and act voluntarily by their own intuition, without being called on; but if in these different meetings (especially in the Righteous Government Meetings) they do not move accordingly, we will have to conduct them as the other Organiza- tions do, by having a ‘Programmed’ Meeting. This will not have to be if the ‘children will allow FATHER’S Spirit to lead and guide them, and‘ allow His Spirit to take charge in each and every individual, rather than one individual as being called the , ‘Leader.’ Let us take this Message to con- ” sideration and allow FATHER’S Mind and Spiritito control us and all , of our affairs. ,By giving this Mes- sage your prayerful attention, you ‘I will not have an occasion to stumble nor err, for your Wisdom and Un- derstanding will be increased and multiplied, and all will draw from This Ever-Flowing Well of Salvation -—the Body of our Sweet FATH-ER DIVINE. I thank you. Peace Everyone! (‘Peace FATHER Dear,’ spontaneously voiced the An- gels in response.) That little com- position long since composed, but I reiterated it in My Mind whilst sit- ting, t-hinking_ I was listening to the song and listening to the music, and considering the Mystery of the Mis- sion of GOD, considering the Work I am doing among the children of men. How marvelous it will be when that which we did endeavor, it can be accomplished automatically and volitionally, without the form of things. As this evening has been set apart as being termed the RIGHTEOUS GOVERNMENT MEETING, if those of you who are assembled will be so governed by the Spirit of My Mind, it will bring into outer expression and into action, the Righteous Gov- ernment Meetings,——-in words, deeds and actions, the same as if it was ‘programmed.’ But, if these Meet- ings are not brought into expression VOLITIONALLY, which is to say by MY SPIRIT, at times it is required that someone should be appointed as though being inspired to lead, as though they are leading and direct- ing, or whatsoever we are stressing. We have not assembled merely to be sitting and passing the time away, but there is enough in the way of RIGHTEOUSNESS, TRUTH and JUSTICE, in the way of the RIGHT- EOUS GOVERNMENT of which we are stressing, to bring to the light -of the children of this Kingdom, something that will give them more information concerning the RIGHT- EOUS GOVERNMENT. , If you can and if you Will be gov- erned by your highest intuition, and if your intuition is My leading and will Work as perfectlya-nd as accu- .V_( 5, , J ‘n . 1. 77 .“ ‘- . rately as It would through an H" vidual*or individuals who would -- a program for the different mi ing.s, I would enjoy it better it Spirit ca-n work it out as Perf through you, by moving Volitio spontaneously and intuitively, as __‘ as by working according to the -" of things. We speak of being ii, and we speak of having an intui_ to lead us and to .tell you Words‘ guide you intuitively, but unless f" can be governed by My Spirit My Mind, and bring out as m-uchff maintain what could be brought, by the system of Program, we‘ be obliged to bring Programs into consideration, and call on. "E viduals, individually and system‘ ally_ But if you are self-denied vj, pletely and yet persistent in ambition to bring out something’, the Advancement of the lKingdo Heaven, My Spirit will inspire. inspirationally and will lead you‘; instruct you intuitively, and you? be as ,expressive and as expressi ‘V the POSITIVE DIRECTION, as if’ were called on by a Represen :5, representing the especial Meeti ;' being termed ‘the master‘ of oer." nies.’ That is why as a rule in; of the Churches, they accustom s, selves to having someone -as a LE’ ER. ‘ EXPRESS ON THE 'roPIo , That is why thousands ‘of 4:." 5 have been led erroneously, be I when you get together and are" sembled, you will not move vo1i_ ally, you do not have the desir, move volitionally apparently, and‘ tuitively, to be an expression of‘; which is in that direction of n-_ ever we are especially stressin the Topic for that especial Mee That is why in the different 01, izations, not only the Churches,,;, the different Organizations,--Q usually have some individual, afini‘ ed or in other words elected Leader, because when we gel and give space for the’ Spirit, and ‘every individual to -lo those who would prohibit rit from leading and guiding f‘Positive Direction, and in the at I have «directed them for ".~ - ial occasion. 1,lt is a privilege to observe the _! It is a privilege to get away 5. SELF, self-exaltation———stay C riaiid lowly in heart and be self- 1, yet be a Living Sacrifice to .GOD. By so doing, My Spirit canlead intuitively and can ‘ others through you inspira- that they might be partak- '-5" the Nature and the Character- foi your Saviour. All of this _; accomplished as accurately -I» perfectly as it would be if 6 ,1,zould be led by an individual “if you will be governed by .‘_-~ ‘t, if you will be self-denied if ' sider when you are thought- ., Lgthinking, the significance of f‘ yourselves as an individual, wing the Spirit to move «r you volitionally, and teach ‘W: I would have you know. I ..stress this thought too vivid- a when you assemble in these if. meetings, it should be some-. ,:,_ouched along the line of what- the especial meeting is repre- “ _ EXPRESSIONS ,'7',1s a Righteous Government , let your thoughts be di- Government and in the Le- ."-" of our present existence, Spirit and Mind might con- _'ally and awaken Politics in '-- tof the Understanding, that fight he truly converted, where [ere 'un-converted,’ and be ,t into subjection to the Funda- ‘Principle. By this, you will ,- your energy, you will be your emotions, you will be us- {in ambition and your enthusi- “ ‘the Positive Direction, in about Righteousness, Truth , ce, by connecting yourselves Legal phrases and expres- .- .,Life, -that Legality might be >7 Christ. When at’ 3. 1 ,~_ -.~ unto the U have been established in ory and you can walk in trher“SPoK‘1‘iiN* «roan» up in the Light of this Understand- ing, where you cannot be torn down. Of course, it is true, you may feel you are saved. That is the way to feel, but whilst’ you feel you are saved, My Mission on earth for you, is to do what I have instructed you to do; in directing your thoughts, your words, your deeds and your ac- tions in the way of Legality and in the way of Politics, and other ex- pressions of our Present Government, of which we have to do with. Those things that concern us, those things that concern others, must be truly‘ converted and must be true, by har- monizing with us and by us har- monizing with them. If you merely consider God is your Redeemer and Saviour, and will not direct your energy and your ambition in the way of Harmonizingiwith Him, it will be a matter of impossibility for Him to save_ you. That is what Conver- sion means! Conversion means you must be changed from one direction toadifferent direction, to that which you have been directed. When you are changed from one direction and are directed in a different «direction, then and there you are CON- VERTED, as far as that is concern- ed. This Great Conversion as an abstract and also as an awakened consciousness, is converting Man- kind in If the way of Righteousness, Truth and Justice, for it is directing them in a different direction to that which they have been going. They have been going in that direction, but when they are truly converted, they will go in —a different direction. They have been thinking in one di- rection, but when they are converted to Righteousness, Truth and Justice, they will think in a different direc- tion. That is the mystery of True Conversion! HARMONIZE UNSELFISHLY _ Then I say, let your thoughts be awakened in the Light of this Un- derstanding, that you might be pa.r- takers of God’s Nature and of God’s Characteristics through Harmoniza- tion. By harmonizing with that which is without and within, by harmoniz- ing with the highest leading within your mind, you will be harmonizing with Me automatically and will even- tually become to ‘be ‘in Unity with your Maker. Through Harmonization, you will _'’be f.brot_1ghf. -into -the _Uinif¢i-2 7'- Page _19 cation of Spirit, of Mind, of Aim and of Purpose, for when you harmonize unselfishly, when the harmonization is actually manifested, it will be the Unification of an expression, instead of merely a harmonized state of ex- pression, That which can harmonize, it can be Unified, for that which is in Harmony will become to be in Unity, firstly in Harmony, then- in - Unity. When you are in Unity in Words, Deeds and Actions, you will take on the Characteristics and the Nature of each other, and you will become to be Unified together. That is the Mystery! BE AN EXPRESSER OF UNIITY Then I say, Unity of Spirit, of Mind and of Aim and of Purpose, should be nothing less than your ‘de- terminated’ endeavor. You should endeavor to be as an Expresser of the Unity of Spirit, of Mind, of Aim and of Purpose, and it should be UNSELFISHLY and TRUTHFULLY expressed. If you take a stand for same, My Spirit and My Mind will inspire you with Understanding be- yond your reason to think, will give you more Joy, will give you more Happiness, will give you more Peace, ’ and will give you more Pleasure, when you are harmonized together ‘as One Man at Jerusalem.’ Through Harmonization you will become to be in the Unity of the Spirit, of Mind, , 'of Aim and of Purpose, and it will be a matter of impossibility for any- one to sever you. The Scripture -then is fulfilled, the Gospel then is fulfill- ed, ‘I pray that they may be One even as we are One!’ You can only become to be One with the other by Harmonization. If a person in mor- tal consciousness loves one or admires another, it is through and by Har- monization. They harmonize and agree with each other, to some ex- tent or to some degree, that the agreement might make the contact and the transmission of the spirit of that individual with whom you are agreeing; therefore you ‘will express a liking or devotion for that "individ- ual. It is not you as a person, but it is the spirit or mind of that per- son in you, loving himself. That is the Mystery! TRANSMISSION or‘ Srmrr AND MIND UNIFY - It is-'Trans:n;'1itti«=} speak volitionally and intuitively; the purpose of giving informati others. When you acccept Of: Message and live It accordingl will assure you, each and all of, will be abundantly blessed with/ dom, Knowledge and Unders, ~»-I ———transcending your fondest des', imagination, for you will be fo-V upon This Foundation, you I" founded where you cannot be H, .‘where you cannot falter and you cannot fear; where you are 7 scious of GOD’S Presence at‘? times, and the very Spirit that- consciousness produces and c «; will be an abstract and an oil, expression of GOD’S Actual Pr, supplying you with all you me: sire, in the fulfillment of My!0 V composition——‘THE SPIRIT 015', CONSCIOUSNESS OF THE ,‘ FENCE OF GOD, IS THE OF ALL (SUPPLY, AND IT AND IT WILL AND IT DOES , IISFY EV ERY GOOD DE.SIRE._’. CHRIST ALONE ‘ HEARD AND SEEN _ The Good Desires are satis- the Recognition of GOD’S Presence, by you as in-dividualsl-', ing your bodies into subjectio living Evangelically. Every can and will be satisfied as Q’ and as briefly as you harmony: your GOD, and shall have 1" brought in the Unity of the S,‘ Mind, of Aim and of Purpose‘ HIM, until you be partakers rs‘ ~Charac-teristics, I-Iis Nature, :o»;,.‘ yourselves and lose your i When you lose your identity 5" are Unified with the Infinite, y_j' partakers of GOD’S Nature i'_n,é ity, and your nature an-d ch, , isti-cs are no longer discover: they are hid behind the veil l"“;, terialism, in other words, ‘ye,’ is hid with Christ in GOlD’—h_ will no longer be seen nor That is the Mystery of earth among men, to cause lose their identity, that they no longer be seen, and to HI-S Identity in the hearts lives of the children of CHRIST Atoms might lie seen, and. _ reign. / The usroimn wom)” Page 21 EXAMPLE not to say within yourself, .,-be governed by my highest _ 'l_- unless your intuition is , and can and will bring you, ,- every Desirable Blessing, the consideration of-others, highest intuition can and if it does bring into 0-b- -«. and into your possession, every Desirable Blessing 5»; your every desire, then ,1,» your highest intuition will I" _ple and an Example for "V That is Why I say, ‘Still your- ” gipy after the Fashion I have . Wu‘, The Highest Light of :m.-« Unders*tandin.g, and the 330 given as an inspiration to ‘-'_ Light of Spiritual Civili- ghould be your portion and ’»_:.- be your leading, or you . roduce it and manifest it to _',~« as a Sample and as an for others. If you can and Q, then and there others will -- you and will see you to Vutstanding figure,’ as a par- ju something to be looked up- ,-»« y as ‘well worth consid- {pr it would be an expression 1 merely the outward expres- ‘ ._._Perfection to others. iv N show Me PERFECTION, I ‘E: It! But do not show j.» - ION, the outgnowth ,. root and the off—spring of fa wants ‘and limitations, and ’- w to observe it and gaze’ ,,,-—,-for. the thing you gaze up- jtsnd to materialize; the thing yvisualize and gaze upon, ,\to materialize an-d become 5,; with it, for through _7§: you are partakers of ressionfs nature and char- when you are partakers _§.l1ich you vividly gaze upon. f- you observe PERFECTION, " _able for you to gaze upon °'- lgnow definitely you are ob- 5BER'FECTION, even though N be your highest intui- Tflur highest leading,—if it be to gaze upon It «dis- .'losing your identity and 1'«9n.d_enciies, that yo-u ' on It unselfishly and OHRIST ‘BEARS VVITNESS IN TERNALLY AND EXTERNALLY Upon This Foundation if you will stand, you will not have an occasion to fret nor worry,—GOD in His Own Majesty, Dominion and Authority, will teach Wisdom, Knowledge and Understanding above your power to think or ask concerning the Mystery, Your intuition should be your In- tutor leading you, and your highest leading would be your intuition, if Christ is your Intutor Internally, when He is teaching you within you, then and there He is your Intuition of which will bear witness to Christ Externally. Why will He bear wit- ness Externally and Internally the same? It is because He is the same without and within, if He is the iden- tical One on Whom you are concen- trating. If you concentrate on im- perfection, you must needs produce it in your observation, and you must needs visualize it, for the thing you vividly visualize, you will surely ma- terialize. Then I say, vividly visu-alize the PERFECT PICTURE,——-—even though you do not know Me distinctly, con- centrate on the Highest Light of Spiritual Understanding given you, and lo I will inspire you with Knowl- edge and with Wisdom that will come forth volitionally, that will teach you from the Fount of G-OD’S Omni- science, transcending all human In- telligence. That is--what I am talik- ing about! LET G0 MORTALITY COMPLETELY This can only be accomplished by you letting GOD, and by letting go of your mortal mind; by letting go of your preconceived ideas and opin- ions; by letting go of your egotism and your mortal persistence, that GOD might lead you in't-uitively and might inspire you inspirationally, and teach you Wisdom, Knowledge and Understanding, transcending all human imaginations. Upon This Foundation if you will stand, there will be more and more information you/ will gain daily, as you live Evangelically and bring your bodies into subjection to the Fundamental. There is no end to the Blessings, for the very Spirit of My Presence in- spirationally will inspire you daily with m-ore and more 'B1es.sin,gs, until -you will not have room to receive them. But these things can only be accomplished by letting go, by let- ting GOD, and by moving volition- ally and intuitively, that My Spirit , ‘ might teach you and tell you more and more concerning the Mystery,—- until you let go mortality completely and live in My Ever-Presence. REALITY OF GOD’=S ACTUAL PRESENCE TO ALL FIELDS “Then I say, when we assemble to- gether in these different meeting places, let our mind and our aim. be to bring about the Law of the Spirit of Life to the children of men, and to establish It on the Material Plane, that the very Law that was in Christ Jesus might be brought through LEGA.L1"l‘Y, made Real, and become to be LAW and O-RIDER. Aren’t you glad? (‘Truly we are glad FA'IlI-DER Dear,’ sanc- tioned the hearers.) It can only be- come to be Law and Order in real- ity, by coming through LEGAL- ITY, and by being endorsed P=O'LI- TICAFLILY, that mankind might ob- serve the Reality of it as it is ‘brought through Legality, and EN- DO1RlSiE‘D by Legality. When it is endorsed Legally and Politically, the Legalization of the Law of the Spirit of Life that was in Christ Jesus, will carry the Legal World of expression through the great Conversion and through the process of Purification, for the purpose of Purifying the Legal Field of en- deavor, and P-urifying Politics and other Legal extractions of our City and State, and Country’s Govern- ment, that all might be controlled by the Law of the Spirit of Life," and be converted and cooperate with It. That is why we wish to bring to the World of Legalization, the World of Politics, and the World of So-ciality, the World of ,Educa-‘ tion, and other material or limited exipressions,-the Reality of God’s Actual Presence, that they all might be converted together, and Unify themselves as ‘one man at Jerusa- lem.’ DESIRE NOT TO BE SEEN N OR HEARD This is accomplished by relaxa- tion, by letting go and letting God rule in you_,——by losing your identity completely, and desiring no longer, I I ‘Pa;g’e‘22 ~24 to be -seen nor‘ heard. but that the -Spirit of My Presence with or with- out a Bodily Form, might have full and free access in and over you all. When this is accomplished, then and there your physical bodies will vibrate with the Spirit‘ of God's Actual Presence, and the Spirit or Harmony, Honesty, Competence and Truth will be your portion, until I shall have brought you through the process of P‘urification, until you shall become to be PERF-'ECT,—— ‘even as your FATHER which is in Heaven.’ This is the Work of the ‘Spirit, and the Scripture must be fulfilled;~—‘Be ye PERFECT even as your FATHER which is in Heav- en is PERFECT.’ This is only ac- complished through and by bringing your bodies into subjection through self--denial 'and concentration, by concentration on the Fundamental, and by bringing your bodies through the spirit of Purification, until you shall express PERFECTION as an outward expression of the PER- FECT PICTURE. Deny yourselves,—relax your con- scious mentality as far as your ~pre- ' conceived ideas and opinions are concerned, and concentrate on the Funda.mental sincerely, and lose your identity complet-ely,—and lo I will be with you. When I say, ‘Lo Iwill be with you,’ I am not speaking of matter, I am not speaking of per- sonality,—I am speaking of the IINWERSONALITY of the AL- MIGHTY, though being Personifled and Personi~fia:b1e,- and Re-Produc- ible and Re-Personifiable, yea I am speaking of the Impersonal Pres- ence of My Majesty, with or with- out a Person as a BODY. GOD WILL SPEAK IMPERSONALLY It is a privilege D-ear Ones, to live in the Actual Presence of GOD, where GOD is on active duty, giv- ing active and practical service to and for you,‘ and is at home at all times,—wheresoever I am. Aren’t you glad? (‘So glad FATHER,’ rang out from the listeners.) When all of the selfish tendencies of My S0-CALLED followers and children shall have been dispelled once and forever, then and there 1 can work Scientifically and Harmoniouslyi to- gether with you and cause, you to ‘IIIEIISB -A d'I‘hei*“S~lPOKEN-‘:VVORD" ' be expressers of ME in the fullness, whereby you,——from lacks and limit- ations will be completely free. I need not say more, I believe I have said enough‘ to stir up your pure minds, and yet there is much could be said, and will be said, when I am not speaking PERSONALLY as I am just now; . for those things that I have not said, when they are revealed, then and there you will know distinctly, for it is revealed then, though when I reveal it plainly, you can plainly under- stand it. Oh for a HEART that will not shrink, a HEART that will not doubt; a HEART that will be sub- stantiated over and above every op- position, a HEART that will stand firm when trials may try to come; a HEART and a MIND that will Unify itself with GOD in This ETER- NAL HOME. I thank you, I thank you one, I thank you all. Good Will Toward Men To show how the heavens may be studied ‘through the huge telescope, the dome and instrument of the model move automatically, as ’the original, but motion is speeded to show the entire cycle of movement. The great instrument used in the McDonald Observatory for studying stellar distances, inter-stellar space and the composition of stars, weighs forty-one tons but is so constructed that it may be moved with as little as one-fourth horsepower. It is.said to be -accurate within one-millionth of an inch. A clock keeping “star time” works the motor. The dome, weighing and the double shutters over its roof, sixteen tons each, require re- spectively only three and one—half horsepower, and one-half horsepow- er to move. The instrument rotates automatically to keep up with the‘ rotation of the earth, moving slow- ly up or down at the same time that the entire heavens may be observed. The mirror to be used in the im- telescope is thirteen inches thick at the outer edge and eighty- two inches in diameter. So many years are required to grind and polish such a mirror to give perfect accuracy that this mirror is not yet completed. The observatory has been built for the University of Texas and will be operated by the Yerkes Observatory staff of the University of Chicago. V ~' ‘ one hundred forty tons, Educator Commands Forums in Adult Educ ‘V, New York, May 5.——A’t a. ence of state directors of WPA5 cational workers, Dr. W. patrick, Professor of Educa Teachers College, Columbia U sity, ably defined the adult -- - tion movement. Dr. Kilpatrick‘-7' in part‘: ' “From time. to time new and v” ly significant movements app, history, such as Democratic go -I ment, and Universal tax-sup", education, not yet universal ’ free Possibly a new de racy is arising. My claim this ning is that Adult Education is such . . . When any such move «A is coming toward recognition ,, are always those who would, parage it, saying it is not new..-_,s. “No significant thing can ' suddenly, always are there roof” the past. H‘ “We have always had Adult , cation in fact, but not in name.'., New England town meetings - early beginnings as were also" popular churches, congregatio, managed; mechanics’ institutes "_ later, labor unions. In fact, i L? ‘ organization -of every sort that 3, cusses its aims and plans,— T, parties and lyceums. All of are forums of Adult Education,“ Adult Education is any study :_ by people old enough to have} school. .Here everything that \j in life should be taught. ,Butf' methods used in Adult Edu“ differ greatly from those of the *7 lic School. In schools, the teach leader assigns the lessons and h the students repeat them. Thet’ er gives the orders . . . The '5 er of adults is the servant of,’ pupils. The pupils are the boss.:, teacher of adults is more. of a T er, does not give orders, and; objective should be to try and ‘j the pupils do better what they ‘ to do. It is very important tha , teacher of adults should under’ these differences, and cultivate; capacities for leadership.” ": “The forum, especially one ‘L attendant discussion, is prac «. necessary if‘ people are to up stand current. social and eco { problems. “The forum is especially _ with controversial issues, beca_ is possible to have speakers " sent all sides of the .issu followed by questions will A further implications. P _ May‘ 11:11,‘ 1937 The ‘!SPO.K.EN wonpv ‘ROADIO REVIEW Out anding Programs AY——THURSDAY WEDNE WEAF-6,6.0K_ WOR-710K (EASTERN STANDARD TIME) WJZ-760K WABC-860K ‘A’: System. 1_. ' WOB: Mutual Broadcasting Sys- .' tom. Station Identification WEAF: NBC-RED Network. WJZ: NBC-BLUE Network. WABC: Columbia Broadcasting 2' , I-' I0 30 ._ lit 1 4uo........ .. TUESDAY, MAY 13 , 00 A. M.—WOR—'l‘rans-radio News. 9:130 A; M.-—WOR-—Ed Fitzgerald. : A. M.-—\VARC——Betty Crocker, '3; expert. :48 A. M.—WABC—-Vvatkins, news. :w_ A. M.--; _VABC—Magazine of the ‘guest celebrities. e. 10 ll ' Expe- A. llI.+WI.i'iA.F—-~Voiee of ne 12:00 Noon—WOR-—0rgan Recital. ’ P. M.——VVAB_C—'l‘ed :lVIalon-3. A‘ P. M.—\VJ7.-—l\'atl«-nal Farm and me Hour. ."~_1:M P. 'M.—WOR—Music from Texas. 32:99, 1*. M.--WABC-—“News ‘ omagrs Eyes.” Thru A ,”1':15 P. M.——‘wAuc-—American School of f j " Al’- ', P. M.—WJZ—“Do you want to ‘.’-”—'Margare't Widdemer, novelist ~ 3:15 P. M.—WOR—Rutgers Home Eco- , mics Bureau. 3330 P. M.-WABC—-Questions Before ess; Congressman Murdock (Dem.) $1 wizona, “A Review of Current Prob- '-H -41:90 1'. M.--WABC-—Curtis Instant--. of «:30 l a z 5.9....’ as v 1 9 0.- av‘: « ,1’. (From Pliiladelphia.) 1 :15 P.‘ M.—WOR-—Trans-Radio News. :3 P. M.——W(lR—Variety Hour. : M,.—-WA,jB(-1-—Children’s Corner. lVI.——WEA_F—Our A m e r i c a n r". - P. M.—--WABC-—-“News of Youth,” . M.—_-WOR--Trans-radio News. . M.—WJZ-—«Lowell Thomas. . M.——-WJZ—Easy Aces. P. M.—WABC—Boa_.ke Carter. P. M.‘--lVJZ—Beatrice Lillie, come- P P’. F P 9 is S‘ O 0 1 .-arch’ 5&5 P -"9.*.*-.. .. 84598 ' . M.-WEAF-—0ne Ma.n’s Family . M.-WEAF—Wayne King. M.—WJZ—Ethel Barrymore. .—WABC—Burns and Allen, . M.—WEAF-—Town Hall To- ", red Allen and Company; " . M.—WABC—Andre Kostelentz’ . stra with Nino Martini. ‘P. M.'—-WABC——B,eauty Box The- . starring Jessica Dragonette. .00 P. M.—WEAF—-Your Hit Parade. P. M.—WEAF—-Gladys Swarthout, to-soprano. 100tP,. M.—WABC—“Tomorrows News _ _-.-'-.WOR—News. P P P M.—WABC—Cavalcade of Amer- P P .r 'r WEDNESDAY. 12 _. ill.-:YVA_BG7Organ Reveil_le,. M.’—-VVOR-—Trans-radio News. A. M.—WEAF-—News. -' M.-.-,-,WJ, .-;:,1Iumc_r in the News. ‘M.—- R-'—'-Mornin'g “Matinee, lebrities. » “ ‘ .--WJZ--Press-radio News. l W? £106,138 lV(Ij.l-u—1\)7:.IZ—General Federation of 4:15 P. _M.——VVOR-—News. :00 r. M.——wJz———News. :15 P. M.--\VEAF—News. ls’ nM.——\VEAF-—Press—r_adio News. .- . l.—-VVJZ—-Press-radio News, :45 . M.-—W(l,R—-News. :45 . M.-—VVJZ—Lowell Thomas. .00 . ll/I.-—‘VJ7r--Easy Aces_ 7:00 . M.—WABC—“Poetic Melodies.” 7:30 M.—-WABC—-Alexander woolcotfi “The Town Crier.” M.—WABC—-Boake Carter._ Frtofics. . M.—- WOR—Pleasant Valley 8:00 P. M.——W0'R-—Svmphonv 01-91; 8:00 P. M.——wI:AF—' v ' - rip/ty Hmm 4 Rudy Vallees Va 18:00 I’. 1\I.——-\’VABC-—Kate Smith’s Band Wgtgon. :30 I’. Vl.—\\'()R - ' Oilfhestrac 1 Lombardo S . :00 P. M.—W'0R—Gab. Heatter news 9:00 P. lVI.—WABC-— ' ’.s ‘_° ate“). Hour. Major Bowes Am 3:00 P. M.-——W?EAF—Show Boat. P. M.—WOR—Ed _Fitzgerald &Co. B .00 P. M.-—WEAF—-Bing Crosby, Bob urns, guests. 10:00 . l\I.——WABG—Flo_vd Gibbons. 10:.—»0 . M.—-W’JZ-—NBC Jamboree. 10:30 . M.—-WABC——-March of Time. 11:01 M.——WOR-Trans-radio News. 11130 M.—WOR—Kay Kyser’s Ork. 10:_30 M.—WABC-—Betty Crocker, cooking expert, 10:48 A. M.—WABC—-Watkins, news. 11:15 A M.-—WABC—Edd.ie and Ralph. 11:45 A. M.— WLAF-— Allen Prescott, household hints. 11:45 A. M.—VVABC—Eleanor Howe’s Homemakers Exchange. 12:15 P. M.—WABC—Ted Malone. 1,013 P. M.—WJZ—Nat’l Farm andflonie 12:30 P. M.—-\VOR—-Trans-radio News. 1:15 P. M.—WABC——Robert VV. Horton, VV’or-l d—Telegram correspondent, from Washington. 4:30 P. M.—WOR—Variety program. 2:00 P. M.-—WOR—Women’s Hour. 2:15 P. M.——WABC—American School of the Air. -—- Guy NOTICE TO READERS Remainder of the week’s radio pro- grams will be found in Tuesday's “SPOKEN WORD” and Thursday’s “WORLD HERALD.” Getting‘ Ready to Live? By T. H. Justice Anybody here getting ready to live? To feed on joy, Grow strong on kindness? Or are you lost in the night. And see only b=la.c.kness? For GOD is the Light, The Comforter And the Power. : Anybody here getting ready to live? » 4 133%? ‘X~RAY GOVERNMENT By T. H. Justice Why are shoes made, corn raised? Why do men ework in factories, on far'ms? Why are grocery stores stocked with food, butcher-shops with meat, dairies with milk? Why? Why? You might think «that food was grown to eat, clothes made to‘ wear, liouses’ built to live in. But between man and all the abundance of life, stands a wall of gold. Two neighbors may live side by side-—one owns a farm and the oth- er owns a cannery. The field of the farmer may be overflowing with ripe sweet corn; the stock 0-f the cannery may be bare and the own- er may be yearning to be able to can the corn which is growing so abundantly on his neighbor's field. BUT IF THE OWNER OF THE CANNING COMPANY HAS NO MONEY, THEN ALL THAT CORN ON THE FARMER’S FIELD MUST ROT! Although these men are neighbors to one another, gold has set up an impassable barrier be- tween them! And so gold divides people from , people, groups from groups, nations from nations. Co-rn rots while peo- ple starve. Machinery rusts while children go without shoes. But once man trusts man, and grows food to eat, makes clothes to wear, builds hous.es to live in, then behold, as by magic, EVERYBODY has all the abundance of life! Eliminate gold and the wells of abundance are opened. Whatever we need comes to us free! All our needs are abundanltly filled. There are no lacks and wants. ‘And we do the work we like and love! For no longer are We coerced and driven by the fear of starvatio;n ——the fear which haunts everybody working for gold. We are free, real- ly free. Free from the fear of to- morrow. Free: from the wild, inhu- man scramble after gold. We are free to do the work we want, know- ing that all our lacks and wants will be satisfied, for all the good things on earth are being passed from hand to hand in free eggchange. This is the goal for which we all work. “ \ ,_ Page 24 RATHER DIVINE KINGDOM IRAQI MISSIONS, EXTENSIONS AND OONNECTIONS UNDER FATHER'S ’1’EBSONAL JURISDICTION NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 20 West 115th St. REV. M. J . DIVINE, Annex, 24 W. 115th St. ' ,REV. M. J._DIVINE, 103 West 117th St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 204 West 63rd St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 203 West 139th St. REV. M. J. DIVINE. 239 West 113th St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 308 West 53rd St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 105 West 119th St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 234 West 123111 St. yREV. M. J. DIVINE, 16 West 131st St. _REV. M. J. DIVINE, 59 East 122nd St. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 24 East 106th St. REV M. J. DIVINE, 305 West 142110 St. Quarters for Sisters. REV. M. J. DIVINE, West 115th St. .REV. M. J. DIVINE, 58 West 114th St.. Extension and Dress Shop. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 16 at 88 to 14 West 144th St., Garages. NEW PALTZ, N. Y. REV. M. J. DIVINE, Lake Mononk Rd. 59 West of City. JAMAICA, N. Y. ‘REV. M. J. DIVINE, 169-03-107th Ave. BBIDGEPORT, CONN. REV. M. J. DIVINE, 468-470 Broad St. MILFORD, CONN. .RE'V. M. J. DIVINE, 11 Gunn Stret. M ‘ SAYVILLR, LONG ISLAND REV. M. J. DIVINE Headquarters, 7'1 l Macon Street, REV. M. J. DIVINE, New Paitz, N.. 1. Grocery Store, 26 jothor Extensions, Peace Miaeiona 7 I and Connection: ' ALABAMA , ENTERPRISE—Baptist I-Iill, Carry nu-t~ chison. ARIZONA 118 So. 18th St.. Phoenix. AUSTRALIA .’ Mrs. G. Malm, Harmony, Scott Cna.m~ berm, Hoeking Pl., 86A Pitt Street. _ Sydney. Australian Church Hall, Russell St.. Mei- J -bourne. Private addreee—Mre. An- -drews, Oxford Chambers Bourke St., llielbourne. _ CALIFORNIA 2602 So. Central Ave., Los Angeles. 801 1:2 Hayes Street, San Francisco.-— Agent. 1828 Ellis Street, San Francisco. 821 Pacific Ave., San Francisco. 831 E. Anahem Blvd., Long Beach. 1435 Filbert St., Oakland. 137 No. Evans St.. San Diego. 21 Roberts St., Santa Cruz 7Q8 14th St., Modesto. 744 Hayes St., San Francisco. 1483-1485 8th St., cor. Cheater. Uexiana. 1075 7th St., Oakland. Rte. 8, Box 46, So. Part, Santa Rose. 358 So. 2nd Street, San Jone. 052 8th St., Oakland. N8 Capitol Ave.. San Francisco 1777 West 35th Place, Loo Angelee. BRITISH WEST INDIE! Kingston, Jamaica. CANADA 1?’? S. Main St.. Welland. Ontario 1050 Burnaby St.. Vancouver. B. C. Room 20. 1116 Broad St.. Victoria. B. C. 531 Spence St.. Winnipeg. Man. Room 216, 1207 Bay St., Toronto--Agent. Toronto. 265 Gerrard St.. East. . 2326 York St., Vancouver. COLORADO 27 West Colorado Ave., Colorado Springs. 8284 Larimer St.. Denver. ' MANITOBA, CANADA .221 Selkirk Ave., Winnipeg. CONNECTICUT II Vita Street. Stamford. The “SPOKEN WORD" FIIOBIDA 534 N. W. ‘l:5th St. Miaxnl. GEORGIA 822 E. Hall St., Sawannah. ILLINOIS 206 East 55th Street, Chicago. 3736 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 4529 Forestville Ave.. Chicago. INDIANA 2481 Deleware St., Gary. KANSAS 534 Golden Ave., Topeka. I234 Blaine Ave.. Wichita. MARYLAND 823 N. Arlington Ave., Baltimore. MASSACHUSETTS 329 West Canton Street. Boston. MINNESOTA No. 12 S. 9th Street. 3dinneaP011l- 802 North Robert St., St. Paul. 1227 Dayton Ave.. St. Paul. MISSOURI 1207 N.‘20 St.. St. Louis. _ 104 S. Ewing Ave., St. Louis. NEBRASKA 2108—28th Ave., Omaha. NEW JERSEY 111 Pennsylvania Ave., Pleasantville. 148 Bond St., Elizabeth. 928 Cookman Ave., Asbury Park. 159-161 So. Orange Ave., Newark. 20 Willard Place, Montclair. 22 Washington Street, Rahway. 417 Rahway Avenue Westtield. 174 Prince Street, ewark. School and Wicklitf Sts., Newark- 158 Johnson Ave.. J ereey City. 801 St. George Ave., Roselle. 43 Schureman St., New Brunswick. 181 Broom Street, Newark. 1820 Greenwood Ave., Neptune. 597 East Third St.. Plainfield. 50 Marshall Street. Elizabeth, N. a. NEW YORK 69 Osborne St.. BI'00k1.VY1- 541 C-lassen Ave., Brooklyn 414 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn. 199 Aahland Pl., Broklyn. 204-25 £5th Drive, Bayeide Peace Mission, 749 Bayvic/Iv Aw... In- wood, L. I. Deerport Road, Huntington 1 Beg St.. Oyster Bay. 85 U ell Drive. Hanhaeeett. 1&5-19 Linden Blvd., Jamaica. L I. 89-03 107th St.. Jamaica. MI W. 118th St..~N. Y. GIG‘-37°‘-5”’! Apt. 8——SiaterI Apt. 11. :3 Winchester St., White Plain! toil W 129th St.. N Y City 1%-12! West 129th St N Y 278 Jefferson Ave., Butlalo. 99 Winyah Ave.. New Rochelle. 397 Clinton St., Buffalo. _ 911 Baltic Street, Atlantic City. NORTH CAROLINA 828 Pine St.. Belhaven. SOUTH CAIROLINA I It? 280- 2nd Street. Chem‘?- OHIO 695 E. Long St. , Columbus 370 No. 20th St., Columbus. 2230 E 82nd St... Cleveland. OREGON I14-518 Southeast 16th Ave.. PENNSYLVANIA 1201 Wilma Street. Route 8. Wuhmzton. 3424 Ludlow St., Philadelphia. 528 So. 16t>h St., Philadelphia. 5831 I-Iaverford Ave.. Philadelphia. 5916 Bryant St., East Liberty. Portland. Pitts- burgh. SWITZERLAND AMRISWIL: Familie Herzog-Tenger, Nordstr. BASEL: Enquire Frau‘ Kurt. Muttenfl BRUETTISELLEN : Winterthurerstr. 293lII. .. HERRLIBERG: Enquire: Schilpbach. MUT'l:%NZ: Frau Kurt, Schiiutzenhaus- weg . REHETOBEL: Frau Meier, Kreuzweg. RHEINECK: Fam. Schiegg, hinter d. Markt. ROMANS1-IORN: Jakob Seller. Sek. Schulstr. 1. « ST. GALLEN: Frau Schalcher. Mueller- Friedbers. ‘brotherhood and peace.” Tuesday, May 11 . .,. WINTERTI-IUR: Fam. Guyer-Bn 5‘ Leimeneggstr. 18. ZUERICH: Schanzengraben 2911. All further information thru: . ,_ --3 European Office. FATHER DIVlN_- Peace Mission, Postfach 58, Wallisell Switzerland. c: VIRGINIA A T 700 Brook Road, Richmond. 119 So. 1st St., Richmond. WASHINGTON 15061|2 Broadway, Tacoma. 3102 Pacific Ave_., Tacoma. Route 3, Box 1‘63, Centralia—Agent. 1019 James Street, Seattle. 4518 Ferdinand Street, Seattle. 2218 E. John St., Seattle. 1901 E. Madison, Seattle. 3913 Wetmore Ave., 124 High St.. Bellingham. 912 W. Chestnut St.. Bellingham. 2246 West 56th St., Seattle. 2401 East Union St.. Seattle. VVASHINGTON, D. C. 1113 “O” St., Northwest, 534 Harvard St., N. . WISCONSIN 1.028 W. Roosevelt Drive, Milwaulne. ' PARTIAL LIST Because of the unknown number Q. FATHER DIVINE connections throu «I out the world, the above II but: “i list for reference. “United Christian Youth” Urges Anti-Lynch New York, May 5th. (CNA).——.l. resolution urging passage of th' Wagner Anti-Lynching Bill was en_ dorsed at the clo-sing session of th United Christian Youth Conferenc in the Madison Avenue Presbyteri Church, at Seventy-third Street, .3 city. . The conference of about 500 youn persons heard Dr. Robert Wycko Searles, general secretary of th Greater New York Federation vgf Churches, urge formation of aunite Protestant youth movement to star a “crusade” dedicated to “justic‘ The church is a mere shell the. has little vibrant life in it, Di‘; Searles asserted_ To be he1pful,i_ “must go down where people suffe‘! and suffer with them,” he stated. [He plead with the nation’s you -, to achieve unity of action towar‘ justice and peace. _‘\ Newark, N. J., May 5.——Represent3" atives of all Elks Lodges o-_; Temples in Northern New Jerse met at Greater Newark Elks Home 28 Beacon Street, Sunday afternoo" and adopted resolutions supportin the Gavagan Anti-Lynching Bill no before the Senate. Discussions of the Anti-Lynching -and of the Harrison? Black.—F1etcher Educational ‘Bills wer the principal features of the u,_.. gram, with Dr. E. s. Ballou Montclair, as the principal speak_ 1. Good -deeds remain; all things perish. ‘ '