Embree to present Spingarn Medal (Continued from Page 1) Africa where bis office is located To Trace Growth of Radicalism Other night mass meetings will be Thursday, June 29 in Pilgrim Baptist church when Miss Jane Adams, J. E. Spingarn. president of the association, and William Pickens will speak. A welcome to the confeence will be ex tended by Mayor Edwad J. Kelly, A. C. MacN'eal. president of the Chicago branch, and Earl B. Dickerson, welcom** tc tne conference will be ex. (Mivet Baptist church. 31st street and South Parkway. Rayford W. Logan of Washington. D. C. wil speak oa “The Growth of Liberal and Radical Thoia^ht Among Negroes,” Miss Sarah Alice Mayfield of Birmingham, Ala., will t‘II of the liberal white student opinion in the south. Sunday afternoon the closing mass meet ng will be held at 2 o’clock in; the Savoy Ballroom. 47th street and South Parkway. Charles H. Houston of Washington. D. C., member of the national legal committee of the asso. | nation, will speak, as will Walter White, .secretary. The principal ad dress will be by Dr Paul H. Douglas, of the department of economics, Uni versity of Chicago, who will speak on “Economic and Polictial Conditions as They Affect the Negro.” Delegates from 24 States To date registrations from delegates in twenty four states have been sent to New York, including California, Texas. Alabama. Georgia, Tennessee, Oklahoma. North Carolina, Delaware, District of Columbia, New Jersey and Muv-ach,.-,-et beside the expected re gixtratios from states near Chicago. The delegate who will probably travel farther than any other will be L J. Williams from the Vallejo, Calif, branch of the association. The conference- will open Thursday Morning, June 29 in Pilgrim Baptist church, 33rd street and Indiana ave. aoe with Herb- rt E Millen, president of the Philadelphia, Pa., branch, pre siding over a discussion of the legal defense work of the association. The Thursday afternoon session wll be de moted to branch reports of the fights against all forms of segregation and discrimination and particularly against school Segregation. To Debate Policies The Saturday morning session July 1 will bring a discussion on policies in faeetng race problems. The situation of the Negro n constantly shifting scene is becoming so precarious that the topic of the discussion, “Shifting Lines of Attack to Meet the Needs of the Day” is particularly appropriate. A spirited session is indicated in as. much as several speakers who believe in a more slashing, radical attack are listed as discussion leaders. The campaign for more employment for Negroes on public works projects will receive attention at the Friday morning session, when Jesse S. Ileslip of Toledo, president of the National Bar Association, and William Pickens of New York tell of the joint campaigi for employment of Negroes at Hoover dam. Roy Wilkins, asssitant secre tary of the association who visited the Mississippi delta last winter, wll tell of the exploitation of workers in the contractors’ camps on the levees. Young people and their work in the association will be discussed Friday afternoon, June 30. Saturday noon July 1, the Madame C. J. Walker medal, awarded for the most outstanding work by a member of the associations in carrying on the program, will be presented to Dr Charles A. J. McPherson of Birming ham, Ala., for his work in reviving the dormant Birmingham branch in the face of open hostility and terrorism against Negroes in his city. Saturday afternoon the delegates will consider the proposal that the association hold national conference only every two years and tnat in the odd years regional conferences be held in various sections of the country. HEROES UNSUNG Makers of Daily Bread by Dr. A. B. Mann (for the Literary Service Bureau) We sleep. The “bread man” comes to the door. We rise and eat. Later, gain comes this servant and leaves another supply of “the staff of life”. \s is usual in such cases, little ‘bought is given to the work of those whe procure and prepare for us the food upon which life itself depends. In the winter these toilers must give no thoughts to matters of wea ther or convenience. They must be at their posts. In summer they endure the intense heat of ovens. At r.ight they must work on “while the city sleeps.” They are faithful servants and deserving of gratitude and praise. Time will come ;when these loyal ser vants will come into their own; then these and ther such heroes will not die “unsung”. Hats off to the bakers—God bless them! QUAKERS RALLY TO CAMPAIGN TO SAVE SCOTTSBORO BOYS New York—Linking the persecution of the nine innocent Scottsboro boys with the Nazi terror against Jewish people in Germany, the religious Soc iety of Friends, through Anna L. Cur. j tis. chairman of the Service Peace Committee of the New York Monthly Meeting is widening its efforts in be half of the nine Alabama Negro boys now confined in eJfferson County Jail, Birmingham. The two youngest :hildren, Eugene Williams and Roy Wright, face a hearing in juvenile •ourt in Decatur, Ala., on June 23. —ifWWE PRICE! [ CsQ HIC.HER 1 Inrtant POT WATER maq never be this cheap aqain Right at the low point of the bar gain market, we bought a stock of “Utilities Special” automatic • water heaters. While they last, „ we’re selling them at this excep tionally low price. All prices are swinging upward. It may be years before we can sell a high quality water heater so inexpen sively again. ' r\ as little $ O down g as and $3.00 per month 1 on the balance ] With prices so low, and terms so reasonable, this is a golden op portunity to modernize your hot water supply. In years to come, you’ll be glad you bought your water heater before prices went up. _i Base all TROTTERS—CUDAHY WIN— Leaders Have Narrow Escape. South S>ie Globe Trotters, 9; U. P. Boosters. 7; Cudahy, 12; Holmes’ Tailors, 6 and that’s the way the Col. ■ ored Amatuer League Baseball gam- ! es thrilled 3,000 at Riverview Park Sunday as old sol did his durndest, and the pool splashed and resounded | to the joyous shouts of ebony hued sons and daughters of neptune. Those Globe Trotters had to do ; some record breaking trotting as the | Boosters went into the last half of j the eigth ahead 7.6, by virtue of “Slick” Lee’s homer with bases load. | ed and single scoring two. But how they did trot. Fellowes fanned to open last half of eigth. Hodges singled. Hilton hit by pitched ball advanced Holdgres to second. “Bee” Kirksey the Trotters wizard port sider, slash ed a sizzling cutter through “Ike” Foster at third which rolled and roll. ed performing tantalinzing tricks in grasping outfielders hands and Bee romped home amid the joyous shouts of the South Side continguent “The Old Man” and his Holmes Tail ors seem to have shot their bolts af ter startling the league for three suc cessive Sundays and beating every thing in sight. They succumbed to an aroused Cudahy team. McCultcheon. j Cudahy manager, had his vandals in fine form and after Clannie Lee’s 1 1st inning home run, the hi,>h power. I ed Cudahy battery proceeded to shell the faltering but fighting Holmes in. i field unmercifully. Crump, Clemments, Wilson, Man ley and Love batted, bunted, ran and slide the Holmes boys silly ___ DOINGS AMONG THE AMATUERS Last week our sport column was late, maybe this week also, do to the speeding up of this paper’s desire to reach its subscribers earlier. So this Sunday eve after having just left the field of battle, home and renovized ; ourselves; poured several glasses of cool and refreshing orange juice into our tummies; sat down to reminiesce a little over the acts of the true and tried. Holmes Off Color The Holmes were away off color this Sunday. We do not know whether it was the heat, overt trained, over confident or what. - Anyway, things went away for the boys. Spratt was off, Gray was out of his usual manner, Rufus and little Crump were throwing wild. Error upon top of error gave the Rex a six run lead without a hit; all of this coupled with a seemingly bad decision the Holmes withdrew from the field. The Effect Now, my friends, the scholars say as a race we never grow up. We are full of infantile habits. Now that habit goes something like this: vis., A child has been used to having his own way ' m everything. In fact he build up an exaggerated ego unconciously. Since no one attempts to train his distorted mind he grows up that way still believ * that the world Is his, bat it really is not. Someone attempts to enter his kingdom, “blewee” and “oh, boy" he as his way or he quits. That the rea son “old Solomon” wrote “Train up a child the way you should and when is old he is a man." Before 8 or 9 thou sand the feature game came to an abrupt end. Maybe the decision was ' . ^hat not the only one we will wfth honoi\ Str*ve to win hut strive to The public is in a quandary now as Jt th,!y, Wi” 860 at 0ur a fight, a whole or a half game f0T hirin* and firinS Players closed June 15th. Doc Manager G. fSis P wO0drUff reIaaW r J*! Roy Wrieht, Don Moton and teasdale were signed. Moton pitched good ball for the Boosters but errors cost him his game Williams, Trotters pitcher, has an I6'"** °l 100 having won four straights. Hunter, Holmes ace. lost S g3me through errors. 6 runs with out a hit. 6 more games and the Lea gue closes, then? Slick Lee hit one over in the Bluffs with the bases full the desire of all players Wakefield had the cool and refresh, mg drinks Sunday. Freddie had two gallons of lemonade for the boys to enjoy after the Holmes-Trotter game. American Legion teams swing into action this week. Follow “our gang.* Thats this writer's south Omaha entry should get some place this year Trotters play at Wahoo, Nebraska, July 4th. Monarchs, Cab Calloway and Armours Boosters gave the fans a big day Sunday. They say that ndoor ball is spoiling the batting eye of some of our best players, Grayson is below par this year Whats matter June? How many did you catch. Parker? So long, will see you. C. A. S. MONARCH BEAT CITY CLUB, 10-1 The Kansas City Monarch, Western pride of the Negro baseball world, played sensational ball to defeat the City Club, Omaha amateur sandlot leader, 10.1 at League Park, Saturday night. The club men had little chance with the Negro pro-men although Swede Carlson, Western League pitch, er for the club men. pitched fine ball. Sensational stops and throws and siz zling line drives coupled with daring base running tells the story of the Monarch victory. MID CITY COMMUNITY CENTER SPORTS Brown Wins MCCC Championship Beats Delmar 20-18 in Finals Richard Brown, Junior vesatile ath elete flashed fine form to win the Mid City Community Boys Junior Ping Pong Championship. Delmar, finalist and heavy favorite to win the championship succumbed in a thrill ing finish that had the crowd on its feet and cheering first one contestant and then the other. Delmar, leading 17-12, threw away an excellent chance to win. His speedy drives going wild time and again as he attempted to cinch the match. Brown, after batll. ing his way through a field of 28 pro. ceeded to cut and chop his way to 19 18, and then flashed across to service aces to win the game, match and championship. COMMUNITY CENTER TO OPEN PLAYGROUND AT THE CITE OF 22ND AND PAUL STREETS Miss Madeline Shipman, Mid City Community Center Supervisor, an nounced plans have been complet’d for the opening of the Center’s summer playground at 22nd and Paul Sts. In presenting the project the Cen ter again takes the spotlight among Community centers as the leader in serving its community in new and in teresting recreations. Kiddies and grownups will be do lighted in learning there will be act ivities for all. Hours will be: open 9 15 a. m. close 8 p. m. For children, games will include slides, sandboxes, swings, rings, hand icraft classes story telling, carving and whittling. Young men and women and grown ups will find their sporting appet:tes keyed up by baseball, tennis and ping Pong. Hot days will be made much more 1 pleasant by numerous showers, heavy sprays cascading over heated bodies with pleasingly tingling fingers. Miss Madeline Shipman, Center Social Head, is to be congratulated on again performing the community such a service as Omaha’s leading recre ation point. Martin Thomas, athletic director of the Center has H>een named as playground supervisor. CHICAGO AND CHICAGOANS by Clifford C. Mitchell SO,—THIS IS CHICAGO! And the World's Fair! But not for me. I’m in no hurry to see the Fair. The last Fair cured me. In ’26 I was in a big hurry to see the Fair at Phil adelphia. Yes, I saw it—and it took me nearly seven years to py the debt, me nearly seven years to pay the debt in no hurry—at all. I’ll not attempt to describe Chic ago’s “hot spots” or its nite life. I haven’t seen or tasted of it—although perhaps I could write descriptively of it just from drawing on past exper iences for in my day I’ve seen ’em all from San Francisco’s eld barbary coast to the resorts on the Prado and the Melican in gay old Havana and in all the cities in between these points. That was in the days of my youth and I’m no longer young. But I have seen Chicago—partic ularly the Black Belt! I seem to have an engagement with the milk man every morning. That is he is the first one I meet on leaving “home” in the morning. Years of getting up at five in the morning have left a habit that is hard to break, so I get up and in the fresh cool of the morning I see Chicago. I And what I see makes me wonder at the contrasts to be found in the | Windy City. In block after block, ! house after house, store after store, are disreputable appearing places— i empty—windows out—windows board j ed or tinned up—dirty and run down | —everything to make a genuine eye sore. Streets are dirty, pavements and sidewalks badly in need of re pairs, and alleys that are filthy. Yet 1 on each comer are scores of poor wretched hungry looking men with out work when there is work to be done all around them. A good pro moter should harness the idle labor with the powers that be,—the politic ians—the real estate owners—and the capitalists—and if nothing else could be done, the cheap labor could tear down these eye.sores, repair the streets and sidewalks, and give the alleys a thorough cleaning for once.* It et, in the papers I see no protests on these conditions but many pro tests against the inability of those with money being unable to spend it freely as and where they wish. I In the districts where the empty and run down buildings are not a positive eye-sore so many signs are to be seen in the windows that on first-glance l thought the signs had been left up since the “Harding fr President pol itical campaign. No one needs to wor ry about finding a place to stay in Chicago—for nearly every other house have “Rooms To Let” signs in the windows. Strolling around at leisure in the early morning hours we see here and there expensive looking cars at the curb of a home—but the home itself looks “seedy” beside the costly car. A good paint job on the home as well as the car might improve conditions. In many less expensive cars, early in the morning ai;e to be seen gents sleeping it off. As I stroll around workers com mence to go to their work. Some look as though they were ready to give up the ghost while here and there we see one who appears happy and gaily walks along the street sinking aloud to their heart’s content. Children come out to play in the street—bony, hungry and dirty—but happy—poor kids they don’t know what it’s all a bout. And they play in the street for all the available ground is occupied with tumble-down building that are empty—and useless. Poor kids! All of the above I see—and more. But this IS Chicago. I like it: I love its people. And I’m hapj>y! Next week at this time I’ll tell you more about Chicago—and Chicagoans. “REVEALING” YOUR PAST m PRESENT I FUTURE 1 bv Abbe’ Wallace 11 “YOUNGEST MENTALIST ON THE AMERICAN STAGE” M. R. B.—My boy friend sent me a letter and said for me to meet him Sunday night on the same corner we always meet. When I got there, he was talking to another girl and they left me standing there flat. Why does he do this to me? Ans: Your boy friend is not respon sible. This is only one of the few things this rival of yours is going to pull over your eyes. If you aren’t ( careful you will lose your boy friend altogether, for tihs mamma means business. F. R. W.—Please help me Dr. Abbe, please. My daughter has not been home since she left to go to a dance the other night. I have tried every hospital, also the police station. I am frantic. Ans: Your daughter is spending a most enjoyable honeymoon at the World’s Fair in Chicago. oYu will hear from her within two or three days. If you will look in her jewelry box on her dressing table, you will find a note she left for you. C. M. S.—Will this girl friend of mine do what she told me that she was going to? I think she is only teasing. Ans: oYu bet your life she will. I predict a shot-gun wedding. L. M. I.—Kind Sir: Why is it that! the ladies don’t seem to like my style ? Ans: Because you are so fond of it yourself. I suggest that you write to me privately and I will go over your case in detail. P. S. A.—I received my book of For -CLASSIFIED ADS- • 3 Room Furnished Apt., WE. 3707 Wig Making, Curls, and etc. AT.7356 We Specialize in Kitchenette Apart, ments. That’s why we can give you the best prices. WEbster 2113 L. W. Walker Furnished Room for Rent, WE. 4162 Don’t be misled by old time brands "marked down to 5c.’’ JOHN RUSKIN always was and,always will be America’s Greatest Cigar Value at 5c. It is the o»ly real 10c. quality cigar selling at 5c. JOHN RUSKIN has more than 60% choice Havana filler, giving it a taste and aroma all its own. Buy a few today and learn for yourself what real smoking enjoyment is. «. ^Ab^sHK THEY ARE MACTUAISI71 BEDEEHABLE v / t*-*»«t-' I L Lewis Cigar Mfg. Co. Mhra, Newark, N. I.1 Typewriting, Criticism, Correction, Revision. Sermons, Addresses and Special Articles Supplied. WE HAVE A PLAN TO PUBLISH BOOKS BY NEGRO AUTHORS 516 Minnesota Avenue Kansas City, Kansas bidden Knowledge and was very well pleased. I am sending another dollar to get one for my brother. The ans wers to your questions turned out exactly right. Please put this one in the paper. Is it wise to dispose of my business. Ans: You will not get your price for it if you do. It will pay you to wait until fall. B. B.—Has anything that I have written any financial value? What is the best course for me to pursue? Ans: I contact success coming to you in your chosen vocation but you can’t expect this to take place overnight. It will take plenty of hard work. A. D.—Will I ever win the love of my boy friend ? Ans: You will not, and you know the reason why. R. C. is more interested NOTE:—Your question printed free in this column. For Prviate reply send 25c and (self addressed stamped enevelope for my New Astrological Read ing and reeive by return mail my advice on three questions free. Sign your full name birthdate, and correct address. Adress Abbe’ Wallace, P. 0. Box—11, Atlanta, Georgia. Shirts Finished 8c When Finished out of Wet Wash—Thrifty—R. D. Linen Bdles. EVANS LAUNDRY Phone - JA. 0243 Tires and Tubes BATTERIES and SPARK PLUGS —See— Redick Tower Garage 15th and Harney Ross Drug Store Now Located At 2122 N. 24th St. We. 2770 ARE YOU CRITICAL ABOUT YOUR LAUNDRY WORK? of Course You Are. Try Our Semi Flat at 6c per Pound with Shirts Finished at 8c each Edholm & Sherman —LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING— 2401North 24th St. WEbster 6055 RHEUMATISM? BACKACHE? NEURALGIA? Do yoa know what yoa are taking: for these complaints! _YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO TRY_ CLOVA'TABS A doctor's prescription, scientifically prepared and founded on a phv«iVian’« hospital research'and experience tn private practice. If vonr d’o^rist cannot supply von SEND FOR A BOY TODAY —DO NOT DELAY—CTOVAfTA HQ. P.O. Box 18, Collegrs Btat, New York City Mai! this coppon with 50 cents (Send no stamps) ... CLOVA-TABB, F. O. Bos It. Colic** Static*. How York OH* * Nam* ....... Addreaa ....... |.pp. ha ___Po«d Offlee ... State ........a [ in your girl friend than in yourself. _ 0 R. L.—When will my aunt get out of the trouble that she is in now? Ans: Just as soon as yon raise the 1 ten bucks to get her out of jail. She Would do as much for you an I believe that you will be repaid in more ways than one for your aid. T. P.—Can I trust th lady who handles my business for me?. Ans: You are fortunate in finding a girl who takes the interest in your j business this little lady does. She ! knows her stuff and there are very | few customers that come into your i place that don't spend some money before they leave. She is all business and as honest as the day is long. B. H. A.—Ever since the first of this spring I have read your column every day without missing a paper. I enjoy it immensely and everybody that I talk to about it enjoys it too. I won der if you will tell me when to take my trip that I plan? Ans: Don’t take this trip with these people you plan to. Their car will break down a dozen times between here and Chicago and you will have to spend your hard earned money to keep the old bus moving. Go by train, it will be cheaper in the long run. The first week in August will suite well. MID CITY COMMUNITY CENTER’S KITCHEN DRIVE OVER THE TOP Too much praise cannot be given Mrs. T. P. Mahammitt and her co workers on the first reports of the kitchen drive. Over $100.00, includ ing the donation of a 110 piece set of dishes was realized. The drive will continue until July 1st. Many plans are being made for the recreational activities for the sum mer months. During the summer months the library will be open from 2 p. m. until 5:30 p. m. and 7 p. m. —to 9 p. m. Mrs. Evelyn Singleton in charge. ftStynewsboys^to DELIVER The OMAHA GUIDE TO YOUR DOOR