- OMAHA flUf IH A ft T I T GUIDE — “No Man was ever III' I I I 111 I I jj I II I The eye of a Master will Glorious who was not _ M I I I I I I BK I f \ I do more work than his Lab°rOUS” - ~~ City, ana Nat’l Lite | VlllAfl Marc:/, o/ Events hand Omaha, Nebraska, Saturday, September 30, 1933 Page Five THE OMAHA GUIDE Published Every Saturday at 2418-20 Grant Street by THE OMAHA GUIDE PUBL. CO., Incorporated All News Copy must be in our office not later than Monday at 5 p. m.,and all Advertising Copy, or Paid Articles, net later than Wednesday at Noon. Entered as Second class mail matter, .March lo, 1927 at the Post office at Omaha, Nebraska, under the act of Congress of March 3. 1879. . SUSCRIPTION RATES (Strictly m Advance) One Years. ..$2.00 Six Months . . $1.25 Three Months. . $1.00 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—The Omaha Guide is issued weekly and will be sent to any part of the Uni ted States for $2.00 per year in advance. 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( irr-^p 19 s m jjr; > 1 This pajvr i* represented for general #4 j m W advertising by th»* Nebraska Preas , ® Association. y EDITORIAL OBSERVATIONS OF “A STRANGER WITHIN YOUR GATES” One feels a strange and peculiar satis faction on finding oneself in a in a city where they are not generally known, moving in and out among the people, hearing their expressions of faith and confidence in the integrity and ability of some moving, progressive man or woman of the community on the one hand, and on the other hearing others condemn ev erybody and everything who may have the tinerity to attempt to put over any proposition for the-good of the public in general. At times it is rather amusing. Not so much by the strife engendered as the secret pleasure one gets from the mental exchange of positions of the per sons doing the condemning and fault finding with the one who is being con demned. The kicker is as old as the creation. The Good Book speaks of it. “Ephram waxed fat and kicked”. One peculiar trait of those who condemns the actions of those who try to build. Those who essay to build in a great number of cases fail utterly. Not so with those who try to destroy and retard every forward step.—They never fail — for the reason they never try to lend their aid to any forward progressive movement, and not having the initiative or ability to form ulate a plan where it requires the quali ties of leadership to promulgate a gen eral forward movement requiring col lective efficiency to bring the desired re sult whereby the whole race may be bene fited. Consequently the onyl way they can ever fail is when they are unable to attract others to aid them in their de structive ambition. At times, especially, depressive times like these, people may from a fit of hy steria lose sight of the true worth of those who have made the sacrifice and stood the test of depration, persecution and death that those who follow after may be benefited, may listen to the voice of the sirens of Hate and envy until they lose sight of the value and worth of such unselfish characters, that if they don’t help stone him to death—they will hold the clothes wThile the others does the throwing. But when history gets a hear ing and once the hysteria has subsided and the people again can see clearly their reactions wall be responsive to good sense and to just conclusions. For ages the hardest task with which man has been confronted, was how’ best to govern man. As a people we must solve the same problem. Can it be solved by throwing stones? Calling names? find ing fault? distrust, suspicion, hate and emy? We have tried that method lo’ these many years and we are still in the wild erness. Evidently w7e must retrace our steps. There is a way out—we must find it—And w7e must find it together—Trust ing God and an unselfish Leadership, magnify the virtues of truth, patience and tolerance, believing all things, hoping all things with a supreme faith in God and an everlasting confidence in Leader ship. Let us close ranks, advance on the enemy in a solid phalanx and the victory is ours. ‘THE NEGRO’S OPPORTUNITY AND RESPONSIBILITY IN NATIONAL RECOVERY’ By DANIEL C. ROPER PHILADELPHIA—(CNS)—The Hon orable Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce, as a representative of the Roosevelt Administration appeared be fore a large gathering in Convention Hally Friday evening September 22, as the principal speaker at the 70th Anni versary Celebration of Negro Progress. Mr Roper’s appearance on the celebra tion program was the result of an invita tion extended by a committee, consisting of Major R R Wright, chairman; the Rev. J. H. Dwelle, the Rev. J. E. Philpot, T. H. Hill, ad others, who visited Wash ington and extended the invitation to a member of President Roosevelt’s cabinet. Mr. Roper chose as the subject of his address: “The Negro’s Opportunity and Repsonsibility in National Recovery” a very timely subject, as many Negroes throughout the country are fairing poor ly under some of the provisions of the N. R. A. codes of fair competition and de cided ill under many manipulations of the same. Mr. Roper took occasion to say: “The increasingly difficult economic problems of our complex society require cooperative thinking and sympathetic support to bring about a solution of all Government problems. It is in recognition of this fact, and with paticular apprecia tion of your place in this program that I initiated recently in the Department of Commerce, a movement toward a closer cooperation between this Department and the Colored people. The Department of Commerce was instituted to encourage, foster and develop business, and, with your interests and welfare in mind, I in vited a committee of capable and exper ienced colored leaders to confer with me on the best methods of solving problems bearing upon Negro business conditions. It is my thought that this committee will serve as a clearing house on matters re lating to your problems, and I shall, with the committee’s assistance, select a man of your race who will be located in the Department of Commerce He will be charged with the responsibility of mak ing business and commercial studies con cerning the (Negroes’ economic problems and their relationship to our national economic program. Through this new set up, we hope to develop plans to help the colored business men to better under stand and accept the highest American standards and practices of business and commerce. I interpret it as my patriotic duty to assist those groups of business people in poorer circumstances to gain the efficiency and advantages of those who are in better circumstances. In this, I am endeavoring to express the spirit of the “NEW DEAL”—the spirit of the Square Deal as it is interpreted and practiced by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.” Many people have been unable to con trol their greed and selfishness, thinking more, of material possessions than of the infinitely more important welfare of hu man. beings. These exclusively selfish motives and objectives have led us to dangerous extremes; in fact, they have brought upon us the greatest economic cataclysm of all times. This unprecedent ed economic catastrophe swept millions into unemployment, paralyzed our pro duction, our distribution and financial processes, and carried us all into a dismal swamp of despair. Most fortunately, we found and put into the White House, du ring this disastrous crisis, a leader with a chart and a compass and possessed of a heart and mind devoted to humanity. His chart shows a program in the interest of all the people—and he quite naturally lebels it — “NATIONAL RECOVERY.” In this great struggle to attain a better and happier condition for all our people, everyone can find and should fulfill his opportunity and responsibility to serve. “The loyalty and patriotism of your people guarantee a sustained, cooperative attitude on your part in meeting the chal lening task that faces us all. “It is natural for you to ask what you can do to assist in this battle for national recovery. My answer is that you have two opportunities for service; the first prompts your help in making the emer gency N. R. A. program a success. Every revolution brings with it certain hard ships for some of the people. But we should recognize and understand that while rough spots and hardships in the hurried program cannot be prevented we can and should strive to make them tem porary in nature. “The second line of service and cooper ation relates to the problem of long term economic planning and future business stability for our people. Our long term problems cannot be postponed until the present emergency is over. They must be evolved and built upon the foundation of our immediate recovery program. It is with especial reference to this that our newly formed Negro Advisory Council will direct its studies and efforts through conference with the Secretary of Com merce.” In closing Mr. Roper said: “In the seventy years since your eman cipation, your people have created a heri tage of enobling characteristics and racial accomplishments that should pro vide a great inspiration for meeting your problems of today and planning for your attainments of "tomorrow. The United States Government guarantees to you the inalienable right to the 'pursuit of life, liberty and happiness.’ It is under this Flag that you secured your emancipa tion. This should be a symbol of the American ideal of freedom and of the in creasing opportunities for you and for all under the guiding principles of the Con stitution of the United States.” Pres- Addresses Workers ( Continued from p. 1) before. Defines Federal Relief Policy I believe we Americans do not wish to see a permanent extension of pure_ ly government operationg carried to the extent of relieving us of our in_ responsibilities as citizens, and it is with that thought in mind that very early in this administration we laid down in regard to one portion of this great picture a somewhat simple rule When we came to the problem of meeting the emergency of human needs we did not rush blindly in and say: “The government will take care of it ” We approached it from the other angle first We said to the people of this country: “When you come to the problem of relief you face the individual family, the in_ dividual man, woman and child who lives in a particular locaity, and the first objective and the first necessity is that the citizens of that comm, unity, through the churches, the com_ munity chestj the social and charit. able organizations of the community are going to be expected to do their utmost extent first Then we come to this second need, or objective, and that is the participation of local, government in the additional need. Local Governments Must Do Their Part We demand that local government shall do its share to the utmost, and then, if that is not sufficient, if those two features do not meet the needs, we come to the next unit, the state, and if that still is not enough, if the state has done everything it reason, ably should do, then obviously the Federal government must step in, be_ cause, whjle it isn’t written in the Constitution, nevertheless, it is the tion Of course, in an organization of inherent duty of the Federal govren. ment to keep it citizen from strava. that kind. I suppose-that there is a certain tendency to feel, “If we don’t do it, the Federal government will.” Municipalities or counties feel,! “if we don’t do it the state govern, private organization, and individuals ment will,” or a local organization, say, “well, if we don’t do it, the municipalities will.” In other words, putting the burden on somebody else with the general thought in the back of our heads “if we don’t do it some body else will.” And, in the last ana. lysis the kindness of Uncle Sam will see to it that we don’t fail. Problem of Lagging States We have had a great many exam, pies of late of areas in this country, areas which have not done their share and are coming, hat in hand, to the Federal government, and saying, “we want Federal relief.” There have been stats which have not done their share — states where the problem of relief have got mixed up with poli. tics; Legislatures that are thinking in political and not in human terms. There are municipalities which are going ahead with the spending of the taxes for political purposes and then find they haven’t any money left for relief purposes A a in giaa to say that those indi. vidual cases are diminishing in num. her because the people of this coun_ try understand it and are telling the government bodies, local or state, that they have got to “play ball” and not shirk There are a lot of cases which are so close to the border line of emergency that they do not be. long to the border relief problem. Yesterday the Governor of South Dakota came to my office with some extraordinary pictures of farm lands where grasshoppers had devoured ev erything down to the roots. Where there isn’t anything left for man or beast to eat; where many thousands of farmers are not faced just with the temporary problem of being helped out a little here and a little there, but with the fact that neither they nor their livestock have any chance of getting anything to live on until next summer some time. There is an emergency. We are going to try to take care of it as an emergency It comes very close to the border 'line— where the Red Cross has got to step in because it ig a peculiar kind of disaster and does not result from flood or fire. Expects More Local Relief There are cases in some of the coal mining sections of this country where families have been starving week in and week out over a long period of time and where the community or the state failed to do their share These are not disasters in the same sense or with the same result that grasshoppers and floods are respon. sibls The point I want to make is this: You have a very great oppor_ tunity, not merely to keep people from starving. You have a further opportunity of inculcating the un_ derstanding that we have to build from the bottom up—not merely to supply food from the top down. There will be a tendency this year in obtaining the wherewithal for lo_ cal relief for people to say, “We can’t do it.” I believe they can do it, big. ger this year and more generously, more successfully this year than they could last Taking it by and large, the country is in a much more hope, fui frame of mind. People have more money to spend and more time in which to do it. It isn’t only the fact that a great many people have al_ eady been put back to work, the fact that people of property have been getting more from rents; there are fewer defaults on bonds and mor. tgages. Absolved From Forty Hour Week I believe today that you can go forth, in the spirit of the N R A , and work under it. You, of course, are going to work a great deal more than forty hours a week I want to tell you that you are hereby absolved from the N R A.—if you want to work. seventy hours a week, go to it. The executive branches of the United States government, and some of the othj” branches of the government also are exempt I think you must go into this cam. paign with the right to expect greater success this year than last Tell ev_ erybody that we are a little bit like the old railroad train that has to travel up a long grade The first thing to do is to get that train start, ed, and the more we can accelerate the pace of that train, the more cer. tain it is that it is going to get over the top. We have got the train start_ ed and it is running, let us sayf twen ty miles an hour. We must get that train to go forty miles an hour, and then there is an assurance that it will go over the top Community Chest Work All of this community chest work, all of the uniting in the cause of meeting human needs, is based on that old word “cooperation ” During the war when I was on the other side the Prime Minister of England, Llyod George, was lunching with me at the American Embassy one day and our Ambassador said something about our cooperation in winning the war Lloyd George turned to me ventive —you have imagination — will you please send word back home that the British government will offer a prize of L10,000 to any American who will discover some other word to take the place of ‘cooperation’ V’ No one has ever won the prize. The point I wish to make is that there are a great many people in this country who are going to say: “Oh, I have given, I am helpng through such and such an organzation, through such and such an individual; leave me out ” There is no such thing as being left out. They can’t be left out. They have got to join you Because, unfortunately, we know the frailty of a certain type of human nature that says something like that as an excuse for not doing his or her part Indiv.dual Responsibility The government cannot get along without you. The Federal, state and local government can’t The whole period we are going through will come back in the end to indivdual citizens to individual responsbility to private organzation, through the years to come We are going to have unemployed throughout the United States, and we know it. I hope, though, the time is going to come when government will not have to give relief I hope the time is going to come soon when everybody who normally wants a permanent job is going to get it. And so I like to think of government relief of all kinds as emergency relief Your work has a twofold purpose. 1 ou are meeting the emergency and at the same time you are building for the future Community chests are go j mg to keep on just as long as any oi us ace alive — and a mighty good ; thing they are too. I tell you very simply that you have a great responsibility on your shoulders; and I know that you are going to fulfill it. You are going back to your states and your communities and give them this message from me—this work is an essential part of the government’s program, the. pro. gram of the people of the United States to bring us back to where this country has as right to be So, get to it and make a record not only of money but a record of service of which we shall all be very pioud. TOWL EXPECTS HOUS ING PLANS READY TUES Groups Finish Work Lead ing to Project for Improve ment of North 24th Street Real estate men, architects, Coun. ty Assessor Greenleaf, County Trea. surer Baumani offciers of building and loan companies and city officials are cooperating so successfully in the proposed housing project along No 24th Street that all preliminaries will be out of the way by next Tuesday, Mayor Towl said Wednseday. “We hope to have the proj_ ject s« well worked by next week that it will be ready to submit to the federal government,” the mayor said. SURVEYS COMPLETED Real estate men have made sur_ veys of the district extending from Paul to Clark Streets and from 18th to 24th Streets, and architects, ac_ companied by Philip Klutznick, as_ sistant city attorney, were to make a trip through the district Wednes. day afternoon. The architects are George B Prinz, William L Steele and Alan McDonald Mayor Towl said all the facts and figures relating to the property and the mortgages thereon will have been compiled by the end of the week so that the cost of the proposed rehab, ilitation of the district can be esti. mated PARKWAYS IN PLAN The project includes parkways and playgrounds throughout the district as well as the renovating, remodeling and rebuilding of houses and the er_ ection of new dwellngs. Some old houses in the district already have been torn downf in anticipation of the improvement Mayor Tow] said he also had in mind a similar project centering around 28fn and R Sts in South Omaha He said the district was run down and that streets were unpaved and badly washed away, making the property of little value in its present condition PALMTAG PUT IN CHARGE OF MORALS SQUAD Myers Says He will Shake Group Up Now and Then; Works Under Commissioner A new leader of the police morals squad Detective Sergt. Fred Palmtag —was announced by Police Commis. sioner Frank Myers Tuesday night, as well as a new policy of shifting supervision of the squad at irregulai intervals among Chief of Police Geo. rge Allen and Inspectors Samardick and A C Andersen Palmtag, Commissioner Myers an. nouced, will replace Sergt. George Brigham as head of the squad or October 1, and will work under di. rection of Chief of "Detectives A C Andersen, Brigham hag been taking orders from Chief Allen and his pre. : decessor worked under Inspector Samardick The purpose behind the change oi policy, Myers said, is to insure a ‘‘square deal" for all in the conduct of police law enforcement. “While I have o fault to find with Samardick or Allen in the way the squad has been directed,” he said. “I feel that the new sys. tern will prove more satisfactory. “It will create better feeling generally because the heads of morals squads, unconsciously or i otherwise, might play favorites. I Each head of the squad, as I ro_ i tate the supervision, will take command and handle the pro. blems in his own way.” Myers said that “against every head of the raiding squad there made accusations of persecution and fav_ oritism, and I feel that by shifting the exofficio head of the squad from time to time everybody will feel he is getting a square deal.” The changes can be mad at any time at his discretion Myers said. They may come on a moment’s no_ tice, and the succeeding head can select his own raider. He said, however, that he had of. fered th: raiding post to Palmtag and Palmtag had accepted it Palmtag is to confer with Myers and Andersen on the personnel of the sQ.uad, but will be permitted his own recom. mendation of assistants The commissioner also revealed he already is considering ways of deal, ing with the flood of legal hard li_ quor which he anticlates will start flowipng into Omaha from Iowa and , Missouri after repeal becomes ef_ fective in November, as now seems | likely ROOSEVELT READY TO STATE PLAN OF CREDIT EXPANSION (Special to The Omaha Guide) NEW YORK—President Roosevelt was to return to his home at Hyde Park Wednesday, obviously confident of the national recovery drive and ready to lay down the terms for putting credit to work to make suc_ cess assured A series of talks with financial leaders convinced his advisers he was about to make known his desires for expanding credit through regular channels as the alternative :o out_ right currency inflation. Welcomed by a crowd that swarmed over his route from Pennsylvania station, Mr. Roosevelt remained Tuesday night and early Wednesday at the family residence on East 65th St., with his own folks A call by Jes(e I Straust ambas. sador to France, was regarded unof_ ficially as meaning France was con_ sidering the two defaulted war debts payments to the United States The President visited the metro_ polis to have a family reunion and say good bye to his eldest son, James who sailed at midnight for Europe with his wife, Betsy. James is going to London and Paris on a trip de_ scribed as a vacation. There is spe_ culation whether he will go to Rus_ sia In the quiet of his ancestral estate at Hyde Park on the banks of the Hudson river, the President will watch the national recovery drive and outline shortly his ideas for putting idle cash in closed banks and frozen bank deposits to work to support his price lifting campaign His immediate object is the release of funds in closed banks, but he is al_ so watching steps by open banks to put their resources to work. There is increasing belief the Presi dent will go to the American Legion convention opening in Chisago next Monday. SEARS SPENDS MILLION IN STATE IN 3 YEARS Sears Roebuck and Company, spent $1,115,960 in Nebraska during 1930, 1931 and 1932, according to figures received by J L McCormack, man. ager of the local store, from D. M Nelson, vice president of the company in charge of merchandising The report, prepared in connection with plans for its 47th anniversary celebration now in progress, contains an account of the firm's expenditures in the state Disbursements included $326,973 for merchandise bought from 18 man. ufaeturers in Nebraska; $481,262 for wages and salaries; $165,340 for ad_ vertising, and $142,385 for rents and taxes The Great Community Builder In days gone by, the gold mining and silver mining industry made his_ tory Some of our greatest states were settled and built up as the result of mining activity. Copper, lead and zinc played a tremendous part in our industrial' development Mining has suffered severely from economic causes during the past tec: years. Today the outlook seems to be’ brighter for mining activity. If fav_ ■ orable conditions develop, it will be a I godsend to many states which have had a vivid object lesson as to the value of mining payrolls, purchasing power, employment, etc Penalizing the mines with exorbit, ani taxation will not be as popular a pastime as in the past More people will realize that condition,, which en. courage, rather than discourage min. ing, are the greatest benefit to the commonwealth 1