Roosevelt Goes to Warm Springs Georgia for Rest WASHINGTON, November 22— (CNS)—President Roosevelt left the White House, Friday November 17 for a two week’s stay at Warm Springs, Georgia, for rest and re creation. Negro spirituals will be sung for him on November 24, by the Emory University Glee Club of Atlanta, Georgia. The occasion will be the pre sentation when Georgia Hall, a new unit of the Warm Springs Founda tion will be turned over to the Presi dent as head of the fundation. Treat ment for the after effects of infantile paralysis is given at Warm Springs. Guests at the dinner will include county chairman of the Georgia Hall campaign — the $100,000 structure having been built with public sub scriptions—and those who were sub stantial contributors to the fund. While at the Springs President Roosevelt may be given a demonstra tion of what it is hoped may prove a peanut oil cure for infantile para lysis by Dr. George W. Carver world renowned chemist of Tuskegee Insti tute, Alabama. Dr. Carver holds the Spurgeon Medal and the Harmon award for the greatest achievements in science, and is a membej. of the Harmon award for the greatest achievements in science, and is a member of the Royal Scientific So ciety of Loudon. Dr. Carver is sow experimenting with peanut oil on twe Georgia boys suffering from infantile paralysis. For the last three men tbs they have been going twice a month to Tuake goe for treatment. Crawford, Held A* Murder er, Once Helped Save .. Guard’s Life RICHMOND, Va., November 22— (CNS)— George Crawford, now held for murder after being brought back from Massachusetts while a convict i* a State road camp in 1923, helped save the life of a State guard when the latter was attacked with a knife by another convict. Governor Byrd shortended Crawford's tertn by a year for the act. Crawford is reported to have had a bad record the first of his two terms and for part of his second term. He escaped twice and lost 20 per cent of his good conduct time on another oc casion for refusing to go to work. Crawford was born in Richmond and lived here most of his life. He was convicted here in 1921 for re-1 ceiving and concealing stolen goods, and was sentenced to three years in the penitentiary. He escaped the fol lowing year and was not recaptured until arrested on a grand larceny charge several months later. He was convicted and received a five year sentence. He escaped a second time in 1925, but was recaptured the following day. For the two escapes he received three additional years, as well as two years for being a second offender. H;s total sentences exceed 11 years. Crawford was released from the penitentiary on November 23, 1930. GARNET WILKINSON, DWIGHT HOLMES TO STUDY EDUCA TION WASHINGTON, November 22_(C NS)— Garnet C. Wilkinson, assistant superintendent of public schools and Dean Dwight O. W. Holmes of How-1 ard University, have named by Dr.: Paul C. Stetson, president of the de-| partment of superintendence of the National Education Association, as members of a National committee on a National Outlook on Education, which will report at the Cleveland convention of the department in Feb ruary. I roblems of teacher training, a comprehensive program of public education, school finance, education ior the new America, public educa tion and public Welfare and the in t- preiation of the schools to the public will be subjects reported on '■»' other committees at the depart ment meeting. Warn Governor Pinchot To Aid in Berwyn School Fight PHILADELPHIA, Pa., November -2—(CNS)— “Unless you take posi tive steps to eradicate the vicious policy of segregation in Berwyn, Devon and Strafford, the Negro citi zenry of Pennsylvania through their -ganizations are determined to de feat your candidacy for the United States Senate,” is the warning re cently sent to Govemoj. Gifford Pin chot in the matter of the segregation of Negro children of school age in he towns mentioned. Failure to use his official influence with Attorney General W. A. Schnad er, and Dr. James N.. Rule, head of the Department of Public Instruction, to have Negro children admitted to schools in their neighborhood as provided in the State school code, Governor Pinchot will fail under the ban as cited. The Governor is told that the re cent Democratic victory in Philadel phia, as a result of which he wired Philadelphia citizens that he was "tickled to death,” should serve as a warning to him. “The 500,000 Negro es of Pennsylvania will vote against you unless you at once and without delay end this illegally established! “Jim Crow” school system that exists in certain Pennsylvania towns,” the Governor was also told. WOMAN WHO SAW JOHN BROWN HANGED, DIES IN WEST VIRGINIA CHARLESTOWN, W. Va., Nov ember 22 — (CNS) — Mrs. Dolly' Thompson, 84 years old, who lived next door to the jail in which John Biown the noted abolitionist was in carcerated, and saw him on his way to be hanged, died here last week. Mrs. Thompson was the mother of 15 children, ten of whom survive her. There are nine grandchilden and four great grandchildren. The surviving children are Drs. S. H. Thompson and J.. R.. Thompson of Kansas City, Kansas; Frank Thomp son of Los Angeles, California; Dav id and William Thompson; Mrs. Louise Saunders and Mrs. Sadie Mil ler, Philadelphia; Mrs. Marie Hol mes; Chicago; Mrs. Fannie Preston, Port Deposit, Maryland; and Mrs.. Margurite Cross of Charlestown. WOMEN WIN DAMAGE SUITS FOR BEING SEARCHED IN DRUG STORE RICHMOND, Va., November 22— (CNS)—Mrs. Gertrude Tabb and her sister Mrs. Katie Lee were awarded verdicts in damage suits against the People’s Drug stores, Inc., A. R. Fry manager of the Broad and Fifth Street sto-re, A. F. Parrish assistant manager, and Sarah C. Gentry clerk, jointly and severally, for stripping ;he plaintiffs of their clothing last May when they were searched for $1.07 claimed to have been stolen. The verdicts one given Mrs. Tabb for $1,060 and the other to Mrs. Lee for $250, were awarded by two juries in Law and Equity Court after hear ing evidence of the humiliation caused the two women when they were stripped of their elotking. The plaintiffs alleged that they were lorcibly detained by the manager and assistant manager and charged with stealing $1.07 which had been plant ed in the dressing room. They avered that the young white woman clerk disrobed them to search for the money which was not found. THE REV. W. H. STOKES WIN8 LIBEL SUIT AGAINST THEO DORE W. JONES RICHMOND, Va., November 22— (CNS)—The Rev. William H. Stokes, who was recently retired from the pastorate of Ebenezer Baptist Church after a service of 25 years, wins a verdict of $1,500 damages a gainst Theodore W. Jones one of his former members for libel. The suit grew out of the retirement of the Rev. -Stokes who claimed hat he had been libeled by Jones who was prom inent in the movement that culminat ed in the Rev. Stoke’s retirement. GIVE YOUR OWN BOY AND GIRL A CHANCE TO EARN AN HONEST LIVING AND RESPECT ABLE JOB BY TRADING WITH THE SQUARE DEAL GROCERY j STORES. YOU OWE $2,000 ! You, the average citizen, are in debt $2,000. So is your wife. So are each of your children and all other relatives. So is everyone else in the country. A part of this debt you know about. You contracted it as a per sonal obligation. It’s entirely your responsibility. But another—and lar ger part — was contracted fop you. The chances are that you don’t even realize you owe it—no one is dunning you for payment, and you aren’t so much as paying the interest directly. This latter is the public debt, which composes a substantial pro . -tion of a total national debt in excess of $220,000,000. It’s been growing at an accelerated rate dur ing and since the war. You’ve per mitted it to grow. You and your fel low citizens weren’t sufficiently in terested in government to work for policies standing for economy and efficiency. Or you voted for measures that increased the debt because it was easy to do, and didn’t seem to affect you financially at all. As a result we are paying one of tho highest tax rates in history. Mil lions of our dollars go yearly to meet the' interest on debt we per mitted government to contract for us. Billions will be required to re tire the public bonds we gave our debtors in exchange for their mon ey. And every business, every in Do your part, as a voter and tax payer, to reduce the national debt, by opposing projects which would ncrease It. A GO0B RESOLUTION FOR 1934 It’s a little early yet for New Year's resolutions, but here’s one worth considering—“I'll do my part to reduce fire waste in 1934.” If a hundred million Americans did resolve that, and didn’t drop it along about the second week of Jan uary with the resolution concerning smoking, the nation would have a splendid start toward winning a dif ficult and ancient fight. We have long been the most prodigal of peo ple when it comes to fire. We’ve sacrificed thousands of lives and millions of dollars to it—precisely as ihj peoples of the pre-christian era sacrificed their victims to the god of flame. In those days the reason was superstition — in ours it is a com bination of ignorance and laziness. And one is as reprehensible as the other. h ires mean high rax rates. They mean terror and misery and disaster. They mean stultification and despair. They’ve ruined whole communities. Their total economic waste can’t be expressed accurately in figures—the direct loss comes to between four hundred and five hundred million a year, and the indirect waste is sev eral times as great. I I :v, ,■ ;, ■ pip • ■ v raggy. , j Spend A Dollar And Make A Job - Square Deal Stores Delivery ... . Nov. 23 to 26 FRESH COUNTRY EGGS, ' ’dozen 18c MELO CUP . 7. COFFEE* '!’•can 29c SUGAR,10 pounds 55c OMARFLOUR.I!b ?ag 29c w!bBag 53c;241b-Bag $1.10 RARE TREAT SALAD DRESSINGjar !0c2 5C TOILET TISSUE,«rpIb 25c CORN FLAKES,largepackage 10c CREAMERY BUTTER ?b 22*c SQUARE DEAL . COFFEE !b 19c CRACKERS,2 !b ?dy 25c SWEET . POTATOES’ Y.ellow y.ams 6 "*• 25c PRUNES,311* '. 25c GRAPE FRUIT,6 for 25c HEALTH CLUB BAKING POWDER 12 oz can 10c , MEAT SPECIALS HAMBURGER,pound 10c CHILI1 ,b Brick PORK ROASTpound 10r smoked . j-Uftn 1'__— PIG HEARTS, pound jy2Q PURE LEAF _7 _1_ LARD 3 !bs.25e SALT PORK,pound 10c BACON,»,b-package 10c STEAK-Short Cut ,b.15c -:--— Haydens Market Montgomery Grocery Voner & Houston 2637 FRANKLIN ST. AT. 8812 2531 LAKE ST. WE. 0226 2114 N. 24th ST. JA. 3543 Adams9 Grocery Carey'sNalJOFllOOd GrOCBry Colquitt Grocery 1313 N. 26th ST. AT. 2543 27th & GRANT ST. WE. 6089 2754 LAKE ST. WE. 3091 We cash Federal Relief Oraers. Ask that your order be written on the above named stores. Go to Voner and Houston for Red Snaper Fish Conquering fire in 1934 would give recovery a mighty impetus. It would save jobs and payrolls and homes and farms and producing in dustries. It would keep money at work that would otherwise be de stroyed and made useless. Make that resolution! REGULATE TRANSPpRTATION! In a recent address concerning the need for adequate and equitable re gulation of all forms of transporta tion, Carl R. Gray, Presid nt of the Union Pacific System, said: “The position of the railoads is not in it self alarming. So far as the depres sion period is concerned, the rail carriers face the same conditions as other enterprises— a greatly lessen ed business. In the necessity that hey maintain a certa n fixrd service, 'h r.' '!•> hsve a definite disability not experienced by business which is not vested with a public interest. On the other hand they possess unique ele ments of advantage in that there has been proven to be a stage below which traffic cannot be depressed. The nation be fed, clothed, and kept warm, and in the supply of these vital needs the railroads provide the _n;ial service. The problems of h .-a., c serve on a Federal jury in this sec tion in decades. • T . , i --—y You never do thus— Why do THIS? # You never take a spark plug from one cylinder of your car to replace the plug of another cylinder. Why borrow a lamp bulb from one socket to re place the lamp in another? For this not only puts one fixture out of service; it exposes you and your family to eye strain from improper, inadequate light. Have spare lamps on hand. Get a carton of thrifty General Electric Mazda lamps today ... then you will be sure of good, economical, eye-saving light. BETTER LIGHT - BETTER SIGHT Nebraska Power € Courtesy - Service • Low Rate* “A Good Citizen Wherever We Serve" Omaha Poultry Market Phone WEbster 1100 1114 North 24th Stseet I the little red j HEN SAID TO THE ! LITTLE RED ROO STER, ‘WHY DON’T YOU COME UP SOME TIME I AM NO ANGEL’ LIVE AND DRESSED TURKEYS GEESE, DUCKS AND CHICK ENS. STRICTLY FRESH COUN TRY EGGS, PRICES REASON ABLE. SEE US FIRST