(Continued from Pige 1) THREE NOTABLES DIE were supposed to lay asuSe a suffit lent amount t. pay the pru t for the bury-1 ing of vote through the policy of hiring workers at the rate in some I instances of $20.00 per day. It de-! pended on the influence and posiUon of the worker in the Community At one city election, it is said that $3,000 was divided among some of the min isters in the city of Omaha. Some workers are said to have received as high as $20-00 per day for a period of ten days. ’ In the 1929 Primary it Hooked as though all the above efforts put forth had failed to get the desired results j in the Primary Election- In the sec ond ward, the Negro precincts the; counts’showed the Negroes had cast, their ballot in favor of the good gov ernment candidates- This became alarming in the underworld down 'town cabinet, and the word went out that somching must be done, money seemed not to have the pulling pbwer, that it had had in previous years. Dennison was advised by his North (jmaha spies, that he must break in on the organization of the Omaha At this time. Mr. Hiram Greenfield was circulation manager, Mrs. Cecelia Jewell was city Editor, and C. C- Gal loway, business smanager. After many conferences amongst the un derworld element. and Dennison Headquarters',. Mr. Dennison called the Omaha Guide Headquarters and asked for a conference with the of ficial staff, at the home of Mrs. Ce •oelia Jewell. Mrs- Jewell made the engagement and said she would put forth every effort to have the officials of the Omaha Guide present. Mrs Jewell extended tine invitation to the staff, and it was flatly turned down. M,r. (Galloway said, that Mr- Denni son wished to see him that he, Dennison would have to come to the ■office that he wadld not meet him at any private residence. Mrs. Green field said that Omaha politics were too filthy for any Christian person to take part in, and that she woi/ld not take part in any political activities. Mrs. Jewell filled the engagement E-V.ne, and held a lengtriy conference i ■fit.h Mr. Dennison, *nd as a result, she became the political manueverer for that ho are left on this side of the shore to start loving everybody, to stop trying to punish our enemies down here on this earth, and the job won’t i be so hard for us when we get on the other side of the shore. U. S. URGED TO RESUME RELATIONS WITH LIBERIA Washington—(CNS) — The grave situation confronting the Republic -rff Liberia and the far-reaching effects the impending disintegration of the little Republic will have on the mis sionary activities of Negro churches, as well as the loss of her sovereignty ;and automy, was called to the atten tion of the Secretary Cordell Hull, of the State Department, the past week. A group of representatives of the Foreign Mission Beards of the Na tional Convention of America, the New England Baptist Missionary Convention, the Lott Carey Baptist , Convention, A- M- E. Zion and A- M. ! E. Churches, the Methodist Episco | pal, Lutheran, Protestant Episcopal and Presbyterian Churches, and •Friends of Liberia, doing work in Liberia; niet here Wednesday Febru ary 7, in a round table conference The conference formulated a “]>etition to the United States Government urg ing that it maintain its traditional policy of helpfulness and protection to Liberia.” waning auenuun to tne lacr tnai Liberia was founded as a colony for freed American Negroes by the American Colonization Society in 18251; -that the United States Govern ment has a duty and responsibility which it cannot evade, and that the Liberian people also have a duty and responsibility to maintain a stable government which will command the respect of the powers of the world; these representatives after a day’s discussion reached the following con clusions which were transmitted to the Secretary of State: 1. That the Government of the United States be urged to resume di plomatic relations with the Republic of Liberia. 2. That the League of Nations Pan of Assistance to Liberia in her present crisis be thoroughly consid-' ertd in the light and spirit of Li beria’s reservations, and that the Li berian Government be urged to do everything possible to regain the tra ditional interest and support of the American Government A. (The “reservations” here re ferred to are those that may not have been considered by the League of Nations-) B- (It was the general feeling of the conference that the acceptance of the plan as it may finally be ap proved by the League of Nations af ter consideration of the reservations adopted by the Liberian Legislature January 12, 1934, is essential to the political independence and stability of Liberia, and its economic and so cial progress.) C- (Further, it was the feeling i of the Conference that the appoint ment of an American Advisor will greatly contribute to the restoration of the traditional interest and sup- ■ port of the American people, who! have been Liberia’s main dependence during all the years of her history.) 3- That in view of the large in vestment in Liberia of missionaries! and money by the respective foreign boards, channels of communication be kept open so that this missionary effort shall remain under the guid ance of American influences 4. It is recommended that repre sentatives of the Liberian Govern ment now enroute to America be in vited into conference by the above mentioned boards so that relation ships of good-will may be continued 5. Finally, it is recommended that representatives of the respective boards seek to convey to Negro pub Here are two homes where men want more work Which one is more likely to get a job first? The home without o telephone The home with a telephone Where a job opens up may be miles To furnish you service the 3ell Sys away . . . one might not go there at A tern provides millions of miles of the right time . . . but with a tele- [$/ wire, a vast amount of equipment phone, he can be notified. Employ- U and an army of employees. They ers call those with telephones. * are always ready to serve you. lie cpinion is America and . to all right-thinking Americans and to the Siberian Government, an earnest de sire to help preserve the sovereignty and automy of Liberia- ii is our earnest desire that there be resumed j the historical relationships of confi-; dence between the U- S. Department j of State and the Government of Li- f heria The organization of Foreign -Mis- j sion Secretaries w'hich sponsored the '• calling of the conference is officered as follows: The Rev. J. E. East, president. Philadelphia; the Rev- L L. Berry, vice-president. New York City; the Rev- H. T- Medfor-d, secre tary, Washington, D- C.; the Rev- J. H- Randolph, treasurer, Washington, D- C. Invited to sit with the representa tive.^ fur inlo.toa paiyoses and retired before the resolutions were adopted were: Jlenry L. West of the American Colonization Society; Dr-! Thomas Jesse Jones, Phelps-Stokes Fund; Harvey S. Firestone, Jr-, Fire- j store Tire and Rubber Company, j Judge Frederick C. Fisher, Expert on Legal Phases of the Liberian, situa-' tion; and George A- Kuyper, Editor Southern Wnrkman, Hampton Insti tute Among others who took part in the discussions of the conference were: Bishop W. W. Matthews, Dr- Emmett J. Scott, Mrs. A. P. Camphor, Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, Ernest Lyon. Lester A- W'alton of the New York Age; W- N- Jones of the Baltimore Afro-American; Mrs. Eva Ball White, Dr. J. C- Jackson, Dr- E. H: Allen and the Reverends, W. H- Jernagin. W- H- Thomas, J. L- S. Holloman, Samuel A. Young, Thomas S. Dono ■hugh. E. White, J. C- Lott, Hampton T* Gaskins, P. D- Perryman, W. T. -Johnson, W. O. Carrington, J- P. Reeden, Daniel C- Pope, E. L- Harri son, W. D. Jarvis, Albert J- Greeun, B_ A- Donovan, Eameat C- Smith, JL Timothy Boddie, A. J- Payne, J- C. Olden, S. N- Galloway, Walter H Brooks, Thomas W- Wallace, A. Wr Brown, CL C- Scott and H. A- Bouey ‘Bishop’ Grace Pleads Not Guilty of Violating Mann Act. NEW YORK CITY. February 13— (CNS)—Charles Manuel Grace, so called ‘Bishop Grace’ of the House of Prayer for All Peopie was arrested in Brooklyn, February 5 and taken to a Federal court where he pleaded not guilty to a Mann act charge and was held in $1,500 bail for trial on Feb ruary 19. ‘Bishop’ Grace drove up to court in a limousine, driven by a chauffer. He said he was a Portuguese. The accusation against him was made by Minnie Lee Kambell, 21 years old, who said that Grace took her from her Brooklyn home to various South ern cities- She also asserted that he was the father of her infant daugh ter. Grace lives at 965 Herkiner Street, Brooklyn, which is also the Brooklyn branch of “The House of Prayer for All People,” which ministers to in dividuals of all people. He is said to be head of churches in New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore Wash ington, and communities in Virginia and the Carolinas, with a total of 200,000 communicants. Negro Applicants Try to Buy P. W. A. Jobs at $20 Each. WASHINGTON, February 13—(C NS)—The “sale” of Public Works Administrative and CWA jobs here is under investigation as agents of the PWA hunt up witnesses to substant iate the charge that a “salesman” would approach an applicant for a job and say “I am a close personal friend of Secretary Ickes and have considerable influence,” In support of his contention, he would exhibit letters addressed to himself, containing references to Se cretary Ickes and otherwise using the administrator’s name- In addition, he would display newspaper pictures of Mrs. Ickes and clippings explaining that he was a close friend of the j Ickes family. He would then offer to place the j applicant on a PWA job for $20- Of- j ficials claim he victimized a consider able number of persons including: many colored men and women- In no ■ aase was a job obtained and now the man cannot be found in the Districtj of Coumbia January 17, 1934 Editor, The Omaha Guide, Omaha, Nebraska. Dear Sir: We wish to express our deep ap preciation for the treatment your paper has given the news items of the N- A- A. C- P. during 1933, and for the editorial comments on the Asso ation’s work. The N. A- A. C- P. could not push forward any sort of | program for the general welfare of the colored people without the co- j peration of the press- We look for ward to a year of continued cooper ation and wish for you and your pa per a prosperous and progressive j New Year Very sincerely yours, BOY WILKINS. Assistant Secretary and Director of Publicity. Plans Suggested For Rais ing Fund to Construct Ne, gro Hospitals in Certain Cities. NEW YORK CITY, February 13- - (CNS)—Hospitals to be owned and I controlled by Negroes Tn every city in the United States -with a Negro population of 10.000 or more, is sug gested and a scheme to raise $150, 000,000 over a twenty-year period is | planned to finance the building the up-to-date hospitals, is planned by Rev. Amos H. Carnegie, the origina tor of the Negro National Hospital! Fund The 12,000,000 Negroes in the United States are each to be request ed to contribute one cent a week dur ing tie twenty-year period and the proceeds used for the adequate hos pitalization of the Negro race in America and the proper training of Negro physiciaiB, nurses and social workers The plan was outlined at the Madi s o n Avenue' Methodist Episcopal Church last week. Among those who attended were the Rev. Dr. Ralph W Sodkman, Dr- 3- G- Vaughan, James N. Speers and the Right Rev. Char les £.. Gilbert, Suffragan Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of New York. l&ere will he no action taken on the formation of a board of trustees unt3 a committee of physicians has been organized by Dr- Vaughan to make definite suggestions for the improvement of present conditions. STATES MUST FIND WAY TO PUNISH MOBS Otherwise Federal Interven tion Is Inevitable, Says Interracial Head. Commenting On St. Joseph Acquittal Atlanta, Ga-, Feb. 10.—Legislation to lift lynching cases out of the “local atmosphere” and provide for their trial in communities unaffected by mob hysteria was urged here in a statement this week by Dr- W W. Alexander, director of the Commis sion on Interracial Cooperation, in commenting on the failure of the Missouri courts to convict partici pants in the recent lynching at St. Joseph. If state officers and courts coninue to manifest inability or un willingness to apprehend and convict lynchers, the intervention of the Fed eral Government is inevitable, said Dr. Alexander, adding that “a state which cannot maintain the civiliza tion of which it is the custodian need not expect the government to respect its theoretical rights " Dr. Alexan der’s statement follows in full: “The St. Joseph case is the old story over again of the failure of courts to convict in cases of mob vio lence. In the 1,880 recorded lynch ings from 1900 to 1930 convictions were obtained in only twelve in stances, or less than one per cent, in spite of the fact that in hundreds of these cases—probably in most of them—the identity of mob members was well known in the community. Local courts and juries will not con vict lynchers, even in the rare cases where officers have the courage to make arrests and grand juries the couage to indict “This condition indicates the im perative need of legislation which will automatically lift such eases out of the local atmosphere and provide for their trial in communities unaf fected by the hysteria that incited the mobs in the first place- The var-1 lous state legislatures are quite com petent to enact such legislation and in my judgment should do so at the earliest possible moment. “Otherwise, it is reasonable to ex pect that the federal government will intervene and take over jurisdiction in cases of mob murder. A state which cannot maintain the civilization » of which it is the custodian need not t expect the government to respect its: theoretical rights. The nation must ■ i-id itself of lynching. Technicalities must not stand in the wav-” I CHARLES J. THOMAS DIES Charles J- Thomas, who has been ill at the home of Mrs- E- M. Baucom, 2410 Erskine St., for the {test few weeks was removed to a local hos pital Tuesday, February 6, departed; this life Wednesday, Feb- 7, 1934. He is survived by his mother, Mrs Phyllis Birch, and sister Miss Mary Thomas of Lawrence, Kan-, and three daughters,'Mrs. Charlotte Clark of 2408 Erskine St., Omaha, Alta and Jeanette Thomas of New York City. Funeral services were held Monday, February 12, at the Myers Chapel at 10:00 A- M. In The Senate (Continued from Page 1) ficer or employee shall likewise fee guilty of a felony- On conviction the parties participating theiein shall be punished by imprisonment of n:.t Jes; than five years or for life Sec. 4. I he district court of :.h judicial district wherein the person is injured or put to death by a mob or riotous assemblage shall have jur isdiction to try and to punish, in ac cordance with the law-s of the State where the injury is inflicted or the homicide is committed, any and all persons who participate therein: Pro vided, that it is first made to appear to such court (1) that the officers of the State charged with the duty of apprehending, prosecuting, and pun ishing such offenders under the laws of the State shall have failed, neglect ed, or refused to apprehend, prose i punish such offenders; or (2) that the jurors obtainable for service in the State court having jurisdiction; of the offense are so strongly opposed ! to such punishment that there is no probability that those guilty of the offense can be punished in such State i court. A failure for more than thirty days after the commission of such an i offense to apprehend or to indict the | persons guilty thereof, or a failure I diligently to prosecute such persons, shall be sufficient to constitute prima facie evidence of the failure, neglect, or refusal described in the above pro viso &ec- o- Any county in wmcn a per son is put to death by a mob or riot ous .assemblage shall forfeit $10,000, which sum may be recovered by suit therefor in the name of the United States against such county for the use of the family, if any, of the per son so put to death; if he had no fam ily, then of his dependent parents, if any; otherwise for the use of the United States. Such action shall be brought and prosecuted by the dis trict attorney of the United States of the district in the United States dis trict court for such district. If such forfeiture be not paid upon recovery of a judgment therefor, such court shall have jurisdiction to enforce pay ment thereof by levy of execution up on any property of the county, or may otherwise compel payment thereof by mandamus or other appropriate pro cess; and any officer of such county or other person w’ho disobeys or fails to comply with any lawful order of the court in the premises shall be lia ble to punishment as for contempt and to any other penalty provided by law therefor. Sec. 6- In the event that any p r son so put to death shall have been tiansported by such mob or riotous assemblage from one county to an other county during the time inter vening between his seizure and put ting to death, the county in which ho is seized and the county in which he is put to death shall be jointly and seveialiy liable to pay the forfeiture j herein provided. Sec. 7. Any act committed in any State or Territory of the United States in violation of the rights of a citizen or subject of a foreign coun try secured to such citizen or subject by treaty between the United States and such foreign country, which act constitutes a crime under the laws of such State or Territory, shall con stitute a like crime against the peace and dignity of the United States, pun ishable in like manner in its courts as in the courts of said State or Terri tory, and within the period limited by the laws of such State or Territory, and may be prosecuted in the courts of the United States, and upon con viction the sentence executed in like manner as sentences upon convictions for crimes under the laws of the United States Sec. 8. If any provision of this Act er the application thereof to any per son or circumstances, is held invalid, the remainder of the Act, and the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances, shall not be affected thereby. k j P. J. McMAHON Omaha,^Nebraska, Feb. 10. 1934. Congressman Edward Burk, Congressman of Second District of Nebraska, House of Representatives, « Washington, D. C. My dear Congressman: Knowing you as I do, I am sure you will support the Costigan-Wagner Measure, known as the Anti-lynching Bill, now pending in Congress. This is human and meritorius Legislation, and as one of your constituents and supporters, I heartily join the request and demand for its enactment. As a member of the Forty-Sixth Session of the Nebraska Legislature in nineteen hundred and twenty-seven, it was my privilege to support and work for identical Legislation here in our State. Very truly yours, P. J. McMahon. LYNCHED! ! ! ; Swinging aloft, in the summer's breeze, Was a charred and blackened mass; Tied to the limb of a sturdy tree. In the noose of a rope made fast But what is this object, so ioath ,«ome, I see? Surely my eyes, deceiveth, Can this a part of humanity be? Oh Lord! how I hate to believe it Alone it hangs, in mute appeal, For justice, war or prayer, I cry aloud as I bend to kneel. ‘Why did They place you there?’ Were you guilty of crime, without a name ? But what matters that to men? Are their deeds so just, or pure theitf fame. Thr;t a stone they can cast at your sin? Ch! man „f Gj.!, w'.h chin so fair, Hov- can you do th’.s thing? Do you not feel toe kindred there, Within those d^rl- veins? I wiil arise an fight I vow, Cut wait, is that the beat ? And from within, a voice speaks, now, “Abide, this is thy test” So once again, upon my knees, I listen, bending low, “I will repap, lean thou on me, • And follow, where I go. Did I arise and fight, that night. In Gethsemane, alone? This is thy crown of thorns, Dear child, Thy cross that must be born.” Forgive, I pray their unjust deed, Their sinful lust, and shame, Their cruel chains of slavery, and greed, Resigned, I cal on thy name I bow to thy will, Oh God Divine! This cup of Gall shan’t pass, Like thy precious son, who on Cal vary pined, I drain each drop, to the last By Madoline E- Sterling % 1-30-34. For Your Parties, Order HARDING’S FRESH ICE CREAM No No No I Want (Harding's Ice Cream) and Mamma Says: “They Make The Best Butter Too.” . i Butter