The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, July 07, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    Notice of Administration
In the County of Douglas, Nebraska,
in the matter of the estate of Edward
Addison, deceased- All persons in
terested in said matter are hereby
notified that on the 7th day of May,
1934, Joseph D- Lewis filed a peti
tion in said County Court, praying
Jiat his final administration account
filed herein he settled and allowed,
and that he be discharged from his
trust as administrator and tht a heal
ing will be had on said petition beiore
said Court on the 2nd day of June,
1934. and that if you fail to appear
before said Court on the said 2nd day
of June. 1934 at 9 o’clock A- M-, and
grant the prayer of said petitioon.
contest said petition, the Court may
such other and further orders, allow
ancts and decrees as to this c<v^~t i
may seem proper, to the end that all i
matters pertaining to said estate may |
be finally settled and determined.
BRYCE CRAWFORD, County Judge
Attorney Ray L. Williams Roo
200 Tuckman Building 24th and La’. !
Street.
PROBATE NOTICE
TN THE MATTER C* THE ES
TATE of Mary Annie Shelton
Union, deceased
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
That the creditors of said decease
estate, before me. County Judge o
Douglas County. N braska, at th
County Court Room, in said County
will meet the p'drdmstrator of sai
on the 2nd d-iv o August 1934, an
on the 2nd da;, < f October 1934, at
o'clock A. M-, each day. for the pur
pose of presenting their claims fo
examination, adjustment and allow
ance. Three months are allowed for
the creditors to present their claims,
from the 2nd day of July 1934
BRYCE CRAWFORD, County Judg
begin 6—9—34 exp. 6—23—34
NOTICE ADMINISTRATION
In the County of Douglas County,
Nebraska
IN THE MATTER OF THE ES
TATE OF:
Matilda Starnes, deceased
All persons int rested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and praying for ad
ministration upon his estate, and that
a hearing will be had on said petition
before said court on the 7th day of
July 1934, and that if they fail to ap
pear at said Court on the said 7th
day of July 1934, at 9 o'clock A- M
to ^contest said petition, the Court
may grant the same and grant ad
ministration of said estate to W- L
MYERS or some other suitable per
son and proceed to a settlement
thereof
BRYCE CRAWFORD, County Judge
Attorney Ray L- Williams, Room
200 Tuckman Building, 24th and Lake
Street
begins 6—15—34 ex- 6—29—34
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Douglas
County, Nebraska.
IN THE MATTER OF THE ES- |
TATE OF:
N((-ita Love Robinson, dec ased- j
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti- j
tion has been filed in said Court al
leging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and praying for ad
ministration upon his estate, and that
a hearing will be had on said peti
tion before said court on the 9th day ,
of July 1934, and that if they fail to
appear at said Court on the said 9th j
day of July 1934, at 9 o'clock A- M-, I
to contest said petition, the Court
may grant the same and grant ad
ministration of said estate to Ray L- j
Williams or some other suitable per
son and proceed to a settlement
thereof.
BRYCE CRAWFORD, County Judge
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
In the County of Douglas County,
Nebraska,
. IN THE MATTER OF THE ES
TATE OF:
Samuel Houston, deceased
All persons interested in said es
tate are hereby notified that a peti
tion has been filed in said Court
alleging that said deceased died leav
ing no last will and praying for ad
ministration upon his estate, and
that a hearing will be had on said
petition before said court on the 28th
day of July, 1934 and that if they
fail to appear at said Court on the
said 28th day of July, 1934 at 9 o'
clock A- M-, to contest said petition,
the Court may grant the same and
grant administration of said estate
te JOSEPH D- LEWIS, or some oth
er suitable person and proceed to a
settlement thereof
BRYCE CRAWFORD, County Judge
begins 6—30—3t
R. T. JOWERS
IMPROVING
Mr- R- T- Jowers of 2881 Corby St
who was seriously injured Wednes
day. June 20, at 20th and Lake St-,
when a street car ran into his auto
mobile, is ‘reported as getting along
nicely at this writing- Mr. Jowers
has been removed from the Lord
Lister Hospital to his home, and he
is now able to sit «p
His many friends wishes him a
very speedy recovery and hopes to
see him out again soon- w
■ I.. ■■■ i
By BUD FISHER
MUTT AND JEFF—Jeff Ought To Use Cakes Of Ice Next Time_~
MUTT, fM SCARED I
STIFF To 60 DOJN'
UNDER THE. SEA!
THOSE SHARKS A
MlGHTEATME p
\ UP ALIVE!
TUT. TUT! NOTHIN'TO BE
AFRAlOOF! IF A SHARK
COMES NEAR yx), JUST
give Him a kind word
MUTT SAID, 1
tf HE'S MAO 1
HE WAG£ =
HtS TAU- , 1
LIKE A CAT! J
X -BETTER 3
TAKE-PLEfTTy 3
OFSU6AR! |
i
Urn** *r* ft 4 ♦ j
MartH'iMOO. I
< OUi WERE COMES j
jjONE AO-READy* :%
HtU-O.SHWOCIfe.OL I
&tfY! see WHAT t i
GcrreeR YA'.SOME j
Nice LUMPS OF gm
L, SU6AR!
OH! its empty!]
lTHE sugar
I meDted!!!
ALABAMA SUPREME
COURT DOOMS TWO
SCOTTSBORO BOYS
(Contnu:d on Page 1)
“The answer to the a gum n ” .
Justice Gardner held, “is that under
our decisions the question is too
broad and does not embrace the ap
propriate predicate.”
Negroes Thrice Convicted
Three times the Negroes have be n
convicted by the lower courts since
they were pulled from a fi ight train
in the mountain town of Paint Rock
in 1931 and charged with a massed
criminal assault on Ruby Bates and
Mrs- Price
At their first trials both women
hoboes described how nine Negroes
threw their white men companions
from the train and then in turn par
ticipated in the attack
Eight were convicted, th' Sup:*eme
Court later ruling one of them was a
juvenile. The International Labor De
fense intervened and tha most bitter
legal fight in the state’s history was
on- New trials denied, the cases went
to the Alabama Suprem'e Court,
which conifrmed seven of the death
sentences.
The United States Supreme Court
set th. seven death sentences aside
on November 8, 1932, holding the
Negroes had not had the benefit of
proper counsel, and remanded the
cases for retrial- The highest court
did not go into the merits of the
case- Last Spring Patterson was re
tried, the jury convicted Patterson at
his second trial and Judge Horton
pronounced the death sentence April
9, only to set it aside on June 22,
1933, holding the evidence was in
sufficient to warrant the verdict
Shortly before the retrials, Ruby
Bat. s disappeared from her home in
Huntsville and a widespread search
failed to reveal her
Just before the defense rested in
th j . Patterson case in April, 1933.
Samuel S- Leibowitz of New York,
chief of counsel /retained by the In
ternational Labor Defense, asked for
a brief recess, and at its conclusion
Ruby Bates walked into the court
room and repudiated her testimony
in the original trials.
Her appearance created a sensa
tion- She said Dr- Harry Emerson
Fosdick, pasta- of the fashionable
Riverside Baptist Church in New
York, had advised her to return to
“tell the truth”"after she had gone
to him with her story that Mrs
Price had concocted the attack story
to prevent arrest as a vagrant.
A mild sensation was caused when
the names of Negroes we»e found on
the jury rolls- Leibowitz charged
they were forgei-ies, and called a
hand writing exp/rt, who testified
they had been added to the list
GRAND CHAPTER O.E.S.
HOLDS MEETING IN
LINCOLN NEBR.
_
(Contnu- d on Page 1)
Matron, Mrs- Mable Galbreath, Lin
coln, W. G- Treasurer. Mrs- Martha
B. Evans, Omaha. W- G-, Secretary;
Mrs. Cloma Scott, Omaha; W. G
Cond, Mrs- Virginia Lewis, Lincoln,
W- G- Assistant Cond., Mrs- Flor
ence Johnson, Omaha. W. G- Trustee,
Mrs- Pearl Flatcher, Omaha, W. G
Trustee. Appointed officers were:
Mrs- Elizabeth Woods, Lincoln, W- G
D Matron, Mrs. Janie Johnson, Otma
ha, G- Lecture, Mrs. Hattie B- Pettis,
Omaha, G- Historian, Mrs- Eva
Gaines, Omaha, G- Organist, Mrs
Josie Moore, Omaha, G- Chaplaip,
Mrs- Helen Carter, Omaha, G- Mar
shall in East, Mrs. Emma Blue,
Omaha, G- Marshall in West, Mrs
Mayme Houchins, Lincoln, G- Ward
er, Brother Caldwell, Council Bluffs,
Iowa, G. Senior, Mrs. Lillian Moore,
Omaha, G- Ada, Mrs- Blanche Bu
ford, Omaha, G- Ruth, Mrs- Kather
nie Houston, Lincoln, G. Esther, |
Mrs- Sally Brown, Lincoln, G- Mar
tha, Mrs- Nettie Frederick, Omaha,
G- Electra, S- M. C. Baker, G. Spon
and Mrs- M. Moore, Omaha WGFC
sor and Helen Carter, Assistant Spon
sor of Youth Frat of Omaha, Maude
H- Johnson, P. W- G. Matron of Lin
coln and Katherine Houston, her as
sistant Sponsor of Youth Frat of
Lincoln, Nebraska
EIGHT WHITE MEN
HELD FOR LYNCHING
(Contnued on Page 1)
formation furnished them by a 14
year-old boy. Coffee County offic
ers arrested eight young farmers and
charged them with the murder. A
mong the eight was the the step
father of the boy Walls. Three
other men were brothers.
Tse men arrested were: William
Peel, Edward Peel, Elijah Peel, Louis
Garner, John A. Gibson, Glenn War
ren, Henry Sherrill and John Henley.
Gibson is the stepfather of Billy Rich
ardson, the boy who named all eight
men. Sheriff Huffman said the slay
ing was an act of vengeance and that
he had no report of what happen to
the other captive except that appar
ht. escap d.
Interior Department Office
Urges Negroes Protest
(Continued from Page 1)
aims of the Rooevelt program and
assured the delegates that there was
a friendly administration In Washing
ton.
“I hope that your experience in
the last year.” he said, “has enabled
you to be assured of the p'esent
governm nt’s inclusive and thought
ful concern about your welfare. I
hope that no shortcoming which you
observed and against which you must
necessarily protest, has been able to
cause you to doubt that you were
dealing with a friendly adminsistr
tion. If there bj any among you
who have this doubt for any reason
whatsoever, I am glad to be in posi
tion to give you forthright assu unco
that you are today moving forward
under a government which in its
central pei-sonnel and prpgvam bears
the welfare of the colored people in
its heart and on its mind.
“For this reason, I must say that
I am here not merely to speak to you
of th? program and to commend to
its spirit but to call upon you for your
fullest coopeiation as citizens
“Wherever you see that these pro
grams ar 1 operating inefficiently or
hurtfully, I call upon you to let this
be known to the responsible officers.”
WHITE RAPS SEGREGA
TION; CALLS FOR
UNENDING WAR
(Contnu d on Page 1)
even in sections of the country where
they realize it may take a long time
to eradicate tne evil. But no matter
how hai d the road or distant the goal
must and will fight toward that
objective with out let-up. Really in
telligent white Americans will join
in th ; fight.
“Thera can and will be no solving
of the race problem, nor even any ap
ppi-eciable amelioration of it as long
as this chasm of misunderstanding,
of suspicions, of hostility, which se
gregation perpetuates and increases,
exists.
Mr. White hailed the growth of
liberalism on the race question in the
south, declaring that young southern
whites would be '’.replacing in a few
years, the older generation which has
battered on race hatred and bigoty.
It is the duty of Negroes, especially in
the south, he said, to increase the
number of those whites who are above
race prejudice.
Formal announcement that the figh1
for th e passage of the anti-lvnching
bill would be continued in the next
congress and pressed without pause
was mada by the N. A. A. C. P.
executive as he cited eight lynchings
of 1934, six of which he declared
were staged afto? it became fairly
clear that congress was going to
side track the Costigan-Wagner bill.
Citizens ware admonished to use
their vote as weapons for justice,
both in the cast of candidates in the
fall election and on all issues affecting
the welfare of the race- Mr. White
urged all candidates be forced to mak
known their stand on th? anti-lynchng
bill.
Delegates were urged to return to
their home communities and kep
alert on the workings of the NRA,
the AAA, and the PWA and other
New Deal devices. They were told
first to get the facts on discrimina
tion and then to protest morning
noon and night to those in authority.
Sounding a final fighting note in a
speech whch bristled with a slashing
attack on injustices inflicted upon
Negroes, secretary White declared:
“Only 4)y persistent, unyielding pro
test will we br heard and answered.
Negroes are learning this lesson at
the urge of biter necessity and suf
fering- Sines January 1, ninety-nine
new branches of the N. A. A. C. P.
have been organized or are in exist
ence indicate the grim determination
ef Negro and white Americans to
wage an organized, rentenless and
unceasing campaign for justice to
Nc-gro Americans-’
Forty-five minutes of Mr. White’s
address was broadcast without charge
by station WKY, owned by the Daily
Oklahoman. The meeting was held
in the First Presbyterian church,
white, and was addressed also by
Congressman Oscar DePriest.
LOWER GAS RATES
The lowest manufactured of any
city in the United States went into
effect in Omaha July 1 as the resul!
of a vote by the directors of the Me
tropolitan Utilities District for a sec
ond rate cut this year. The last pre
vious cut became effective last F.br
uary. It is the tenth cut since muni ,
cipal ownership of the gas plant.
The reduction will give the peopl. i
of Omaha about $79,000 per year, in |
addition to the $60,000 annual saving
effected by the reduction made in
February, according to Col. T. A.
! L ison. general manager of the
! Utilities District, and the new rate
; cut will effect p actically every small
! consumer in the city.
The reduction is five cents per 1000
| cubic feet and ess than 10,000 cubic
feet for all customers who use more
i than 500 cubic feet of gas per )month,
j and drops rates from 60 cents net to
55 cents, per 1,00 cubic feet.
The commodity price of gas for
house heating and industrial purposes
also was reduced from 45 cents pec
i.000 net to 40 cents net.
DELEGATES ATTEND
CONVENTION
Mr. R. S. Simmons and John B.
Horton, jr. were authorized d legates
. m th. local Omaha Branch of the
NAACP National Convention held in
Oklahoma City, Okla., from June 27
to July 1.
The expense of the authorized dele
gates were graciously donated by
i about 52 of Omaha’s NAACP loyal
supo ters, to the the amount of $47.99
We understand that this expense went
for the expense for the delegates
elected by the Board of Directors.
John B. Horton, we are told was an
i r.n authorized delegate with entrance
| fees of $1.00 paid by the Association,
I and the other expenses were paid by .
: himself. Mr. R. C. Price, presi
dent of the Omaha branch conducted
I the campaign to raise the funds with
| the assistance of other members.
i
Georsre Slim Hairston and
Wife Leaves for Chicago
DEFEATED THE BEST PLAYERS
AT POCKET BILLARDS IN
OMAHA
(By Bert Moore)
After brief visit in Omaha estab
lishing himself as a pol player, play
ing golf game or what is called
lemon pool, beating all the best color,
ed fellows, then challenged any of
the best white players- He was
matched with three State champions,
after defeating each of them, and
nothing else to do, he has departed
for the World’s Fair to demonstrate
his art there. It is said that if Omaha
can develope a worthy challenge that
ha will return on a moments notice.
Join Bert Moore’s News
Club Column by sending
your name to the OMAHA
GUIDE.
Wants to Hear From His
Children
(By Bert Moore)
If anyone knows the where abouts
of Mrs. Josephine Williams Baldwin,
who left Omaha for Kansas City in
1928. notify the Omaha Guide- Her
husband, Charles E- Baldwin is anx
ious to hear about his four children,
Betty Jean, bom in Omaha, Charles
Junior born in Denver, Helen bom in
Kansas City, and Robert bom in
Joplin, Mo- If she or anyone that
knows reads this article, write to
Charles E- Baldwin, Bert Moore,
Omaha Guide, 2418 Grant Street
John Dixon Suffers Heat
Stroke
Mr- John Dixon of 2614 Maple St-,
owner of the Twenty Grand Pool
Hall, 24th and. Parker Streets, be
came seriously ill Saturday June 30,
suffering from a heat stroke.
Mr- Dixon was given first aid
treatment by Dt*- Hawkins, and then
rushed to the hospital- The stroke
paraliaed the entire left side of Mr
Dixon's body. He had not regained
'Ideal BottMng Co
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WEbster 8043
The Omaha Guide
Recommends
The State
Furniture Go.
Comer 14th and Dodge
Streets. As One of the Most
Reliable and Aceomedating
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Prices the Lowest
and
Terms the Easiest
consciousness July 3.
Mr. Dixon had complained to his I
brother. Alfred, Saturday, that he
had a headache all day, and he
seemed to have been worried about
something, states Alfred Dixon. Mr.
Dixon is still in a serious condition,
but there is a slight chaace of his
recovery
Delegates Horton and Sim
mons Returns From N. A.
A. C. P. Convention
Mr- Johnny Horton and Mr. R. L
Simmons, delegates to the 25th An
nual Convention of the NAACP
held in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
June 27 to July 1, returned to Omaha
July 3
Mr- Horton was placed on the
time and plae? committee, and Mr.
Simmons on the resolution commit
tee. Mr Horton states that there
were two ballots taken to decide on
the next convention in 1935, on th
place of meeting. The contest ulti
mately ended in a close victory by
St- Louis over Omaha- St- Louis won
by a slight margine
In a statement mad? by Mr. Hor
ton, he said, the 1934 convention was
the greatest beyond reasonable
doubt of the 25 years of the meetings
of th? NAACP.
Arrested for Vagrancy
ST. LOUIS, Mo- July 5—A colored
man was arrested and charged with
vagrancy- When he was brought be
fore the Judge, he handed the jugde
a piece of paper and asked him to
read it- The Judge read the paper
which stated, “Turn this man free”—
signed Franklin Delano Roosevelt
The Judge said, “If you are a friend
of the presidents, you should have a
hundred dollars to pay your fine,”
there was no answer from the de
fendant- Thirty days in the work
house- Next case.
Purchase an Omaha Guide
and be a Booster for the
Bert Moore News Club
Column.
MR. W. M. GALLOWAY
PASSES AWAY IN
HAMPTON, VA.
Mr. W- M. Galloway of Hampton
Va., died July 3 in the Veterans Hos_
pital in Hampton
Mr. W. M. Galloway spent two
years and eight months in France
during the Worlds War, and has suf
fered from the effects every since
He was at one time a resident of
CJ|maha, until the World War- After
he returned from the war, his health
began to fail him, having to move to
hospitals from one city to another
trying to regain his health.
Mr- Galloway is the brother of Mr.
C. C. Galloway, acting editor of the
Omaha Guide, and leaves two other
brothers to mourn his death, N. R.
Galloway of Beaumont, Okla. and A.
F. Galloway of Dallas, Texas.
Virgin Island Rum Now m
Sale in New York
NEW YORK, July 6—(GNS)— |
The first shipment of Virgin Island
rum has reached New York- That is
100 cases of post prohibition stuff of
high grade has just been received
from A- H. Riise, the oldest rum ■
dealer at St- Thomas.
The Federal Alcohol Control Ad
ministration has authorized unlimited
imports of rum from the Virgin Is
Ross
Drug
Store
Now Located
At
2122 N. 24th St.
Vie. 2770
METCALFE RUNNING
FOR GOVERNORSHIP
Revision of Nebraska tax law.
along constructive a n d equitable
lines will l>e one of the most import
ant tasks confronting the next gov
ernor and the legislature, Stanley F
Levin, president of the Young Voters
League for Metcalfe for Governor,
said at a meeting of the league at the
Rome hotel Tuesday night
The tax bill, known as House Roll |
No- 9, which provides for a tax bill
on credit accounts of business and
professional men and women, drew
the particular fire of Levin- He char
acterized this law as impossible of
enforcement.
“There is real work to be n Neb
raska on taxation,” he said- “The
most practical form of relief is to be
found in a reduction of the cost of
government through the elimination
of jobs which have been created for
purely political purposes.”
He declared that Metcalfe could be
depended upon to follow such a pro
gram of strict economy
POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
lands, but no estimate can be made
a sto the amount that will be brought
in
Rum manufacture is one of the
principal industries of the Virgin Is
lands and it is believed that much
i will be done toward the economic re
habilitation of the territory- Thj ef
fort to bring about an additional out
put by the industry is being made
through the Interior Department
CLARENCE CAMERON WHITES
INVITED TO VISIT VIRGIN
ISLANDS
HAMPTON, Va- July 6— (CNS)— (
Governot Pearson of the Virgin Is
lands had invited . t. and Mrs- Clar- 1
enc. Cameron White to visit the Is
lands and give a ; octal lecture tour
They are expected to sail from New
York on July .25 and return on Aug
ust 20- They will appear in all the
prncipal cities of the Isands and at
the major educational and welfare
institutions.
Mr. White is well known as a com
poserr1 and violinist, and Mrs- White
as an accomplished piano artist
Inclianaoolis Girl Gets High
Degree From Oyford
University
OXFORD, England, July 6—(CN
S)—Miss Matze Tate, a former in
structor of history at the Crispus
Attucks High School in Indianapolis.
Indiana, has just been awarded th'
B- Litt degree (which ranks with our
Ph- D ) by the historic Oxford Uni
versity.
Through an Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority Foreign Fellowship Miss
Tate was assisted in pursuing her
studies at Oxford- Th? degree was
awarded on the basis of a two year’s
research into the “Movement for Dis_
armament 1863-1914.” (
As the result of an unfortunate
bicycle accident, Miss Tate took her
degree in absentia- She is still con
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LACE CURTAINS DONE CHEAP
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fined to a nursing home but hopes to
bo out soon and see more of England
and the Continent before returning
to America.
Georgia ‘Brain Truster’
Says ‘New Deal’ Here to
Stay by ‘Peace or War’
SAVANNAH, Ga„ July 6—(CNS)
—“The new deal.” says Dh- S- J
Sanford, president of the University
of Georgia, “is here to stay either as
a peaceful or as a bloody revolution,
and it rests with the press to edu
cate the public to make it a peaceful
one.'
This warning was sounded herej^i
a short extemporaneous speech at
the closing session of the G. orgia
Press Association- The University
President declared that “President
Roosevelt is the only example of
creative statesmanship this country
has produced in my lifetime
“The new deal, he added, “repre
sents progress as against stagnation
It is a program to ‘reconcile peace
fully the conflicting interests and to
redistribute America’s abundance- It
is here to stay either as a peaceful
or as a bloody revolution, and it rests
with the press to educate the public
to make it a peaceful one "
LEIBOWITZ TO STUDY HOW
CRIMINAL CASES ARE CON
DUCED ABROAD
NEW YORK CITY, July 5—(CNS)
—Samuel S- Leibowitz. chief of de
fense in the Scottsboro cases, in com
pany with Mrs. Leibowitz, sailed for
Europe- last week- Mrs- Leibowitz
said he intended to combine business
with pleasure by making an informal
study of the manner in which crim
inal cases are conducted in various
European countries
Mr. Leibowitz, who defended the
youths in the Scottsboro case said bfe
did not expect a verdict before mi*;
July on his appeal for a new trial
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