m (Continued from I’age 1) telling,” said Dr. S. T- Wadley, phy sician with the City Health Depart ment. “When the child gets older, perhaps we can teli then, though there is no way of being certain about it. Jn many casts full-blood Negro babies are born perfectly white and get darker with passing time.” Laymen say that Negro blood blood can be traced by a darker streak which Alamito • Our extra rich Grade A Milk now contains Vitamin D, intro duced the natural way by feed ing our cows irradiated yeast. • Vitamin D builds and repairs bones and teeth and prevents rickets and respiratory infec tion. Phone Jackson 2555. Ad No. 13—2 ins. x 48 iin:3 Try This OnYc ur HAIR if '—7 PAYS— V* T Your Miitor Proves Results^ eeroas Your hair m ed not be short, sera'fgiy. kinky, nor need IL be dr»*d out* laded and hftleea. tor thara h * m aevrou this ooor eot»drtK>n »<. that destroys the oatoniMW * ©f the hair. This new, different method will grow long,, hwtrooa, glossy .soft,straight hsir, remov* dandruff. Iteb, tetter, dry s«ah», I ‘and dried out hair, condition by la bri co tin g. strength «n i ng end pro 1 longing the lifsof the hair for men { ana women. Send Coupon now be \ d*a .™ oKS CDCITTreatise rllLtioayoww ■ COUPON - —— —l !LOU RAY CO.. Dept, wt, 412 W. E>1« St., CWce«e, IN.***« ■ HeMc .end me VTMSE Tree use 1 Uaj Offer a I aritbeot am/ eeet el eil to we. | Koae .... -—.—.—- J I AOdreae , ■ . —■ ■■■■-I | qtr—.. Department 1019 runs down the spine, and the unknown child in the hospital shows no streak. Shortly after 2 a m. Sunday, Zel r"i Thompson. Negro, who lives at 2804 Fark, was awaken by a thin cry outside his window. He went to asleep again, believing that the cry ranee from a cct or a child next door. He- wen* out on the porch at 7;15 a. { m. and found the hild bundled up in i blanket crying softly. The blanket was pinned with one large safety pin and one chubby hand lay on the boards. Thompson called an ambulance- “I thought that it was a Negro baby," he said today. “>:t had a flat nose like one and it’s hair was kind of that way- I asked my neighbors about and one of them said, he s^w a sedan driving about the at 2 a. m. and he raid it stopped in front of my house.” A hospital laboratory worker said Negro blood could be detected by a miscropic examination, by physicians scoffed at this. “The Negro and the white hild are just alike structurally,” said one of them. “The blood cannot be told a part bpart by any method devised thus far” “You will probably hear a lot of stuff about different methods of tell ing a white baby from a ...egro baF>y.” said a high official at the University of Tennessee Medeal School- But I can tell you that there is absolutely no way to do it. Only the mother can tell you.” The baby is as pink as any other ' white baby. Its’ nose is a little flat and there is a slightly darker band of color about its forehead. There is something about the hair which does not seem quite Caucasian, but, as the says, “they all look that way.” TO CLLE3RATE ANNIVERSARY OMAHA, Sept. 20—The fifteenth anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party in the United States will be celebrated in Omaha at an en teriainment to be given at the Workers Cultural Cnter, 2404 Parker St- on i the evening of Sunday, Sept 23 Ella j Reeves Bloor beloved veteran of many working class struggles, and one of | the founder of the American Commun ; ist party, will be the principle speak er. The admission price of 25 cents ; includes program, and refreshments. NEGRO PROBLEM MAY NOT BE SOLVED, SAYS MENKEN NEW YORK, Sept 18—The Nejjro problem may be insoluble, declares H. L. Menken, former editor of the Am erican Mercury, in an article appear ing in October “Crisis,” out Sept ember 24. Mr- Menken advances the theory that neither by uproar or legal pro cesses is the NegTo likely to secure the rights he craves. He holds that the present state of m,ind in America as he sees it,, is that the Negro has gone far enough and should be con I tent for the present. However, the Sage of Baltimore also declares the Negro cannot af ford to cease fighting, even though he makes no new gains, or the rights he now has may be taken from him. Speaking of the Constitution and the bill of rights, upon which the Negro depends, Mr. Menken asks: ii . i ... uul iviirti is mis sonorous charter of liberties really worth? It is worth to the Negro precisely what it is to the American white man. That is to say, it is worth whatever courts and legislatures choose to make it from time to time. And what they choose to make it is no more and no less than what the concensus of opin ion, of mbb opinion—wants to see it made. . . . For all these reasons,” he con eludes, “I find myself full of doubt that the American Negro will recover his constitutional r:ghts on any near tomorrow. His politicians promise hi'm that he will, but they are only polit icians. Some of his white friends tell him the same, but they hawe fooled him in the past. My pri vate hope is that he will get them all soon or late- But before any such Utopia dawns there must be consderable change in the thing of the human race. It must cease believeing in quacks and trans fer its confidence more to facts.” In the same issue John P. Davis writes and Article, “T/RA Codifies Residence of Edward Hughes, 5702 Marry St. This S-Rosm^House Was Heated r f- _ 4 ' for $76.77 (total) Last Season! c THAT A SMALL HOME K ' ECONOMICALLY WITH A GAS FURNACE THIS 5-room house is only one of hundreds of small homes whose owners have found that heating with a gas furnace is not expen sive^And, this winter, they'll find their oper ating costs even less, for gas rates were re duced again on July 1. Ask to have an engi neer make an estimate of the cost of heating ycur home with a gas furnace. The estimate will be made free, and there's no obligation to buy afterward, Nafbr.a! Housing Act Allows Three Years to Pay—With No Down Payment \ % % * Any Heating Contractor who handles Gas Furnaces or Boilers, can furnish Prices and Heating Estimates I Heavy lifting gas/ The three million feet of j HYDROGEN REQUIRED TO INFLATE^" the Graf Zeppelin WEIGHS 9 TONS. A HOME FOR CATS - There are about 25,'000,000 CATS IN THE U.S., MORE THAN ONE FOR EVERY FIVE PEOPLE. The muscle caterpillar - A caterpillar l» HAS 4,000 MUSCLES, ii TEN TIMES MORE ' than a man. U Wage Slavery'-” Charles H. Houston j and Mr. Davis collaborate on a piece: “TWA: Lily-White reconstruction.” I There is a short article on Samuel Winningham, the “watermelon king”, ! c-f Chicago- W. Rollo Wilson names the colored players he thinks could make the big leagues. ‘NO DISCRIMINATION’ DEF INITE POLICY SAYS firestone __ NEW YORK, Sept. 34 — “We have a definite policy that we do not discriminate against Ne groes,’' declared A. P. Mathieson, I manager of the western zone of the Firestone Tire & Rubber Corn* pany, in a letter addressed last week to Walter White, secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple. The statement was in reply to a complaint by Mr. White of some-; time ago against an inter office memorandum in the Grand Rap-, ids, Mich., office of the Firestone ' company, signed by H. C. Acker, district manager, objecting to a Negro employe waiting on trade. * “On a recent shopping check! of your store,” the memorandum1 stated, “it was found that the j colored attendant was waiting on trade and left a rather poor im pression. i would watch this it I were you ami let him handle trade only in extreme emergencies. I don’t believe you would ap preciate being served by a color ed attendant if you were in a station where the crew was made up largely of white men.” In his letter of complaint Mr. White warned: “Many thousands of Negroes in the United States own automobiles. Many of these use Firestone tires. The question! I should like to ask, both per sonally and on -behalf of Negro users of Firestone products and of fairminded white users, is if the Firestone'company approves the distinctly biased attitude of your district manager at Grand Rapids. If it does approve such prejudice we should like to know so that Negroes may be inform* ed of this fact.” In his reply to this complaint, Mr. Mathieson wrote: “The man* ager of our Grand Rapids dis trict office did not handle the matter as it should have been han dled nor in keeping with our pol icy. We have several hundred Negro employes in our factory here in Akron and a large num ber are employed at our whole* sale offices and retail stores throughout the United States. “We have a definite policy that we do not discriminate against Negroes. ‘“You will appreciate that in an organization such as ours it is impossible rto see to it that A sensa tional new , m a g a zine— . just out! Twenty nine amazing features on Black Magic, ex poses on Crooked Dice, Card Sharps, Lucky S y m pols, ITALiIAN LOTTERIES, etc-, etc. /VSrwssrAiVDf DON’T BE A SUCKER Get the inside dope from “Doc” Wizard’s scientifc revelatons. Learn how big gamblers pick win ners by NUMBERLOOM — SCI ENCE — MYSTICISM1! The real low-down by IOBO TUTTO. At newstands or send £5c to Lucky Systems, Dept. E, 608 S. Dear born St-, Chicago, 111. Department 3E l everybody does and says the right thing. We have spoken to our this situation and we assure you that it will not occur again in Grand Rapids and if our company policy is observed it will not oc cur elsewhere.” NEGRO HISTORY Mr. J. A. odtgers, who has made an extensive study of the history of the Negro, tells of the difficulties that he is having in in getting his manuscripts pub lished. Yet it only requires $1500 (fifteen hundred dollars). .Judg ing from the contributions that Mr. Rogers makes to the Negro weeklies. \Ye cannot see why this should be. There is no more im* portant work to be had of a peo ple than their past history. Jt tends to make them self admiring and self supporting. If the Negro j youth knew more about his) beautiful physical characteristic, j achievements and heroic deeds,! he would not spend so much rnon' ’ ey buying hair straghtener and face whitener stuff, that has caused him to be tlu* lapghing stock of*the civilized world. The people, who support the Y. W. C. A., the N. A. A. C. P., the Urban1 Ijeague and the Negro Churches, cannot be expected to give Mr. Rogers their as^iitanee. B* cause they know if a people becomes self'apreciative, they will no longe. submit to the treatment that they receive today. There is absolutely no hope for the old Negroes of today. Therefore there should be a fund raised to get Mr. Rogers’ works into the hands of our Negro children. N. L. R. B. PROMISES TO FIGET TO ENFORCE HOUDE RULING By Federated Press . WASHINGTON— (PP) — Tak-! ing up the challenge of the Hondo \ Engineering Corp. and the Nat’l.' Assn, of Manufacturers, Chair man Lloyd Garirson of the Nat’l ' Labor Relations Board announc-j ed Sept. 14 that he would seek! prosecution of the company by j the U. S. Dept, of Justice. The company has refused to abide by the hoard’s- ruling that it should recognize the union chosen by a majority of its employes as their1 exclusive agent for collective bargaining. Questioned as to the conflict be tween the hoard’s ruling and the principle of proportional repre sentation laid down by Pres. . Roosevelt in his automobile settle ment, Garrison claimed that in the auto case the majority of the employees had agreed to group representation which was to in clude members of minority or ganizations. The auto settlement has work’ ed out'in affect as legal recog nition for company unionism, TIRED, ACHING, SWOLLEN FEET : Moone’s Emerald Oil Guaranteed to Stop All Pain and Soreness and Banish Offensive Odors In just one minute after an appli cation of Emerald Oil you’ll get the surprise of your life. Your tired, tender, smarting, burning feet will i literally jump for joy. No fuss, no trouble; you just ap ply a few drops of the oil over the surface of the foot night and morn ing, or when occasion requires. Just a little and rub it in. It’s simply wonderful the way it ends all foot misery, while for feet that sweat and give off an offensive odor, C there’s nothing better in the world. Moone’s Emerald Oil is guaranteed to end your foot troubles or money back. 11 union men complain, and has help- j ed the employers to avoid collec tive bargaining with bona fide, franc unions. 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