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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1934)
A CLEAN SYSTEM FOR HEALTH Good health cannot be had with out regular bowel activity. When your bowels miss acting for • d?.y or two, parts of food which rc not be digested stop In the lar~e tr rtine. There they sour, release pr'roning gases, and a dangcrc :s condition (called "Constipation”) Is •et up. Drive out the poisons of constipa tion by taking Thedford’s Black Draught, and enjoy that good feeling VI XUUbi fflUViiOVUUl.l/ people tell about af ter they have taken Black-Draught. It acta promptly and thor oughly. It tends to . leave the bowels In a condition so they will continue to act natu rally. f Get the genuine THTOFORD’S Black* | ZSraughU Bold In 25-cent package* auu ' the majority of the workers in the plant and the Labor Board held that it should therefore represent all the workers in collective bargaining. The Houde Co. refused to accept the decision and NRA’s action followed- j Employment Gains- August factory employment increased 1 per cent over July, and payrolls increased 3 per cent according to the Bureau of La bor Statistics. An increase, •was nor-, ma! in August, reflecting seasonal ac-! tivity in certain industries. Compar ! «d with August 1933, the index of factory employment gained 3.9 per cent and the payroll index 9.5 per oent Dividcnds Improving: For the first 8 months of 1934, favorable dividend changes numbered 909, compared with 410 in the corresponding period of 1983. There were only 273 unfavor able changes compared with 237 dur ing this period last year. 237 increas ed dividends were declared, compared with 77 in 1933; 258 dividends were resumed with 118; 283 extra divi dends with 121; and 131 initial divi dends compared with 94 in the 1933 period. Must Operate Under Fuel Code: The Cotton Textile Institute requested NRA to exempt from the provisions of the Retail Solid Fuel Code some 490 cotton mills which sell fuel to their employes at cost or less, as an accommodation. At the public bear ing, NRA’s Industrial Advisory Board stated that such sales by mills are in competition with retail coal dealers It further declared that “statements were made that this and other activi ties on the part of employers, which might be termed somewhat partemal istic, were taken into account when establishing wages,” and that it did not beelieve “that any services per formed for employes should be con sidered as part of the wages paid.” and NRA thereefore denied the ex emption. Steel Employment At New High: A survey of the steel industry’s first year of operation under its code re veals that by June of this year em ployment had increased approximate ly 35 per cent over last June; wages 62 per cent average hourly earnings; 32 per cent. Reduction of the ave> rage work week by about 9 per cent, brought employment to the highest level in 4 years—virtually as many workers on the job as in 1929, in spite of the fact that the industry was operating at only a little above half of its capacity- About $12,000,000 more was paid out in wages and sala ries in June 1934 than would have been disbursed on the pre-code basis. Coton Garment Workers Helped: Before NRA, there were 13,000 child laborers in this industry and there were sewing machine operators who worked 54 hours a week for 8 cents an hour- Since the adoption of its code, these abuses have been elimi nated and the purchasing power of the 250.000 workers has nereased by $25,000,000 over 1929. according to the code Authority. The hourly wage rate now in force is 20 per cent high er khan in 1929 and 63 per cent high er than last year. “Small” Druggists Vote For NR A: “Drug Topics” is conducting a poll in 43 states and the District of Colum bia to find out how druggists feel about the Retail Drug Code. About 95 per cent of those queried may be classed as “small business.” A sum mary of the answers so far received reveals that practically 90 per cent would like to see their Code retained aftter N-R.A. expires. Furthermore, while 7 per cent -would retain the pre sent wage provisions, 75 per cent fa vor higher wages; and while 19 per cent would keep the hours now in ef fect, about 50 per cent weuld like to L see shorter hours adopted. Far from wanting trade practice provisions scrapped, 93 per cent would like even more stringent rules. Less Than 1 Per Cent Violate Codes: Because controversy is always news, - more is heard about code violations A than about code compliance. The fact H js, however, that without coercion or legal action American industry is com plying with its codes to a remarkable degree. Only 63,151 complaints had been registered by July 1st against the 2 and one half million employers operating under 506 codes- Of these, almost half were duplicants. Many more were crank letters or complaints based on misunderstanding of code provisions. Therefore, less than 1 per cent of all employers had been found guilty of coda violations prior to July 1st. State Dir rotors Adjust Many Com plaints: During the 2 weeks ended July 21st, NRA State Directors ad justed, without reference to Wash ington, a total of 990 complaints al leging violations of code wage and hour provisions. Ja mo«t cases, al leged violations were found to fse merely employers’ misunderstandings of their obligations- Clarification by State Directors brought about the re stitution of 1106,732 in back wages to some 4.300 employers throughout the country. fl-nall Town Exemption Clarified: A new Administrative Order lists ful ly those local retail services or trades which are exempted from Code or P. R. A. proviions regarding maxi mum hours of employment, minimum wages, hours of operation, price regu lation and assessments to Code. Au thorities. This exemption applies on lv to the following businesses, in towns of 2 50rt or less, which arc ‘ en gaged exclusively in local trade or service:” retail sale of bakerv pro ducts; retail food and grocery trade: retail jewelrv trade; retail tobacco trade; retail trade; iincluding drug and booksellers trade; motor vehicle sto rage and parking; barber shops- beau ty parlors; bowling and billiards; cleaning *nd dyeing; laerdrv; real estate brokerage; shoe re-budding- ho tels; restaurants; confectioners’ stores and retail sale of milk. Child labor Provisions and Fair Trade Practice Pr-r>vi'<3io"s (except those which re late to the minimum price pt which nv*rchandise may be sold) still ap ply. Whpt Ptrikes pin-nifv; Secre.tarv of Labor Frances Perkins, in a special interview in the N. V. Times. Aug 5. 1924. said; “Disturbing ns the re cent labor troubles have been they did not come as a surprise to anv one who has studied our economic his tory. Each time the oountrv has suf fered a financial crisis s+rikes have marked the beginning of reTovew. Thev may be regarded as a sure sim of an improvement in conditions. Al though this depression is the worst one from which the conntrv has suf fered in years, the number of strikes is smaller than those attending our recoveries in the past.” (Tor addtional matriaT. write to tHe Special Assistant to the Administra tor. NRA. Washington, D. C.) THIS GLORIOUS INTEBIUOE Reween the tragic days of the Drouth and the Winter which will soon be upon us comes this marvel lous season of Indian Summer. There may be no “fodder in the bock” and it mav be impossible for us “to hear the huskv, rustv rustle of the tas sels on the com” but this is all the more reason whv we should accept the invitation of old Uther Nature to wander far afieeld. to seek diver sion and rest where the flaming sum ac and the golden linden tree blend their gorgeous colors with thhe bronze of the oak artd the deep russet of the maple At heart we are all children. It is the simple things of Tife that give us lasting pleasure. Unlike our an cestor we mav not be able to ride to the hunt as did they in the glorious October weather but there are so many thing? we can do that will ( make life richer and more enjoyable for us all. The tempo ol modern diversion nas j been speeded up to such a degree that it leaves us exhausted mentally and physically. The nerve wracking, frantic pursuit of pleasure is fast becoming intolerable- We need rest and peace and contentment and at this particular season of the year it is waiting for us on the hillside, along the open road and in the leafy soli tudes of the woods. Mother Nature is extending to us her last invitation to join her. The swirling leaves that flutter to the ground warn us that we had best ac cept before her whimsical fancy changes. With an alluring voice she is calling to you and to me and par ticularly to the children. She wants us all to join her in a happy, care free frolic There are trees to climb, nuts to hunt there’s the lovely bitter sweet to gather, here are camp fires to be built around which all may gather and sing the songs that warm the heart and make us young again. | Gome to the woods where the air is rich and clear, where the green leaves have turned to gold, where you;- very nature thrills to something indefinable and where your longing for the sweet, simple pleasures or life is satisfied. Come before Winter in all th majety of his power descends upon us, come rn this brief, glorious interlude! LIBERAIIOnITiHE NEGROES BY HURSEL W. ELEXANDER The renewed murderous onslaught by the ruling class upon the Negro people calls for immediate and de cisive action if a whole sation of 12,000.000 is not to be trampled into the dust The Law Of Rope And Faggot With rope in one hand and torch in the other, lynch terror stalks the land abetted and organized by the powers that be. In the very shadow of the White House, on the Eastern j Shore of Maryland, the charred bodjr of George Armwood was tossed upon the scrap heap of king lynch as the 34th victim of last year. Jn prepara tion for the wholesale legalized lynch ing planned for the Scottsboro boys,, tho State of Alabama ha* thrown back; into the teeth of the mas* movement of protest the lynched bodies of its victims at Decatur and Tuscaloosa. It has released murderous rifle and machine gun fire against the indomi table and courageous Negro share croppers of Tallapoosa County. Extra-Legal Lynching Rising to the occasion* the Su preme Court ordered that Crawford be returned to the lynch - infested courts of Virginia and that Duel Lee be sent to the electric chair- Angelo Herndon was thrown into the dun geons of Georgia to serve a 20 year sentence. Not to be outdone, the au-j thoritles in the North are supporting, Negroes to the homeland of lynch ter ror. filling the jails with victims of the frameup, the hospitals with the victims of police brutality. Each new insult and degradation is sharper and more stinging than the last. The bloodhounds of terror seek out every head raised above its fellows in protest against poverty, hunger, un employment, starvation, wages; di-j sease, death which has settled with a double weight upon the Negro people. All the suffering and degradation whch have been visited upon the white masses by the crisis have been ap plied double force against the Negrc Ttiaae The Old Deal The Wilson Administration seek ing the cooperation of the Negro peo ple, in the waging of a war which benefitted only the rulers and the right, promised the Negroes the full rights of citizenship. Also the offi cials today by promises are seeking to make Negro people bear the heavy end of the burden of the crisis. Then, on the battlefields of Europe, the Ne groes did not find citizenship, but death; and those that lived, the bit* ing indignation of insult, discrimina ton and jira-crow. Today, on the bat tlefield of the crisis, o icial sanction is given to the double standard Ame rican democracy by condemning, in official legal action, the Negro work er to the lowest paid category, by signing the death warrant for Negro croppers in the plowing-under and acreage, reductions program, by ruin ing 'the small Nlegro businessman. Never, in recent years has there been such a program of annihilation de creed for the Negro people Nor has the whole system of so cial degradation, segregation, and jim-crow been altered in any respect. Despite their prmisees the officials have not uttered a single word of protest or made a single move to pun ish the lynchers, or in any way or form guaranteed the enjoyment of equal social and political rights by Negroes. Instead, they signified their allegiance to the Southern slave drivers by appointing an outstanding white Southern bourbon as ‘ guardi an” of the Negro in the industrial recovery machinery. The Bill of rights presented by the League of Struggle for Negro Eights in the Scottsboro March on Washington, has been thrust into the waste basket. Chattel Slavery has given the place to serfdom on the Southern planta tions; the slave regime, to all forms of legalized and tacit persecutions and oppression- To this day the small farmer and sharecropper does not own land, the Negro worker is handi capped, the Negro professional peo ple and businessmen are being driven out. The right to fix free and equal public education, to vote, to hold of fice, be an equal citizen is denied. To Break The Chains That Bind The Slave conditions which reign in the Southern Black Belt have plagued the Negro wherever he has gone. The chain of serf labor in the South extend to the cities in the North and enshackle the Negro indusrial worker. The shackles that bind the Negro also bind the white worker The Negro worker in the North can not free himself as long as the Negro masses are chained. The blow that strikes the shackles from one must strike the shackles from, the other. The leaders of the American Fed eration of Labor (Woll, Gren, Lewis, etc.) have Blinded the organized white workers to this fundamental fact. They have excluded Negroes from unions. They are supporting the special codes which assign lower wages to these industries where Ne groes are chiefly employed; they have accepted the difference in wage-scaled and working conditions for North and South. They are a part of the Roose velt machinery. They are doing their best at the present time to halt the widespread mass revole against N-R.A. They are doing their best to divide the white and Negro workers even further. Of the same mould is the leadership of the Socialist Party (Thomas Solo mon, Crosswathe). At the bottom contemptuous of the Negro masses, they are compelled by their desire, to keep their hold upon the rank and file Socialist Party members to gloss over their support of white suprema cy with such hypocritical remarks as: “Let us first liberate the white work ers; then we’ll work for the Negroes.” This is the answer that only those can give who are quite content to see the Negro people enslaved, who support the white ruling class in keeping the Negro people enslaved. A WONDER FOOD DEMONSTRATION AT ELKS’ HALL—OCT. 17, 18, 19 Starts at 6:45 BERT MOORE’S COLUMN (Continued From Pape 1) After listening to his pleas and in vitations, * asked him what the popo lation of Russia was. He said it was 170 million. I asked how many Ne groes were included- He said about one thousand m all. I then asked what was the membership of Negroes in this country In the Communist party. He said -that it was far up in the thousands, but he could not give me the exact number. Some Folk say that this world is queer And say strange things ag’in it But let me tell you all right now, It’s not the wurld. it’s the people: in it POLICE COURT NEWS | COUPE COLLIDES WITH ICE; CREAM TRUCK On October 5, at 2:18 a. m., Wal ter Winn, who was making a left turn at the intersection of 24th and Charles 9ts., Ipollidejd witih nn ice ream truck driven by Walter Scha lecht of 2202 Evans St Frosh P. Allen, a lad of 16, 2636 Charles St. was riding in the Ford coupe with Winn at the time of the accident. He was bruised about the eye and knee, and Winn was cut on the right hand. Officers McGreer and Callahan took them to the police station, where Al len was attended by Dr- Atwood and ent home. Winn was booked on a Charge of reckless driving. - I ATTEMPTS SUICIDE Miss Valeria Josie King 15 years old, 2209 Seward St., attempted to omirit suicide by drinking a quanti ty of lye Sunday, Oct- 7, when her mother refused Valeria permission to> ttend the Neighborhood theatre. She was burned on the lips and tongue. The case was reported by officers Al legro and Griffin, and she was at tended by Dr. Folman and left at home SUFFERS WITH HEART AILMENT Mrs- Emma White, 1421 N. 21 St., became suddenly ill with a heart ail ment on Monday, October 8. She was attended at home by Dr. Folman, who sent her to a local hospital in the police ambulance, escorted by offi ers Kaufhold and A. Potash INJURED WHILE REPAIRING TIRE On October 9, Joshua Ferguson, of 131^ Webster St. was repairing a Itire on his truck at the Oil Station on 50th and Underwood, when the iron rim on the outside of the tire blew out and struck him, resulting in bruis es on the right arm and on both legs. Mr. Ferguson was taken home by Ralph Beck, 1513 N. 28th St. and at tended by Dr. Jensen \ This is the seventh line of the poe try puzzle: “With close attention to these linen’ ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS I . " Happenings fhat Affect the Dinner Pails, Dividend Checks And Tax Bills Of Every Individual. National And rnternational Problems Inseparable i From Local Welfare. —oOo— Ask the president of your local ce ment or lumber company how busi ness is—and the chances are that he will say it is bad. Ask the owner of a retail store the same question— land, unless your community is well | below the national average of busi ness conditions, he will doubtless say that trade is good, and is constantly getting beter. As Paul Malion, the well known j Washington correspondent, recently pat it, “Industry is doing nothing worth talking about, but business generally is better than you think." In August, the durable goods indus tries were operating at about 67 per cent of normal. (Normal means the average of the years 1923-25.) Non durable goods producers touched 90 per cent, and the trend was upward. In other words, concerns making ce ment, steel, metals, lumber and other products which don’t wear out rapid ly are still at the bottom, while the makers of food, clothes, tobacco and all the things which have a short life are experiencing relative prosperity Deepartment store sales are well above what seasonal experience would lead us to expect; these stores, of course, deal primarily in nondurable goods. £t isn’t hard to trace the reason back of this. It can be expressed in two words: Government spending. Goveranjent is dealing out billions for relief through its various agen cies, and the bulk of this money goes at once into such necessaries as food, clothing, fuel. Almost none of it is used for purposes which would stimu late the production of heavy indus tries- People who, after long unem ployment, get three or four dollars a day, buy food and clothing—but they don’t buy new homes, automo biles or motor boats. The problem the government faces now is to bring the heavy industries up to the level reached by the non durable goods industries. It is stari ng to attack that problem—and as ts first ste pin giving industry itseelf more control over its own affairs than it has enjoyed for almost two years. The NRA reorganization indicates the trend. The period of its dictator ship is apparently over- Its new board' includes actual indi^tfc-ialistfe who will be systemeatic to the wishes and problems of other industrialists. As a matter of fact, all late Roose velt appointments have been campa Merman Fnedlander Files for School Board to Eriedlander, Northside Grocer, drafts him !? memh€T of the 0maha Seh«ol Board, having secured more than 100d ™es on Petition to file for School Board in one dav ir Mr- Briediander owns and operates the Herman’s Grocery and Meat aMrket on North 24th Street, and has lieen active for sev Northside “ ^ S°Cia1’ Ec°nomic and Political Endeavors on the I Quick! Easyh' Here’s that sure way to get WHITER ^ SKIN! j I TTERE is the bleach that gives i|gj | X. you amazing results; quick- Ip est, easiest way. It’s the tried and trusted Nadinola Bleaching Cream — prize winner of them all. Just spread over face and neck at bedtime. While you sleep it worLs wonders. Soon your skin grows whiter, shade by shade. Your friends find you more charming, more attractive than ever. The surest, safest bleach Don’t take chances with strange bleaches which may disappoint you. For you are absolutely sure of Nadinola. It’s been the favorite with all the ravishing light toned beauties for years. Nadinola Bleaching Cream does more than whiten your skin. It clears up flaws and blemishes—makes your complexion temptingly soft and smooth and fresh. Money-back guarantee in every jar Full instructions and printed money - back guarantee come with every jar of Nadinola Bleaching Cream. Go to drug store today and get some. Regular size is 50c. Money-saving large size is $1.00. If you can’t get it nearby, send 50c or $1.00 and we will mail to you postage paid with book of treasured beauty se crets. National Toilet Co., Paris, Tenn. NADINE CORAL ROSE Face Powder Now 25c Here’s that en ticing Nadine Face Powder that every woman loves— now in a new 25c size— packed in round blue box. Also sold at 50c in square blue box. At drug stores or by mail. cNadinola Bleaching Cream ratively conservative—the experimen talists have been given little or noth ing. The best guessers are now saying that the NRA will gradually retrench, andwill voluntarily relinquish most of its power, it will have less and less to say about how business should be run, will be more of an umpire than an administrator. It seems that the only thing it will certainly retain is its power ^vqr wages, hours and working conditions- ' —0O0— During the past few weeks, 3 major events have seriously acect ed the jittery European and Asiatic situations. Two of the events definite ly aid the maintenance of world peace —-one definitely points toward war. The last came from Italy, when H Duce announied that every utalian citizen will be given army training— from the ages of 8 to 33! Children of 8 will be enlisted in juvenile bat talions, will be subject to the in fluenced of martial spirit. As they grow older, they will be given inten sive training in the arte of war. That announcement caused many Eu ropean headaches—Mussolini, for all his speeches concerning peace, is dan. gerous. Italy is now overpopulated, cannot produce enough to adequately support her people. Yet Mussolini offers prizes for large, families, heavi ly taxes bachelors, is a relentless ene my of birth control. He wants more Italians when their country can’t take care of them. The answer can only be conquest. nappier eve era are iounu in me so tion of the Chinese Easten ail way problem, and the admittance of Rus sia into the League of Nations. The Shinese Railroad, jointly owned by Ja pan and Russia, has been a constant source of trouble. Japan threatened to seize the line—and ussia concentrat ed army divisions, tanks, artillery and planes at Vladivostok, intimated that if Nippon tried to carry out her threat she would have a war on her hands. Today, when the bear snarls,' It means something—Russia has one of the largest and best equipped of all armies. A fortnight ago, Japan and Russia,1 after long discussions, came close to I an agreement ^whcrdby vTapan will buy the line. A comparatively small amount of money separated the bar gainers. and it looks as if the “most dangerous railroad in the world" will shortly become only a harmless branch of the world s transport sys tem As for the admission of ussia to the League, it will immensly increase that body’s power in preventing and settling international arguments and in enforcing peace. Whether you like ommunism or not, Russia is the lar TjUIV* RING NERVES When you are just oa edge ; . . when you can’t stand the children’s noise ;;; when everything you do is a burden ... when you are irri table and blue ... try Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. 98 out of 100 women report benefit. It will give you just the extra en ergy you need. Life will seem worth living again. Don’t endure another day without the help this medicine can give. Get a bottle from your druggist today. (Joldi-EoA'vte VEGETABLE COMPOUND gest of all major powers, in both area and population. She really wants peace—not for humanitarian reasons,: but because her gigantic internal de velopment program requires the con-| rentration of all her resources at home —3he can’t afford to fight. — THE PRINCIPLES OF TRANSPORT REGULATION The report of the Transporta' tion Conference of 1933-4 lays i down two vital general principles,; among others. Those are: That! there should be unified regulation of the interstate carrying services which are subjected to rate and service regulaions; and that self regulation as exemplified by the industrial codes is not an effective substitute for public regulation. The Conference represents the entire transportation industry, and it is a testimonial to its work that where representatives of the various carriers concerned found themselves in violent disagree ment at the beginning, thejfr even tually reached almost unanimous acoord in making reeommenda ions. All substantial bus and truck companies, as well as the railroads, favor equalized regula |tions — they are as interested as ! anyone else in eliminating flyby* : mghts from their business. S present, regulation of trans portation is almost farcial. Only one branch of the industry, the railroads, is really regulated. Uther carriers are subeet to state regulation only, or to none at all In many cases, there is no curb Whatsoever to heir policies as to S,cheduies> wakre and labor na dards, etc. In some states any setbb?0i2WnS an oId truck may - ■ ipsolf up as a stage company —at the expense of etablished anti reponsible carriers which are seek ing to serve the public honestly and well. The Conference's recommenda" tions should be given the most careful atenion in preptaring fu ture transportaion legislation. In a matter of this kind, which con cerns all the people, there is ne» time to waste. illegal order to arrest all Com* munists; Anna Mae Leathers and Leah Young, Georgia textile pickets, held under the same con" stitutional slave law of 3861, used against Angelo Herndon, and the ‘Atlanta Six’ ad carrying the death penalty for ‘inciting’ to in surrection. Signed, Sasha Small, Interna" tional Iiabor Defense, Manning Johnson, Trade Union* Unity League.” WEAK AND SKINNY MEN, WOMEN « AND CHILDREN Sa*»d br mw Vitamin, of Cod LW Oil in taatoioM UbUta. Posad* of Ana healthy Awfa Instead of bar* wraggy bone* l New vigor, vim energy instead of tired listleaaoew! Steady, snlet nerve* I That i* what thousand* of poopfe ar* getting through scientists' latest discovery—the VitaAln* of Cod Liver Oit concentrated la little sugar coated tablets any.oflta horridTashy taste or smell. McCoy * Cod Liver Oil Tablet* they’ro called I "Cod Liver Oil in Tablet*", and they •Imply work wonders. A little boy of S, aeri ouMy »ick. got well and gained 10 A ft*. |n Juet one month. A girl of tHsrWn after the same dlswse, gained 8 lb*, the first week and 2 *!■ wf**c A young mother who £LZl~v,ali?r «•»« *ot all her health bark and gained 10 ib*. In lew than a month. Yon simply must try McCoy'* at once. “7ou don’t gain at leant 8 lb*, of Arm healthy flesh in a month get your money back. Demand and get McCoy'a-the original and genuine Cod Liver Mil Tablet* f-JA —epprovedby Good Housekeeping mgr Inrttute. Refuse *11 aubetitutw— <AT on th* original McCoy's— ----- there or* none better. «N APPEAL I , TO ALL ! ,,. OMAHA MERCHANTS, I MANUFACTURERS, PACKERS 1 p.., „ AND FARMfeRS ! Someone to Work £jye ™ss a Trial and See What Happens ’ or mcchlnp. djGer('nce who: A janitor, carpenter, driver, clerk ; to en _ i T» 5011 Put them to work they will have monev ( nPed any0ne and don’t know where to get dW the GovernmeBt Employment Bureau. It can be [ Try it for 30 Days [ Everyone Will Have a Job | Don 1 wait 0H yourself-Ask for a clerk. This will put thous f ands of people to work. [ S? ab°Ut business increase; it Will be enormous. You cannot [ Gear1 Housewives—Don’t make a pack horse of voursolf Tf you buyanythmg, have it delivered. It will not cost any more and wall give jobs to thousands of deiverymen over night. 1 Ibis will put thousands of people to work* i 2501 Cuming St. At i CONSOLIDATED AUTO PARTS CO [ “Home of th* Kangaroo Court” | Kangaroo Court Committee i 2501 Cuming St. 'At. 5656