The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, October 13, 1934, Page Six, Image 6

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    THE TAX MASTER i
The National Industrial Cofer
«i;ee Hoard ha« issued an extraor
dinarily interesting comparison of
the naion’s income and expetndi
tures of rthe years 1929 and 1932.
In the former year our income
was $#1000,000,000. In the latter
it was $39,000,000,000. Yet the
cost of government rose from 7.8
per cent to 17.3 per cent of the
total income.
In 1932 we spent three times as
much for government as for agri
cultural products; seven times as
much as wc spent for light, power
and gas; twenty per cent more,
than we spent for all manufaeturl
ed products; twelve times as much |
as we spent for metals. Aji idea,
if the change may be gained
from the fact that in 1929 gov j
'eminent cost us only a third as.
much as we spent for inanufact-;
ui i d i roduets, and cost a billion
dollars than we spent for agri-j
♦netural commodities.
Today it is reliably estimated1
that the cost of government a
mounts to more than 20 per cent
of the national income. That
means that every worker must
put in one day out of each fj^'e"
day week ir* order to pay his
share of hi expense. If htis wage
is $25.0 da week, he gets but $20.
00 in reality—government gets the
other $5.00, either d i r e c 11 y,
through increasing the cost of all
the necessities of life.
The lax problem is as vital an
L see a the American people ever
faced. |
SOMEBODY BLUNDERED
Study of lie statistics reveals
that a majority of he 758,500 auto
mobile accidents in the United'
States in 1933 occurred on j
straight, dry roads in clear
vveathei ^ and involved ears in
good condition driven by persons
of mature age—from 25 to 04. The
majority ot the 30,000 deaths and
850,000 injuries iau.-t be attribut
ed to blunders.
A recent analysis by the Na
tional Bureau of Casualty and
Surety Underwriters shows what
the blunders were. There are 81
in all.
1. Drove too fast for conditions
—this accounted for approximate
ly three-fourths of all mishaps in
1933 assigned to driving blunders.1
2. Failed to slow down at inter
sections.
3. Failed to keep to the right.
4. Tried to pass another car go
ing in the same direction when
view was obstructed.
5. Failed to slow down on ap
proaching pedestrians.
6. Passed on the right of a pre
ceding vehicle.
7. Ignored important traffic
control devices.
8. Parked at dangerous spots.
If drivers will obey the eight
common sense rules suggested by
these violations, the annual acci
dent record can be reduced to a
negligible figure.
- A BABY For YOU?
” If you are denied the blessing of a
baby all your own and yearn for a
baby's arms and a baby's smile do not
give up hope- Just write n confi
dence to Mrs. Mildred Owens, 2509—
Coates House, Kansas City, Mo., and
she will tell you about a simple home
method that helped her after being de
nied 15 yrs. Many others say this has
helped bless their lives. Write now
and try for this wonderful happiness.
—Adv- _____
The International Labor De
fense is calling upon its 200,000
members and affiliates, and all
workers’ organizations to inten
sify the mass campaign in defense
f Herndon and the Scottsboro
boys.
Reports received by the Nation'
al Office of the International La*
bor Defense of the protest meet'1
ings dud mass demonsrations or
ganized by the International in
the cities on tour, describe the
enthusiastic response of thousands
to the appeal of Angelo Herndon,
youthful leader of the white and
Negro unemployed of Georgia and
Mother Norris. Overflow meetings
were held last week in Gary, In
diana, and Chicago, Illinois.
YES, YOU ARE
WELCOME
Republican women or Uoogias
county will give a tea in honor of
Robert (r. Simmons, Republican
candidate for Pnitcd States Sen
ator. at he Paxton Hotel Tuesday
afternoon, October 16th.
Every woman interested in
meeting Mr. and Mrs. Simmons is
invited to attend and will be made
welcome at the tea. I will be open
to he public. The tea will begin
at 2 o’clock.
Prominent Republican women,
of Omaha and county will act as
hostesses and will serve at the tea
tables. This tea will be the lpg
focial and political event o fthe
i ampaign.
la the receiving line, in addition
to Mr. and Mrs. Simmons will be
Mrs. M. D. Cameron, Republican
National Committee woman;
Charles S. Reed, chairman of the
Simmons-for-Senator Club and
Mis. Reed, Mrs. J. Dean Ringer,
chairman of the woman’s division
of the ►Simmons club: Judge Her"
be. t Rhoades, Republican Candi
da ie ofr congress and Mrs.
Rhoades; Mrs. Harold M. Diers
a ad HMrs. Bertha Clark Hughes.
Vt the tea table will bo: Mrs.
I. Francis McDefihott, Mrs. Heir
ry Tovey, Mrs. Stanfield Johnson,
Mrs. C. W. Hamilton Jr., and Mrs.
Harry S. Ryrne.
The Hostesses will be:
Mesdames Rufus E. Lee, Rich"
ard Mallory, Walter Oozad, F. A.
Cressey, Victor Smith, Bruce Mc
Culloch, Helen Adkins scott, C.
W. Mead, Dr. Jennie Calf’as, Theo*
dore Maenner, Phillip Potter, Per
ry Wheeler, Roy Towl, Howard
Kushton, Palmer Findley, Irvin
Stalmaster, A. W. Jefferis, Ted
.Metcalfe, J. Francis McDermott,
Alfred A. Raperi, Frank Baker, C.
W. Hamilton Jr., Oscar Engier,
Howard Kennedy, Fred Bailey, M.
M. Meyers, Ballard Dunn, Lulah
T. Andrews, William Berry and
Sam Reynolds.
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Stop Getting Up Nights
Here’s one good way to flush harm
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and stimulant for weak kidneys and
irritated bladder. Besides getting up
nights, some symptoms of kidney
trouble are backachees, puffy eyes,
leg cramps, and mpist palms, but be
sure to get GOLD MEDAL—it’s the
genuine medicine for weak kidneys—■
right from Haarlem in Holland
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Mr. Johnson’s Briirantine Fair Grower is truly
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*Te(dayi ^s-*5.— I
..Stirs j C1TY. . STATE..J i
ISTERNATIOHAL tabor
DEFENSE LEADS TRADE
UNION PROEST
International Labor Defense
Leads Trade Union Protest
Delegation to Washington Pro
testing Discrimination and Ar
rest of Textile Workers Follow
ing Strike Sell-Out.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Shifted
around from Secretary of Labor
Frances Perkins to Director of
Conciliation Kerwin ami from him
to newly appointed chairman of
the new National Textile Labor
Relations Board, Judge Walter P.
Stacey, the International Labor
Defense led a delegation of rep
resentatives from the Trade Union
Unity League, the Needle Trades
Workers Industrial Union, United
Shoe and Leather Workers Union,
Marine orkers Industrial Union,
Taxi Drivers Union, Committee
of the Protection of Foreign
Born, the legal staff of the I. L.
; D., in protest against the whole
sale discrimination of militant tex
tile workers and continued arrests
ji the textile areas, particularly
in Georgia and iNortn Carolina.
The delegation was greeted
with a series of evasive promises
of investigation into the matter
;.nd categorical statements from
Judge Walter P. Stacey, a native
son of North Carolina that nobody
vas arrested in North Carolina
except “for breaking the law.”
This was in answer to the demand
of the delegation that Svlvia
Crouch and Belle Weaver arrested
last week in. Gastoijia, N. C., and
the nineteen textile workers in
Shannon, Ga., and Athens, Ga.,
arrested last week and held under
nilitary arrest, be immediately
released.
The statement presented to
Frances Perkins, Director of Con*
filiation Kerwin and Judge Stacey
follows:
“Madame Secretary: .
“This labor delegation repre
senting several hundred thousand
workers organized, into trade
in ions, was brought here by the
Itemational Labor Defense, itself
representing 200,000 members and
affiliates, to protest against the
wholesale discrimination and
blacklisting practised against over
80,000 textile strikers all over the
country and especially in the
South. The strike was called off
on the basis of the Winant Board
Report, which was hailed by your
self and President Roosevelt as a
(sweeping victory’ for the textile
wokrers. This ‘victory’ in reality
has been the most complete be*
trayal and defeat of the textile
trikers who face starvation, un
employment after thirteen weeks
of militant strike struggle against
the most brutal array of military,
machine guns, armed hugs, force
and violence ever seen in this
country.
“Sixteen murdered, the last vic
tim, 18-year-old Leo Roulette, died
in Woonsocket, It. 1., last Mon*
day. Over a hundred were driven
into a concentration camp in
Georgia. Hundreds were arrested.
Nine states had Nat’l. Guard out
against the textile strikers. Fit'
teen thousand troops were on ac
tive duty, arrayed in federal U.
S. Army equipment, against the
textile strikers who demanded liv
ing wages, decent hours, an enc
to the brutal stretchout systeir
and recognition of their union.
“The International Labor De
fense, which offered defense of al
arrested textile strikers to the na
tional strike committee in Wash
ingon as well as to all local anc
district strike committees, fron
he first day of the strike protest
ed against the use of armet
forces, military and mercenary
against strikers who were exercis
ing their constitutional rights—
the right to organize, strike and
picket.
“We propose for your im
mediate attention and action thf
following demands which we feel
are in the inerests of the textile
strikers:
“1. That your department im
mediately take steps to end the
blacklisting and discrimination on
the basis of union membership
againt militant textile workers
who were exercising their legal
right to organize, strike, and
pieke.
“2. Complete withdrawal of all
armed forces, police, special den
sities, thugs, used againt textile
■workers.
“3. Provision made for the un
restricted right of textile work
ers to organize into unions of
■their own choosing.
“4. Arrest and punishment of
all those responsible for the 16
murder during the three weeks of
the strike.
“5. Release of all those arrest
ed, including Sylvia Crouch and
Belle Weaver, in Gastonia, N. C.,
all those still held in Rhode
Island under Governor Green’s
PROF. L06AN
FORSEES STRUGGLE
OVER CONTROL OF
HAITIAN FINANCES
Atlanta, Ga., Oct 9—Special
Next step ip the struggle of Haiti
for self control will involve the man
agement of the government finances,
Rayford W. Logan, professor of his
tory at Atlanta University, who spent
his summer in the Haitian Republic,
declared in a talk this week at Moore
house College. Mr. Logan was an
eye witness to the withdrawal of the
United States Marines after a stay
of 9 years on the island, and had op.
vortunity to talk at length with Presi
dent Stenic Vincent, regarding the
situation in Haiti
The coming struggle involves four
factors: the National City Company
of New York, mhich the government
of Haiti owes $11,000,000; the Bank of
Haiti, which is now owned and control
led by the National City Company; the
President and peo pleof Haiti, and.
finally, the United States Government,
which still maintains an American fi
nancial representative there in the per
son of Mr- DeLame, a resident of Lou
siana.
It is now proposed, Prof. l«ogan ex
plained, that the United States relin
uish its financial control, and that this
control be placed in the hands of the
Bank of Haiti, which under the plan
would be sold by the National City
Company to the government of Hai
ti. The bank under this plan would be
governed by a guard of six, two Hai
tians appointed by the President of
Haiti, two Americans selected by the
President from a panel of five persons
to be submitted by the National City
Company, and two to be selected by the
President from a panel submitted by
the foreign bondholders’ protective
council.
Mr- Logan aontends that control by
the American government is less ob
ectionable than control by representa
tives of private individuals. He be
lieves with many other friends of Hai
tian the United States that they can
present these views to the American
State Department and get favorable
attention.
Mr. Logan devoted his summeer to
esearch in Haiti and the United States
on the subject of Haitian-American re
lations in preparation for the writ
ing of a dissertation on the subject,
which i3 to be offered as a require
ment for his Ph D, at Harvard Uni
versity.
“How do tl account for the change.”
he asked- Answemg hs own queston,
he stated: “In 1926 the officers in
command of the island were largely
Southern white men. Today officers
are largely men who have come from
the Northern and Western (States.
The Southern officers made the mis
take of supposing the Haitians would
be as docile as the Southern Negro.
They forgot that Haiti had fought
for 13 years to win their indepen
dence, and through their own efforts
had brought forth the one republic in
the Western hemisphere where the
black man was to be free.”
The two men who more than any
others brought conditons in Haiti to
the attention of the outside world
were men whose names would be for
ever associatd with Atlanta Univer
sity—James Weldon Johnson, of the
class of 1894, who through his arti
cles in the Nation first reported on
oppression of the Haitians under Ame
rican control, and Professor W- E. B.
Dubois, who by his writings in the
Crisis focused the attention of the
American Negroes and their friends
on the conditions in the island repub
lic- ' 1
! 1ST RESOLUTIONS REPORTED
OUT AT A. F. OF L,
CONVENTION
SAN FRANCISCO—(FP)—One re.
solution was adopted outright, twt
eferred /to the Executive Council
ne referred back to the Committee
a organization and one hamstrung
y amendment at the fifth day’s ses
ion of the American Federation o:
jabor Convention.
The adopted resolution, which car
. ied without a dissenting vote, wa:
: hat introduced by the Internationa
adies Garment Workers Union call
l ng upon the Executive Council t<
onfer with the Executive Boards o
[ ffiliated national and internationa
unions to seek eradication of all dis
’ ruminations against colored workers
The two resolutions referred to thi
Executive /Council had to do witil
organization of migratory and tinabei
workers. A resolution aimed at som<
. of the delegates in the convention foi
patronizing non - union restaurant:
went back to the Organizing Commit
tee for amendment- A resolutior
eeking expulsion of internationals foi
discrimination against Negroes was
mended until it called only for an in
vestigating committee to study the
subject of race discrimination in the
mions and report back at the next
nnual convention.
■ 1 1 ■' —0
A WONDER
FOOD DEMONSTRATION
AT ELKS’ HALL—OCT. 17, 18, 19
Starts at 6:45
ALABAMA SUPREME COURT
TURNS DOWN SCOTTSBORO
REHEARING
Death Date Set for December 7
Poliak Will Handle Legal Appeal
to U. S. Supreme Court second
Time.
(Special to The Omaha Guide)
NEW YORK — Announcement
j that an immediate appeal to the
U. S. Supreme Court will be taken
n he Seottsboro case, was made by
the International Labor Defense
October 4, when the State Su*
preme Cour of Alabama rejected
a motion for re-hearing of the ap
I peals in the ease of Iteywood Pat*
terson and Clarence Norris.
The state supreme court, in fe
fusing to grant the re-hearing, set |
i the dae for he execution of Pat
terson. and Norris for December 7.
Walter IT. Poliak, who brilliant
lly defended the case of the Scot
tsboro boys in the legal appeal
ito the U. S. Supreme Court iri
, 1932, when that body wos fore*
led by world-wide pressure to .
' grant the boys a new trial, will
'be associated in the new appeal
to the TJ. S. Supreme Court with
Osmond K. Fraenkel, who has
been in charge of the legal work
connected with the appeals since
the Decatur trial, it was announc*
ed b ythe International Labor De*
-fense. ,
The Best Talent
In engaging Poliak, the Inter
national Labor Defense is follow
ing its policy of providing the best
available legal talent for every
step in the Seottsboro case. The
retaining of Samuel S. Liebowitz,
one of the most able trial law
yers in the country, for the De
catur_trials, was an earlier evi
dence of this policy.
Walter H. Poliak is considered
the most expert constitutional at
torney in the country, and the
man therefore best fitted o pre*
pare he appeals to the IT. S. Su
preme Court, which will be taken
on grounds of denial of constitu
tional rights to the Seottsboro
boys in heir trial, one of the most
basic points to be raised being
the systematic exclusion of Ne
groes from Alabama juries. Mr.
Liebowitz has never conducted
such an appeal.
It was after Mr Liebowitz had
! been informed of the decision to
retian Mr. Poliak in the appeals, a
spokesman for the International
Labor Defense said, that Liebo*
Witz made his announcement, last
, week, that he was withdrawing
1 from the case—an announcement
coupled with a vicious and unwar
ranted attack upo the defender of
the scottsboro boys, the Inerna
tional Labor Defense.
Mr. Liebowitz was informed of
j the decision on Monday, Oct. 1,
and made his announcement of
withdrawal o Oct. 3, almost simul
taneously with the announcement
jof the third lynch-decision of the
Alabama Supreme Court in the
ease, setting the execution date
for December 7.
Interest of Boys Come First
CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
ATTACKS GREEN
- i
SAN FRANISCOOO—(FP)— The
Northern California Committee of the
American Civil Liberties Unions, with
leadquarters in San Francisco, is after
he scalp of Pres. William Green.
1 Green in a report to President Roose*
elt on subversive activities included
he union among Communist-controll
d organizations. In a challenge ask
ng Green to appoint a committee to
nvestigate its organization, the Union
1 oints out:
“Our organization has rendered fre
■ uent and consistent service to or
’ anized labor. We have stood firm;
gainst anti-labor injunctions, infringe
l nents on the right to picket peace
' ully, to strike and to organize.
“This report of yours carries libel
‘ us implications involving respected
1 Americans who constitute the Na
tional Committee 'of our *rganiza
! Won. To name a few: Felix Frank
urter, Richard C. Cabot, Federic C.
1 Howe, Henry T. Hunt, Norman Hap
good, Judge Charles Amidon, Amos
1 Pinehot, Charles Board, John Dewey
nd Susan Brandeis.
“You know that the American Civil
Liberties Union is constantly attack
ed by Communists.”
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ROSENBLATT TRIES TO
STEM NRA CRITICISM
SAN FRANCISCO—(FP)—Sol A.
Rosenblatt, division administrator of
the NRA tried to head off some of
the criticism to which the Roosevelt
Administration ia being subjected at
tha A. F. of L- convention in an ad
dress delivered at the morning session,
Oct. 5.
“Last October, when addressing you
in Washington." Rosenblatt declared
M said that the National Recovery
Administration is the greatest experi
ment in practical Idealism ever con
ceived in the minds of human beings
Nothing that has transpired eirwfe
then has caused me to change my
mind.
Rosenblatt said that great gains had
been made and that the act and the
codes presented truly scientific ap
proach to the solution of industrial
problems. A faint ripple of applause
greeted some of his remarks. Prin
cipal among these was the point at
which he spoke af competition and
appealed to organized labor not to let
it be “competition based upon the de
basement of labor,” or “competition
to see who can make toil more hope
less and unbearable for the wage-earn
er”
CONSERVATIVES AND PRO
* GRESSIVES RUSH ON
NEGRO ISSUE
SAN FRANCISCO—(FT)— The
first skirmish 'betwjeen progressive
irvd conserative forces on the floor of
the A. F. and L- convention took place
in the morning session of the fifth
day, Oct. 5. Neither side emerged
victorious, but it may be said that the
progressives drew first blood.
Centering on a resolution introduc
ed by Delegate Philip Randopph of
the Sleeping Car Porters advocating
expulsion of “any union which viola
tes the constitution of the American
Federation of Labor by maintaining
the color bar’ and which called for
the appointment of a committee of
five to investigate the. whole status
of Negro workers in relation to the
A- F. of L., the issue precipitated a
sharp division among the delegates
The Committee on Organization rec
ommended non-concurrance in the re
solution. Randolph then took the
floor and urged its passage in a res
trained but eloquent plea that was fol
lowed by one of the longest bursts
of applause yet heard in the conven
tion. When an oral vote was taken
on the acceptance of the Organization
Committees recommendation, a thun
derous ‘no ’ echoed through the hall.
Sparring for delay, before a show of
hands could be taken, W. L. Hutche
son of the Carpenters offered on
amendment to the effect that Pre
sident Green appoint an investigat
ing committee to report on the whole
matter at next year’s convention. An
NEW GA RMFN T~®ITO P~0PENS
The Fitts Garment Shop is now
open or business at 2060 N. 19
St., We. 0647. Listen for the an
nouncement for the Fitts*Ware
style show.
drew Furuseth, veteran of the Soa
man’a Union spoke in favor of the
question being referred to Executive
Council
Delegate Frank Daffy delivered a
long-winded speech aglinsttheresolu
tion in which he declared that this
matter had been agitating the A.. F.
of L Councils for 26 years.. Hut
cheson’s amendment was then put to
vote and carried
OMAHA MIDWEST
. CLINICAL SOCIE
TY CONVENES,
OMAHA, Oct. 12 —• A thousand
midwestern physicians are expect*
ed t assembele in Omaha from
Oct. 29 to Nov. 2 for a week’s
post-graduate study under 12 of
America's most distinguished me
dical men. The occasion will be
the second annual assembly of the
Omaha Mid*"West Clinical Socie
ty, meeting on those dates with
headquarters at the Hotel Pax
•UOt
Heading the list of distinguish
ed lecturers and clinicians will b«
the presidet of the American Me
scal Association, i>r. Walter L.
Bierring, of Des Moines, Dr. Fos
ter Kennedy, New York neurolo
gist of international reputation,
Dr. Frank H. Lahey, Boston, for
professor of surgery at Harvard
Medical School nnd now director
of the celebrated Lahey Clinic,
and Dr. Benjamin, JL Orndoff,
[Chicago x-ray specialist who is
general secretary of the Fifth In
ternational Congress of Radiolo
gy and past president of the Ra
diological Society of North Ame
rica._ _
An incidental feature of the as
sembly will be the Ak-SarBen
Live Stock Show, horse show and
rodeo, being held at the same time.
Other famous medical men ad
dressing the past-graduate assemb
ly are: Drs. Willis C. Campbell,
Memphis, Tenn., orthopedic sur
gery; Carl II. Davis, Milwaukee,
is., gynecology and obstetrics: A.
I. Folsom. Dallas, Texas, genito
urinary; W. II. Guy, Pittsburgh,
Pa., dermatology; R. H. Jaffee,
Chicago, 111., clinical pathology;
John O. MeReynolds, Dallas, Tex.,
eye, ear, nose and throat; A.
Graeme Mitchell, Cincinnati, 0..
pediatrics, and Cyrus C. Sturgis,
Ann Arbor,| Mich., medicine.
Charles W. Taylor
CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION
Your Vote Appreciated
Elec. Nov. 6 Your Vote Appreciated
Non-Political Ballot
Present State Supt. of
Public Instruction_
1
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foremost among all
Talcums. For the whole
< family, after bathing, it is
indispensable. Use it daily.
Softer,* finer, absolutely pure—it
protects and absorbs. The delicate,
inimitable Djer-Kiss fragrance, ox
course. White and Rose.
Jumbo Size 25^
*1°.° Regular
Size
Wn* f 41 •
f TALCUM POWDER *
Genuine Djar-ICus Partum, in a dainty O d
VaneMe, Purie Size « .*•, « . . ~ -