SLEEPING CAR PORTERS UNION SEND DELEGATE SAN FA NCI SCO—A marked change in the attitude of delegate!\ to the American Federaton of Labor conven tion w'w manifested during its sessio when the rrt oluton introduced in the convention by the delegatus from the Sleeping Car Porters’ Union, for the elimination of discriminatory clause in the constitutions and by laws and rituals of all A. F- of L. affiliate* war* accepted in part The resolution which was referred to the powerful committee on organization headed by Frank Duffy, a member of the Execu tive Council of the A. F- of Ik, was non concurred in by the report of the committee But in a special appeal and argument by A. Philip Randolph National Prcsdent of the Brotherhood of Sleepng Car Porters, in which he called upon the white delegate who packed tike hall to support the resolu tion n the interdst of solidarity of all working classes, regardle?!^ of race, creed, color or naionality, the delegates with a tremendous ovation voted down the report of the committee on organ Izaion 'Who findings and recommendations of the committee which will be appoint ed by the President William Green. In harmony with the mandate of the ■convention, to tie next convention, on the entire question of the relation ol Negro workers in the A- F of L-. and their present status in the Federation, are predicted to marke the beginning of a deeidely new policy on the oart ol the A. F. of L to Negro ^prkers, Iftates Mr Randolph before leaving the convention The fight for mdui trial unionism, though long and heated, has borne fruit, since the convention went on favoring the organization of the workers in basic industries •such as automobile, nfbber, steel, etc., intc industrial union" observe* Randolph The adoption of the principle of indue trial unionism will definitely affecl Negro workers advantageously, sinc« tee industrial union will emhr«oi unskilled os well Skilled workers and the Netgro worker* are largely unskiled, continued the porters' leadei Mr. Randolph. Another signal bit of progwr mad« by the ccjnv^ntion of the A. F- of L Hollis Hopes To Revive Glory of Major Taylot NEW YORK — (By A1 Moses foi ANP.)—The announcement that Har ry Hollis, sepia spring bicycle cham pion will team with Frank Harris oi Phllty, brings back the pristine great n«*s of the incomparable Major Taj lor, Harlerm fans for years have seer the light skinned Panamanian pit hii speed against Bobby Walthout, Fred dy Spencer, and other stars of th< banked track and wondered to them selves just how long silly prejudice: would Ikeep 'ties lad Ji*om (doming back into the lampight We look for those twro colored rid e*i to gun popularity with the fan: who are quick to reward real ability with genuine and whole hearted ap plauso- Naturally, the boys will faci the same tricks of the beards tha our jockey* have been running inti since the day!s| of Islnac Murphy. was the enlargement of the executive council from nine to fifteen, after a hard and bitter fight over a period of three years, led by John L- Lewis, President of the United Mine Workers of America, a powerful (industrial union says, Randolph. It is significant of the new spirit an attitude by the delegates to th A- F. of L- convention, that all five resolutiortt presented by the delegates of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters were adopted in whole or in part and for firsst time a Jew, since Samuel Corapers, former Prefeent of the A- F- of L-, David Dubinsky, Pro ddent of the International Garment Workers Union, was placed on th Executive Council, concluded Randolph. ANDY JENSEN . Andy Jensen wa« the Democrats Choice at the primary election for County Assessor and will be the poo plela choice in the general electio November 6. o says the Committe of 1,000 Second Ward Workers' Clulj for Andy Jensen for County Assessor 1 Andy Jensen, 45 years in one spot, ! is now candidate for County Assessor jon the Democratic ticket in the Nov ember General Election: Mr- Jense is the son of a North 24th St. buslnen man, who for more than 5 years has given employment to 6 Negroes in ; their laundry plant, known as the , Jensen Laundry at 24th and Ere kino Streets. i Mr. Jensen aays that If elected afl County Assessor, you will not have to fight for your prorata of employment his laundry plant, known aa the Jensen Laundry at 24th and Brskire election talk either. My past record should be sufficient proof. Political Ad Paid for by Committee of one thousand ! "NEWS IS NEWS'* SAY • LYNCH BROADCASTERS - WASHINGTON —( ANP )— Speak. l >ng before the Federal Comjmmica. i tions Commission last week, an offr . icial of radio station KNX, Los Angel. , es, ^stated that “news Is r.ews” and . that whenever a mob stormed a jnil to i carry out a lynching, the “story” would be broadcast The official, Guy C- Earl, made the ■ .taterrent in reply to a charge to i a charge made last week by Father r Cornelius Deeney to the effect that ■ broadcasts from KNX h->d inspired * the growth and purpose of the mob : which last year stormed a jail at San i Jose, Calif, and lynched two white men, held as kidnapper* Here's the best protection for the worst weather — Black and White A Peroxide Cream—and it keeps your r shin free from coarsening and roughen ing no matter how much it is exposed t • wi: d end weather. 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I had cramps so bad that I had to cry many times. I used to stay in bed two days a month. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Tablets helped me wonder fully. For the first time in my life I do not suffer. I can work all the time now and feel strong.—Mrs. Bennie Coates, 1963 Ter race St., AlusJkegon, Mich. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S TABLETS __C Uterme Tome and Sedative for Women % BISHOPS URGED TO ENDOBSE ANTI LYNCHING BILL ATLANTIC CITY, N. J—There is 'stycmg indication that the General Convention of the Prober sant Episcopal church meeting here will adopt a resol ution urging prosage of a federal anti lynching bill. On Wednesday Walter White, secretary of the National As sociaton for the Advancement of Col ored People, conferred with the bishopj and urged passage of a federal law to cope with lynching. He pointed to the dire economic plight of the Negroes and charged that lynching Ss the chief means of perpetuating that condition. There had been no groat outcry over the 17 lynching** so far thit year, he said, because all of the victims were Negroes. The statdf will not or cannot stop lynch ing. he declared, and that while organ zatlons with a dotal membership of 39.203, 928 had endorsed the Costi gan—-Wagner billl, the active support | of the Protestant Episcopal Church wa'j sorely needed Among the bishops present at the ^conference were Theodore D- Bratton of Ml^asippi, Edwin A. Penick of North Carolina, George Craig Stewart of Illinois, Bhhop Green of Misssis sippi, Bishop Finlay f South Carolina, and otheit*. All seemed strongly in favor of a resolution condemning| lynching and ah*o favoring a fed cral law. *Tt is said that a number of these bishops will present the recolu tion to the Convention. Following Mr- White,s talk many questions! quetftionlt were asked ---■ NE6R0 MAY HAVE TO FORM OWN POLITICAL PARTY Colored Voter In North Never In Worse Qnandrv Than Today, Editor Declares NEW YORK—The Republicans, De mocrtts, SocialH^ and Communists have little or nothing to offer the Ne ! pro voter and the race may yet be forced to organize a Negro politieal party in self-defense. This is the conclusion of Oswald Garrison Villard, noted liberal editor, in an article entitled "The Plight of I the Negro Voter,” in the November Crista magazine, julH out He declar es: I "It is perfectly obvious that the Ne gro has nothing to gain from the ! Roosevelt Administration except in bo ( far as Mr. Roosevelt effort!* to re* ■ store prosperity may benefit all of j the people. “If we look on the other Bide, the Republicans have absolutely nothing | to offer anyone- £ have no doubt that I’they will be willing to make all sorts of campaign and platform promise* to I the Negro, ju t as they have in the past, and then fail to live up to them i —al»o precisely as they have in the I past. “As for the Socialist party, that ife beyond doubt entirely friendly to the Negro, and wholly without race pre judice- But the situation of the Se l cialist party is obviously hopeless. • “As for the Communists, I know ‘ that their doctrines are in many as pects especially appealing tothe Ne 1 gro- Yet, if I were a Negro it would j be the last party for which £ should consider voting- Itjs.' leadership in the Unibed States is irtfignificant, almost beneath contempt. The Ruffians . themselves have no fath in it, and lit tie good opinion of it * I “It may possibly be that the time 1 will yet come when it will be neces ary to form a Negro party. But the time is not now.” The November isjsue contains also an article by Loren Miller, “Uncle Tom in Hollywood,” in which colored people are urged bo take some action against the characterizations of the race being broadcast to the World through the films by Hollywood pro ducer*. Hallelujah! Sings 200 As Colored Elder Is Freed (From The New York Daily New1*) Two hundred colored men and wo men, massed in 54th St-, between 8th iand 9th Ave., shouted “Hallelujah,” | leaped in ectacy or knelt in prayer yesterday when word came out of West Side Court that Magistrete Ha Ion Capshaw had freed James K. Hum phrey, 59 year old elder of the churc cf the United Sabbath Day Adven tists at 144 W- 131st St Elder Humphry, who lives at 141 W. 131st St-, had been charged with grand larceny by Alexandria Ber nard of 28 W. 132 St-, who accused him of “smooth talking” her out of $550. We, the Pastor and Members of | United Sabbath Day Adventist I Church of Omaha, and lumbers of the Conference rejoice with our beloved Moderator, Elder Jamefe, K- Hum I Phry> of New York City, who has been acquitted of the larceny charges that were brought against him by Alex andria Bernard- After five months of hurrassing him as though he were a criminal, when brought before) ! Judge Capshaw, he was, after five' months of scrutinizing, croes-qestion ing and examining, found to be am in nocent man. Once more we tell the world tha we are proud of our Leader, Elder J K- Humphrey, whom we are not ashai ed to present before any body of peo pie, either as a Christian minister o as the foremost Bible teacher of th race, or as a polished gentleman and a scholar. Elder M- M. Boodle Vice President of the United S. D- A- Conerence, 2320 N. 28 Ave^ HUEY LONG’S ORDER AFFECTS INSANE NEGROES BATON ROUGE, La.—(ANP)—By j order of Senator Huey Long, sheriffs of all Louisiana parishes were order ed last week to remove all insane pa tients they may be holding in prison, and to transfer them in the wards the Insane at Jackson. FARMER MAKES GOOD FERA S PROGRAM Jn 1933, Alabama had on relief no less than 30,000 agricultural workers —a certain number of them prime ex amplaj of that historically unfortu nate individual, the share cropper For these sufferers relief was accom plishing nothing. More than half the time the share cropper had no idea what his previous burden of debt was to his landlord, for the landlord kept the only books there were. Most of the relief monA." filtered through the sl^re cropper as through a sieve, found its way back to the landlord. Time after time the latter took over ed labor.” “We appreciate fully,” the letter concludes, “the difficulties to be encountered and are doing all we can to overcome them.” debt”—and left the Relief Administra te partially liquidating his “past the dhare cropper’s entire crop by way ng to supply a farmer with canned goods lest he starve, 1.00 states the For tune Magazine. Thaddeus Holt, the State Relief Ad ministrator in Alabama decided that the time had come to try a brand nerw sort of treatment for the econo mic ills of the FERA’s agricultural re lief clients, 60 per cent of which whom were poor whiten, 40 per cent of whom were Negroes- The drastic srtep was taken early In 1934 on the approval of Harry L- Hopkins, FERA Administrator in Washington. The State Relief Administrator put this ultimatum up to the landlord^: either take over your tenant as your relief problem and feed him when he becomes destitute, or else waive your claims to his 1934 crap and let the tenant farm for himself with the help of the state and federal government. Some landlords accepted this latter alternative, whereupon the Relief Ad ministration took a long l*ok at its rolls and out of the lot selected 6,000 who seemed to give some promise of mponding to treatment. Upon them it then began its paternalistic expert ment To the 6,000, the Relief Administra tion now gave the equivalent of eight months' relief all in one lump. This included one steer, costing $20, feed for the ateer, four and a half months' supply of food, plus seed, fertilizer, tools and clothing. The value of all this comes to an average of $91. It was a loan to the share cropper; ha signed a note and the relief organiza tion tok a mortgage on his crop. The share cropper remained a mortgage, but with this very mportant difference —his creditor was now the govern ment, not a private individual- When the share cropper signed his note, he became technically no longer a relief case Now it hft». always been the conten tion of the landlords who operate un der the feudal share-crop system that the share cropper is perpetually bank rupt because he is either a no-good poor white, or a lazy shiftless Negro. The goverment found only 200 o the 6,000, because of deaths, sickness and other such unforseen exigencies failed to make good, and pay back. The two following examples picked at random from the lot tell the story generally, which was typical of the majoriSy in this first 6,000: Stranded white farmer with wife and two children. Had been a relief case for more than a year- Unable to obtain credit or farm implements to earn a living. Advanced money by Alabama Re lief Administration to cover cost of steer, seed, feed, fertilizer, farming implements and subsistence- This has been paid back in full in work relief labor on public projects. He produced excellent crop with estimated value of two hundred thirty one dollars, the yields,- being as fol lows- One hundred forty bushels oi corn, thirty five gallons cane syrup one hundred twenty-five bushels 63f this proves out and the State Relief Administration can get rural Alabama spinning again it will make genuine work-relief projects for | reveral thousand men out of felling j lumher on state land- The lumber will be finished in sawmills that, will , take as their pay part of the umber . itself. The hou«e will be built by car i penbeo* as part of the district relief - work program. It will not be paint I ed. The $9.60 will be spent for such ! necessities as hinges, nails, a door j lock, the window glrn-ji Probably the J amount of federal money laid out in workrelief projects to create these houses will be some $200 a unit- The farmer will not get his house free. The government will select only the most promising risks and will take crops and labor in payment for It. This program has two more years to run. It is wide enough in scope to provide real rehabilitation. Admit tedly, the plan in rural Alabama has worked only as the result of close sup-, ervison over a group of underprivi-i lodged people- Remove the supervis ion now and the group drift hapless ly back to its old conditions. But con tinue the supervision under the FERA long enough and the time may come ,when it is no longer seeded- Some LEGAL NOTICES Attorney Ray L. Williams Room 200, Tuchman Bldg. 24th and Lake Sts. In the Matter of the Estate of Martha J. Roberts, Deceased: All persons interested in said matter are hereby notified that on the 24th day of September, 1934, Janet Rayford filed a petition in said County Court, praying that her final administration account field herein be settled and allow ed, and that she be discharged from her trust as administrator, and ha a htetaring will be had on said petition before said Court on the 20th day of October 1934, and that if you fail to appear be fore said Court on the said 20th day of October 19334, at 9 o’clock a. m., and contest said petition, the Court may grant the prayeu of heirship, and make such other and further orders, allowances and decrees, as this Court may seem proper, to the end that all matters pertaining to said estate may be finally settled nad determined.— Byrce Crawford, Couny Judge. Begins 10-20‘34. Ends 11-3-34. DOUGLAS COUNTY, NEB. In the Matter of the Estate of Martha J. Roberts, Deceased1 11 All persons interested in said i matter are hereby notified that on I the 24th day of September, 1934, Janet Rayford filed a petition in said County Court, praying that her final administration account filed herein be settled and allow ed, and that she be discharged from her trust as administrator, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 20th day of October, 1934, md that if you fail to appear be ofre said oCurt on the said 20th day of October, 1934, at 9 o’clock a. m., and contest said petition, the Court may grant the prayer of said petition, enter a decree of I heirship, and make such ohter and further orders, allowances and decrees, as this Court may seem piQper, to the end that all matters pertaining to said estate may be finally settled and determined. — Bryce Crawford, County Judge. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the County Gourt of Douglas County, Nebraska: In the matter of thet estate of Hou ston Murdock, deceased: All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in said court alleging that said deceased died leaving no last will and praying for administra tion upon his estate, and that a hear ing will be had on said petition be fore said Court on the 6th day of October, 1934, and that if they fail to appear at said Court on the said a. m. to contest said petition the court may grant he same and grant admin istration of said estate to William L- Myers or some other suitable per son proeed to a settlement thereof. Bryce Crawford County Judge Beg. 915-34 Ex. 10-6 34 CONTRIBUTION OF NEGRO ARTIST DRAMATIZED ON AIR NEW YORK—((ANP.)—The com pany of “Stevedore,” the theatre Un ion Play now running at the Civic Reportory Theatre, presented a dra matization of the contribution of the Negro Artist to the American Thea tre over the NBC- service to WEAF and network, Wednesday. The presentation was entitled “From Dixie to Broadway” and had Leigh Whipper as the narrator The program started with the first attempt of the Negro to produce entertaVn men and worked through until the prevent daly. This was the first time that anything of the sort has been done over a major qtatJon in the Ne.w York area. The first time that a Negro played before a Brohdway audience in any thing except a revue or as a bit play er, was in 1920 when Charles Gilpin made history in Eugene O’Neil’s “Em peror Jona !” There followed in CRIME CONFERENCE m NOT DISCUSS LYNCHING NEW YORK-It does not seem likely that lynching will be discussed at At torney General Cumming’s crime con ference in Washington in December. The National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People wrote to Attorney General Cumings, on Oct. 9 ei Iking if the lynching evil would be on the agenda of the conference. Jo seph B- Keenan, assistant attamey general, has replied, “The program for the conference is not as yet complete. Obviously, it will be impossible to co ver all phi* *es of the crime problem in the short space of three days. No definite decision has been made with refei-ence to the subject of lynching.” According to offialaltf of the Asso ciation, the Department of Justice hod evinced no interest whatever in the wave of lynchings but has been ac tive in running down kidnappers. At torney General Ou mitrings himself, they point out, If on record as oppos ed to a federal anti-lymching bill and has remained indifFereat to the exclu sion of qualified Negro voters from the Democratic primaries in the South although supplied with much docu mentary evidence in that connection 80,000 rur-d families in the United States are being rehabilitated under arrangements mfore or less like Ala bama's directed by Assistant Admini strator Lawrence Westbrook of the Federal Emergency Relief Admini stration ASK FOE FORBES’ PULLMAN. Sliced White BREAD And Get Mere for Your Money At Your Neighborhood Grocer “help the unemployed'’ -FORBES BAKERY 2711 N. 24th St. We. 6400 quick succession -such plays *<^jT God’s Chillun,” “Abraham’s Bosom,” “Porgy,” “01 Man Satan” and “Rub Little Chillun” with other Successes. The Script for this program was whitten by Alfred Bercivi and John Brown and Irving Gordon directed it ,’t was the first in a series of pro grams to be -sponsored by the Th