The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, April 27, 1935, Page THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SOCIAL SCENCE DIVISION
ON NATIONAL RECOVERY
PROGRAM FOR NATIONAL CONFERENCE
PLACE:—Auditorium, Frederick Douglas Memorial Hall, Howard Uni.
TIME:—May 18th, 19th and 20th, 1935
THEME:—“The Posit-on of the Negro in Our National Economic Crisis”
First Session—May 18 at 9:30 a. m. Dr George E. Haynes will preside.
9:30 to 10:30—'Registration of delegates.
10:30 to 10:40—Remarks by the Presiding Officer.
10:40 to 11:20—“A Survey of Hie Problems of the Negro
Under the ‘New Deal’.”_Mr John P. Davis
11:20 to 11:40—Discussion of Paper.....JDr- Abram L. Harris
11:40 to 12:00—Discussion from the Floor.
12:30—Luncheon for delegates at Howard University.
Second Session—May 18 at 2:30. Dr. Charles H- Wesley will preside.
Topic:—“The Negro Industrial Worker”
2:30 to 3:00—“The Negro Worker Under NRA”_
„ .. . „ „„ -------Dr. A- Howard Meyers
3:00 to 3:30— The Plight of the Negro Industr.al Worker”_
„ OA t -.-.....Mr. T. Arnold Hill
3:30 to 4:00—TEe Trade Union Movement and the Negro”_
. -----.-.-.-.Mr- A. Phillip Randolph
(In the event of Mr. Randolph’s absence his paper will be
read by Mr- Ashley Totten)
4:00 to 4:15—Discussion of Papers .._Mr. Ira DeA Reid
4:30—Discussion of Papers Mr. Robert W. Dunn
4:30 to o:i0—Quertions from the Floor.
5:10 to 5:30—Discussion from the Floor.
Thin! Session—May 18, 8 p. m- Miss Nannie H. Burroughs will preside
iopic: Symjpos.um of Negro Workers and Farmers on the “New Deal”
A Negro Needle Trade Worker from Forrest Citv, Arkansas.
A Negro Tobacco W.orker from Reidsville, North Carolina
A Negro Domestic Worker from New York City.
A Negro Steel Worker from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
A Negro Laundry Worker from Washington, D. C
A Negro Sharecropper from Lauderdale County, Alabama
An unemployed Negro Worker from Baltimore, Maryland
A Negro Farmer from Panola County, Mississippi.
(Following the Symposium delegates will have the opportunity
to ask ques.ions.)
Fourth Session—May 19, 10 a. m. Dr. Charles S- Johnson will preside.
topic:— America’s Negro Farm Population ”
10:00 to 10:30—“The Present Pos.tion of the Negro Farm
10-30 tr, 11-on ^OP^lation” ..Miss olive Stone
iU.ou to 11.00— The Governments Farm Policies and the
Negro Farmer” ___Mr M I Wilarm
11:00 to 11:45—“The Effect of the New Deal Farm Program
...... ,9 no -n °n the N^°” .Dr E- Franklin Frazier
JO—Discussion of Papers........Mr. J. M Maclachlan
}|:JJ .Mr. James S- Allen
12.15 to 12.3o—Questions from the Floor
12:S5 to 1:00—Discussion from the Floor
Fifth Session-May 19, 2:30 p. m. Dr. Howard Long will preside,
o. 9 n ^P1C^ Dea .Social Planning and the Negro.”
2:30 to 3:00—The Pol.cies of the Subsistence Homestead
/t 4.u Division on the Negro.Mr. Charles Pynchon
(in the event of Mr. P. nchon’s absence his paper will be
read by Mr. Edward W Zeuch)
3:00 to 3:20—“Solving: the Problem of Farm Tenancy”.
o.on : , ..-----...Mr Frank Tannenbaum
3.20 to 3.40— Tennessee Valley Authority and the Negro”....
o.An . . on „ .-- --- ------...Fraulein Berta Asch *
3.40 to 4:20—Critique of New Deal Social Planning as it
4 in to 4 rvaffeCtS .-Dr. Ralph J. Bunche
1° 1-x^“51S<!USS!on of Papers ..Dr. Charles H. Houston
1'“° ^ 4:45—Discussion of Papers ... Mr- M H. Hedges
4:4o to 5:10—Questions from the Floor ®
5:10 to 5:30—Discussion from the Floor
Sixth Session—May 19, 8 p. m., Dr. Mordecai Johnson will preside.
Topic:—Mliat Kind of Social Planning Best Suits the Needs of the
Negro.
8:00 to 8:10—Remarks by the Presiding Officer
8:10 to 8:50—Social Planning for the Negro, Past and
Present __J)r yg g g gu gQ;s
S:50 to 9:10—Social Planning for the Negro in the Future ...
5:2 S S-S-STT”*,01 ap.ers ...Mr Emmett Dorsey
9.30 to 9.50—Questions from the Floor
9:50 to 10:10—'Discussion from the Floor
‘"Persons starred have been invited.)
Seventh Sess.on—May 20, 10 a. m., Miss Elizabeth Eastman will preside
10-0fT°tn1Cinial.-n,Orn^?tlLLai>Ox1i: (b) Unempto/ment and Relief.
10.00 to 10.30—The Plight of Negro Domestic Labor_
min to m.4A tv.-Tr.-.—Mrs. Myra Colson Callis
: £ 11004Sr3lSCUSS,On of Paper ---.Mrs Jessie Daniel Ames
in in to 1l1°^7PlSC*U33l0,i0f Paper —.—.Miss Mary Anderson
10.50 to 11.00—Questions from the Floor
11:00 to 11:10—Discussion from the Floor
11:15 to 12:00—Negro Unemployment and its Treatment_
12-00 m 19-1=; tv Dy tbe x^^.Mr. Forrester Washington
Iz'is to mifcl^!301133-011 °l ^aper - Mr. Nels Anderson
1210 to m:f^Z?1SCUv310nx0f Paper™.Miss Tbyra Edwards
12.30 to 12.45—Questions from the Floor
12:45 to 1:00—Discussion from the Floor
^aioVMa&20; 2:30 P Dr‘ Locke will preside,
-opic.—How May Me Improve the Status of Negro Workers and
Farmers?
2:30 to 3:00—The answer of the Socialist partly, Mr. Norman Thomas
(Because of Mr. Thomas’ unavoidable absence, his paper will
9 no * m ^ read by Mr. Paul Porter)
3.ini to 3:30—The Answer of the Communist Party_
3=30 to 4:00—Questions from the Floor.. ^ ^ames W Ford
1'on 4:30—Discussion from the Floor
4:30 to 5:15—Critical Summaries of the Conference.
(each speaker to have seven mfnutes)
Mr. T. Burnham King
Dr. Ralphe J. Bunche
A White Worker
A Negro Worker
Dr. E. Franklin Frazier
„ , j. . Mr- John P. Davis
dl®cussions on particular subjects will be arranged at the
comerenee, Monday evening is reserved for a general discussion of
Next Steps in the Light of Present Problems.” Delegates are urged
to take part in this session. 6 are urgea
WHO S M HO AMONG THE CONFERENCE SPEAKERS
W ■ T. n i 11 « m , -— ._
xjm.1 o aucu iiHs iimue sever&j
studies of Negro Farm Problems. He
is a member of the Communist Party.
Mrs Jessie Daniel Ames is a member
of the Southern Interracial Commis
sion. She has published a pamphlet
on conditions of domestic labor in the
South
Miss Mary Anderson is head of the
Women’s Bureau of the United States ;
Department of Labor.
Mr Nels Anderson is author of “The'
Hobo”; and is now with the engineer
ing division of FERA
Fraulein Berta Asch is from Berlin; t
now an Elmhurst Fellow at the Brook-:
ings Institution. She has made a de
tailed study of TV A
Miss Nannie H Burroughs is Princi
pal of the National Training School
for Women and Girls.
Dr Ralph J Bunche is head of the
Department of Political Science at
Howard University.
-
Mrs. Myra Colson Callis is a member
of the faculty of the Atlanta School j
of Social Work- She was a member
| the White House Conference on
Domestics.
Mr John P Davis is executive sec
retary of the Joint Committee on na
tional Recovery.
Mr Emmett Dorsey is instructor in
■ political science at Howard University.
iDr W E B DuBois is a membepr of
phe faculty of Atlanta University, au
W*i0r * number of books on the race
^problem and formerly editor of the
Kir Robert Dm fe director of Labor
Research Association and author of
several books on problems of indus
trial workers.
Miss Elizabeth Eastman has been
prominent in the field of interracial
cooperation for a number of years
Miss Thyra Edwards is connected with
the Abraham Lincoln Center in Chi
cago. A former student at Brook
wood Labor College, she has lectured
on workers’ education in this country
and in Europe
Mr James tt Ford was candidate for
the vice-presidency of the United
States on the Communist ticket in
1932.
Dr E Franklin Frazier is head of
the Department of Sociology of How
ard University. He is author of the
“Negro Family in Chicago”, and col
laborated on Negro farm studies at
Fisk University.
Dr Abram Harris is co-author of the
“Black Worker”; a member of the fac
ulty at Howard University, former
member of the Consumers’ Advisory
Board of the NRA; and recent recip
ient of a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Dr George Edmund Haynes is Race
Relations Secretary of the Federal
Council of Churches.
Mr M H Hedges is secretary-treas
urer of the National Association for
Economic and Social Planning.
Mr T Arnold Hill is executive secre
tary of the National Urban League.
Dr Chafles Houston is vica dean of
Howard University Law School; and
special counsel of Use Naftonol Amo
oiatkm for the Advancement of Col
| ored People -
Dr Charles S Johnson is head of the
Social Science Division at Fisk Uni
j versity.
Dr Mordecai Johnson is President of
Howard University,
j Bur T Burnham King is a common
wealth Fellow from the London School
of Economics. His home is South
Africa. He has been studying the
race problem in America for the past
year.
Dr Alain Locke is professor of phil
osophy at Howard University.
Dr Howard Long is assistant super
intendent of the Washington Public
Schools.
Mr J M Maclachlan is a member
of the faculty of the University of j
North Carolina.
Dr A Howard Meyers is executive
director of the Labor Advisory
Board of the National Recovery Ad
ministration.
Mr Paul Porter is Labor Secretary of
the Socialist Party.
Mr Charles Pynchon is general mana
ger of the Subsistence Homesteads
Corporation of the Department of In
terior .
Mr A Phillip Randolph is president
->f the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters.
Mr Ira DeA Reid is in the Depart
ment of Sociology of Atlanta Univer
sity.
.Miss Olive Stone is a native of Ala
bama; now a Fellow at the University
of North Carolina.
Mr Frank Tannenbaum has made
several studies of the South and of
| tenant problems.
Mr Norman Thomas was Socialist
candidate for President of the United
States in 1932.
Bir Forrester Washington is head of
the Atlanta School of Social Work;
and was formerly Director of Negro
work of FERA.
Mr M L Wilson is Assistant Secre
tary of Agriculture.
Mr Edward Zeuch is in the Planning
section of the Subsistence Homesteads
; Division.
---
In Commemoration of
50th Anniversary
Local radio listeners will hear!
telephone conversations from the;
four corners of the I'nited States'
1*1 a program presented over the I
Columbia netwoik Sundv April!
28 from 5 to 6 p. m. central stand
ard time. This program will
commemorate the 50th annivers
ary of the American Telephone ;
and Telegraph Company, parent1
company of the Bell system of
which the Northwestern Bell
Telephone Company is a part.
This anniversary broadcast will
be of particular interest to the
250,000 employees and 750,000’
stockholders of the Bell System,
besides all other users of tele
phone service.
Ted Busing, ace radio reporter
of news and special events, will
announce and serve as master-of
ceremonies for the program,
which will open with four suc
cessive long distance calls to
Flush Poisons From
Kidneys and Stop
Getting Up Nights
When you can get for 35 cents a I
supremely efficient and harmless stim- j
ulant and diuretic that will flush from
your kidneys the wast matter, pois-1
ons and acid that are now doing you
harm, why continue to break your
restful sleep by getting up thru the
night. Just ask your druggist for
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules—
but be sure and get GOLD MEDAL—
rifht from Haarlem in Holland. Other '
symptoms of weak kidneys and irri- :
tated bladder are back ache, puffy
eyes, leg cramps, moist palms, burn
ing or scanty passage.
GOOR CHILD
; /and tuC'Schooi
t ! 1 ' Sr Dt. ALLEN a IRELAND
. IW rkpm* md Hndii fdmMm
tin, /m; Sum Oi^imi r< httr linuin
Stunts
"I dare yt&,” “Yer stomped,*
were among toe cries I heard upon
ste^ipipg on tb the school play
gro&a&'
is aturaiiy, 1
stamped, interested.
Fere was a group
<£ email boys formed
in a circle surround
ing two of their
number matched
p hg^lnst each other
id t test oi srrengtn,
ability, an{ xcixs. The large beys
and the girls had tbeir own groups
at other spots.
It was the monthly “stunt test,"
I learned. All was in order and rua
according to laws and a plan de
vised by the pupils themselves. A
good lesson in citizenship, by the
nvay. Children are sticklers about
living up to their own rules. And
they're excellent law enforcers.
It was interesting to cheek off in
my mind each trait as I watched
the contest. There was no quitting.
•Everyone had to “deliver the
goods.” If he tried but lost, all was
welL Perseverance. Quick think
ing. Mental strategy in action.
Courage. Fair play. The loser's
hand extended to the winner. “This
is real character building,” was
toy thought'as I strolled away, sat
isfied.
Hovt to plam ike ueato" for • pto
**c—tke tkormoe bottle of qooi
mill bo rUemieood Jexfwook fcyPr.
IreloauL ^
telephone officials at San Diego,
Cain; Dastport, Ala me; Heinng
ham, Wasning.on’ n.ey west,
norida.
miotner interesting feature of
me program wm oe ±ed iiusing
talking witn prominent personan
in WiUei,) sc^araieu parts of
the country, hooked up for a long
uis.auce round-robin conversa
tion, so tnat eacn can talk to and
hear the otners. Tne voices oi all
wnl ue Uera by tne radio audi
ence.
jmwin C. Hill, noted news com
mentator, and manning Toiiock,
eminent autnor and piayw'ngth,
wiio will be among several promi
nent persons participating on .he
program, will tell me story of
tne telephone in two groups of
in.eresung dramatizations. One
group win portray several his
tone events m tne development
oi telepnone service, including
me nrst telepnone conversa.ion
ever neid; the one between Alex
anuer uranam iieil and his assist
ant, ihowas A. Watson and other
siguilicant episodes in tUe suose
quent deeviopment of telephone
service. The otner group of
urainatiztions win demonstraie
me vital part that the teeiphone
plays in modern lue, in sueu aeti
nues as the tracking down of
criminals, tne uissemina.ion oi
news and the summoning of help
in cases oi emergency.
At the close oi tne program,
W alter S. Wuford, president oi
the American Telephone and Tele
graph Company, wrnl be inter
viewed by hiawm C. Hill. Air.
biiiord will discuss ques.ions of
policy and tell how telephone
service has been coordinated to
serve the nation wnh the utmost
efficiency and economy.
Andre Kostelane.z ,one of the
foremost musical directors m
radio, will present his famous or
cnestra ,augmented by a chorus,
to provide the musical back
ground lor wrhat promises 10 be
one of the year’s outstanding
radio programs.
Count 52 Votes “Sure”
For Anti-Lynching
BiU
If Costigan-Wagner Measure Can
Break Through Filibuster, it
Will be Passed; Nineteen Senat
ors Postivdly Opposed, With
Others Not Committed or in
Doubt.
AVashington, D. C. April 25.—
AA ith the first skirmish over the
Costigan-AVagner anti-lynching
bill out of the way, supporters of
the measure counted up fifty-two
“sure” votes in the senate for the
measure if and when it comes to
a vote. j
The first sharp exchange over
the bill came Tuesday, April 16
when Senator Ellison D. Smith of
South Carolint loosed a burst of
oratory about “protecting the
womanhood of the South from
beasts” and declared lynching
was necessary to curb such
crimes. Senator Walter F. George
of Georgia also spoke against the
bill, but on the basis of its al
leged uneonstitut'ionaliiy using
the old states rights argument.
The 52 Favorable Votes
According to the latest poll,
the senators who will vote for the
bill are: Ashurst, Arizona; Aus
tin, ATt.; Barbour, N. J.; Bone,
AATashington.; Borah, Idaho; Bulk
ley, Ohio; Bulow, S. D.; Capper,
Kansas; Clark, Mo.; Copeland,
X. Y.; Costigan, Colo.; Couzens,
Mich.; Cutting, N. M..‘; Davis,
Penn.; Dickinson, Iowa; Dona
hey, Ohio; Duffy, Wis.: Frazier,
N. D.; Gibson A7t.; Guffey, Pa.;
Hale, Maine; Hastings, DeL;
Hatch, ;N. M.; Holt, AY ATa.;
Johnson Calif.; LaFollette, Wis.;!
Lewis, 111.; Lonegran. Conn.; Me
Carran, Nev.; McGill, Kans.: Mc~
Xary Ore.; Metcalf, R. I.; Minton,
Ind.; Moore, X. J.; Murphy, la.;
Murray, Mont.; Neeley, AV. ATa.;
Norris Neb.; Nye, N. D.; Schall,
Minn.; Steiwer, Ore.; Thomas,
Utah-' Townsend, Jr. Del.; A~an
denberg, Mich.; Truman, Mo.;
Van Nuys, Ind.; Wagner, N. Y.;
Walsh, Mass.; Wheeler, Mont.;
AATihte, jr. Maine; Sehwellenbach,
AYash.; Shipstead, Minn.
mi. _ . . • i
jliiuac puanveiy uppuacu are:
Bachman, Tenn.; Bailey, N. C.;
Bankhead, Ala.; Bilbo, Miss.;
Black, Ala.: Byrd, Ya.; Byrnes,
S. C.; Connally, Texas; Fletcher,
Fla.; George, Georgia; Glass, Ya.;
Harrison, Miss.; Long. La.; Mc
Kellar, Tenn.; Overton, La.; Rus
sell, Jr., Ga.; Sheppard, Texas;
Smith, E. C.; Trammell, Fla.
Not committed, but probably
favorable-: Adams, Colo.; O’Ma
honey, YVyo.: Pope, Idaho.
Not committed: Barkley, Ky.;
Coolidge, Mass.; Gore, kla.; Key
VJVJWWffJMV*WAVJV.V
Remove evil, and regain what yon
®nce had, then MONEY, LOVE, JOBS,
SUCCESS and HAPPHs’ESS fe ypurs.
GUARANTEED to help you.
Send for FREE Information Now.
D^rgott Publishing Co., S4Sff Rb®de»
Auanu®, Chicago, IIlinoi®. adv.
WWWJWWWWWWI
es, N. H.; Norbeek, S. D.; Thom
as, Oklahoma.
[Doubtful: Car raw ay, Ark.;
Hayden, Ariz.; King.; Utah; Lo
gan, ivy.; Reynolds, N. C.; Robin
son, Ark.; Tydings, Md.
No report: Brown, new Hamp
shire; Burke, Neb.: Carey, Wyo.;
Dieterich, 111.; Gerry, R. I.; Mc
Adoo, Calif.; Maloney, Conn.;
Pi trnan, Nev.; Radcliffe, Md.
Filibuster Big Obstacle
A filibuster, of course, is the
big obstacle which faces the bill.
The votes are there 10 pass it if
it can get to a vote. It is already
certain that a vote will be taken
on a motion to consider the bill
and make it the business before
the senate. Senator Costigan has
served noace that he will make
that motion as soon as the Bank
head farm homes act is disposed
of. But already filibustering is
going on on the Bankhead bill,
to delay as long as possible any
considera.ion of the anti-lvnching
bill. One senator, supposed to be
speaking on the Bankhead bill,
delivered a long speech on the re
cent airplane flight to Hawaii.
Observers believe the senate
will vote to take up the bill some
time next week and that then the
filibuster will start in earnest.'
Senators Costigan and Wagner are
on the floor every minute and
are determined to press the bill.
L is not certain as yet that
Senator Huey Long of Louisiana
will filibuster against the bill. The
kii.gfish is rated as a smart man
and while he will vote against the
bill, he may not lead a filibuster,
having his eve on 1936.
Vo-uJeer Lobbyist Aid.
Leading the workers and or
ganizations who are supporting
the bill is Walter White, Secre
tary of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People, who has been in Washing
ton constantly since the first
word came through that the bill
would be taken up.
Assis\ing in the many tasks and
interviews is a group of volunteer
whi e and colored workers, many
of whom are not even members
of the N. A. A. C. P. These in
clude the lobby committee of the
Women’s International League
for Peace and Freedom, the
Washington representative of the
national Y. W. C. A., Theodore
Berry, president of the Cincin-1
nati, Ohio Branch of the N. A. A.
C. P., John P. Davis, secretary of
the Joint Committee on National
Recovery, Mrs. Virginia R. Me-j
Guire, president of the District of
Columbia branch, a former Long
Island white woman now living in
Washington, a white woman visit
ing from Minnesota, and two1
young colored women from North
Carolina. All these people have
been assembling material, inter
viewing senators, running errands,
checking newspapers and seeing
correspondents. In addition, Wil
liam H. Hastie has prepared an
exhaustive analysis of the wrhole
question of constitutionality in
cluding all cases which could be
cited; and vice dean Charles H.
Houston has made an analysis of
all anti-lynching bills which havej
ever been introduced in Congress. \
Telegrams Aid right.
Telegrams from branches of the
N. A. A. C. P. and other groups
and individuals were effective in
getting senators who might have
remained away in to the senate
and on the lookout for the bill.
Steady communication with senat
ors is urged by the N. A. A. C. P.
from the voters back home. These
messages ought not be offensive,
but should be insistent and should
be toned according to the known
attidude of the isenator. They
should urge resistance to any fili- j
buster.
In a fight like this, with the
situation changing almost hourly,
with hundreds of valuable con:
tacts to be made, with the neces
sity of instant action if success is
to be won, the N. A. A. C. P. finds!
itself lacking funds for the fight.
In one day last week it was nec
essary to spend fifty dollars in
telegrams. At least fifty dollars
more should have been spent, but
the money even for the first fifty
was lacking. Telephone calls,
stenographic service and incident
al expenses require money.
“Now is the critical time,”
said Walter White. “All the
the splendid preliminary work
will be wasted if we cannot press
forward now that the actual
fight on the floor of the senate
is upon us. The need for money
is desperate. Conditions are fa
vorable for victory and it would
be tragic if the need of funds
should rob us of it.”
Contributions should be rushed
to the N. A. A. C. P. 69 Fifth
Avenue, New York. Checks may
be made payable to Mary White
Ovinglon, treasurer.
Emperor of Ethiopia to
Declare for Defense
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia—<CNA)—
“Ethiopia does not want war. No!
No! But Ethiopia will resist invasion
to the utmost.” Thus Haile Selassie
stfeted the position of Ethiopia on the
threatened invasion by Italian fascist
forces. He »t&tf|l further that the
ana were depending on the
of Nations and “world public
•pinko” for support. ^
California Pacific
International
Exposition
San Deigo, Calif., April 25—
More than two dozen official rep
resentatives of three separate gov
ernmental agencies participating
in Ameriea’s Exposi ion arrived
here this week.
Offices were assigned to them,
clerical forces augumemed and a
colorful ground-breaking cere
mony for the Federal HDusing
Administration’s large exhibit
was held.
From Washington came Joseph
W. Hiscox, federal commissioner.
“Seventeen departments in the
national capital are working, on
an emergency basis, preparing ex-!
hibits to be shown in the Exposi
tion, “Hiscox said. “These will be
shipped here on an express train
of fifteen cars and installed com
plete before the opening date,
May 29.”
The federal exhibit palace, for
which Congress appropriated
$125,000 is now being built and
will be ready for the opening of 1
the California Pacific Interna-1
tional Exposition on May 29. An
additional $225,000 was voted to
prepare, install and main ain dis
plays in it.
Adolph Muehleisen, San Dieg
an, was named California’s com
missioner at the Exposition by
Governor Merriman this week.
Muehleisen announced the dis
plays in the California Sta.e build
ing will be arranged to give a
complete picture of the common
wealth’s government at work. In
addi.ion, most of the counties of
the State will have exliibis in the
same building.
A group of ten federal officials
arrived by plane this week, from
Washington and intermediate
points and went to Balboa Park
to break ground for the FHA dis
play and demonstration of how
the public may benefit from the
National Housing Act.
Col. W\ D. Flanders, national
director of the field division of
the FHA, headed the group and
with him, coming from Washing
ton, were his assistant, Troy B.
Hewett; Clyde Powell, assistant
director in charge of mortgage
insurance; and Paul Best, repre
senting the FHA administrator,
James A. Moffett.
From San Francisco came Al
fred B. Swinerton, regional direct
or; Clifford C. Anglim, Northern
California director.
From Los Angeles, Fred W.1
Marlow, Southern California di
rector.
From Phoenix, Steve Spear,
Arizona state director.
Those participating in the
ground breaking ceremonies with
these men were officials of the
Exposition. Frank G. Belcher,
president; Zack J. Farmer, man
aging director and Waldo Tup
per director of exhibits.
Even as these ceremonies oe
eured, still another group of gov
ernment men were at work in the
Palace of Natural Hisiory instal
ling a display demonstrating the
work of the Civilian Conservation
Corps. Departments cooperating
on this installation are Army, La
bor, Education, National Park
Service and Forest Service.
Student Sues Law School
Baltimore, April 25th—Donald
G. Murray, 21 year old colored
graduate of Amhearst College
and a resident of this city, has
filed a petition for a writ of man
damus against the president, reg
istrar and members of the board
of regents of the University of
Maryland, a tax suppotred insti
tution, to compel them to con
sider his application as a first
year student in the law school
for the academic year beginning
September 25, 1935. This law
school is the only state institu
tion affording a legal education
■.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.'.'.V.SV.V.V.
The Omaha Guide ■"
•’ Recommends IJ
ij The State i
jj Furniture Co.
■j Corner 14th and Dodge
Ij Streets. As One of the Most
% Reliable and Accomodating
*i Firms to Bny from.
% Prices the Lowest
•' and
I* Terms the Easiest
and the only law school in the
j sta.e approved by ihe American
Bar Association.
j Mr. Murray properly made his
application and forwarded his in
! vestigation fee last January. It
was refused and re urned to him.
The board of regents also refused
to accept the application. This is
cited in the brief as a viola ion
not only of the university’s chart
er, but also of the state laws and
the 14th Amndment to the Feder
al constitution.
The petition asks that they be
compelled to accept Mr. Murray’s
application and inves igation fee
and to investigate his qualifica
tions in the same manner as any
other applicant for admission as
a first year s udent of the school
of law.
GET MONEY—LO
eT awT «
iA.
1 guarantee to help yon get a new atari
file No case beyond hope. Stop wor.(
fog! Wr'te me to..ay Information FEFh
ft. W LLIAMS, 901 Bercca Av
JERSEY CITY. N J.
Dept. O. G.
TIRED, ACHING,
SWOLLEN FEET
Moone’s Emerald Oil Gnaranteed 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
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,
there’s nothing better in the
world.
Moone’s Emerald Oil is
guaranteed to end your foot
• troubles or money back.
Just send your name and address and
we,will send you free Magic Incenee,
a two-treatment package of Roreen,
the five-in-one hair dressing, a sample
of face powder, and the Great New
Boatity Book. Write quick to Keystone
Dept. l-R-4
TIRED, WORN OUT,
NO AMBITION
HOW many
women are
just dragging them
selves around, all
tired out with peri
odic weakness and
pain? They should
know that Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Tab
lets relieve peri
odic pains ana dis
comfort. Small sue only 25 cents.
• Mrs. Dorsie Williams of Danville,
Illinois, says, “I had no ambition
and was terribly nervous. Your Tab
lets helped my periods and built me
up.” Try them next month.
9-~1
I
f,
U___ _l
How to Get Rid of
GRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger
When you can change your gray,
faded, or streaked hair to its natural
youthful soft color in less than half
an hour—
And do it at home without fear of
harm to the hair—why go on looking
years older than yon should look.
Rap—I—Dol is the real, original
hair colorer—18 shades to choose from
it is go supremely good that the best
beauty shops in all the large cities in
the world feature it- Rap—I—Dol
will not wash off or fade nor affect
marcell or permanent waves.
Go to any Beaton Drug Store today
and choose the shade you need—you'll
be a happy woman if you do—for a
long time to come.
Special!
MENS HATS
CLEANED and BLOCKED * ,
EMERSON LAUNDRY
and ZORIC DRY CLEANERS
2324 North 24th StreetWEbatef 1029