The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, May 04, 1935, Image 2
I’REVEALING' - i/Dur PAfI, PRESENT oruX EUIDRE •• & ABSBf WALLACE It V- D. G.—What is the best thing for me to do concerning the property that I now own? Ans.—'List this property with a local REAL ESTATE AGENT for sale. This house and lot is not the type of place that you are interested in living in and > he quicker you sell it the less expense you will have to assume to keep it repaired and you won’t be able to get a better price in the next few years than you can right now. N. H. M-, Jr—I am just a far mer’s son and I wrant to know if I will realize my ambition? Ans.—It would be unwise for you to dispose of your farm and go west. Due to the recent dust storms in the middle west it is not likely that you could make a success of Farming this spring To locate further south would prove profitable for you. L. B.—I haven’t seen the boy I took to be my boy friend in several weeks. Please tell me what is the trouble ? Ans.—Your boy friend had to leave town on PERSONAL BUSINESS and has not had ime to communicate with you. You w 11 see him within the next ten days and he will give you the low down concerning his disappear ance. F. G-—Will my brother-in-law ever right me for what I have done for him? Ans.—He will—but it will be sev eral more years before he will be able to compensate you for caring for his THREE MOTHERLESS CHILDREN Since his wife died he has not held a permanent job for any length of time and has not been able to save any money but }je does intend to do the right thing at a later date O. C.—Should I take my mother’s advice ? ,Ans.—Don’t fail to—mother knows best. In advising you to attend a boarding school she is absolutely right- Although it will be difficult to finance this course, it will turn out very profitable for you and your mother in the end. C. E- M—I met a man and fell in love with h m. He has been separat ed from his wife and now she wants him back. What shall I do? Ans.—The thing for you to do is not to put too much confidence in this man. He has been separated from his wife for NINE YEARS in case you don’t know it, and for this reason has every expectation to remain sepa rated . In my opinion he doesn’c mean as much to you as you would like to believe. Prepare yourself for a dis appointment. F- E- C.—Will the reputation I have won on my present job lead me to stead/ employment? Ans.—I see no reason for you to be worried about your present line of work. It looks to me like the next l few years will be decidedly prosperous ones for you. Don’t make the mis take of not saving some of your earn ings for a rainy day. L- M. L.—Tell me who took m'y money and who took my pin and will I ever get them back? Ans.—It is my opinion that both the pin and the money were taken by the same person. I would say this person to be a boy and if yo<u make a more careful study of th.s situation you will find that all the evidence points toward this young man as being the guilty party. Although I cannot pre dict you getting the money back, I can safely say that the guilty person is the one you now have in mind. E. J. M. —Why is it that I cannot get a good go with the girl I am so fond of. Does she care for me? Please advise? Ans—You will find it will take more than smooth talking to make up th.s girl’s mind Money talks with her and since you can’t give her any thing but LOVE, I would suggest that you seek your affection from some j other source. A. M.—Does my husband really ; love me ? Ans.—SHAME ON YOU. You’re a fine one to be asking me whether 5'our husband loves you or not—after you’ve cheated on him for seven years. If your husband still loves you after seven years of this stuff, he should be awrarded a medal of honor. NOTE—Your question printed free in this column- For Private reply send 25c and (self addressed stamped en velope for my New Astrological Read ing and receive by return mail my advice on three questions free. Sign your full name, birthdate, and correct address. Address Abbe’ Wallace., P- O. Box—11, Atlanta, Georgia. CANDACE PRAISES FRENCH NATION (Continued from Page 1) groes love France passionately and consider her the principal emancipator of members of the black race.” Unlike in the United States where prejudice seeks to restrict black citi zens to menial occupations and closes the door of economic opportunity in their faces, opportunity of every sort is open to all French citizens who are competent to grasp it and Justice deals impartially with citizens of all colors. So proud is Monsieur Can dace of his France that he boasts of what she has done for black men. He writes further: First Deputy In 1848 “We have always had since 1848, men of the black race in the parlia-, men'tary assemblies. In 1848, the, first black man who was chosen was named Louis Matthew who represent-, ed Guadeloupe. Since 1871, there have been either mulattoes or blacks in the assemblies of the Third Repub lic- Several have occupied places of note in the chamber, the senate and the government service. ” M- Candace then describes some of the positions held by black men in France: “M. Gerville-Reache was vice presi dent of the Chamber of Deputies from 1904 to 1906. “Mr. Alexander Isaac, a mulatto, was a member of the Commission of Justice of the Supreme Court of the Senate and vice president of the Com mission of Inquiry of Algeria, presid ed over My Jules Fery. “M. Demery, while representing Martinique in the Chamber of Depu ties, was made undersecretary of state in the Department of Merchant Marine and Commerce in the admin istration of Georges Clemenceau dur ing the World war. : “The same M. Lemery, now a mem ber of the senate, was minister of justice, keeper of the seals and vice president of the national council of ministers in the cabinet of Gaston Dounvergue. “M- Delmont, a mulatto, is a deputy now from Martinique “The late M. Diagne, former deputy from Senegal, and myself, both served as undersecretary of state for the colonies. Member of Two Cabinets “I was a member of both cabinets of Herriot and Paul Boncour, after having been for many years vice chair man of the finance committee of the Chamber of Deputies.” Thus writes a black citizen of France, of black nven who sit in the cabinet of that country, who hold po sitions of authority, serving their nation’s welfare, while their black brothers in the United States, helpless themselves, must stand by while their few defenders withstand the onslaught of a predjudiced minority. There are no wage differentials in France, no Jim Crowr OCC camps, no discrimination in the allotment of public funds “France employs all means to amel iorate the material condition and to raise the moral level of the black citi zens in her colonies,” asserts M. Can dace. “Even as I write, the Economic Con ference of Metropolitan and Overseas France, w'hich has been in conference since December 3, is at the point of ending its labors. Among the re forms advocated by this body, there is a set of questions of interest to the natives of the colonies, principally those which give to the Organization for Colonial Credit security to insure long-term loans at a low rate to the natives, and those which concern the allocation of a public improvements fund of 150 millions for major works in all the French colonies. Natives Asked to Take Part “In all the possessions of France the natives are called upon, directly and indirectly, to take part in administra tion, in the vote on the budget and in the control expenses The colonies which do not yet have deputies or senators in the Chamber, have local advisers of the government, through whom the natives are represented, or financial delegates- In all ways, the native blacks are able to make their voices hard in the heart of the French assemblies. ” Deputy Candace’s next word is of special significance to American Ne groes who now find themselves be leaguered by race prejudice and un justly dealt with. , "The colonies which are represented in the Parliament,” he informs Amer ican Negroes, "find themselves in a position, through their representatives to call attention to injustices in order to correct them when they become known “The white deputies place them selves, without distinction of party, at the side of their colored colleagues when black citizens ask for justice. ” All Stand Together in France Then Deputy Candace makes anoth er proud boast for his country: “I am able to state emphatically that France has truly the sentiment of solidarity between all elements, white, yellow and black, which people the planet. She has a love of jus tice and she practices the true frater Brilliant Physician DR. RALPH H. SCULL. ] Youthful specialist on staff of Provident Hospital Chicago, who has been reappointed by Rush edical College of ;he University of Chicago to a research fellow ship in Dermatology. Dr Schull has pursued advanced work in his chosed field at Kansas City, at New York University as well as in It's current affiliations at Rush Medical College. His M. D. de gree is from the University of Chicago. nity of human beings. “From across the seas, I send a cor d al greeting to all the Negroes of the United States, and I saly to them, for all that France has done for the eman cipation of my race, I have for her an imperishable regard which is the same as worship.” M. Candace was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in 1912 and has served continuously ever since. Be fore becoming a deputy, he was a pro fessor in the School of Technical and Professional Instruction. All his pu pils were white Frenchmen, from the better families, but they loved him. Also before he was deputy, he was chief adjutant in the cabinet of Rene Viviani, minister of work in the cabi net of Clemenceau from 1906 to 1909. Candace is a member of the Academy of Colonial Sciences, and for 13 years, has been a member of the board of governors. Radio Speech By Walter F. Cozad, President, Omaha Chamber of Commerce — KOII, Tuesday, April 16, 1935, at 9:45 p. m. Ladies and Gentlemen : The Sixteenth National Flower and Garden Show is now- his ory. It is one of the truly glorious pages in Omaha’s history, and many of our older ckizens go as far back as the Trans-Mis sissippi Exposition in 1898 to find an event which compares wth it in beauty and magui tide. It was moreover, an outstanding success in a commercial way. Through out the nine days of the show, Omaha’s ho els, retail stores, res taurants and even wholesale hous es had a con.tant stream of visit ors and buyers. But although the Flower Show is history, it leaves a lesson with the citizens of Omaha and the mid west that should not be forgotten. The Flower show was to me an inspiring example of what can be accomplished through the general cooperation of all people. No event within my memory has com manded such general enthusiasm and support. It is an ancient mixim that many hands make light work, and the maxim was verified in the Flower Show. The general chairman of the show. Mr. Glenn Wilcox the florist who ex hibited, and all the volunteer com mittees of business men worked hard but their labor was lighten ed by the ready spirit of coopera tion which everyone manifested. The result was that the Show played to a paid attendance of nearly 120,000 people, a record which has been excelled by only two other cities, both of them many times as populous as Oma ha. It is not my purpose tonight to dwell at any great length on the glories and successes of the Flow er Show, but rather to suggest the point that Omaha can do almost anything if we bring to our prob lems the general cooperation, the united effort that made the Flow er Show such a success. With this thought uppermost in our minds, I think it is opportune therefore to take stock of our problems and objectives. * ' Ours is a great state. As natur al resources, we have a soil and a climate which, for agricultural purposes, are unexcelled any where in the world. That state ment remains unchallenged even in the face of recent calamities. On the economic side, we see pric es steadily improving, and after long years of oppressive surplus es, we begin to see an approxi mate adjustment between our supply of farm commodities and the demand for them. This con dition of circumstances is the foundation for our hope that ag ricultural prosperity is returning. Agricultural prosperity is the first concern of all this territory. Receives Research Fellow ship at Rush Medical College Chicago, May 2 (ANP)—Dr. Ralph H Scull, able young Chicago ph^. si can, has just been notified of his re appontment as a research fellow in the department of dermatology at Medical College of the University trustees of the University of Chicago. The appointment has attracted inter est. here because of the practice of Rush Medical College during the past several years of not accepting Negro undergraduate students. His reap pointment is being pointed to as rec ognition of startling ability in the field of skin and social diseases. Dr. Scull began his training in the public schools of Galveston, Texas, his jnative home, later being awarded the degree of B- S. from Wilberforce Uni versity and S. B. from the University of Chicago- He secured his degree of M. D. from Rush Medical College. Enlisting in the army at the age of 18, he served as a non-commissioned officer being promoted to the post of commissioned officer in the infantry and machine gun services. He is now an officer in the reserve army corps. His interneship was spent in the General Hospital of Kansas City, taking special work there under the renowned specialist, Dr- Paul Stookey and later spending a year under Dr. M. Hines, now of John Hopkins Uni versity, Baltimore, Md. A Rosenwald fellowship granted through his membership upon the staff of Provident Hospital Chicago, enables him to do additional study at New York University and Bellevue Hospital. His new association at Rush stamps him as one of the best trained physicians in the country in his field. --ymj We in the ciiies are engaged in agriculture, equally with those on the farms. Our prosperi y in the cities is rooted in the soil. Our first and most immediate concern, iheenoie, is to see that the farmer prospers, and I urge the people people in the ciiies to address themselves io tha problem as an xiously ar.d constructively as the farmers themselves are facing it. I s-id tha as natural resources we have our soil and our climaie. The re"ept d'3t s orms have dramatized the fact tha we must come o an intelligent policy of: eoneer-Wg our natural resources, including our soil, our water, and our imher. Our farms have a rather thin layer of four to six inehes of fertile tons il. For sev-! eral generations now, the w‘nd and the water have b?en carrying hat tonsoil a ay, and today we find soil erosion as one of our great pbb’ems. There are ways of mo-ling ‘.hat problem success-! fully by returning the more sus cept'h’n land to grass, by tree plan i",~. and hv sc:entifie farm ing. We must as a country he prepared to adopt ihose measures, otherwise we face the prospect of seeing our land steadily lose i s fertility ar.d value. Closely akin1 to the problem of soil erosion is the problem of water conserva-! tion. The 1934 drought emphasiz-j ed the need for water conserva, I ticn, so thai 1 need not dwell on it here. Suffice i. to say that it I is a problem for all of us, ciiy dwelleds and rural dwellers alike. YY e must achieve a closer un derstanding among ourselves, if we are to develop the cooperation I speak of. Perhaps n will help to develop this spirit if we can all catch something of the spirit of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce tribe of Yessir. Each mon.h, the Tribe pays a visit to some mid western community, and there sits down to dinner with ihe citizens of all the surrounding territory. There is no mention of Omaha in these meetings, and no praise of Omaha. The Tribe goes out in o the territory to learn the prob lems of the territory. Good will and good fellowship are the key note of the meetings. I never come away from these meetings without a feeling of being closer to the community visited, or with out a more active sympathy for its problems. It would be a won derful thing if we Nebraskans and midwesterners could all get together in this spirit of good will and goodfellowship. Nebraska is ready to move forward. Our farm prospects are bright. We have no bonded indebtedness. Our good roads have been paid for as built. Through the imposition of an emergency gasoline tax and the aid of the federal government, we are taking care of our relief in an adequate and economical way. If, as we feel sure it will, our legislat ure follows the advice of our gov ernor, we shall have no additional forms of taxation to plague the householder and handicap the business man. Our credit and financial position, as a state are like Gibralter. We are in the most favorable position perhaps in many years to attract new capital and enlarge present enter prises. With cooperation and un derstanding, we are prepared for progress. Let us turn for a moment to our local problems. On every side we see opportunities for coopera tion and constructive effort. Ak Sar-Ben is currently campaigning for members. AK-Sar-Ben’s rec ord of service is such that we should all pitch in and help, and every ounce of effort that we put behind the Ak-Sar-Ben campaign wiH bear fruit in a greater and better Omaha. Our city and coun ty officials are faced with diffi culties hat challenge their best statesmanship. We can aid by lending them our cooperation and constructive counsel. No matter wha our political feelings, we must realize that ibis is our ad ministration, our local govern ment. Its success is our success. It’s failure would be our failure. Le. ’s cooperate with our local governments. The Chamber of Commerce is campaigning on a thousand fronts to build a better and more prosperous Omaha. As an example of the constructive work i is doing, take the Carter Lake development project. When the project is completed some three to five years hence, we hope that Car er Lake will be one of the beauty spots of the entire mid west, a recreation cen er for Oma hans and an attraction for tour-j ists. The work was conceived in a Chamber of Commerce commit tee, 1 he momentum was put be hind it by the Chamber of Com merce. Such projects are for the good, of all the community. We earnestly solicit your support for the efforts of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce to build a more prosperous and more beautiful city. The work of the Chamber is so complex and varied that I find it hard to pack all into a short speech. However, I think I can classify it under a few main heads, and this classification will almost serve a our pla form for the Greater Omaha that we all want. As a Chamber of Commer ce and as a city we must: 1— Place agriculture on a scien.if ic and prosperous basis. 2— Formulate a permanent policy of conserving our natural re sources, with particular refer ence to soil and water. 3— Secure free and easy access to Omaha by acquirement of bridges over the Missouri river at the earliest possible date. The Chamber of Commerce is on record in favor of acquir ing .he Douglas Street bridge through he revised escrow ag reement. To give the city greater ktLude in ac ing, we aiso favor passage of the bill row pending before the legis lature which will permit the city o purchase the bridge I through the issuance of reve-1 nue h^nds. 4— Obtain all possible transporta tion advantages for Omaha, by development of good high ways, of aviation, and water ways, and by securing rate equalities on tlte railroads. Transportation is the very life blood of business. Omaha came into being because of its future growth and prosperity depend up transportation. 5— Attract to Omaha more na tional conven.ions and events like the National Flower Show. This is the job of the Com merce Publicity Bureau, and its success will be in propor tion to the support it receives. 6— Develop a program of national advertising and publicity that will tell the nation about Ne braska and the midwest. 7— Build Omaha business and pay rolls by bringing more! factories and distributing houses here. 8— Promote understanding and co- j operation throughout this ter ritory. 9— Kesist attempt to increase the burden of taxation which the home-owner, the consumer and the business man must bear. 10— 'Defend private enterprise against the constantly increas ing threat of government com petition and excessive regula tion. The first condition of recovery is the wllingness of business men to gamble on the future. Private enterprise will be slow in reviving, so j long as business men fear that the government will enter into direct competition with them, confiscate their profits, or tax them to the point where busi ness is not profitable. This, then, is the Omaha Chamb er of Commerce platform for a better and more prosperous Oma Fine For Kidney And Bladder Weakness STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS Keep your kidneys free from waste matter, poisons and acid, and put healthy activity into kidneys and blad der and you’ll live a healthier, happier and longer life. One most efficient and harmless way to do this is to get from your druggist a 35-cent box of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules and take them as direct ed—the swift results will surprise you. Besides getting up nights, some symptoms of kirney trouble are back, ache, moist palmist leg crampo, and puffp eyes. If you want real results, be sure to get GOLD MEDAL—the original and genuine—a grand kidney stimulant and diuretic—right from Haarlem n Holland. Give your kid neys a good cleaning once in a while. f Rewards I can’t think of a human trait more objectionable than the “what do I get out of it” habit. We be come readily suspicious of the per son who always says or thinks “what is there in it for me?” And yet aren’t we guilty of breeding that into each new generation of soci ety? What else can it be when we, the members of such and such a club, offer a five dollar gold piece for the best essay on some favorite topic? We give this and that for art contests; trips to the big city to the pupil who is first in some thing or other. Banquets, sweat ers, gold medals, and what not to members of winning athletic teams. Right into the classroom it goes, with prizes for anything we want accomplished. Little wonder that the individual develops the habit of analyzing personal gain. We encourage him to do just that. As a matter of fact, anyone who knows the psy chology of childhood knows that if all thought of prizes is removed and no tradition has been estab lished, children will do things that are interesting just for the love of doing them. Such is child nature. Of course, not all things interest ing to adults are attractive to chil dren. We must take age and stage of development into account. But in ordinary school work, children will give their best for a teacher they like. And ail the re ward they want is a “well done,” or a “that's fine.” It’s that word of praise the., se*-1', a llUle human recognition of a job well done, of something into which they put their best efforts. In hie next article Dr. Ireland wOl tell about a successful device to aid in selecting a balanced diet. ha. It does not pretend to tell the whole story of Chamber of Commerce work. For example, it passes over the work of our fire preven ion committee in minimiz ing fire losses and reducing insur ance rtaes: of our military affairs committee in attempting to secure $1,500,000 for the development of Fort Omaha and Fort Crook; of our Public Health Commit ee in improving the public health serv ice, of our traffic safety commit tee in cooperating wi h public of ficials in attempting to make the streets safe for raffic; of our wa erways committee which has done so much toward securing the Missouri river improvements be tween Kansas City and Omaha and is now busily engaged in at tempting to secure ail additional 40 million dollar appropriation for completeing work in Sioux Ci y. I am merely attempting to highligth some of our objectives, s‘o that all will understand where we are going, and where we hope ! Omaha will go. You may disa gree with individual planks jn this platform. On .he whole, how ever. it must he conceded that if carried out in its en irety it will give us a finer and busier city, a better city in which to work and a bet er city in which to have our homes. We solicit your under standing. because we know that if j ou understand onr position you will lend your cooperation to "our efforts. As the state grows so will Omaha grow and prosper. We have discovered the way to dream anything you wish and have it come true. If you wish to have success wi n rour dreams answer this ad at once. If not, don’t ’ write. Free deta.ls. Daggett Pub. Co. i 3430 Rhodes Ave., Chicago, 111. FREE - FREE A Beautiful free gift to any reader of this paper. Just send us your name and address to day. HARRY ANDREWS 49 East Broadway, New York, N. Y. COULD NOT DO HER HOISEWORK every ▼▼ thing you at tempt is a burden —when you are nervous and irri table—at your wit’s end—try this medicine. It may be just what you need for extra energy. Mrs. Charles L. 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