N. A. A. C. P. Launches Nationwide Drive to Force Early Vote (Continue! from Page 1) measure in the Senate. “Every or ganization, every church every in dividua’ who really wants lynch ing s opped should rush to the N. A. A. C. P. as large a contri bution as possible as quickly as possible,” ne urged. “The next step in the fight may have to be taken almost any day now. The N. A. A. C. P. faces this next step wi h a big deficit which it incur red. Brilliant and successful as the fight was. it was crippled by aTmost complete lack of funds for telegrams at crucial s ages of the fight, stenographic service, tele phone calls and the like.” The N. A. A. C. P. is planning a series of nation-wide meetings in cooperation with interested or ganiza ion in protest against the filibuster and in demand that the bill be passed. Those wishing to sponsor meetings are being asked to write the N. A. A. C. P. 69 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. “We are asking friends of the bi 1 to dehige the President with a^ ava'rnche of pro ests for net speaking out in faror of the bill,” Mr. White announced, “and to write their senators insisting that it be passed before Congress ad journs: 500 000 protests should pour into Washington within a week.” How Senators Voted The following senators voted AGAINST adjournment; for the bill, on a’l four votes: Austin, Bu'kley. Burke, Capper, Cope land, CVis igan, Ponahev, Gibson, Hale, MeCarran,. McNarv. Minton, Neeley. Nve. Schall. S' hwellen bach,* Steiwer. Vandenburg, Van Nuvs and White. In the final vote May 1 the fol lowing senators voted AGAINST adjournment; for the bill, Austin, Barbour, Bulkjey, Btirke, Cap per, Carey, Copeland, Costigan, Piekinson, Ponahey, Gibson, Guf fey, Hale, Has ings. Johnson, Keyes, LaFollette, MeCarran. Mc Nary, Minton. Neeley. Nye, Schall, Schwellenbaeh, Steiwer, Town send, Tydings, Vandenberg Van Nuvs, Wagner, Walsh and White. Senator Wagner, while not vot ing each ime, was absent and was paired always against adjourn BE A NURSE LEARN AT HOME *'I learned to be a nurse at home. So can others." says Mrs. A. Raglin of Los Angeles. Graduates of C. S. N. earn a good living in their own com munities. Practical nursing oilers a happy, profitable, permanent career. _ The course is endorsed by physi cians. Established 33 years. Simple lessons with full explanations. Many pupils find work before they complete the course. One graduate saved S400 while learning. Equipment, with goods for uniform, is included in this home study course. Easy tuition payments. High School education not required. Send postal today for free, illus trated. fascinating booklet. "Splendid Opportunities in Nursing," and 32 sample lesson pages. CHICAGO SCHOOL n OF NURSING Dept. 2sgg N Ashland Blvd. Chicago. HL Pleas* sand free booklet and 32 sample lessen pa***. City.State Age ... ment. In the final vote May 1 the fol lowing senators voted FOR* , against .he bill: Adams. Ashurst, Bachman. Bailey, Bankhead, Barkley, Bilbo, Black, Borah, Brown, Bulow, Byrd, Byrnes, Caraway, Clark. Connal’y, C'ouz ens, Dieterich. Huffy, F etcher, Frazier, G ass, Gore, Harrison, ITa.ch, King, Lewis, Lonergan, McGill, McKeLiar, Murray, Nor ris, O'Mahoney, ^ Overton, Pitt man, Pope, Radcliffe, Robinson, Russell, Sheppard, Smith, Thom as, Okla.; Thomas, Utah; Tram mell, Truman, Wheeler. Night Ball at N. S. S. A. Park. Marty Thomas presents “The Derby.” At last our community has a ball park and an eight thousand dollar one at that, and lighted. No longer need lovers of baseball swelter under the boiling sun and blistering dirt laden winds as they cheer for .heir favorite speed pitchers and home run hitters. For the unheard of price of one , thin, or a dimer, Nebraska’s fast est teams may be seen in action, and it is within pleasant walking distance. Derby’s Feature The Bee-News, sponsors of the Nebraska Soft Ball, “and it’s not soft by any means,” association, is featuring the Derbys, better known as Tuxedoes, on Saturday nights in games packed wi h strike outs, long hits and thrilling base runs. The team, composed of the best colored ball players, left j baseball four years ago, and since I have built an enviable State Cham pionship ; ’32 and ’33, and last I year beat Bamsdall’s Worlds’ i Fair Soft Ball Champs in the play off for the Iowa Championship 10 to 4. “Deac” Frampion ,captain, leads a g’ittering array of dia mond stars headed by Adolph “Mouse” Bolden, at short; “Smil ing” Charley Crump, Nebraska’s most finished pitcher; “Herbie” Peak, the speed ball king; James “Rufus” Smith, the ‘get-in-it here’ batter, at second; Henerv “Junior” Grayson, the bullet arm third-baseman, and an outfie'd of ball hawks, such as James “Cope” Hunter. “Wheeling” Wheeler, John “Little John” Harvey, and the incomparable short center and hard hitting Lawrence “Lit.le Larry” Stewart. Come out Sautrday nights and be really entertained. Nowhere can you get sruch fun. The Derbys combine sparkling p’ay with a clowing act th$t includes a dice game at second, vocal numbers by the center quartette and “Mouse” Bo’den, clad in frock coat and tall silk hat, gives a sc*.non that will rock you into gales of laughter. Come out Saturdav night an see for your self. First game, 7:3Q. Main game, 9 o’clock. Three Ball Leagues at Urban Center Fast Games Feature Play The Urban League C>~tter, 2213 Lake formerly “Mid-City” an nounces the opening of three leag ues for the coming outdoor sea son. Mondays and Fridays the Senior League Men, 18 and above are featured by a four cornered fight between the league leading Derbys, Merchants, Globe Trot ters and Lakes. Tuesday and Thursday games in the High school league are featured by the tight race with the Junior Globe Trotters leading, Merchants and without long delay or needless expense If you want light, bright skin . . . you want it QUICK! You don’t want to fool I around and waste time! 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Large cake 35c. ^ JUNE IN "PLEASURE 1SLAXD**WEPNESDAY NIGHT, KBC NETWORK -fr * In Defense of a Mother A MOTHER’S DAY CONTRIBUTION By William Pickens WE could just as well call this contribution “A Defense of Poor Mothers,” for it is the essen tial story of millions of poor mothers of every land and race, past, present and future. I am influenced to write this word when I re flect on the thousands of introductions which I have had as a public speaker. The most unpleasant experiences of well-known public speakers are these introductions. Often while listening to them, I say to myself: “Well, if any speaker can counteract the effects and survive the handicaps of an introduction like that, he will prove his talent and skill.” In the first place, the intro ducers, as a rule, have very little respect for the exact truth; they will offer any polite; sometimes impolite, exaggeration or prevarication to fill in the vacancy. The veteran speaker gets to the place place where he ceases to make corrections or to tone down evaggerations, but just le.s it go at that, except when common decency makes it nec essary for him to disclaim some immodest state ment concerning his achievements, and abilities. This have I often sat and heard the eloquent person who was presenting me say things which, by their necessary implications, were slander and a false report on the worth and character of ,he little brown mo.her whose image is always called up be fore me when I hear these naive and thoughtless insinua.ions against her. The situation is s« per sonal that it would seem very rude to correct the falsehood and challenge the unintentional slander right there on the platform, and so I am doing ii in this more impersonal and less insidious manner through the written word; in justice to my own mother and for thousands of o.her mothers of all colors, who happen to be poor. Many times have I risen to speak, filled wi.h temptation to cha lenge the slander on the spot, but wavered be.ween loyal ty to the memory of a dead mother and polite kind ness to .he living sensitive person who had just spoken and introduced me. His mo.ives were clean enough; he meant firs,, of all to exhibit his own eloquence and secondly to add to my praises, when, af.er saying many things more or less about my more recent life and work, he had proceeded: "And yet, a few years ago, this man was a lntle ragged, un-cared-for boy, living in a small cabin, with dirt and squaior and hunger,” . . . and so on and so forth. And there si. I, son of a poor mother long since dead, and allow her to be publicly and unjus.ly slandered like that, . . .in order not to hurt the vani.y of some living, breathing person. Now, how is this speaker’s partly honest mistake made? Whence came his naive assumption? Nowhere in the sotry of my life is there record of facts justifying these conclusions. The error comes from this; that these people all assume that poverty must be nec essarily ragged and dirty. But I always recall how my little brown mother, when she saw the rhildren of some slovenly neighbors, whose condition might justify the rhetoric of these introductory orators, would say that as she had “fingers and eyes’’ and could get “needle and thread and water and soap,” there would be no rags and dirt on her children or in her house. Her oft repeated words were: “I would sew and scrub my fingers to the bone before ever I would suffer my children to go like that.” In her gospel, raggedness was a sin, but patches were respectable; and poveny was “no excuse for dirt as long as water is free.” She had eight living children. Their clothes were cheap and scant, but both raiment an body were as clean as a hound’s tooth. The garments were often decorated with mending patches. “I will slave ’till my back is broken before ever a child of mine shall go hungry.” My moiher died when I was thirteen years of age, and the only times when I remember being allowed to suffer hunger and the lack of food have been since I was thirteen years old: and often fol lowing these great mee.ings where somebody so brilliantly and flatteringly introduced me to the public. Therefore must I modestly disclaim the credit of rising from unkept poverty and dirt to being a man who likes physical c.eanliness and order in life and work. I am a “sanitary crank” because my moth er’s example taught me that poverty and cleanli ness are not absolute contradictories. My college mates have often humorously recalled that my books always s.ood in such constant order on table or shelf that I could reach for any one of them in the dark, and that at night my discarded garments were never laid on the floor or hung in confusion. A hole in the unseen sections of a sock is intolerable, and a rip or rent or a missing button from an in visible undergarment shouts for immediate repairs. W hether these qualities be commendable or not, I deserve no individual credit or blame for them, tor I have not acquired .hem, as the generous speak ers of.en imply, “in spite of the early surroundings anu conditions” of my die, but exactly BECAUSE OF THE EARLY CONDITIONS OF Y LIFE. And now, on this “Mother’s Day” and on all other days I do pray and trust that the Little Brown Mother of long ago will forgive her renegade son »uu sa siiu sn many times while men praised him undeserved y and slandered her so unjustly. Beau Brummels, Iv’s Chats and Trinity following in a tight stub born ba.tle. Wednesday and Siars desperately defending a Start desperately defending a slim lead over the Trojans, Bil iifcens, Demons and Lake Mid gets. Sa tirday night ’s league iearns feature a four hour round of entertainment at the New N. S. S. A. Ball park a. 30 and Wirt. Marty, Director of Athletics. SOCIAL WORKERS TO MEET IN CANADA, JUNE 9-12 (Continued from Page 1) eral Council of Churches in New York City. He is to conduct dis cussions centering about the ‘ ‘ Re sponsibility of the Churches and Religious Leaders in Local Areas of Social Conflict.” Forrester B. Washington, a member of the ex ecutive committee of ihe National Conference and director of the Atlanta School of Social Work, also is scheduled to participate. Included in the list of National Conference committee members whose task during the past sev eral months has been to select spenkers and subjects for the Montreal meeting are: T. Arnold Hill, acting executive secretary and director of the In dustrial Relations Department of the National Urban League; Bishop Robert E. Jones, resident bishop of the Methodist Episco pal Church at New Orleans; Frankie Adams, instructor in group work at the Atlanta School of Social Work; Lieut. Laurence A. Oxley, chief o'f the Division of Negro Labor of the United States Department of Labor Washing ton, and Eugene Kinkle Jones, executive secretary of the Na tional Urban League. Elsie M. Mountain, general secretary of the Paseo Branch of the Young Women’s Christian As sociation in Kansas City, Mo., has W.SVAW/AW/JVAVAV// For Backache, Kidney and Bladder Trouble STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS Here’s one good way to flush harm ful waste from kidneys and stop blad der irritation that often causes scanty, burning and smarting passage. Ask your druggist for a 35-cent box of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules—a splendid safe and harmless diuretic and stimulant for weak kidneys and irritated bladder. Besides getting up trouble and backaches, puffy eyes, leg cramps, and moist palms, but be sure to get GOLD MEDAL—it’s the gen uine medicine for weak kidney—right from Haarlem in Holland. been nominated as a member of the Xa iona! Conference of Social Work's Commit.ee on Community Organiza ions for 1935-36. Elec tions will be held during .he luom real meeting. In i.s sessions this year, the Na tional Conference is emphasizing a subjec now receiving Federal legila ive attention; s-. cia securi ty, according to Miss Lenroot. Fifty-two associate social groups and the Canadian Conference of Social Work are partieipa nig with the National Conference in the Montreal meeting. Loses Four Good American Greenbacks Tuesday a man, on h!s round of placing orders for job printing and mailing important letters, eating beakfast and getting his morning ci gar, missed an envelope in which he bad placed four good American green backs for safekeeping about 2 P. M. He became frantic and searched all his pockets. However, in searching, he failed to find the said greenbacks Then business really picked up Although he was about 50, his limbs began to move as though he were about 15. With haste he backtracked over all his stopping places- He came into the Guide office, where he had placed some job printing for the Elks’ Oratorical Contest. He enquired if any one had seen the envelope in which the money had been placed. After quite a rush search among papers on ! the desk, at which he had sat, he hastened out the door for the next stopping place. When all hope had been exhausted, he stopped in the Post Office at 24th and Ohio Streets, and the postmaster handed him the envelope in which the said four green backs rested. Rev. McIntyre was the finder of the envelope and had turned it over to the postmaster. Mr. M. L. Harris, 2219 Ohio Street, the loser and finder, expressed his ap preciation to the Postmaster and when seen last, was looking for Rev. McIntyre. Mr. Harris says it pays to live right, and the Lord will take You can WIN at anything you do if you know the INSIDE DOPE. Horses, Stocks, Bonds, Sweepstakes, any kind of Speculation. Write to KALABAR At Once for FREE Information- Just enclose a few stamps to cover pos tage. STOP LOSING. You can BE A WINNER TOO. Act Now. KALABAR Dept 225-E, Box 399, Grand Central Annex, New York City. care o* ILs own St. Phili p’s Church to Crown Monarch Kirs_‘ Borealis and Queen Aurora V will be ciowncd at the Fifth Annual Coronation Ball, sponsored by the choir of St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church, Thursda. night, May 23rd, at the Dreamland Hall. Corona.ion cere monies at 10:00. Dancing will follow to the music of the S/nco Hi-Hatters. School Conditions in Harlem Overcrowding _ New ^ oi k. —CNA—Overcrowd ing in Harlem schools is so seri ous that even James Marshall, white. Fusion member of the Board of Education here admit ted that it was “hampering their; efficiency.” Commissioner Marshall, after! visiting eight schools in Harlem,1 stated, “I found too many schools on double sessions and too much overcrowding. These conditions make ins ruction and discipline difficult.” School conditions in Harlem, as revealed by William Burroughs, former New York City school teacher and member of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, and other witnesses be fore the Mayor’s Committee in vestigating Harlem conditions, are worse than in any other part of the city. Most of the schools are old, dilapidated fire traps which are dangerous to the health of the children. Pennsylvania Railroad Jim-Crows Negro Dining Car Patrons New York,—CNA—The Penn sylvania Railroad system has a -deliberate and official Jim Crow policy against Negro dining car patrons. This fact was revealed last Monday night as a meeting of the Dining Car Employes Union, Lo cal 370. Woman Jim Crowed A dining car waiter and mem ber of the union who had just fi nished his run from Washington to New York related the follow ing incident at the union meeting: A Negro woman who occupied section No. 7 in Pullman car No. 540 entered the dining car dur ing rush hour. She sat at a table at which one seat was empty and at which a white man was eating. The whi.e man got up instantly and refused to pay his check. A Mr. Smith, white steward of the diner No. 7964, profusely apologized to the Negro hating; white man and explained to him j that it was the policy of the rail-1 road never to seat Negroes and whites at the same tab'e. Neither! the steward nor any other com- j pany represen ative made an ef fort to collect the white man’s, food bill. Members of the union bitterly denounced he company’s Jim Crow policy and several declared they would protest to the com pany. Hughes Writes Brilliant Negro Intellectuals New York —CNA—Langston Hughes, noted poet and president of the League of Straggle for Ne gro Rights, contributes a story to the latest issues of The Anvil, a magazine of proletarian literature. The story, entitled “Dr. Brown’s Decision,” is a scathing satire up on “Uncle Tom” Negro intellec tuals. It concerns a Negro pro fessor who appeals to millionaire white philanthropists for funds so that he may establish a Jim Crow college where Negroes will be educated and patronized as “equals.” The professor at the same time hopes for a fat salary that will enable him to go to Paris where he will forget he is a Ne gro. Langston Hughes recently re ceived a Guggenheim fellowship to enable him to do special work in literature. Negro and White Workers Force Bill For the Unemployed Austin, Tex., —CNA—Negro and white delega ions of the State Federation of Workers and Un employed Organizations met here in a conference and drafted re lief demands which were present ed to the legislature by Spokes man O’Connor w'hite, of San An tonio. The chief demand was for the introduction and passage of a bill providing for the establishment of unemployment, old age and social insurance, the bill :o be known as ‘‘The Texas Workers and Farm ers Unemployment, Old Age and Social Insurance Ac!” Spokes man O’Connor, as a result of the mass demand for adequate unem ployment relief, presented the draft, which is a revision of the Lundeen bill and declared: “The element of hunger stalks in the midst of us. The president has brought the attention of the en tire country to ;he need for some sort of social security.” No Discrimination In addition, he presented im mediate relief demand adopted at he conference, requesting that these demands become effective pending the ac ion on the workers bill. They are as follows: That all relief clients shall be paid not less than a minimum of $50 per mon. h and that the maximum work week shall not exceed 30 hours; that all clients on work re !ief projects shall be paid not less than 50 cents per hour for non. skilled labor and that skilled laobr be paid the prevailing union sca’e; we demand that human nee* shall constitute the basis of relief, and that there be no dis crimination against Negroes, Mexicans, aliens or non-residents; that the right of all unemployed workers be recognized, to set le their grievances through collective bargaining by representatives of their own choosing; that, pending the enactment of the former de mands into law, there sha'l be an immediate res oration of all relief cuts up to the level of February 1934. One legislator objected vehem ently to the presen: ation of these issues as “demands,” declaring to Spokesman O’Connor; “You haven’t any right to demand any thing of the government. You are merely to entreaty or petition.” O’Connor’s reply to this was: 1 ‘ VVe come here as honos worh ers. If we sometimes violate a fine point of order, please forgive us. ’ ’ He dramatically pointed out how the unemployed of Texas are starving through no fault of their own. blUl We have discovered the way inH to dream anything you wish *— and have it come true. If you wish to have success with your dreams answer this ad at once. If not, don’t write. Free details. Daggett Pub. Co. 3430 Rhodes Ave., Chicago, 111. /-- N v. -...-. . - y COULD NOT DO KER HOUSEWORK ■ tempt is a burden * —when you are i nervous and irri I table—at your i wit’s end—try this medicine. It may be iust what you need for extra energy. Mrs. Charles L. Cadmus of Trenton, New Jersey, says, "After doing just a little work I had to lie down. My mother-in-law recom mended the Vegetable Compound. 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