The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, May 11, 1935, Page THREE, Image 3

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    Racial Discrimination
Church Conventions
Denounced
W orld Needs Religion Of Jesus Rather
Than A Religion about Jesus,
Says Denver Clergyman.
(By the Continental Press)
Denver, Colorado, April 30—“The
world’s great need today is the appli
cation of the religion of Jesus rather
than so much talk about, while posses
sing so little of, the religion of, the
religion of Jesus,” said Dr. Edgar M.
Wahlberg, scholarly minister of the
Tiafc-onally known and liberal Grace
Community church of this city, in an
address Monday afternoon before the
Denver Interdenominational Alliance
in its regular session at the Glenarm
Branch Y. M. C • A., 2800 Glenarm
Place.
Speaking on the subject, “The Re
ligion of Lent,” Dr. Wahlberg insis
ted, “We need a Lenten period which
has the Religion of Jesus rather than
the religion about Jesus Not only
should we have the Religion of Jesus
dominate our lives in the Lenten
period rather than a religion “about”
Jesus, but in all other periods of our
lives. ”
The scholarly and eloquent WThite
minister pointed out that there are
approximately three hundred million
church adherents but the majority by
far “are concerned about the Relig
ion ‘about’ Jesus so much so that they
do not stop long enough to consider
the Rel-gion ‘of1 (Jesus.
furthermore, Dr Wahiherg con
tinued, “we are too much concerned
about the Religion ‘about’ Jesus to
stop to consider what is the religion
‘of’ Jesus We are concerned about
creeds, institutions and certain for
malities which only intensify our pre
judices. We have dug narrow chan
nels of Nationalism, of economic in
justice, of Race prejudice.
“The church should act to end the
1 ff Jitaim t 'wmi'm. |
| f I
A CLEAN SYSTEM
I FOR HEALTH
; Good health cannot be had vrtffi
©’- -*gular bowel activity.
\.*.en your bowels miss acting for
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> Drive out the poisons of constipa
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L O-t ttM (ecuiae TESDPOBD E Eirt"
ic ab-ctm — *—— _■
^efV^^UP ERNM MB W^MMB gMM^W VSBW j
—
economic injustice of the present day
and we should learn tha: the material
resources of the world are for use in
making mankind happy and not for
Profit. Th church should help .n pre
paring for the ‘abundant life’.”
The eminent and liberal Dr. Wahl-;
berg created national and international
attention by his recent stand in re
fusing to attend a Cincinnati confer
ence on “The Racial Ministry” when
the announcements stipulated that
Negro minis ers would be segregated
from white ministers, certain hotels
having been designated for white min
isters and others and the Y. M- C- A.
for Negro ministers.
Considerable criticism was heaped
upon Dr. Wahlberg by some of his
white ministerial colleagues, but his
answer was that he did not wish to be
party to a program under the auspices
of the supposedly ‘Christian church’
which set up such racial barriers that
were incompatible with the principles
of Jesus Christ. Some held that the
Negro delegates accepted the discrim
ination themselves. Dr. Wahlberg
held, “Even if they did, that fact did
not necessarily make Jt right nor
tolerable to a Christian man ” . |
“The religion of /Jesus stands for
Love, Justice, Brotherhood—the hard
way no doubt, but it is the only way j
that can gain the expression and have
the influence intended by its Founder,
Christ Jesus ”
The Grace Community Church, of
which Dr. Wahl berg is pastor, is of
the Methodist Episcopal faith, is most
unique among American churches. It
is called a great laboratory working
day and night on the principles of
Human Relations, that is, Race Rela
tions, Capital and Labor, Old Age and
Health insurance, Relief, et cetera. !
Dr- Wahlberg risks unpopularity and
frequently alienates many who other
wise would be joined to him, but he
ever stands foursquare for equality of
•spportunity and even handed Justice
for everybody.
Mr. Fred Glaser Says
Citizens’ Eat 14,400,000
Frankfurters a Year
Residents of Omaha annually con
sume nearly 4,000,000 pounds of saus
age, including enough frankfurters
(or wieners) to reach from Omaha to
Philadelphia, it was estimated today
by Fred Glaser, Omaha meat packer
and member of the Governing Com
mittee of the National Organization
of Sausage Manufacturers.
“Frankfurters,” he said, ‘represent
approximately 30 per cent of all the
sausage eaten in this city. On this
basis, Omaha annually consumes 1,
200,000 pounds of Frankfurters.
There are about 12 frankfurters of j
the average size to the pound, thus
making 14,400,000 individual frank
furters eaten annually in Omaha- At
an average length of five inches, we
find that it would require about 1,135
miles of frankfurters to satisfy Oma
ha’s appetite each year ”
Mr. Glaser explained that frankfur
ters are the most popular of all saus
ages. In some sections of the United
States, he said, they are known as
“wieners”, and in other sections as
“Coney Islands”, and in still other
sections as “half smokes”. The most
universal name for them is “red hots".
Following frankfurters in popular
ity comes bologna, which represents
17 per cent of all sausages consumed;
pork sausage, 15 per cent; dry saus
ages (including salami, cervelat, etc.)
13 per cent; summer specialties (such
as smoked tongue, veal loaf, etc.) 13
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per cent; and miscellaneous types, 12
per cent
“In all, there are more than 100 dis
tinct types of sausage and prepared
meat specialcies,” he said. “Sausage
prepared in th!s country to meet spe
cial specific racial preferences has
proved a never-ending source of
amazement to the people of many
European countries who have come
o the United States. Varieties popu
lar in V.enna, Stockholm, Berlin,
Rome, Athens, Madrid, and almost any
other European capital may be pur
chased across the counter in Keokuk,
Iowa; Wahoo, Nebraska; or Omaha ”
South Repudiates the
Filibuster
(Continued from Page 1)
ployed in mining, iron and steel,
meat packing, and railroad work.
It appeared from this report that,
though Negroes in these industri
es had suffered some ill effects
from the NRA, the net result had
been to their advantage.
Dr. Charles S. Johnson, of Fisk
University, who has directed an
intensive study of the Negro in
agriculture, painted a gloomy
picture of the status of farm ten
ants, white and colored. This con
dition, he thought, could be reme
died only by an extensive federal
land ownership possible on easy
terms. The commission approved
the Bankhead farm tenant bill,
now pending in the United States,
which provides for the beginning
of such a program. The results
of these surveys, which were con
ducted under the Commission’s
auspices, are to be summarized
and made public.
Dr. E. McNeill Poteat, Jr., of
Raleigh, N. C., was reeleeted
president of the Commission.
Doctors John Hope and Ashby
Jones were elected honorary presi
den s, and Mrs. Mary McLeod
Bethune, of Daytona Beach, Fla.,
first viee president. Dr. "Will W.
Alexander was reelected to direct
the work of the commission. The
an.i-lynching statement, which
was given to the press and sent
immediately to all the Southern
senators, was as follows:
“Hitherto the Commission on
Tnter-racial Cooperation has taken
no opposition relative to federal
anti-lynching legislation. We
were agreed that the primary re
sponsibility for the prevention
and punnishment of lynching rest
ed upon state officials and eourts,
and that, in last analysis, public
opinion was largely the deter
mining factor. Consequently, the
Commission from its inception
has worked continuously along
these lines, seeking anti-lynching
legislation in a number of states,
urging vigorous preventive meas
ures when lynchings were threat
ened, asking effective court ac
tion against the members of mobs,
and at the same time seeking
through all possible avenues of
publicity and education to build
up a public opinion that would
no longer tolerate crimes of this
character.
Lynching records of the last
fifteen years indicate progress
along the line of prevention. Of
ficers generally are more vigilant
than formerly in the protection
of prisoners, thereby reducing the
lynching toll. Meantime intelli
gent public opinion is practically
unanimous in condemnation of
mob violence.
“On the contrary, with rare ex
ceptions. attempts at prosecution
in lynching cases continue to be
futile. In nearly every case the
community hysteria which gives
rise to a lynching makes impos
sible and effective court action
against the perpetrators of the
crime. Consequently, in not one
case in ten is an effective effort
made by the authorities to identi
fy and prosecute the members of
’ynching mobs. Even in the rare
cases in which such efforts have
been made, indications have very
seldom been obtained, and con
victions have usually proved im
possible.
“Disappointed by this record
of impotence on the part of state
and local officials, the Commis
sion has reluctantly been forced
to the conclusion that little is to
be expected from this source, at
least in the immediate future,
and that an appeal to the feder
.(O T>k t be discouraged or alarm
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i Shorts for Sports
CAROLYN T. RADNOR LEWIS
Fashion Export,
Child Lito Magaxino
**A iorse! A horse!
My kingdom for a horse!
Whether there’s a pony in this
fashion picture or not, the polo shirt
and shorts are bound to be a hobby
this summer with her royal highness,
the American 8 to 16 year old.
Capricious fashion, in the person of
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The mesh polo shirt is closed with talon
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---
al courts in such cases is justified
and demanded by the condition.
“The Commission favors, there
fore the enactment of federal
legislation to this end. in the
hope that federal agents and
courts would be in a better posi
tion to act fearlessly and ef
fectively in the prosecution of
participants in the crime of lynch
j mg.”
Supreme Court Flays
Negro Jury Exclusion
_
(Continued from Page 1)
| the trial that the reason Negroes
i were not called for jury service
was because Oklahoma had laws
segregating the races. The Assist
ant County Attorney unsucces
sfully tried to make a Negro wit
ness admit that it would be just
as embarassing for a Negro to
serve on a jury with white men,
as it would be for white men to
serve on a jury with a Negro. The
colored witness denied it would
cause a Negro juror any embar
rassment, but the statement of
the Assistant County Attorney
remained in the record as an ad
mission of segregation as the of
ficial policy of the county.
Rebuke Oklahoma Attorney
In arguing the case for the
! state the Attorney General of
Oklahoma attempted to go into
the facts of the crime and prove
that Hollins raped the girl at the
point of a pistol; but the United
States Supreme Court rebuked
him and stated it was not interest
ed in anything except the jury is
sue. The Attorney General then
argued at great length about the
failure to prove that any parti
cular Negro citizen had been kept
off the jury on account of race
or color, but he failed to deny
the policy of segregation.
Charles H. Houston, Special
Counsel for the N -A. A. C. P.,
hammered this official segrega
tion policy home to the court in
his final argument. Associated in
the case with him were his father
William L. Houston and Edward
P. Lovett. A decision is expected
soon.
Defend Lynching in
Senate Speeches
Washington, D. C. —CNA—
Anti-lynching bills are “reflec
tions on the South” declared
Southern senators in Congress
last week. This, in essence, was
the broadside launched by the
Southern senators against the
Costigan-Wagner measure.
Senator Smith of South Caro
lina and Senator George of Geor
gia led the attack on anti-lyneh
bills, declaring that they were mi
constitutional and a ‘ ‘ reflection
on the south.”
Smith openly allied himself with
the lynch elements. He delivered
an impassioned and claptrap ora
tion upon theneeessity of protect
ing the “virtue of Southern
white womanhood” against rapist,
'.■.V.'.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V/.
^ The Omaha Guide «•
Ij Recommends !■
I The State ij
Furniture Co. ji
Corner 14th and Dodge J||
Streets. As One of the Most
Reliable and Accomodating
Firms to Buy from.
Prices the Lowest
and
Teims the Easiest
assumedly “Negro-rapists.”
“Certain acts committed; lynch
ing of negroes,” he declared, “are
beyond the reach of any court or
jury in the opinion of any righ.
minded man or woman.”
Hence, any anti-lynching bill,
according to Senator Smith is an
“open reflection on the South”
and fur her that ‘‘no one shall
violate the pudity” of Southern
white womanhood “without pav
ing the jus: penalty.”
Santor George sputtered and
fumed, stating that federal anti
lvnching legislation was uncon
stituional.
C. C. C. Enrollees to be
Selected by State
Directors; Fechner
Special to The Omaha Guide
Robert Feehner, Director of
Emergency Conservation Work,
today announced new basic state
quotas establishing the number
of men each state is authorized to
enroll in the Civilian Conserva
tion Corps under the program ex
panding the CCC to 600,000 men.
The new quotas, carrying increas
es for virtually all states, were
computed on a basis that weight
ed population 50 per cent and
relief needs 50 per cent in each
state. The young men enrolled
by the War Department in the
CCC will be selected by the De
partment of Labor through state
directors of selection. The Vet
erans’ Administration will select
the veterans. Of the total num
ber of 600.000 o be enrolled in the
camps, 545,000 will be juniors and
55.000 veterans.
The selection and enrollment of
men to bring the corps to 600.000
men will begin on June 15. Com
pletion of enrollment is scheduled
for August 31. It is estimated
that during the enrollment period
appr<*ximately 350,000 'men, in
cluding replacements for men who
drop out prior to July 1, will be
sent to the camps. Enrollment in
the CCC is limited to young men
between the ages of eighteen and
twenty-eight years, war veterans
and a small number of experienc
ed men selected from the localiti
es where camps are situated. The
present authorized strength of the
CCC is 353,000. Included in the
353.000 are 50,000 drought relief
enrollees from the cities of twen
ty-two drought states.
Relief Discrimination
Against Negroes
Washington, D. C. —CNA—
Statistics released here by Feder
al Relief Administrator Harry L.
Hopkins, white, throws further
light on the rank discrimination
against Negroes in the distribu
tion of relief.
In New Orleans, La., for ex
ample, the rates are as follow^:
White Negro
Single-16.80 10.50
Married_23.10 16.80
In ten Southern states. where
the Negro people compromise the
majority of a large section of the
population; Alabama, Arkansas,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi,
South Carolina, South Dakota,
Texas and Virginia, work relief
earnings averaged less than five
dollars a week; $3.53 less than the
average for the country. Wages
paid to the Negro laborers in
these states were considerably less
than five dollars.
Hearings Reveals of
Barring of Negroes
New York—CNA—A bombshell
was thrown into the Mayor’s
committee hearings last Saturday
day when James W. Ford, vice
day when James YT Ford, vice
president of the L. N. S. R., rais
ed the question of exclusion of
Negroes from grand jury service
in New York County.
The question came as a climax
to a session which bristled from
start to finish with sharp clashes
between spectators, committee
members and the police depart
ment.
Ford asked witness Malloy, who
testified before the grand jury on
the murder of young Lloyd Hobbs,
whether he had seen any Negroes
on the grand jury. Malloy said
loudly “Nd.” Malloy also de
clared that the officials of the
grand jury attempted to discredit
his testimony because he stated
that young Hobbs was cold-blood
edly shot down for no cause what
soever.
No Negroes on Jury
Arthur Garfield Hays, the old
est practicing attorney in the
courtroom, and chairman of the
session, stated that he had never
seen a Negro on the grand jury,
although some had served on petit
juries.
He then asked the audience,
which was filled with practicing
attorneys and representatives of
the city administration, whether
they had ever seen a Negro on
the grand jury. All of them
stated that they had not.
Edward Kuntz, International
Labor Defense attorney, had re
marked at this point that “it
seems Decatur, Alabama is jihead
of New York in the matter of
Negro jurors.” ..
"REVEAL ING' ?
your *
PAST, PRESENT
<M EUIPRE ••
B/ASee' MULACE
^y»w»bU on <£•
iBMf <frg-VL7,,.TT"
NOTE—Your question printed fret-5
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.
V. M —If I marry the bay I have
in mind do you think I will be disap
pointed?
Ans.—Since you have already been
married once, I advise you to be sure
the man you are planning to marry is
the right one for you- I don't believe
you will be disappointed in him, how
ever, for he is already thinking ser
iously of buying a nice FIVE ROOM
HOUSE—However, it will be at least
four or five years before he can finish
paying for it.
©■ W.—Will you please tell me
what is the matter with me and ad
vise iqe just what to do ?
Ans.—Don’t get the idea into your
head that you are DUMB, for you are
not- It is just that it is harder for
some people to learn in school thar
others, and in some cases PRIVATE
INSTRUCTIONS are necessary.
Since you have already been in the
eighth grade for two years, I feel
sure that you could make a lot more
headway with your education in a
PRIVATE SCHOOL.
H- P. R.—Should I start making
plans for the future, and do you think
I could have any success?
Ans—You certainly should start
making plans for the future, and don’t
think that you are too old to do any
thing worth while. Even though you
are nea>*' forty, you still have a
chance to adjust ‘yourself to the idea
of supporting yourself — DRESS
MAKING should prove a most excel
lent way for you to make an honest
living.
J. R. D.—Will you kindly tell me
where my husband went Saturday
night ?
Ans.—Before you and your hus
band went on the trip last week, he
naturally had to make some reserva
tions for it, and that appears to be
what he did Saturday night when he
i left you at his sister’s house- If you
wouldn’t be so suspicious of every
move your husband made, you could
I enjoy a lot of trips with him similar
to the one you took to the mountains
last week
H. M- B.—Is my husband still foil
ing around with the woman I have in
mind ?
Ans.—The woman you have in mind
has been afraid to be seen in the com
pany of your husband since you caught
them together, even though she does
still like him. He seen to have taken
a fancy to another g.rl now, and she
appears to be no?*? other than this
woman’s daughter.
T. H—I am down and out and
would like for you to advise me what
to do about n*y financial condition ?
Ans.—There is no reason whatso
ever for you to be in such bad circum
stances, with all the property you own,
and you should consider yourself lucky
that you have been fortunate enough
to keep it- The farm you have isn’t
doing you a bit of good as it is—It
would help you out considerably to
sell it for it is worth a big price.
0. C.—Please tell me if a financial
way will open soon for me to do what
I wish ?
Ans.—You have chosen a very good
way to meet new friends and not only
will you have a good time at BOARD
ING SCHOOL, but you will get some
good training for both the business
and social world—By the time the fall
term begins, it appears that your
family will be in a position financially
to let you enter a boarding school
_
F- S.—Do you think my job will
turn out to be a steady one?
Ans—You seem to be highly re
spected where you work but even
though you have won a good reputa
tion, your job will not prove to be a
permanent one—For detailed informa
tion I suggest that you see note at
tached to this column and write to me
for a PRIVATE REPLY.
L. B.—I believe in having a good
time but the girls around here are too
D—-__
slow. Do you think I will marry
the one I have in mind?
Ans—The girls ;ou run around
with are not too slow. It’s just that
you are so fast that they appear that
way to you, and I advise you to slow
up a bit- The boy you are in love
with thinks a great deal of you but if
you expect to win him, you’ll have to
slow up to a pace that he can keep up
with you
Took off 17 lbs.
OF UGLY FAT
HEEDED DOCTOR’S ADVICE
*obert Hickey, Roseville.
Calif, writes: "My doctor prescribed
w^iHh?wSaltS for me—he said ‘hey
T lU?,n,twhurt me ln ‘he least. I've
wnrth7ttlbS' 6 Weeks Kruschen is
w°rth its weight in gold.”
Mrs. Hickey paid no attention to
Bossipers who said there was no
Jo reduce. She wisely fo”
TOT? hCr doctor 8 advice. Why don't
4 ^LvJar0^Kruschen to-day (lasts
4 weeks and costs but a trifle)
otmhoyt wkt half tea8P(>°»f“l in cup
dru^lLtr16" eVery m0rD1^' ^
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JERSEY CITY. N J. ,
Dept. 0. G.
TIRED, ACHING,
SWOLLEN FEET
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.1 I
How to Get Rid of
CRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger
When you can change your gray,
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it is so supremely good that the best
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