PORTLAND INQUIRER Negro Housing Aided by Builders Blandford reported, some 1,300 units, to cost an additional $4,000,- 000, have been added to the public program. Negro families also shared im­ portantly on the basis of income and need in the pre-far program of low-rent housing built with fed­ eral financial assistance, Mr.Bland- ford pointed out. A total of 40,200 homes, accommodating nearly 185,- 000 people, were made available to Negroes through peacetime public housing, he said. Citing some of the difficulties in interesting private capital in pro­ ducing homes for Negro workers, Mr. Blandford pointed out Wash­ ington, D. C., Baltimore, Md., Chi­ cago, Jacksonville, Fla., Atlanta, Ga., Memphis, Tenn., Norfolk, Va., Columbus, O., Oklahoma City, Ok­ lahoma, Dallas and Houston, Tex., and Los Angeles and San Francis­ co, as cities where “pioneering achievements are being recorded.” CLASSIFIED C A SH F O B Y O l 'B C A B T o p O F A P ric e » DU 5th BOIS MOTOR CO. The willingness of private capi­ a n d W a s h in g t o n a n d C o lu m b ia Sta. tal to enter the field of building VANCOVVEB, W ASH. 1 homes for Negroes was cited today ric iddell of g r e a t Ph. Vancouver 56 or Portland BRITAIN, 19 2 A O LY M PIC 4 0 0 - by Administrator John B. Bland- _________ ATwater 1514_________ M E T E R c h a m p v m ig h t h a v e w on 0ur EL R o y ford, Jr., of the National Housing Stenographer-Typist, capable oi the 2 oo m e t e r s *r&o, b u t Agency us a long step forward to­ HE WOULDN'T COMPETE taking dictation. Must have had a S unday school ward a solution of the housing BECAUSE experience in office routine. TEACHER AND RACE WAS Phone or write Portland Inquir­ problem for Negroes. T h EOLOG i ST s e t to be R um er, 2736 N. E. Rodney Ave., City Speaking before the Annual Con­ A W O RLD'S^M /LE ON A 12; WE 7220. RECORD ON ference of the National Urban SUNDwy- A SUNDAY— Male Help Wanted League in Columbus, O., Mr. Bland- HE WAS Pin Setters—12 Boys or young A ford reported that some 17,000 pri­ men for Day or Night Shift. Top AlW/STE« vately - financed accommodations rates paid. No experience requir­ for non-white families will be ed. Phone or write Portland In­ quirer, 2736 N. E. Rodney Ave. made available under the NHA’s WEbster 7220. war housing program. As of Sep­ tember, he said, 4,800 of these hail APARTMENT HOUSE FOR SALE $2000 Down. Title Clear been completed and arly 10,000 3 Units, 3 Baths, 3 Kitchens. Easily others were under construction. converted for 1 or 2 families. 2Vi “These are good sized figures,” banked lots on comer affording he said, “but they are not a drop privacy. An ideal close in home in the bucket compared to fhe with income. Fruit trees on lots. Write B-6 Portland Inquirer, amount needed in the days ahead. Portland 12, Ore. The important thing is that private Parcels sent to soldiers and sail­ financing of housing available for j ors abroad are addressed to army Negroes has not been provided in | and fleet post offices in this coun­ the past — but an entering wedge try, FEA official pointed out, and has been driven at last.” Raising of $1,514,504 to support according to Post Office regula­ It is an “important wedge,” Mr. the 72 agencies participating in the tions parcels so addressed are con­ G i l DODDS. ONE OF AM ERICA'S B E S T Blandford declared, because “it is Portland-Multnomah County Unit­ sidered domestic shipments. M IL E R S IS A D fV IN lT y STuDENT, A N D one which eventually may well test ed War Chest, which started on Oc­ HAL C U TBiLL.FO RM ER M/LE AND ft M/LE Officials added that the state­ the economic soundness of housing tober 0th and is to continue to Oc­ STAR WAS KNOWN AS THE "FCÌIH 6 PARSO/V * ment was issued because a number for Negroes and which may even tober 10th, or until the goal is J.MPJ* of persons have been needlessly ap­ alter a lot of conclusions about reached, is now in full swing. plying to FEA for export licenses housing occupied by Negroes neces­ Ten thousand volunteer workers for such shipments. Last Friday’s report showed a sarily deflating the value of Sur­ pate in the United War Chest have give their services gratis to this done with money raised in past total of §910,366.20, or 56 per cent rounding properties.” community endeavor, in which all Regarding the Government’s ef­ are privileged to serve and give. years and what they will do with of the goal, with one division, th a t, of Clubs “over the top.” forts to meet the housing needs of Working under an executive com-, that raised in this campaign. Plans for solicitation are made Negro war workers, Mr. Blandford mittee of ten, thirty division chair- pointed out that as of last June 30 men djrect the contacting of every weeks in advance; employees in Judge Harrison Visits Portland or man end woman in the city and firms conduct iheir own campaigns, approximately 70,000 units (Continued from page 1) aiid there is great rivalry as to about 10 per cent of the total pub­ county. After leaving the Kaiser Yard, what firri will go “over the top” licly - financed part of the war Solicitation in the Vanport dis­ Judge Harrison was the guest of housing program—had been made trict is under the direction of f i rst. . available to Negroes, 83 per cent Messrs. W. Van Loan and Kenneth Report luncheons are staged at ^ e anport ousing . < mmistra of them for families. Porter. With workers employed on the Multnomah Hotel each day of tion. A police escort conducted the This represents, he said, an in­ different shifts, the task of reach- the campaign, where division lead- party on a tour of the Housing vestment of about $247,000,000 or ing every individual calls for extra ers and their lieutenants leport on p roject and stopped in the adminis- 12 per cent of the total public effort in that district progress of solicitation. Each per- j trati(m o ffices where the m anager> S led money spent in the program, add­ Throdgh the rftedlum of the son attending buys his own lunch,! ,. . .. , , * • „ 4 . ___ : i ., Mr. W. S. Griffin and the assistant ing that from March through June newspapers and radio stations, and and entertainment is provided by j DEAN B. of this year some 4,630 units, or by speeches delivered by ninety school orchestras or orchestras manager, Mr. Fyock, gave a very more thun a third of the total pro­ speakers from the Speaker’s Bu- from radio stations and clubs, as a interesting talk on why of Van- grammed, were scheduled for Ne- reau, the people are informed as to part of their contribution to the port. The judge, always an inter- gro occupancy. Since June 30, Mr. what the agencies which partici- cause. ested listener, asked some very pertinent questions. The story of STATE r Vanport to him was one to be won­ REPRESENTATIVE dered at and to be told and retold. A marvel of efficiency as explained A Businessman with by Mr. Griffin. Engineering Training. Several impromptu speeches and visits also helped to make Judge Widely Experienced , William H. Harrison’s visit one to In Education. be remembered. Among the best remembered of the judges’ v isit, V ETERAN W O R L D W A R I. was a flag presented to him by Pd. Adv.H.W. Hull 226 N. E. 63 rd Ave. Portland Thomas (Tommy) Luke, president and of the 50,001 Club of Oregon. The flag was presented to him at the suggestion of Mrs. Henson for his i particular brand of Americanism. R E -E lect The Negro Race, the Republican Party and the American people are proud of Judge William H. Harri- j son. Judge Harrison was judge of the Superior Court of Oklahoma coun­ VANPORT ty, Oklahoma; a member of the Board of Pardon and Paroles of the City Commissioner State of Illinois; Assistant Attor- ney General, State of Illinois and former Grand Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias. E L R0BIH5ON CHEST DRIVE IN LAST HALF WEBSTER ANNOUNCEMENT PARAD E MASS MEETING BOWES "Silt" Friday, November 3rd, 1944 PRINCIPAL SPEAKER HERMAN E. LAFKY Delegate to the Republican National Convention for Oregon Parade starts 7:30 P. M. at Victory Boulevard and Denver Ave., ending at UPPER GRADE AUDITORIUM, N. Broadacres and Force Street. VOTE FO R COME AND MEET THE REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES! HARVEY WELLS "NEW INDUSTRIES - M O R E JOBS" R e p u b lic a n C a n d i d a t e f o r REPRESENTATIVE M ULTNOM AH COUNTY “ S A N E A N D S E N S I B L E L A W S ’* P a i d Adv. l ‘d. Adv. R a y G a r n e r , C h m B o w e s for C o m m . , 404 M o r g a n Bl d g . , P o r t l a n d