The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, November 23, 1918, Page 8, Image 8

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    AVOID EPID MICS I
INSURE YOUR WAGES 4
AGAINST SICKNESS AND ACCIDENT WITH |
THE CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COMPANY 1
A. PLUMMER, E. A. LAWRENSON, '
AGENT, MANAGER. !
300 BEE BLDG. 300 BEE BLDG. 1
CLAIMS PAID IMMEDIATELY |
—^—■
'JUiT Tne IAM| Ai ALL TM|
jiiiT, it n tailb d hoti
FROM NOW ON '
•» *« « <« « •* >v »« y y « <» « y y « y y ” f* rt.y-« y y y ” «. ^ --•
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| Office Douglas 2421
::
= Dr. C. H. Singleton I
DENTIST
■j
i t
Office Hours 109 S. Fourteenth St.,
9 to 12 A. M. 1 to 6 P. M. Omaha, Nebraska I
AT THE
Franklin
24th and Franklin Streets
SATURDAY—
Clara Kimball Young
—in—
“SHESLEY' KAYE”
SUNDAY—
Norma Talmadge in
“GHOSTS OF YESTERDAY”
- Alhambra
24th and Parker.
SATURDAY—
Dorothy Phillips in
“PAY ME”
A Wild Western Production
SUNDAY—
Neal Hart in
“QUICK TRIGGERS”
Constance Talmadge in
“STUDIO GIRL”
Arbor Garage
Fire proof block with steam
heat. Repairing and .storing.
Will accommodate DO cars day
and night. Connection taxi
service. Husiness at 2506-08
South 32d Avenue. Tel. Harney
3371, Omaha.
C. R. Boyd
Colored Prop.
A
Diamond
24th and Lake Sts.
SUNDAY—
Don’t Forget the Great
Negro Play,
“THE TROOPER OF
TROOP K”
By Noble M. Johnson
All Colored Actors
Excellent Show Saturday
Night and All Next Week.
FOR BOOKS, BIBLES and
STATIONERY
Patronize the
New American
Book Store
General Agents for Colored
Papers
The Monitor.
The Defender.
The Indianapolis Ledger.
? MRS. NELSON, Secretary.
| 2516 Q St. Phone So. 2100
'X"X":"Xv:"X"X"»X“X"M"M“X"X
Y Y
I K. & M.
| Grocery Co.!
X 2
£ Successor to X
4 4
t H. E. YOUNG X
3 3
Y X
Y We solicit your patronage. £
X 2114-16 North 24th St. X
X X
•X,vv,XXXMX«X-XXXMXM>*XXX*XX
! Liberty Drug Co. f
X EVERYBODY’S DRUG STORE f
We Deliver Anywhere. X
X Webster 386. Omaha, Neb. X
i v •••
•XXXX-XX-X^M'frXXW-X^XX
---BUY A HOME
$50 Cash, $20 Monthly
3856 Leavenworth St. 7 rooms,
newly papered and painted, new
electric light fixtures, bath rodjn
and toilet, large la"; on paved
street and car line; or.e-half
block from school. House is va
cant; can move right in. See it
today.
2417 Maple St.—5-room cot
tage, modern except heat, large
rooms, floored attic; large lot on
paved street; block to 24th
street car line; fine neighbor
hood; now vacant. Can move
right in. See it today. Price
$2,500. Very easy terms.
C. B. ROBBINS
REAL ESTATE, RENTALS, FIRE AND TORNADO INSURANCE
Telephones: Douglas 2842; Webster 5519.
LIEUTENANT EUROPE'S
COLORED HAND
Irvin S. Cobb in the Saturday Evening
Post.
Somewhere in France.
111\\ O days we stayed on there with
I an Afro-American regiment ( he
369th infantry) near the front, and
they were two days of a superior va
riety of continuous black face vaude
ville. There was the evening when
for our benefit the men organized an
impromptu concert, featuring a quar
to; that would succeed on any man’s
burlesque circuit ar.d a troupe of buck
and wing dancers whose equals it
would he hard to find on the “Big
Time.” There was the next evening
when the band of forty pieces sere
naded us. I think surely this must be
the best regimen al band in our army.
Certainly it is the best cne I have
heard in Europe during the war. On
parade when it played “The Memphis
Blues” the men did not march; the
music poured in at their ears and ran
down to their heels, and instead of
marching they literally danced their
way along.
As for the dwellers of the French
towns in which this regiment has from
time to time been quartered, they, I
am told, fairly go mad when some al
luring. compelling ragtime tune is
played with that richness of synco
pated melody in it which only the
black man can achieve; and as the
regiment has moved on, more than
once it has b^en hard to keep the un
attached inhabitants of the village
that the man was quitting from mov
ing on with it.
If I live to be a hundred and one I
shall never forget the second night of
a splendid, flawless full moon. We
stood with the regimental staff on the
terraced lawn of the chief house in a
half-deserted town five miles back
from the trenches, and down below us
in he main street the band played
plantation airs and hundreds of Afro.
American soldiers joined in and sang
the words. Behind the masses of up
turned dark faces was a ring of white
ones where the remaining natives of
the place clustered, with their heads
wagging in time to the tunes.
And when ',he band got to “ ’Way
Down Upon the S’wanee River” I
wanted to cry, and when the drum
major, who likewise had a splendid
baritone voice, sapg, as an interpo
lated number, “Joan of Arc,” first in
English and then in excellent French,
the villages openly cried; ard an elder
ly peasant, heavily bewhiskered, with
tears of a joyous and thankful en
thusiasm running down his bearded
cheeks, was wi h difficulty restrained
from throwing his arms about the
soloist and kissing him.
Not Knocking Mazie.
Chorus Lady—“Mazle Middleton told
me yesterday that she makes some
easy money mornings posing as a heud
und-neck model for a sculptor.” Show
Girl—"I shouldn't he at all surprised,
j Some sculptors, you know, make a
specialty of gargoyles!”—I inITalo Ex
press.
Therefore, Be Cheerful!
Depression, gloom, dark 'brooding
these are the worn stones In the de
scent to the Inferno of Incompetence,
! helplessness, delayed victory, or even
ultimate defeat. This, we know, is
true evermore In our Individual lift
struggles. It Is just as true of na
tions.—William Allen Knight.
Few Really Sincere.
Sincerity is an openness of heart;
we find it In very few people; what
we usually see is only an artful dls
simulation to win the confidence o4
| others.
A COLORED MILLIONAIRE
IN FRANCE ENTERTAINS
BOYS FROM TRENCHES
I Continued from Pukb 1)
“I almost believe you're Irish, in
stead of Frenchman Louis," she re
plied. “But you and the sergeant,
j The servants and I have been looking
for you everywhere.”
That was the only time I saw Lan
cour. The other day I was told that
there was a movement in the indus
trial section of Paris to send Lancour
to the French parliament. He is very
popular and his Negro blood is no
more thought )f ban a slight strain
of Indian blood is in the United States.
He and his wife go everywhere, and
rec ve everywhere and hold whatever
honore arc due them.
Who could not but help fight the
battles of France?—George B. Tandy
in Favorite Magazine.
RACE PREJUDICE GETS KNOCK
OUT IN 74TH ASSEMBLY DIST.
Real simon pure democracy if you
please reigns in the 74th Assembly
District, and on his merits, Frederick
Mad:son Roberts was on last Tuesday
elected to represent this district in
the Assembly for the great state of
California, for the next two years.
Notwithstanding the fact that Rob
erts won the republican nomination
at the August primaries in a field
of five aspiran a, and which nomina
tion is always equivalent to an elec
tion; strong efforts were made to de
feat him, on no issue other than
race prejudice. His independent op
ponent gum-ri r ed around the dis
trict passing out his caids, written
on the back thereof was the inscrip
tion, "My opponent 's a Nigger.” A'l
fair minded people resented this, and
Mr. Gahart, the man who put it in
vogue was buried under an avalanche
of votes. The firirll count was, Rob
ert 2,556; Gahart, 1,794: a majority
for Roberts of 726.
And thus the 74th Assembly Dis
trict of the great State of Califlcmia
presents a practical demonstration of
real democracy, for be it known, with
out the support of a very considerable
part of the white voters in this dis
trict the election of Mr, Roberts
would have been impossible. W hile in
this district there is a great big Col
red population, he same does not by
any means excell that of the white
people, therefore the victory for de
mocracy is clean cut and unques
tioned.—Los Angeles Eagle.
First Electric Lighted City.
Aurora, 111., was the first city In th
world to have Its streets lighted b.
electricity, that method of illuminatin'
having been installed there in 1881.
WANTS TO HEAR FROM BROT
Robert Baum, 2009 Nort!
street, Omaha, Neb., is nnx'
learn the whereabouts of his l.
Wade Hamilton Baum, who fo
resided at Centralia, III., and
whom he has not heard for eigl
years. Should this notice come to
attention of Wade Baum or of anyoi
who can give any information con
cerning him they will confer a favor
by communicating with Robert Baum,
2009 North 25th street, Omaha, Neb.
South Side Notes
Mrs. Georgie Anderson, Elsie Dan
ner and Mr. Gus Lowe were called
away to Tulsa, Okla., on .recount of
the death of h eir lit Je sister, Miss
Maude Lowe.
Mrs. Mattie Irving is still quite sick
at her home on Q street, between
Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth.
Mrs. Sara Gray of 4222 Sou h
Twenty-fourth street has been quite
sick with a very severe attack of the
grippe. She took down last Friday and
hasn’t improved very much.
Little Miss Upchurch, whom it was
thought last week was improving, had
a relapse and is very sick at the home
of her parents.
Mr. Robert Severe is quite sick at
his home, 4422 South Twenty-sixth
street, with an attack of la grippe and
rheumatism. He has been unable to
be at work since last Friday.
Miss Leona Gray of 1211 Missouri
avenue left Wednesday, November 20,
for Austin, Minn., to visit her sisters,
Mrs. C. A. Steward and Mrs. I. Stew
ard. She will remain with them until
after the holidays.
Mrs. Lillian Andrews, Thirty-third
street, between Y and Z, is down with
an attack of influenza.
Mrs. Belle Henderson of 2720 S
street was called to Kansas City to
the bedside of her sister, who is very
sick.
The first quarterly meeting of Allen
chapel, A. M. E. church, was held last
Sunday. Although the weather was j
very inclement Rev. Mr. Williams of i
St. John’s A. M. E. church and quits a |
number of his congregation came over i
and helped, for which Allen chapel is |
very thankful, also to Rev. Mr. Rhon- !
nee and congregation of Council !
Bluffs.
Mr. Arthur Barnes has returned
home from the camp.
RECEIVES NEWS OF
BROTHER’S PROMOTION
Mrs. Roxie Williams, 2513 M s'root,
and Mis. Alice Nelson, 2410 P street.
South Omaha, yesterday received
wo i-d from their brother, Captain
Adam Patterson of Company A, 365th
infantry, that he has been promoted
to assistant judge advocate. He will
be commissioned a major. He is one
of many Kansas City, Kan., Negroes
who is making good in the army.
Captain Patterson had an extensive
law practice before entering the army.
He says the Negroes under his com
mand arc making a creditable show
ing against the Huns.
CLASSIFIED ADS
BILLIARD PARLORS
CAPITOL BILLIARD PARLOR
Cigars and Tobacco.
Barber shop in connection. All kinds
of choice candies, chewing gum and
soft drinks. Service to our guests
our specialty. Athletic and baseball
headquarters.
Webster 1773. 2018 North 24th St.
Charles W. South, Prop.
BLACKSMITHS
J. W. STAPLETON
South 2571. 5825 South 23d St.
DRUG STORES
THE PEOPLE’S DRUG STORE~
Douglas 1446. 109 South 14th St.
ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO.,
24th and Lake; 24th and Fort,
Omaha, Neb.
COLORED NEWSPAPERS AND
MAGAZINES
•
FRANK DOUGLASS
Shining Parlor.
Webster 1388. 2414 North 24th St.
T » » » -«■« « • « ■ « . «■» . »■ • —t
Petersen & Michelsen
Hardware Co.
GOOD HARDWARE
2408 N St. Tel. South 1M
---
f ■ • • « ■ t 1' • • • t t « tI ■ * » '■■■»«■
DR. JAMES W. SCOTT
Expert Masseur & Chiropodist
N. E. Cor. 12th & Famam Sts.
y * * * — ..* *"*"*"+
MELCHOR--Druggist
The Old Reliable
Tel. South 807 4826 So. 24th St.
....- »-■'
• _
DRESSMAKING
MRS. FRANCIS
WASHINGTON
2322l/j Q St., South Side
Tel, South 753
f-—-«'.
1—WHITE’S— j
BAGGAGE LINE |
2423 Patrick Avenue,
Omaha, Neb. 1
» Tel. Webster 4931. i
i •
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
-THE
Booker T. Washington
HOTEL
Nicely Furnished Steam
Heated Rooms, With or
Without Board.
r»2.‘5 North l'tth St.
Omaha, Neb.
Phone Tyler 897
IPoro Beauty Parlor
Mrs. Clara H. Rogers
Scientific and sanitary Scalp
and Hair treatment. Manicur
ing and Massage. Switches,
Braids, Transformations and
Curls made to order. Doll Wigs
a specialty. I’oro system and
. bench work taught. Diplomas
! given.
! Call Webster 2631.
I Address 2426 Patrick Avc.
The Moon
CAFE
GOOD HOME COOKING
MEALS AT ANY HOUR
2605 N St. Tel. South 2962
Harry Norman
PROMPT
Taxi Service
AT ALL HOURS
Pool Hall and Billiard Perlor in
Connection.
Phone South 2962 2603 N St.
South Omaha.
PHILIP’S DEPARTMENT STORE
WE NEED 4935-37-39 South 24th, South Side. THE GOV
MORE The Fastest Growing Store in Omaha. S \ Y^^DO^
ROOM- “WATCH US GROW.” JOT BUILD
1 -..'____
25% on All Coats,
ore Furs and Dresses
j m '
It is a stock reducing sale.
The most important sale of Women’s Outer Wearing Apparel. Do not let another day pass with
out paying a visit to South Omaha’s most popular shopping center.
REDUCTION ON COATS
Charming belted, flured and high waisted styles portraying the smartest of fashion lines are offered
here in handsome Wool, Velour, Cylinder Cloth, Broadcloth and I’lush coats; large collars of Kit Coney
' Plush or self material.
REDUCTION ON DRESSES
Here you will find dresses, both beautiful and practical. Every one -it stock reducing sale prices.
In serge; splendid styles, stock reducing sale price with 26% from the repuiar marked price.
There is also included all Mina Taylor Dresses ami Aprons, consisting of a wonderful array of ex
clusive styles.
A great reduction sale, with low prices in all departments that constitutes our great banner bargain
event of the entire year. Any cooking utensils needed for Thanksgiving? For the preparation of the
. Thanksgiving dinner you will find the better of all kinds here, without which even the best cook cannot do
justice to herself. Come in. In our Economy Basement cas your eye over the different counters you
will find everything in the line of housekeeping at lower prices than any wl,ere else, because we carry
a trenuyidous stock on hand. We were foresighted knowing the war would bring merchandise up to j
higher prices.
COME IN SATURDAY OR ANY OTHER DAY—YOU WILL BE SAVING MONEY BY VISITING
THIS STORE.
1111 —I' i .. l