The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, December 18, 1952, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE VOICE
__PUBLISHED WEEKLY_
“Dedicated to the promotion of the cultural, social and spiritual
life of a great people
Elbert Sawyer
Publisher and Editor
Business Address 2225 S Street Box 2023 2-4085
If No Answer Call 5-7508
Maxine Sawyer Advertising and Business Manager
Dorothy Green Office Secretary
Mrs. Joe Green__ Circulation Manager
_ Member of Ihe Associated Negro Press and Nebraska Press Association .
Entered as Second Class Matter, June J>, 1947, at the Post Office at Lincoln,
N.'braska, under the Act ot March 3. 1879.
I year subscription .*2.50 'single copy .. ,10c
Out ot State 1 year Subscription *2.50- Single Copy 10c
[ftEBRRSKH
/_ iy / \ EMTOUALS
SSSSSKSY 7 rj 13 i A i % The views expressed In these columns
III lAZ/vyjm, K ■ are those of the writer and not
j ft w necessarily a reflection of the policy
mssoemnon/ • 1 of The
n** A K NATIONAL
fVhlAHI VkoH D fO/TON/At
II L&TFWfyL—T ASSOCIATION
Chicago Youth Talented Musician;
Pete Fischer Gets CBS Press Berth
Pete Fischer, Chicago and New
York’s gift to instrumental music
and arranging, has landed a solid
and responsible spot with the
CBS (Columbia Broadcasting Sys
tem) core of press, radio and tele
vision press corps.
Fischer writes press publicity
for 10 radio shows, and is respon
sible for making up the daily CBS
radio « network calendar, listing
the various programs and details
for the radio editors all over the
country.
The lone sepia in this particu
lar division, Fischer has an im
pressive, business management,
music and communications back
ground. He is a product of Engle
wood High school and Wilson'
Junior college, back in Chicago.
Fischer was hired by CBS as
a writer on the basis of his free
lance radio and magazine work
over a 10-year period,with lead
ing magazines including Down
Beat, Variety, Billboard and other
similar sheets. He handles the
talent agency and newspaper con
tacts and plans and executes pub
licity for the following programs
on the CBS Radio:
“Church of the Air”; “Mr. Keen,
—Tracer of Lost Persons,” “Gang
busters,” “Mr. Chamelon,” “The!
Line Up,” “Garden Gate,” “City
Hospital,” “Saturday at the
Chase,” “Gunsmoke,” “Curt Mas
sey Time,” which recently fea
tured Duke Ellington among a
variety of other duties.
Father of Blues
Continued from Page 1
Miss Gloria Swanson and Mrs.
F. H. LaGuardia—and how he
played the “S(. Louis Blues” on
his trumpet during the occasion,
and how the Elks’ band played |
“Hike With Ike” and the author,
Jack Gould, sang it with them as
he did at the GOP National Con
vention.
He told how he appeared on
television with Vice President
elect and Mrs. Nixon, with Sen
Nixon’s arm around him. Refer
ring to this he wrote—“I thought
that would have been a good story
for the Race papers, but, no!
Then the aged artist unbridled
all his feelings, stating:
“The Press forgets this famous
quotation—‘I care not who make;
the Nation’s laws, if I can write
the nation’s songs.’
“They discriminate in so man}
ways, because I wrote the St
Louis Blues, but forget that
wrote the anthem, ‘They that Sov
in Tears, Shall Reap in Joy,’ anc
hundreds of other sacred compo
sitions that could be sung in choir:
of the nation. They also forget |
that the ‘St. Louis Blues’ makes
me about as much money as if I
were a congressman or a college
president and that his song glori-j
ties our Race around the world,
the celebrated composer wrote.
“So, for ‘rank discrimination* I
wonder at times who is most to be
blamed—the opponents of the civil
rights or some of my folk,” he
continued.
j “Monday before election I rode
in a motorcade. The car carried I
my name on a banner and some
one threw papers from the Newj
York Timesjdated, Oct. 24, attack-'
ing Gov. Dewey with their names
signed, forgetting that New York,
;under Gov. Dewey was the first
I state in the union to wipe outj
race discrimination with an FEPC
> law.
“1 appeared on Television with
Eisenhower at the Astor hotel. He
' introduced me and ’ made, a short
talk telling about our song, “Hike
[ with Ike.’ I am a Republican by
' tradition. I was born in Florence,
I Ala., birthplace of the first Negro
■ elected to congress from the north,
; Oscar DePriest, and the home of
Christmas Special
Boys-Girls-Adaiis
Basketball_5 new VOICE
subscriptions
Iron....10 new VOICE
subscriptions
Toaster.20 new VOICE
subscriptions
Fry-Rite ..... 45 new VOICE
subscriptions
Question: Can you tell me what
to use on a concrete retaining wall
for color? Should it be oil paint,
waterpaint, whitewash, or colored
cement? Part of the wall was
treated with water-repellent, and
holds whitewash well, but the
other parts did not.
C.J.H., Staten Island, N.Y.
Answer: If you want to stick to
whitewash, and makjc it stick, try
one of these: 1 oz. of alum to a
gallon of whitewash; or, 1 pint
of molasses (or I pound sugar
dissolved in hot water as a substi
tute) to each 5 gallons of white
wash. Both stick well. You may
also use oil base outside paints, or
those with a resin emulsion. You’ll
have more trouble making colored
cement stick to waterproofed sur
faces.
Question: Our middle-aged
house is equipped with half
screens which ride up and down
on a wood molding. These screens
do not fit flush against the bot
tom and small sized insects gain
easy entry. Is there any way we
can seal these openings and still
have the screens work?
C.S., Baltimore, Md.
Answer: You might plane or
sand the lower edges of the
screens to fit the uneven sills by
first drawing a pencil line along
the sill-and-screen joint to dis
cover the points that fit poorly,
then remove the causes of trou
pe. Or, you might apply felt
weather-stripping to the under
James T. Rapier, congressman in
Reconstruction Days. Many times,
my father told me how he helped
lide Rapier from the Ku Klux
Klan on an island in the Tennes
see river until they could spirit
nim away to Washington.
“You will not see that in the
papers, but it’s in my books,” he
wrote.
• Ending on a philosophical note,
The Father of the Blues state:
“This letter is written in the
spirit of Thanksgiving with the
hope we will continue to ‘render
unto Caesar that which is Caeser’s
and render unto God thanks for
the blessings bestowed on us, most
especially, from the day of Lin
coln’s Emancipation Proclama
tion.”
i- i
I Your City •*
Light Departrnent
I— __a
FOR HOME. SCHOOL
OR OFFICE USE
ROYAL TYPEWRITERS
Muul—Eire trie—Portable
A. B. DICK MIMEOGRAPH
DUPLICATORS
CompIctR Dspllc ftlor SBppllti
DICTAPHONE
CLARY ADDERS
SALES—SERVICE—RENTALS
C«ll, Phone or Write
NEBRASKA
TYPEWRITER CO.
125 No. 11th 2-7285
Opea Thursday Eveaiass ntU •
We Gtve SAB Green Stamps
side of the bottom edges where
its springy action will seal the
gaps when the screen is closed
tightly.
Question: I plan to cover my
basement joists with ceiling tiles,
and have to set the copper water
pipe and electrical conduits back
into notches in the joists, but havei
been told this will weaken the'
joists. Can you suggest a solution?
D.J.T., Lansing, 111.
Answer: It is a better plan to
disconnect the electrical wiring,
and run BX cables through
drilled holes in each joist it must
cross. If your water pipe is flex
ible tubing, do the same with it.
, If rigid pipe, you may cut notches
to recess the pipe but cover each
I notch with a heavy steel plate the
width of the joist, and drilled with
: holes for at least two screws on
each side of the notch. Best way
is to relocate the pipe along one
wall and box it in.
Question: We are bothered with
ants' in the basement which seem
to appear each time the floor is
washed and waxed. They are dif
ficult to get rid of. Can you sug
gest any treatment?
R.G., Brooklyn, N.Y.
Answer: Chlordane is one of the
most successful poisons in com
batting ants. In liquid or powder
form, spread chlordane around all
| cracks and wall joints where en
' trance is possible. Also, along door
and window sills. This, and other
methods of getting rid of ants was
i
on those long distance
Christmas calls
We know that long distance calls
add much to Christmas happing
And we'll do everything possible
to complete your calls.
It's a good idea to place your
long distance calls early and to call
by number. That way, your tele
phone team speeds your "Merry
Christmas” messages more quickly.
LINCOLN TELEPHONE &
TELEGRAPH COMPANY.
BARGAINS
in Christmas Cards
(See Our Samples)
Goldenrod Stationery Store
215 North 14th Street
DONLEY-STAHL CO. LTD.
1331 N St
DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS
SICK ROOM NECESSITIES
WE APPRECIATE
YOUR PATRONAGE
Jess Williams
Spring Service
221S O Street
Lincoln 8, Nebraska
Phone 2-3633
---
Baseball Commission
Selling Stock in
Lincoln Ball Team
The Baseball Commission ’ of
Lincoln, is engaged in selling stock
in the Lincoln Baseball team ip
order to keep this City in or
ganized baseball.
We urge all citizens to purchase
as many shares of this stock in or
der that the purpose for which it
is intended will be achieved. Lin
coln needs a good baseball team
and this is our chance as citizens
to keep one as well as own a share
in it.
The stock sells for $10.00 per
common share.
We understand that Bobby
Shantz is working with the com
mission and can be contacted at
the park.
discussed in great detail in the
April-May 1952 issue of The Fam
ily Handyman.
For Everything in
HARDWARE
Baker Hardware
101 No. 9th 2-3710
AUTO FARTS
MOTOR REBUILDING
MOTOR EXCHANGE
BEN’S NEW WAY
AUTO PARTS
2918-2024 “O" St. Pit 8-7989
-9 out of 10 tout hoot hot
,_ it Bom
Save money at Cheapper's
on hundreds of gift items.
• Cosmetics
• Appliances
• Housewares
• Tobaccos
• Men’s Sets
• Stationery
• Cameras
• Box Candy
• Drugs and RX too
CHEAPPER
DRUG STORE
1325 O 2-3225
1122 N ST.
2-9313
Gilmour-Donielson
Drug Co.
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS
142 So. 13th St 8-1844