The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, July 23, 1932, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ ' —i— ——
What does the Communist
#
Party Offer the Negro?
(by William Z. Foster. Commun
ist Candidate for President)
Note: this is the last of u series
of articles, released thru
the I’rusader News Agency, writ
ten by William Z- Foster, candi
date for president of the Unitod
States on the ticket of the Com
munal Party. Foster’s running
mate I* a Negro worker of Ala
bama, Janies W. Ford. Mr. Foa
ter anu Ford were nominated by
•co’aiu* at the convention called
by th - Communist Party late in
May in Chicago. This convention
r.u i the demand for e^uai
right* fur Negroes and self-deter
mination for the Black Belt.
The tirst article dealt with the
condition of the Negro workers in
America today. a» Mr. Foste.r
ace* it the second with the atti
tude of the various political part
ies and organizations towarda
the Negroes. The article below
deals with the methods of solv
ing the Negro problem that would
lie followed under an American
Soviet government, which is the
avowed aim of the Communist
party.
ARTICLE N. O.
An America Without Jim-Grow
The capitalist class not oidjr
roll* the workers as a whole, but
it viaita special exploitation upon
Chose sections of the working
class— Negroes, foreign-born,
womeu. youth, the aged, etc.,—
who. for one reason or another,
are the least able to defend them
selves in the class struggle. The
American Soviet Government will
drastically eliminate such spec
ial discrimination, along with cap
italist exploitation generally.
8mashing the Jim Crow System
Tbs American Soviet govern
ment, immediately it takes power
will deal a shattering blow to the
whole monstrous Jim-Crow sys
tem. To deatroy it ruthlessly will
be one of the real joys of the vic
torious proletarian revolution.
Every remnant of slavery will be
abolished In a Soviet system,
the Negro will have the most com
plete equality—economically, po
litically, socially. The doors to
every occupation, to every social
activity, will be wide open for
him. He will have ample land,
confiscated from the great white
landlords, lie will be^free to do
and go as any other citizen, with - J
out let or hindrance. Attempts
to maintain the capitalist white
chauvinism and ostracism of the
Negroes will be punished as a
serious crime against society.
Socialism will mean the first real
freedom for the Negro. He it
beginning to realize this, hence]
hi* ina>s turning to the Commun-j
i*t Party for leadership, and the
eonequent deep alarm of the cap- j
Halts!* and the big landowners at
this growing unity of white and!
black toilers.
The status of the American Ne-1
gro is that of an oppressed na-1
ltonal minority, and only a Soviet!
system can solve the question of1
such minorities. This it does
iu addition to setting up equality j
in the general political and social
life, by establishing the right of
self- determination for national j
minorities in those parts of the!
country where they constitute!
|he bulk of the population. The j
constitution of the Soviet Union5
provides that. “Each united re
public retains the right of free1
withdrawal from the Union. “The
"Program of the Communist In
ternational’ declares for:
The recognition of the right
of all nations, irrespective of I
race, to complete •elf-determin
at ton. that is. self-determination
inclusive of the right of State
separation.”
Negroes Will Rule Black Belt
Accordingly, the right of seJf
determination will apply to Ne-1
groes in ihe American Soviet sys
tem. In the so-called Black Belt
of the South, where Negroes are
in * majority, they will have the
fullest mrht to govern themselv
es ami also such white minorities
as may live in this section. TheJ
same principle will apply to all
the colonial and semi-colonial peo
ples now dominated by Americ
an imperialism in Cuba, the Phil
lipines. Central and South Amer
ica. etc.
The experience with self de
termination of national minorit
ies in the Soviet Union shows that
the Rusians have solved this prob
lem with the revolution. The
many national minorities have the
right of self-determ!’'«tion: they
have their own language, their
own culture. Yet they all live
together in the strongest unity
under the general constitution of
the U. S. S. R. Where there is no
capitalist exploitation there can
he no suppression of weaker na
tionalities. The radical liquida
tion of the 4 ■ insoluble ’* Jewish
problem in the U. S. S. R testi
firs to the completeness of the
Bolshevik cure. The solution of
the question of suppressed na
tionalities, a question which caus
es untold misery in the capitalist
world, is one of the great achieve
ments of the Russian revolution.
The Question of Intermarriage
The American Soviet will, of
course, abolish all restrictions up
on racial intermariagt. The ar
guments of Ku Klux Klanners
and the like that Negroes are an
inferior race and that mixed peo
ples are less capable, have no
justification in science and social
experience. Those “scientists’'
who endorse such “white supre
macy” theories are only so many
bought and paid for upholders of
.jj'italist exploitation. The facts
aie that all the big peoples of to
day are already hopelessly “mon
grel” and that wherever Negroes
ha e half a chance they demon
;trate their intellectual equality
vith the whites. Geographic is
olation of the early human stock
into widely separated groups
brought about its differentiation
into individual races; contact be
tween these various groups, bred
of modern industrialisation, is
just as irresistibly breaking down
these racial differences and bring
ing about racial amalgamation.
The revolution will only hasten
'his process of integration, al
ready proceeding throughout the
world with increasing tempo.
FORD, VICE- PRESIDENTIAL
CANDIDATE, DENOUNCES
DIES BILL
Schenectady, N. Y. (CNA) —
Condemnation of the Dies deport
ation and exclusion bill as a weap
on against Negroes, and against
white workers who join in the
struggle for Negro rights, was
contained in a statement made
by .James W. Ford, Negro worker
of Alabama and Communist candi
date for vice-president. Mr.
Ford is now on » country- wide
election tour. - Yii jg
Mr. Ford characterized the Dies
bill, which provides for the de
portation of aliens professing
Communist beliefs or holding
membership in Communist or
sympathizing organizations, as
“the latest step by the white
bosses for the legal persecution
of the workers.”
“The Dies Bill, if it becomes
law, will provide a sharp weapon
against the Negro workers of A
merica,” said Mr. Ford. “It af
fects directly not only the for
eigu-born white workers, but the
lOO.OOONegro workers who have
come here from the West Indies.
Should these West Indian work
ers express sympathies with the
Communist Party, or enter its
ranks, they would he subject to
deportation under the provisions
of the Dies Bill.
‘Deportation is coming into fre
quent use a,gainst white workers
who dare to take a stand for th*
rights of Negroes. The Circuit j
Court of New York recently up-1
held the deportation order against
August Yokinen, Finnish work- j
er. stating frankly that it was do
ing so because of Yokinen 's|
pledge to the Communist Party,1
of which he was a member, to re- j
pudiate his attitude ofwhite su
periority. George Stalker, an- I
other worker with a white skin,!
organizer for the Communist!
Party in Omaha, has just been;
released from jail and is threat !
cned with deportation to Scot-'
land. Stalker's ‘crime’ consisted
of holding interracial dances in
Omaha and defending a Negro
worker who had been arrested
for attending them.
"The Dies bill also represents
one more effort of the white boss
's to divide the working-class in
to groups—to set white against
Negro, native against foreign-’
born. The fight against the Dies
bill, which is now under consid
eration in the Senate, deserves
tne heartiest support of every mil
itant Negro and white worker in
the country.”
TWO VETS COMMIT SUICIDE
P*Tis, Ark., (AXP)—Financial
'ifficulties aiul poor health caus
ed Thompson S. Haney of Little
Hock to shoot himself to death at
the home where he was stopping
Tuesday. He was doorman at the
American hospital at Neuilly,
France, during the world war.
Chicago, (AXP) John H. Den
nis, 32 years old. a veteran of the
world war. shot and killed himself
in the waiting room of the Ed
ward Hines Jr. Memorial hospital
Friday. He had gone to the hos
pital from his home at 4838 Wa
bash avenue for examination.
2 BOYS SENTENCED TO DIE
Chattanooga. Tenn.—Two color
ed youths were condemned to b.e
electrocuted here on charges of
halting a white couple on a street
driving away the man and crim
inally assaulting the girl. Both
Andrew Wileoxen and Oscar Biv
ens, were charged with assaulting
the white girl.
Efficiency Wins
MOW/ MlJolOMO*
CHICAGO—(AMS)—Modem efficb>
•ncy offers tbs only real solution M
the world’s economic Ule. according to
Harry W. Solomon, whoas widely
heralded system of centralised con
trol forms the baste at successful oper
ation tor a gigantic gl00.000.000 hotel
corporation of which today, at Jt. M
has Just been made president here.
Credited with showing the nation*
praybeards how to turn the depression
•to a golden opportunity Mr. Solomon
who began life as a *2.50 a week office
boy. and later spent IS years in the
building industry, starting as a sires
be? of the construction gang, told a
recent meeting of national l irlnmi
mecutiTee in the Hotel Wlnderaeers a
Chicago, that the present economic
*1*1* br routing sham and pretense
hem the world, and pnnplg
Wsrywbere more alncena.
FEDERAL BOARD FOR
VOCATIONAL TRAINING
Farm Shop Work Important Part
of Agriculture Courses.
IIow itinerant teacher trainers
travel from 01^, Ntyjro Vocation^
agriculture sctyool^ $ to another
showing'iteactiers hoav to organizlp
and operate the fa nfl shop courses
given for the boys in these schools
is outlined in a report received
by the Federal Board for Voca
tional Education. The work of!
these teacher trainers is supported
in part by the State departments
of education in Louisiana, South j
Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, and
Mississippi.
To illustrate what can he done
by the itinerant teacher trainers
who serve teachers of Negro vo
cational agriculture schools, the
Federal Board for Vocational
Education points to the method
used hy one of the intinerants, W.
W. WilkinR, and to a specific in
stance of his instruction activit
ies. Wilkins gets around the
country by means of a special
truck in which he carries the tools
he needs in giving instructions to
teachers.
Let us follow Mr. Wilkins as he
arrives at the Great Branch vo
cational school near Orangeburg,
S. C. and see how he proceeds.
The first thing he did was to find i
out from the students what type 1
of repair work they thought was
needed at their homes. Next he
drove out to some of the homes of |
those who seemed interested in
doing repair work. At the home j
of a farmer who had two sons in j
the vocational agriculture school;
he found a number of repair and
construction jobs. The farmer a-j
greed to buy the lumber and other
materials necessary for the jobs.
For distinct jolts were laid out—j
the construction of a new poultry
house and a new tool shed, chang
ing the location of the garden
fences, and repairing a number of
farm tools. Mr. Wilkins stayed i
long enough at the Great Branch
school to make a drawing of the i
farm showing the exact iocation ■
of the different farm shop repair
jobs involved in the project as well!
as sketches and plans of the dif-1
ferent buildings to be erected.
Before he pushed on to the next j
vocational agriculture school he
left instructions with the Great
Branch teacher of agriculture to
get all the materials together for
the job. and promised to return a
little later and show the teacher j
how to start the farm shop stu-1
dents off on the work planned on i
the local farm.
And to see Mr. Wilkins organize
and start the work on this farm
when he returned was an eye op
ener. Before the actual work be
gan he discussed it thoroughly
with the agricultural teacher and
the pupils of the Great Branch
school. He used the sketches and
plans he had drawn up originally
to explain just how the work
should proceed and what part of
the work each student should un
dertake. While some of the 12
boys who aided in this job as a
part of their farm shop work wert
tearing down the old garden fenc
es and erecting new ones, another
group was busy erecting a poul
try house, and still another was
repairing farm tools. The farmer
on whose place the work was be
ing caried out, as well as his two
sons were working with the teach
er and the other boys when the
teacher trainer pulled out for an
other school, there to repeat what
he had done at the Great Branch
School.
It is an easy matter to tell the
localities in which the itinerant
teacher trainer has been practicing
his art by the improvements
which are being made on the home
farms of students. The observa
tion of the Federal Board for Vo
cational Education is that in order
that the best work in farm shop
nractiee m*y be done, it is neces
?lary |or vocational agriculture
schools not only to have good
buildings and equipment but also
that the farm shop teachers be
trained for their job. And the
itinerant teacher trainer is doing
his part in the teacher-training
job.
Negro farmers who are interest
ed in enrolling their boys in voca
tional agriculture schools in their
community may get information
concerning these schools by ad
dressing a letter to the State Su
pervisor of Vocational Education
in Agriculture, who is usually lo
cated at the State Capitol.
GERMAN WORKKERS TAKE
PART IN THE SCOTTSBORO
STRUGGLE
Hannover, German, (by mail) j
In Hannover, the social demo
cratic police chief, Barth, in his
written decree denying Ada
Wright, Scottdboro Mother, the
right to speak at the meeting; de
clared he had been in communi
cation with the notorious Berlin
(police head, Grzesinski, ' and
would carry out the^aame policy,
which meant that Ada bright
was not to enter the meeting hall,
or send any message through any
one else.
Just as the great meeting was
adjourning, however, with the
workers singing the International
Ada Wright was escorted into the
hall and up to the speakers’ plat
form by a workers’ guard. The
police were taken by surprise and
remained inactive as the singing
of the International increased in
spiritTTfld masses ojs fvorkelK, nich
ed toward the stage as if to-pro-1
Negrp Mothej;. With
the singing of the International
ended Ada Wright was escorted
out of the halUas quickly as she
had arrived.
Protest telegrams were sent to
American ambassador at Berlin
and to President Hoover, at Wa»h
ington, and to Governor Miller,
of Alabama.
On the train coming to Hann
over from Stuttgart, passengers
approached Ada Wright and
earnestly discussed, very often in
extremely broken English, the
facts of the Scottaboro persecu
tion. Many of them promised to
join and aid the work of the
Committee for the Liberation of
the Scottsfyoro Negro Bovs. They
were given literature and prom
ised to earefully read it themsel
ves and pass it on to their friends.
ILD. PLEDGES UNWAVERING
?IGHT TO SCOTTSBORO BOYS
“And now that we have finally
succeeded in getting the case be
fore the United States Supreme
Court,” read a letter to the Scotts
.boro boys from Carl Hacker,
Acting General Secretary of the
International Labor Defense,
' we must continue, yes, we must
make ever a much greater fight
than we have made up to the
present time. We must get to
gether more millions of workers
Throughout the entire world to
demand your release. Only in
this way will we he able to suc
ceed in getting you boys out of
prison finally."
This is the promise the Inter-]
national Labor Defense has given
the Scottsboro hoys. The formal
receipt from the Alabama auth
orities of the papers granting an
official stay of the execution has
already been received by the ILD.
national office,—papers demand
ed by the Supreme Court accept
ance of the case for review. “But
says Carl Hacker, today, “there
must he no relaxing of efforts!"
SCOTTSBORO BOY WRITES
LETTER TO THE I. L. D.
- i
“I am also glad that we will
have a visit from our kinsfolks.
Sunday,” writes Andy Wright,
one of the nine Scottsboro boys,
in a letter to the International
Labor Defense organizer for the
southern district, expressing his
appreciation of the visit the In
ternational Labor Defense had a
rranged between the boys and
their parents. The boys are
weary from the long-confinement
in the death cells every hour of
the day, and denied all opport
unity of outdoor exercise; but
they feel confidence in the Inter
national Labor Defense. About
the Supreme Court acceptance of
the appeal. Andy says, ‘‘I thought
that everybody on earth should
have rejoiced (at) our good
news.”
At this juncture, however, the
International Labor Defense fac
es a most, serious shortage of
funds. With the greatest bur
dens in the history of American
Labor on its shoulders, and with
inspiring victories in sight, the
need of money to carry on the
Scottsboro campaign is now so
pressing that a direct appeal is
made to the working class of the
United States.
Help the International Labor
Defense now! Send funds to the
International Labor Defense, i
"" ■ ■» I ■■ ■ ■ - ■
room 430, 799 Broadway, New
York City.
Government Still Dodging
On Negro Jobs at Hoover
Dam
New York, July— Although
Secretary Ray Lyman Wilbur of
the Interior department, person
ally assured a joint committee
from the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo
ple and the National Bar Assoc
iation that Negroes would be em
ployed on the huge Hoover dam
at Las Vegas, Nev., in June, the
government and contractors are
still pussyfooting and no Negroes
have been hired.
The daily payroll at the dam
has averaged $10,000 through tha
winter and has run as high as
$18,000. The government con
tract with the construction com
panies specifies that U. S. citiz
ens be employed, but so far only
white citizens have drawn any of
the huge payroll. About sixty
foreigners are working at the
dam.
Secretary Wilbur and the Six
Companies, Inc., builders of the
dam, are resting on the technical
ity that Negroes will be employ
ed “when additional men are hir
6d,” in other words, when the
present force at the dam is in
creased. However, * colored res
ident of Las Vegas reports to the
NAACP. that the turnover in the
present force runs as high as 80
a day. The NAACP. and the
National Bar Association do not
see why Negroes cannot he hired
at once inasmuch as from sixty to
eighty new men are taken on
each day, replacing those who
are dropped or who quit.
Walter White, NAACP. Secre
tary, in a letter to Secretary Wil
bur on July 1, asked that, in view
of the high turnover reported at
the dam that Mr. Wilbur again
confer with the Six Companies,
Inc., so that the discrimination a
gainst Negroes may he ended.
Jos. W. Dixon, assistant Secretary
of the Interior, has replied that he
is calling for a report from the
contractors and will notify the I
NAACP. of the findings. Mean- j
while in San Francisco, a commit
tee headed by Leland S. Hawkins,
a director of the National Bar
Association, conferred with Presi
dent W. A. Bechtel, of the Six
Companies, and renewed the de
mand that Negroes he employed,
Negroes from other sections are
warned not to flock to Las Veg
as. as there is no work of any
kind there foi a colored man evfm
while waiting for the jobs at the
dam to open.
NEGRO BOY WINS HIGHEST
HONOR IN NEW YORK MUSIC
CONTEST
New York, —David Johnson,
Jr., a 17 year old colored boy,
won the gold medal with the
highest rating given to any con
testant in the New York Music
Week Association contest for
this year held on Sunday, in Carn
egie Hall.
Mrs. Constance Edson Seegar,
the boy's violin teacher, has sent
to the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo
ple. the following facts about this
colored genius of the violin:
‘He was born in New York and
began his musical studies at the
age of 4% with his father who is a
musician and violin teacher. Da
vid attended St. Marks Parochial
School and is now a student at
George Washington Jligh school.
“In 1925* the boy entered the
Institute of Musical Art of New
York City and obtained a schol
arship. For the past six years
he has been studying with Mrs. •
Constance Edson Seegar, mem- |
her of the violin faculty of the
Institute. He has been in form
er contests of the New York Mu
sic Week Association winning a
silver and bronze medal in 1926
and a silver medal and pin in
1930. His gold medal was obtain
ed this year with the high rating
of 97%.
“At the 9th Annual Concert of
the Music Week Association held
June 19 in Carnegie Hall, young
Johnson won immediate success
with the large audience by his
fine playing of the Kreisler ar
rangement of the Praeludium and
Allegro by Pugnani.
“It is predicted that the boy
will have an outstanding career
and will take his place with the
fine artists of his race who are
now before the public.”
JULY CRISIS TELLS HOW
JOURDAIN DEFEATED EVAN
STON, POLITICAL RING
New York. —How Eward Jour
dain, former track star of North
western University, not only "be
came the first Negro alderman of
Evanston, Illinois, but there de
feated the local political ring with
the aid of white votes, is told in
the July Crisis magazine.
The article entitled, “Evan
ston’s Negro Alderman”, tells
how Jourdain was ousted from
office he had fairly won and how j
he came hack with overwhelming
victory.
He was aided in his dramatic
fight by Northwestern U. Profes- i
sore and two all American foot
ball stars who kept all-night vigil
at Evanston’s City Hall, to see
that Jourdain’? name was filed.
Another feature of the July
Crisis is an article on the 8outh
ernafres Quartet, entitled “Radio
Rhythm Makers” by Roy Wilk
ins, Assistant Secretary of the
NAACP.
Where Human Life Is Cheap
by R. A.‘Adam*
( The Literary Service Bureau)
Often we hear the expression,,
“for dear life.” It is used to be
apropos, but considering actual
conditions, it is obsolete, in this
country. In this money-mad,
crime-ridden country no longer is
life dear—it is almost the cheap
est thing. Confirmation of this
contention is in the reign of law
lessenss and the multiplicity of
murder* in America.
The notorious Young brothers
killed perhaps a dozen men before
they ended their own lives. Not
long ago robbers killed seven
members of a family because the
head of the family could not
eomply with the demands for
$5,000. Gang killings, wholesale
and retail, are of every day occur
rence. Parents kill themselves
and their own children and often
children kill their own parents in
order to gain possession of their
property.
Nearly £Very day women are
brutally murdered by men who
were tired of them or were jeal
ous of them. Women kill women
like the bloody Ruth Judd who
murdered two women who had
been her close friends. Women
kill men, also, oftentimes their
own husbands and many times
men of whom they are enamoured
and of whom, they are jealous.
The only negation of this con
tention that life is cheap is in the
efforts of criminal lawyers to save
the lives of the perpetrators of
these dastardly crimes. These
legal mercenaries exhaust their
ingenuity in striving to win sym
pathy for murderers. They plead
the dearness of human life-life
of the criminal—and forget those
who have been ruthlessly murder
ed, and others who will suffer be
cause of the laxness of the law
and its failure to punish crime ef
fectively.
Yes, life is cheap, and, unless
there shall come rapid and radic
al improvement in the curbing of
crime and of law enforcement, the
law will be compelled to confess
itself impotent and citizens will be
compelled to go armed for the
protection of their own lives.
And this will spell anarchy, and (
chaos!
SOME WIVES AND OTHERS
by Mr. “X”
“Making A Big Show’’
(The Literary Service Bureau)
(Next Week: “Those Husbands
of Outs’’ by Madam “X”
An exasperated husband com
plained, “My wife forgets we are
poor, or she tries to keep the
neighbors from knowing it. She
is forever ‘keeping up with the
Joneses'; and it keeps my nose on
the grind-stone. This wife of
mine joins all the social and reli
gious clubs, and when they meet
at our house she entertains lavish
ishly; and it's awful the bills 1
have to pay for these clubs, She
tries to outdo folks that can sell
and buy us, and seems never to
think that the people know we are
not able to do all this. When I
get after her she whines, ‘I don’t
have any vacations; I don’t have
any pleasure but with ray friends;
and I don’t want to be left out of
society! ’ ’
Well, it keeps a man hard-np,
Xr BURT
JOHN T. DYSAR1
. DISTRICT JUDGB
Bnflorsefl try Bar
- --y ...
and prevents him from saving for
tie proverbial rplny day. Bat,
what can he dof I think a man
ought to just rebel—but I do not
know just what X would doj
• J t l ——!> w ■ « nr—1 '■ j' 1
Poetical Works of Eudora V.
Marshall
Published and Distributed by
MXbb Eudora V. Marshall, 1433
97th Ave.t Duluth, Minnesota
This little brochure is filled
with the poems of Miss Eudora V.
Marshall, which, we learn by read
ing the preface, were all Vritten
subsequent to May 1930, as the
direct result of a disappointment
in love.
• • •
The poetess has expressed her
thoughts on a great many pertin
ent subjects, in rhyme, and scat
tered throughout her verses are
bits of auto-biography which we
patiently piece together and thus
learn of the historjrb# rhie of bur
young writers of note.
# • #
I We learn that ah# was born in
Minnesota on May 30th, 1906 and
Schooled in the public schools,
and the University of Minnesota
'rom which school o| learning sh£
is a graduate. She has taught in
t|ie high schools ©f Mississippi,
and, judging from her poetry, she
■ilso experienced a few of the ro
mantic arts while in Mississippi.
* • ' « M,
m nr Jt w v lapp m mmsim
We further-lean! that her poetitj
contribution^ have been accepted
and published in periodicals pub
lished in . Duluth: Atlanta; Pitts
burgh^"Minneapolis ; Baltimore:
Jackson, Mississippi; Boston and
in the Minnesota Alumni Weekly.
firiUl ri«<! •
Miss Marshall " j§ frequently
heard at church recitals, reading
from fcclactions of Kef four hund
red compositions and is also dis
tributing her latest song number,
“I’m Searching for the Man of
My Dreams.” .Ji..... If ,|
Clifford C. Mitchell.
r" - '>■»■ nk. ** ■. .k,
0-. — . o
Felt or Cloth BAT t ^
Cleaned * Rlocfced
with order for nST'))ll
SUIT or LADIES DRESS Z/Jk
_Cleaned A Framed for
- * ..... i — __ . ■
Tires and Tubes
AT
TAX FREE PRICES
—See—
MILTON WILSON
Redick Tower Garage
15th and Harney
iDRirik]
CRYSTAL PURE
MINERAL WATER *
f FOR YOUR HEALTH l
f —10 Gallons 75c— ^
J ROBINSON DRUG CO. J
24th and Decatur St. i
WE. 5000 j
Gold Seal Creamery Co.
80th and Underwood Ave. HArney 5261 or Glendale 2929
WE EMPLOY COLORED HELP
Pasteurized Milk, Butter, Sweet and Sour Cream, Whipping
Cream, Butter-Milk.
—EARLY DELIVERY—
J. F. TAYLOR, Prop.
Edholm & Sherman
LAUNDERERS—DRY CLEANERS
DAMP WASH
SEMI FLAT
DRY WASH and
FAMILY FINISH
I Dry Cleaning of
LADIES’ and GENTS’ WEAR
All Work Guaranteed to Be Satisfactory I
2401 North 24th Street WEbster 6055 |