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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1933)
Legal Notices NOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF T. H. MAENNER, Inc. KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That the undersigned, do hereby associate themselves to gether for the purpose of forming a corporation under the laws of the State of Nebraska, the name of which corporation is T. H. MAENNER, Inc., with its principal place of busi ness in the City of Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska. The general nature of the business to be transacted by this Corporation shall be the dealing in, selling, hand ling, adjusting and brokering of all types of insurance save alone life in suranee and kindred lines; the deal-1 ing in selling buying, pledging an encumbering real and personal pro perty, mortgages, notes and other evidences of indebtedness; to pre pa ration of, handling, filing and rec eding of instruments effecting real and personal property; the manage ment, supervision, repair necessary and incidental to the carrying on of si. d business, as fully as same would be carried on by a natural person, i The amount of capital stock auth-; crizcd is Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars and the same shall be paid for in full prior to commencing busi-j ness. The time of commencement of | business shall be September 1st, j i938 and the time of the termination of the Corporation shall be Septem ber 1st,, 1383. The highest amount of indebted- j ness to which the Corporation may at any time subject itself is two thirds of its paid up capital stock. The affars of the Corporation are to bo conducted by a President, Vice President, Secretary and Treasurer. Dated this 16th day of September, 1933. T. H. MAENNER, GLADYS R. MAENNER, M. M. ROBERTSON, L. E. HARBERT, Incorporators PROBATE NOTICE IN THE MATTER OF THE ES TATE OF: Theresa J. Liverpool, deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY QIVEN: That the creditors of said deceased will meet the administratrix of said estate before me. County Judge ofj Douglas Cs>untv, Nebraska at the County Court Room in said County on the 2nd day of January 1934 and on the 2nd day of March 1934 at 91 o'clock A. M. each day for the pur pose of presenting their claims for' examination adjustment and allow ance. Three months are allowed for J the creditors to present their claims from the 2nd day of December 1933. BRYCE CRAWFORD County Judge. 3t- November 11 18 25 __ IN THE COUNTY OF DOUGLAS COUNTR NEBRASKA IN THE MATTER OF THE ES TATE OF Texanna Malone deceased: All persons interested in said mat ' Shirts Finished 8c When Finished out of Wet Wash—Thrifty—R. D. V Linen Bdles. EVANS LAUNDRY Phone - JA. 0243 Reid-Duffy | Pharmacy ' 24th & Lake St. Webster 0609 free Delivery ter are hereby notified that on the 14th day of November 1933 Funny Freeman filed a petition in said County Court praying that her final administration account filed herein be settled and allowed and that she be discharged from her trust as ad ministratrix and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 9th day of December 1933 and that if you fail to appear before said Court on the said 9th day of December 1933 at 9 o'clock A . M.. and contest said petition the Court may grant the prayer of said petition enter a decree of heirship and make such other and further orders allow ances and decrees as to this Court may seem proper to the end that all matters pertaining to said estate may be finally settled and deter mined. BRYCE CRAWFORD County Judge Attorney John Adams Jr.. 3t Nvember 18 25 Dec. 2 -tlASMEDADS FOR RENT—a modern two room furnished kitchenette apartment in private home 2875 Wirt Street couple desired a half block from the Crosstown Car line. Call WEb stcr 4285. Modern rooms for rent, 2513 Charles Street. Furnished rooms for rent. WEbster 3454. ~ FOR RENT Kitchenette Apartment—4 rooms, unfurnished, price reasonable. HArney 6887. Furnished rooms, strictly modern 2529 Wirst Street. HArney 3126. FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT WEbster 3454. For Sale-Combination Lib rary Table and Bed. Very Durable and heavy. JAck son 2887. i and 3 Room Furnished Apt—Call WEbster 5656 FOR RENT—2 nice rooms for rent. Reasonable in a nice apartment. Call WEbster 0998 or call at 2407 Parker. Mrs. Bell Woods. Working man, wants couple to share modern 5 Room house, 2605 Wirt Street. Call after 6 p. m. Reasonable Strictly Modern House for Rent— 10 Rooms, AT 8533—2918 N 28th St. Furnished or Unfurnished. FURNISH ROOMS for men with double beds, are single. 2628 Char les Street. Modern room for man. Call JAckson 7058. Furnished Room for Rent, WE. 4162 Furnisheb Kitchenette 'Aqartment Neatly Decorateb, W'e. 3707 MODERN FRONT ROOM for work, ing man. WEbster 3707. ANNETTE BEAUTY SHOP, 2619 North 28th Avenue. Mrs. Elrette Smith, Prop. For appointments, Call WEbster 3909. Price* reason, able. Modern room one Mock from car line. Rent very low. WEbster 1529. ~~ GET IN BUSINESS FOR I WANTED 10,000 Dilapidated Cars H also I Auto Parts Sfor ALL MAKES ALL MODELS I® Everything: Priced to Sell Some and See Us GEFBEF Auto Parts Co. ■16th & Pierce Ja. 3800 I Consolidated |Auto Parts Co. ■2501 Cuming St. At-5656 I “Home of Kangaroo Court” i YOURSELF | Old Established Location for Grocery Business. Fixtures In— stalled. Rent Reasonable to Right Party. WEBSTER 3603 5 ROOM HOUSE—2009 N. 25th 3.00 week or 12.00 a month 2115 N. 30th —3 ROOM APT— Furniture, Lights, Water. 3.75 week. JAckson 0986 Nice- Modern- Front- Room For Rent. Tester 3707 Warm coats, 50 cents; SI and $2; pretty Badger Fur Set; old Rus sian Pony Coat very cheap. 411 Sweetwood Avenue JAckson 3697. Call evenings and Sunday. FOR RENT —1 large furnished, strictly modern room, suitable for one or two single men. 2431 Cald well Street. HArney 5163. I->- . ' _ : FOR RENT—cheap 2 room apart ment also a furnished room. Call WEbster 5553. Apartment For Rent—3 Room Kit chenette Apartment, §3.50 per week. HArney 6887, (Continued From Page Three) Mrs. T. H . Goodwin, husband and two brothers, Rev. j.. W. Goodwin, and Isaac Goodwin, left for St. : Louis, Missouri, November 4 to at- ( i tend the funeral of their brothers wife, Mrs. Vassie Goodwin. Mrs.. T_ H_. Goodwin and Rev.. J W.. Good win, will return November 14, at 8:46 a., m . Mrs. Jane Kennedy of 1320 East 47th Street, Los Angeles California, surprised her many friends by quiet ly slipping away to Yuma, Arizona and becoming the bride of Mr. E A Bryant of Los Angeles, California. ! She was accompanied by her old I friends Mr. and Mrs_ Sidney Morton, formerly of Omaha, Nebraska, now of Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs.. Bry ant will be at home after November 1, at 1625 East 105th Street, Los Angeles, California. Mrs. Lovejoy Crawford enter j tained at Bridge to honor Mrs. James T. Lewis, the lovely wife of Dr. Lewis, on Wednesday, at high noon. Lunch was served. The guest : included, Mrs.. Alma Clark, Mrs. Milton Johnson, Mrs. L.. Charlotte ! Crawford, Mrs. Luella Waites, Mrs.. Alice Wilson, Mrs.. John Adams, Jr. ■i/ii-s.. Edna Johnson, Mrs. Alice Gal : loway, Miss Susie Whiteside and ! Miss Louise Gaillard of Chicago. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. I Sylvester Waites, high; Mrs. J. Dil-j | lard Crawford, low. Mr. R.. C.. Price, President of the NAACP. is very busy these days preparing for and pushing his cam paign for at least 3000 new mem bers. Mr. Price has shown real ability as a leader.. NIGHT CLUB OWNER KILLS DRUNKEN YOUTH ARMED WITH REVOLVER INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. November 14—(CNS)— Raymond “Dee" David 43, proprietor of the Paradise Night Club shot and killed William Hind man, 24 who armed with a gun was trying to force his way into the club. Hindman was drunk and when re fused admission said, “I pay $20 to get in; there’s a man in there I’m going to get.” Enraged at a point blank refusal he shot at “Dee” who returned the fire and Hindman fell dead with a bullet through his heart. Held at first under $25,000 bond “Dee” was later after an investiga tion given his freedom. MAN AND WIFE ACCUSE EACH OTHER OF MAILING DEATH NOTES j Dine ; ; i -AND Dance| l AT THE ! | | i Panama Garden | EVERY AI'TERNOON j t AND EVENING f 2210 Seward St! PHONE WE. 4019 I C. R. Trimble, Prop. I BRITISH POLICE IN AFRICA RAID OFFICE OF SCOTTSBORO DEFENDER LAGOS, Nigeria (West Africa)— November 13— By ^lail— British police have raided the office of I. T. A. Wallace-Johnson general secre tary of the African Workers’ Union of Nigeria, here, and seized all the files of the oganization. Wallace-Johnson who has been known in America as organizer of a protest movement in British West Africa around the demand for the re lease of the Scottsboro boys, has also been a nindefatigable fighter against the enormities of the British admin - ~ -- istration. In West Africa, taxation has been growing by leaps and bounds, and unemployment has swollen to unrecedented figures, lay ing the burden of the crisis on the exploited native population. Among the exposures by Wallace Johnson which have particularly irk- j ed the British Imperialists are the publicity he obtained for the cutting of the allowances of native police- [ men and firemen; the destruction of native stalls. ALABAMA LYNCHINGS OF INNO CENT VICTIMS BLAMED ON OFFICERS _ CHATTANOOGA Tenn. November 15—(CNS)—An investigation of the lynching of four Negroes three months in and about Tuscaloosa Alabama by the Southern Commssion for the Study of Lynching has re sulted in the issuance of a report holding peace officers responsible and indicating a belief that some if not all of the victims were innocent. The commission handed by George Fort Milton editor of the Chattanoo ga News is composed of editors and educators from Southern communi ties. A summary of the commission’s findings reads in part: “Since August 12 mobs in the vicinity of Tuscaloosa Alabama have taken the lives of three Negroes and left a fourth for dead. Careful inves tigation of the situation reveals these facts: 1. One of the four mob victims was undubtedly two others probably the fourth possibly inno cent. “2. Unquestionably the police of ficers of Tuscaloosa County have not performed their duty in safe guard ing these prisoners or protecting, them fom violence. We are convinced that some of the County officers pro-, bably connived in the taking of the three Negroes first seised. At best! they exhibited inexcusable ineffi ciency and stupidity. “3. In spite of the vigorus char ges which the circuit judge made to two grand juries Tuscaloosa’s law enforcing agencies have made no ef fort to punish the lynchers. ”4. While only a few white in dividuals in the Tuscaloosa neighbor hood reseat the tragedy of enters the community’s white citizenship ha; variously accepted the sorry chain of events as inevitable excusable or commendable.” NEGROES PLAY IMPORTANT PART IN RECENT ELECTIONS WASHINGTON Ntrvember 14—(C NS) — A score or more of Negroes were candidates for Assemblymen aldermen constables and members of school boards in several of the large cities of the country on election day November 7 and more than half of them were elected to office. In New York City where the prom inent candidates for mayor LaGuar dia McKee and O’Brien all made de finite and pronounced efforts to gain the support of colored voters the re sult shows that the Republican-Fu sion candidate LaGuarida was the favorite; but in Harlem the Negro stronghold intimidation fraud and the improper use of the welfare funds and “free coal” kept down his vote. In the 19th Assembly district in Harlem James Stephens Democrat for Assemblyman defeated Clayton T.. A.. French Republican; and Char les W . Bradford Democrat was elect ed Alderman over Fred R. Moore Republican. In the 21st Assembly district Rob ert Bernstein white Democrat defeat ed J. Dalmus Steeple Republican for the Assembly. The defeat of Steele “the Mayor of Harlem” is the result of an error of omission as Steele could "have had the votes of the Fu sionists of the district but failed to get the signatures of enough petit ioners to have his name put on the voting machines of the district. Con rad A. Johnson Republican won over John W. Smith Democrat for Aider man in the same district by 1054. In Newark Essex County New Jersey William S. Hargraves Repub lican was elected to the State As sembly to succeed Mecer Burrell. In Cleveland four race candidates were elected: Lawrence 0. Payne John E. Hubbard and Dr. Leroy N.. Bundy as councilmen; and Mrs.. Mary B.. Martin as a member of the Board of Education for a second term. In Philadelhpia John C.. Asbury candidate for city magistrate went down with the Vare macnine while Edward W. Henry former Republican and at present on the magistrate’s bench was elected on the Democratic ticket. WASHINGTON, November 14 (CNS)—William and Evelyn Smith, man and wife met in Police Court last week before Judge McMahon. William said that he didn’t mind an occasional note saying he is doomed to die, but when circulars advertising an undertaking establishment began ! to arrive it is a little too much for him. So William had Evelyn arrested,' charged with threatening his life. Evelyn denied writing the notes or sending the circulars. Assistant District Attorney Roger Robb had her write a similar note in court. Both he and Judge McMahon agreed that the handwriting looked identical and the case was about to come to a close. But Evelyn had an ace in the hole, and she accused William of remail ing the threatening notes and the funeral circulars to her. The case was continued until November 17, with William’s record, if any to be looked up. ARNOLD HILL HEADS URBAN LEAGUE NEW YORK CITY, November 14— I (CNS)—T. Arnold Hill, Director of the Department of Industrial Rela tions of the National Urban League was today named as Acting Execu tive Secretary of the National Urban League during the period that Eu gene Kinckle Jones will be in the service of the government as Eco nomic Adviser on Negro Affairs of the Department of Commerce. GEORGIA CHAIN GANGS MAY BE ABOLISHED ATLANTA, Ga., November 14—(C NS)—The end of Georgia’s notor iously inhuman chain gang system may soon lose its main support upon the completion of the construction of the $1,500,000 prison in Tattnal County. It is claimed that the withdrawal of State felony convicts, the back bone of the chain gang is the aim of the State administration. Baby Dies After Doctor’s Vain Hunt For Hospital NEW YORK CITY, November (C NS)—A four months old Negro baby died at Hempstead, Long Island November 2 after an intestinal oper ation which was delayed for hours while authorities were searching for a hospital to which the child might be admitted. The trouble was that the baby had whooping cough. None of the eight private hospitals in Nassau County is permitted to accept a patient suf fering from a contagious disease. It was recalled at last that there was an unequipped operating room at the Town Home. It was scrubbed out and Katherine Hurleym, superin tendent of Nassau Hospital, sent an ambulance load of sterilized equip ment. Dr. A.. S- Warinner performed the operation at midnight, which, sugeons had concurred should have been performed at 7 o'clock. At 4 a., m.. the baby died. He was the only child of Mr., and Mrs.. Leon Cole man of 93 Laurel Avenue. TRADE WITH YOURSELF. BUY YOUR NEXT ORDER OF GROCERIES FROM A SQUARE DEAL GROCCERY STORE. MARCH OF EVENTS By REV. ALBERT KUHN National Prohibition has become past history. In spite of the jibes that have been made at Pr.^khn-. Hoo ver’s characterization of Prohibition as a “nob e e xperi ment” I agree with him. The experiment has 1 se 1 well worth making and will be of invaluable aid in furt! \r ef forts to combat alcoholism successfully. In abo" one third of the states, state prohibition sti1! exists. ’ state law. In most of them it will b dropped v. ithm " next year, anti-prohibition sentiment being at t..s . 3scnt time in vogue. Beer has now been re-instated for over two months. It had been preached to us that free beer would prove the new life blood of America and that with its introduction prosperity would flow back again with a rush. Well, here in Omaha the breweries are open again, but their busi ness can hardly be called booming and the number of help they hired has hardly made an impression on unemploy ment in the city. Thousands of persons who shouted lus tily against prohibition have not even gotten to the trouble as yet to sample the new brew. It’s just like folk fighting for democracy and the right to vote and then, aft er they have won out, being too indiffrent to vote. Now with hard liquor coming back it wall be inter esting to observe the development of the new liquor trade. Already some of the rankest wret papers, like the. Chicago Tribune, have announced that they will not ad mit liquor advertisements in their paper. The old cry of “unciean. unclean” is already being raised against the whiskey business. It may after all not be so easy for hard liquor to break into the circle of ethical business mter prises. But let us make no mistake; the danger that iarge portions of a people sink into alcoholism is ever existing. Both the federal, state governments are giving serious thought to liquor control legislation. Different states will no doubt handle the matter in a different way. The safest method of keeping down the liquor evil is in my opinion to keep private profit out of the traffic. There ought to be state controlled distilleries and importing houses and in each towm or county that votes wet there ought to be retail establishments operated not in the pro fit basis but as public dispnsaries where clerks sell the goods much like postal stamps, with no gain to them selves personally. The county could decide whether these selling agencies should not be provided with accommoda tions for consumption on the premises. However uniformity in liquor regulation tnrougn out the country or even within a state is hardjy to be ex pected nor would it be advisable. In every district public opinion must be reckoned with and that varies enormous ly depending upon whether the district is urban or rural, old American etc.; we ought to know by now that with out the support of the general sentiment of the people any system of regulation fails down. v In Germany Hitler’s government and Internation al policy has reieived the endorsement of more than 40 millions out of the 44 million voters. Only those who are blind to facts will deny that for the present at least Hitler has the bulk of thevNation behind him. France will think twice before she will provoke the German people to war while they are in such a mood, especially since both Italy and Great Britain give her no encouragement whatever. The Jews will receive fairer treatment by the German people when once their leaders have given up their ef forts to dominate Germany politically and commercially as they have done since the war, previous to the Nazi re volution. The Entre Nous Holds First Meeting The regular meeting of the EN TRE NOUS was held at the home of Mrs. Alice Galloway 2814 North 28th Street, Sunday, November 12th | 7 P-. m.. Work was started on the Scrap Books part of the Christmas to the poor children and to those in the Douglas County Hospital. They are anxious to secure as many toys as they possibly can. No matter how dilapidated you may think the toys are, the club girls can rebuild them. If you have any, or if you know of anyone who has any toys that are no longer fit to play with, please call WEbster 1883 and some one will call and pickup your donation. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Elaine S. McGee, 2870 Grant Street. ■BUEHLERBROrmarkets i B212 N. 16th Street 24th and Lake Streets 2408 Cuming Street ■ 'SMALL . I IIPORK CHOPS.pound 11c ■ ■BEEF POT ROAST,pound.5wc I iPORK SHOULDER,pound : 5c I ■SPRING CHICKENS. p""nd 10'!c 1 ■PURE LARD, 4pounds --27c | 1 NO. 1 COUNTRY I i EGGS, 2 dozen • • • 28c I I SUGAR,10 pounds. 48c I I VEAL BREAST 1L Lr 1 IHAMBURGER *U. 1 ■CHOICE RIB BOIL,ppund 5c I ■CREAMERY BUTTER,pound 20c 1 5 ROBERT’S | MILEcan 5‘Ac I I RED STAR COFFEE,pound W. c 1 HP. AND G SOAP,10 bars 25c I I CHEESE, AMERIC'NCREAM 12?*cj 1 WEINERS, FRANKS ORn | [RING BOLOGNA,3 pounds z b 1