The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, March 30, 1935, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores
BEER Draught or Bottled
RABE’S BUFFET
Refreshments and Lunch
2425 N. 24 St 24th & LaRe St
Ja. 9195
Old Time Lager cn Tap
Buy Your Garden and
Grass Seeds Now!
Save Money by Using ou_'
BULK GARDEN SEEDS
Home Landscape Service.
924 N. 24h S, JA-5115
Duffy Pharmacy
We. 0609
24th and LAKE STREETS
DRUGS
PRESCRIPTIONS
HARDINGS
ICE CREAM
Free Delivery
i _
Autry Ice and Coal Co
Basket Coal, Lump
35c, 3 for $1.00
Nut, 30c, 3 for 90c
Prompt Delivery
We. 2762
TIRE & BATTERY SERVICE
AUTO PAINTING
General Repairing
At. 9662
THE IDEAL GARAGE
2419 Lake S reet
FEBRUARY SALE
Beautiful Evening Clowns and
Afternoon Dresess of all kinds
This Spring’s Styles
The KRAFT BARGAIN Store
2518 N. 24th 1701 N. 24th
AFTER THE WRECK
-CALL
KAISER & CHRISTENSEN
AUTO TOP AND BODY CO.
Auto Painting
AT 8972 2810-12 N. 24th St.
SLAUGHTER BAR-B-Q HUT
and
RESTAURANT
2002 North 24h Street
Under New Management
EDNA MITCHELL & Son, LEON.
DEEP ROCK
SERVICE
STATION
24th and Charles
Try Our
KANT-NOCK AIVIATION
GASOLINES
Kohrell and Carpenter.
Expert Auto Repair
and Battery Service
Quick Service Ja. 8103
M. & W. GARAGE
1706 N. 24th Street
IT’S HERE NOW.
FIRE-CHIEF
Emergency Auto Service
BULGER TEXACO STATION
30th and Wirt. JA-8052.
MILTON WILSON ATT.
Sponsored and Supported by Public Spirted Northside Business Men for the Purpose of Creating Better Understanding
Between Merchants and Consumers an dfor the Purpose of Bringing Dircetly to You the Latest Price Quotations
MYERS
FUNERAL
HOME
Dignified, Efficient Supervision
Nothing Over-Or Undone
2416 N. 22 St. WE 0248
_/
TUCHMAN BROS.
The North-Side Largest “Food Market.”
| Lowest Prices on Quality Foods
24th and LAKE 24th and LAKE
CORN FLAKES 9c
QUAKER OATS 19t
BREAD ''RE-SH DAILY 2 L0AVES 15c[
ICO AD OMAHA FAMILY ja !
or P. & G., 3 bars
BLACK WALNUTS 5 POUNDS 10c|
SALMON talplin°kans 11c|
MASON & KNOX CAFE
2307 N. 24 St. Prompt Delivery WE 4208
FREE! FREE! FREE! For A Few Days Onty
Free, with your stein of beer the following
sandwiches: Hamburger, Imported Swiss or
Cream Cheese, Boneless Cold Ham, Tender
Prime Roast Beef.
Let us Club you with a club breakfast in a Mason and Knox way
-FOR BREAKFAST
HAM AND EGGS, German fried potatoes, Three hot Tea—
No, Man-sized biscuits with coffee_u.20c
BACON AND EGGS, American fried potatoes,
hot tea biscuits, coffee__■ •__ 20c
HOME MADE SAUSAGE, Knox fried potatoes,
hot tea biscuits, coffee_ • 20c
AUNT DELILAH HOT CAKES with Sausage or
I Bacon, coffee 20c
Storz Triumph Beer On Draught
HOME OF THE BARBEQUE KING
Market
WE-5444 24th & LAKE Sts.
-•mn nww -_
The Best Quality Foods At The
Very Lowest Prices
WE DELIVER
\--'
Economic Highlights
(Continued from Pkge 7)
sive equipment as much as she
likes.
Inevitable result will be a boom
in, the munitions industries—and
another long step toward Euro
pean war. Every European coun
try will .supposedly in self-de
fense, also increase armaments
and armies. It is easy for diplo
mats to speak soothingly of se
curity and to avow peaceful in
tentions—it is a historical fact
that nations with first class mili
tary machines usually want to try
them out when they think the
time is ripe.
Armed forces of principal nations
total: Russia, 830,000, with 15,000,000
reserves; Great Britain, 200,000, with
280,000 reserves; France, 584,000, with
6.000. 000 eserves; Italy, 437,000, with
5.000. 000 reserves; Poland, 325,000,
v^tth 1,700,000 reserves. The United
States, by way of comparison, has an
army of 135,000, with 309,000 reserves.
MOB HANGS HANGS NEGRO
BOY FROM OAK TREE
SECOND LYNCHING IN ’35
Maringouin, La.—Because he dar
ed to protect himself from the
assauL of a white man, Anderson
Ward, became the second known
victim of lynching this year.
Town officials allowed the body
to hang from the bough of an oak
tree for several hours before they
cut it down, in the hope, no doubt,
that the sight would terrorize the
Negro population of the neighbor
hood.
Ward and a white man, Den
nis Brudroe, had an argument on
the afternoon of February 24th.
Brudroe, drew his gun in an at
tempt to shoot Ward, but the gun
failed to explode. Meanwhile
Ward struck out to protect him
self, but actually dealt no blows
because another Negro drew him
away.
As soon as news of the affair
spread ,a lynch gang of about 25
started a man hunt for Ward. Al
though he was locked in the local
jail, no real effort was made to
protect him and the mob easily
broke in and seized him.
When Ward’s body was found,
swinging from a branch, it wai
discovered to be full of gunsho
wounds. To prevent his making
any cry for help, the lynchers hao
gagged him with a bandage.
A swift and efficient wrhite
wash, with the usual verdict oi
kil'ing “by parties unknown” has
been made by ;he town officials
PRESSING FOR THE PRIZE
By R. A. Adams
(For the Literary Service Bureau)
Discouragements are everj where,
And oft we’re tempted to despair.
But all who may be truly wise,
Will still keep pressing for the prize.
Day after day, always ahead,
Are paths unknown our feet must
tread;
Dangers portentous arise,
But. failure means to lose the prize.
Life is compared unto a race,
And one m,ust fainting courage brace,
For all that still before him lies,
And still press onward toward the
prize.
Who would attain to high renown,
And wear, at last the victor’s crown,
Must hellish furies all despise,
And press on ever, toward the prize.
PROVERBS AND PARABLES
By A. B. Mann
(For the Literary Service Bureau)
Where There’s Breath There’s Hope
This is from the Latin maxim which
runs ‘Dun spiro, spero’—‘While 1
breathe I hope.’ This a fierce slap in
the face of the whining pessimist and
the abjeet coward.
Life is not gone until the last
breath is gone. As long as life re
mains there is hope of its extension.
And hope for its extension means hope
for the opportunity to prosecute any
work yet incomplete.
Hope is a cardinal virtue. Except
love it is the most enduring. It is a
treasure which lost means poverty
and utter discouragement. So, one
should never allow circumstances to
extinguish the flame of hope. Of hope
Alexander Pope wrote:
“Hope springs eternal in the human
breast
Man never is, but always to be
blessed;”
and this is the secret of human pro
gress.
I
MORE JOBS |
The easiest way to prevent unemploy- P
Iment is to create jobs. This Community §
offers a great variety of employment op
portunities. When you patronize your ga
P
community merchants wholeheartedly, 3
you increase their volume and make it |
possible for them to give all the mem- gj
bers of this neighborhood additional em- |
ployment. g
ARE YOU DOING 1
YOUR PART |
/------—
PETERSEN’S BAKERY
2306 N. 24 th Street 24th and Lake Streets
MADE IN SPRING PASTEL SHADES—DAINTY TEA CAKES, ICE
CREAM, COOKIES AND COLORED SANDWICH BREAD.
— SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY —
Ice box cookies and date
rocks, doz _ 15c
Variety of Tea Cakes, doz —.15c
Pullman Loaf, each______12c
Poppy seed Vienna, loaf..10c
Raisin bread, loaf _12c
Light Bread Biscuits, doz. -12c
Napkin dinner rolls, doz.-20c
Anripftf rrvllo A AT 2S«*
Fruit rings, coffee cakes,
each____15c and 20c
Fig bars, doz.-- 20c
CAKES—Banana, each.._...39c
Lord Baltimore, each _ 45c
Gold Cake, Chocolate fudge
icing, each _44c, half_22c
PminH P.alcps onrh IS#* anH 9S#
— PIES —
I Cherry, Apple, Gooseberry, Lemon, Banana and Cocoanut
Cream, each-----25c
v___✓
ASKS FEDERAL ACTION
IN MISSISSIPPI LYNCHING
I
Third Mob Murder of 1935 Was Inter
state Kidnapping and Can Be
Classified Under Lindbergh
Law, Says White.
New York, March, 1935—A request
that the federal government act
against the kidnapers and lynchers of
i Ab Young, put to death by a mob in
a school yard at Slayden, Miss., March
12, was telegraphed to President
| Roosevelt and Attorney General Ho
i mer S. Cummings by the National As
sociation for the Advancement o± Col
ored People as soon as the 1. nching
became known.
Young was captured at Rossville,
Tenn. and transported across the
state line into Mississippi where he
was hanged and shot. He was ac
j cused of murdering a white highway
employe. The NAACP telegram to
Attorney General Cummings, signed
by Walter White, secretary, declared
the federal government had the power
to act under the Lindbergh kidnaping
law and said: “In the name of the
laws which you have taken a solemn
; oath to uphold we vigorously insist
■ that your department proceed at once
against the kidnapers of Young yes
terday.”
To President Roosevelt the NAACP'
secretary cited the Young lynching as
the third in 1935 and the second in
five months where a victim has been
transported across a state line. He
called upon the Chief Executive to
spur the Department of Justice to
action and to urge immediately the
passage of the Costigan-Wagner anti
lynching bill which has just been re
ported favorably out of cbmmittee.
j According to a special story in the
j Memphis Press-Sciirtitar, Young was |
captured and held prisoner in the
school house just outside of Slayden
from noon until 4:10 p. m., when he
was hanged. During this time prac- 1
tically the whole town was arguing
whether Young should be turned over
to officers rushing there from Holly
Springs, Miss, or whether he should be
burned alive. It seems the argument
was about fifty-fifty, with more in
favor of burning, but those in favor 1
of the layv were very stubborn, though
outnumbered. While the argument
was at its height about fifty men are
said to have become “disgusted.”!
They left in automobiles and hanged
Young quickly by driving a truck out
from under him. They then returned
' to town and told the rest of the pop-!
ulation that the argument was “all
settled/’
It is said Young’s neck was not
broken by the crude method of hang
mg He slowly strangled to death.
Willie he was in his last agonies, a few
of the younger whites began shooting
at his body for fun. More and more
joined in taking “pot shots” at the
swinging corpse until it was riddled
w.th bullets.
A jury quickly returned a verdict of
death at the hands of “parties un
known.” It is certain that local and
state authorities will take no further
action.
The text of the NAACP telegram
to President Roosevelt:
“The third lynching of nineteen
thirty-five took place yesterday at
olayden, Mississippi when Ab Young
suspected of murder, was killed by a
m° ‘ '7113 is the second instance
within the last five months where a
V'Ctim was kidnapped by a mob and
transported across a state line. Young
was seized according to the Associated
Press by a mob at Rossville, Tenn
essee, taken across the state line in
to Mississippi and there lynched.
This is unquestionably a clear viola
tion of the so-called Lindbergh Kid
napping Law which provides for fed
eral action in cases of kidnapping or
abduction “for ransom reward or
InT86!’ Jhe Nati°nal A33<*ia
PeL ^ *5® Advance"*nt of Colored
with I and cooperating organizations
ha total membership of forty-two
million working for passage of federal
legisiatjon agAnst lynching respect
of LmVVif°r0USly tW° COUrses
of immediate action upon you as
leader of the American people. First
we urge you to order the Department
Justice to proceed against the kid
nappers of Ab Young under federal
legislation against kidnapping. Fail
ure of Department of justice to act
in the notorious kdnapping of Claude
Neal last October from Brewton, Ala
bama, and transportation across the
state line into Florida where he was
lynched with abnormal bestiality has
caused profound crtticism of the in
activity of the Department of Justice.
We urge that the department be not
permitted again to be guilty of mis
feasance. Second, we ask you immed
iately to urge upon Congress prompt
passage of the CostigamWagner bill
which on Monday was favorably re
ported by the senate judiciary com
mittee.”
KNOCKED UNCONSCIOUS BY
AUTOMOBILE
Mrs. Florence Terril, the wife of Dr.
’rice Terril, was knocked unconscious
Thursday at 1:30 P. M. by a taxi cab
at 16th and Douglas St. She was
picked up and rushed to Police Station
for emergency treatment.
Dr. Wiggins was called in to take
charge of the case. The Police Sur
geon said that Mrs. Terril should be
sent to the Hospital for a few days
and await developments. But after
consulation between Dr. Wiggins and
Dr. Price Terril it was decided to take
Mi's. Terril to her home. She is now
confined to her bed with severe pains
in the lower part of her limbs. She
is under the care of Dr. Herbert
Wiggins.
CHURCHMEN ASK CONGRESS
TO END DISCRIMINATION
New York.—Continuing the struggle
to get clauses against racial discrimi
nation in the Economic Security Bill
the Department of Race Relations of
the Federal Council of Churches an
nounced last week through Dr. George
E. Haynes, executive secretary of the
Department, that action is being taken
by leaders in several cities following
the Department’s sending facts to
them and urging action.
Among those who have been work
ing to influence their Congressmen
and the House and Senate Committees
are Dr. William N. DeBerry of Spring
field, Mass.; W. T. Poole of Pittsburgh,
Raymond Pace Alexander, Esq., of
Philadelphia; Dr. E. W. Moore of
Columbus: Bishop Reverdy C. Ransom
of Wilberforce; Bishop John A. Gregg
of Kansas City; Bishop L. W. Kyles,
of North Carolina, and Thomas B.
Dyett, Esq., of New York City.
NEGRO BEATEN TO DEATH;
NOT FAST ENOUGH.
New York, —CNA—Last Wed
nesday night a pedestrain was
beaten to death at the corner of
134 Street and Seventh Avenue,
by five policemen, because he
“did not move fast enough” on
the streets.
BOY ATTACKED IN STORE
IS STILL MISSING.
New York—CNA—Last week
the “New York Evening Journ
al,” Hearst chain newspaper, and
other New York daily newspap
Prs, displayed the picture of Lino I
Rn era ,a 16-year okl Negro boy,
whom they claim was the boy at
tacked in the Kress store at 125th
.Street near Seventh Avenue.
These papers published statements
from the boy that he was “ un
hurt ’ by the Kress detectives,
and was sent “safely home.”.
It has not yet been definitely
established here that young Ri
vera was the boy who was at
tacked in the Kress store last
Tuesday night.
Rumors are current that the
hoy who was actually attacked
has never been found.
national negro health
WEEK
Seventh Annual Observance of Wood
son Center, March 31 to April 7
Sponsored by Health Committee,
Mrs. Inez Simmons, R. H., Mrs. H.
Wells.
Speakers every afternoon at 4 P. M.
Sunday, March 31st, 4 p. m., Health
Play and talk on Health and Sanita
tion by Miss Evelyn Evans, R. H.
Friday, 10 a. m., Baby Clinic and
Nutrition Talk by Miss Overman,
Board of Education.
Friday, 8 p. m., Nutrition Lecture
and Slides by Mr. Joe Ihm, of Benson
High School.
Miss Ella May Franklin has charge
of the plays, Miss Constance Mullen,
costumes, Miss Dorothy Taylor, pos
ters and parade.
URBAN LEAGUE WIRES 0 K.
OF ANTI-LYNCHING BILL
New York, March 21.—As an
official act of its annual meeting
held recently in New York, the
National Urban League through
L. Hollingsworth Wood ,its presi
dent, telegraphed Senator Fred
erick. Van Nuys, chairman of the
Senate sub-committee of the judi
ciary its endorsement of the Cos
tigan-Wagner bill and urged
favorable action by the commit
tee. The L rban League previous
ly had endorsed the bill, being
among the first to do so.
Do You Want Naturally Wavy Hair?
Try Our
CROQUINGNOLE MARCEL WAVE
Affords Numerous Changes of
Coiffure.
CHRISTINE ALTHOUSE
BEAUTY SALON
2422 N. 22nd St. WE. 6846