The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, April 13, 1935, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores
OMAHA AUTO PARTS CORP
Omaha. Nebraska
2206 Cuming St. JA. 0019
S. J. Sindelar A. R. Thacker,
Pres. Treas. <
VONER and HOUSTON
2114 N. 24th St. JA-3543.
Every Day is Bargain Day Here
Buy Your Garden and
Grass Seeds Now!
Save Money by Using otn
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
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
EASTER SALE
Swagger Suits _*.__$6.95
Sport, Street and Afternoon
Dresses.
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.
I DEEP ROCK
SERVICE
STATION
24th and Charles
EXPERT ALEMITING
SERVICE
. 15 Years Experience.
KOHRELL and CARPENTER.
Expert Auto Repair
and Battery Service )
Quick Service Ja. 8103
M. & W. GARAGE
1706 N. 24th Street
MILTON WILSON
Says
Come in And Look Us Over.
BULGER TEXACO SERVICE
; Goodrich Tires.
Willard Batteries.
Recharge Batteries
Fix Flats
Have Complete Road Service.
FOR
JOB PRINTING
CALL
WE. 1750
OMAHA GUIDE
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
TUCHMAN BROS.
The North-Side Largest “Food Market.”
Lowest Prices on Quality Foods
24th and LAKE 24th and LAKE
FORBES SPLENDID SLICED BREAD, 16i
oz loaves, 2 for 15c |
FRESH EGGS FROM BENSON FARMS,!
Per Doz. 25c
PINK SALMON, 2 TALL CANS 25c
CALIFORNIA PRUNES, 2 Lbs 15c
FRUIT SALAD NO. 1 TALL CANS, 2 FORI
29 c. I
OMAHA FAMILY OR P and G Soap, Per bar!
4 Cents. ^ I
MASON & KNOX CAFE
2307 N. 24 St. Prompt Delivery WE 4208
FREE! FREE! FREE! For A Few Days Only
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 .....■ 2Gc
AUNT DELILAH HOT CAKES with Sausage or
Bacon, coffee 20c
Storz Triumph Beer On Draught
HOME OF THE BARBEQUE KING
l-'
WE-5444 „ 24th & LAKE Sts.
The Best Quality Foods At The
Very Lowest Prices
WE DELIVER
PROVERBS AND PARABLES
By A B Mann
(For The Literary Service Bureau)
“You Can’t Eat Your Cake and Keep
It Too.”
It is not uncommon to hear a child
cry “Where’s my cake?” Common al
so, is the reply, “You ate it.” From
this comes the axiom, “You can’t eat
• lr cake and keep it too.” The les
son is one of moderation in the use
of what we have and a caution against
waste of what we have. It is true in
regard to money, time, physical
strength. One cannot use these with
excess, with prodigality and at the
same time conserve them for future
use. So it is wiser to stretch them out
and profit thereby. The “prodigal
son” wasted all in riotous living, then
MRS. RANDLE.
Home Made Candy Pop Corn
Carmel Corn and
ICE CREAM.
2510 N. 24th St. Omaha, Neb.
CALL '
Omaha Poultry Market, 1114 N.
24th St.. WE-1100. FRESH
EGGS—FRESH DRESSED
POULTRY WHILE YOU
_WAIT._
O—HMIM
SWANSON
Plumbing Co.
Plumbing—Heating and
Repairing.
1918 Cuming St.
E. A. Backlund, Mgr.
Phone JA-3434 Night JA-4356
i...
CASH AND CARRY
Suits 59c—Plain Dresses 75c.
Buy and Sell Second Hand
Clothing—Tuxedos For
Rent
SUITS PRESSED 35c.
SERVICE ANYTIME
Laundry Agency.
HOLMES THE TAILOR
2218 N. 24th St. Phone WE-3320
“came to be in want." The same
causes are productive of the same
effects.
FRANCE USES COLONIALS TO
SAFEGUARD OWN INTERESTS
Paris, France, (CNA)—Colonial
troops were ordered to the Rhineland
frontier last week to forestall Hitler’s
attempts to re-arm. This is repre
sentative of French imperialism’s pol
icy of utilizing the anti-fascist senti
ment of the colonial soldiers for its
own interests. Included in the troops
ordered to the frontier were the Sec
ond Colonial Infantry of Africa, a
Madagascan battalion of machine gun
ners and considerable forces of Alger
ian soldiers.
JAMES P. POND LECTURES
AT SPELMAN COLLEGE '
Atlanta, Georgia, April 11th.—
Special: James B. Pond, manager
of the Pond Lecture Bureau of
New York, presented his famous
lec.ure on “Eccentricities of Ge
nius” in iSsters Chapel on Mon
day morning.
Born in an atmosphere of celeb
rities, Mr. Pond has been associat
ed all his life with the world’s
grea.. His father, Major J. P.
Pond, regarded by many as next
to Barniun, America’s greatest
showman, founded the Pond Lec
ture Bureau in 1873. He not only
managed the decture tours of his
| celebrities, but he brought them to
his home. As a boy Mr. Pond
! grew up with such people around
the house as Mark Twain, Conan
Doyle, Sir Henry M. Stanley,
Bill Nye, Ian MacLaren, Israel
| Zangwill, Paul Lawrence Dunbar,
and Hall Caine. On his father’s
death in 1903, Mr. Pond became
the owner of the eWorld famous
lecture bureau, and has conduct
ed it ever since.
Mr. Pond has managed a list
of stars that reads like,a “Who’s
Who.” He has had a unique gift
for finding talent and exploiting
it. Many people found by him
may have been later lured away,
tmi he has done an amazing
pioneer work. He managed the
tirsL recital for Paul Robeson.
He unearthed and first brought
to America the virtually unknown
John Mansfield. Ruth Draper he
P MORE JOBS I
I flg
I The easiest way to prevent unemploy- g
g
ment is to create jobs. This Community g
offers a great variety of employment op- g
g
portunities. When you patronize your P
P
community merchants wholeheartedly, P
you increase their volume and make it fe
1
possible for them to give all the mem- g
c
bers of this neighborhood additional em- |
ployment. g
ARE YOU DOING |
: ! YOUR PART I
PETERSEN’S BAKERY
2506 N. 24th Street 24th and Lake Streets
PIES—A CHALLENGE TO MOTHERS. Mothers use the best of
everything.everything. Wie use housewives’ recipes and stress QUAL
ITY. Our ovens are adjusted so the pies turn out perfectly baked.
The special of the coming week will be different soft pies each
day with a variety of two-crust pies, each 25a.
PIES—Prune, Custard, Cocoanut Cream, Lemon Chiffon and Chocolate.
SATURDAY SPECIALS
Doughnuts— Chocolate Fudge Cake, each—40c
Cake and sugar, doz. —.20c yei]0w Cake, orange Icing, ea...44c
Glazed and French, doz. —25c H Cake, each __._____.25c
Crescent Butter Rolls, doz.2oc . ' •>*,.
Pecan Crisps, doz. -.— 25c Variety Small Cakes, each..2oc
Fig Bars, doz.___20c Bran and Whole Wheat
Banana Cake, each - 39c Bread, loaf -10c
/
Grant Street Pharmacy
PHONE WEbster 6100 ..
Registered Pharmacist Prompt Delivery
PRESCRIPTIONS carefully compounded
MIDAS ICE CREAM
Flavor—Quality Always
P. J. Robinson, Mgr.
24th and Grant Streets Omaha, Nebr.
k_________—
developed from obscurity into the
greatest' one woman show the
theatre has ever known.
He brought Rabindranth Ta
gore for two spectacular tours.
Maurice Maeterlincke, Lord Dun
sany, Vicente Blasco Ibanex were
his. So, too, Sir Philip Gibbs,
John Galsworthy and Lady Greg
ory.
In the field of exploration, Ad
miral Byrd has made all his
tours under his management. Ad
miral Peary was also a Pond
s ar.
In his talks about the world
celebrities, Mr. Pond makes it a
point to be not only entertaining
but to show the human side of
people who are most of the world
merely names and traditions.
INSTITUTE CHURCH
BROADCASTS SERVICE
Hampton Institute, Va.—This morn
ing at 7:45 o’clock, the Hampton In
stitute Church broadcast a service of
devotion over station WGH at New
port News.
The service is a part of the Inter
Church Program which enlists out
standing churches in the broadcast
ing of religious services, at certain
intervals.
A double, mixed quartette provided
the music, under the direction of Dr.
Clarence C. White. “When Morning
Gilds the Sky” opened the service.
This was followed by a Bible selection
read by Chaplain S. A- Devan The
! quartette gave, then, the anthem “God
is Love,” after which the Chaplain
made a brief address, ending with
I prayer. One of the chants used by
| the whole Hampton student group at
their evening prayers, was chanted
by the singers who closed the program
with “Fairest Lord Jesus.”
Tomorrow morning — Friday, the
services will be repeated, with the
Junior Male Quartette providing the
j music. They will sing spirituals on
1 ly. The next day—Saturday, the
mixed quartette will sing again.
■
HARMON ART EXHIBITION AT
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY
Atlanta, Georgia, April 11th.
Special:—A group of 43 paint
ings and sculptures, the work of
leading Negro artists in America,
was on view in the Exhibition
Hall of the Atlanta University
Library from March 24th through1
the 31st.
This* exhibition, sponsored by
the Harmon Foundation, was cir
culated by the College Art As
sociation of New York. For
many years the Harmon Founda
tion has exhibited the work of Ne
gro artists, and this year tjlie
College Art Association collabor
ated with the Foundation in se
lecting and assembling tht works.
In the foreword of the catalogue
Miss Audrey McMahon, Director
of the College Art Association,
says, “It is less a group of work
by the member of a particular
race than a contemporary art ex
hibit of merit and standard.
GERMANS; ITALIANS RACE
TO PLUNDER ETHOPIA.
Addis Ababa, j Ethiopia—The
Hitler government offered mili
tary aitl here this week to Haile
Selassie, King of Abyssinia, in the
fight I against Mussolini’s fascist
aggregation.
German fascism has today little
or no concessions in Ethiopia and
this move, by Hitler is an effort
to substi flute the robbery by
German capitalists for robbery by
Italian capitalists.
It looms as no benefit whatever
to the Negro people of Abyssinia
as all the imperalist nations of
Europe are attempting to seize
the wealth and natural resources
of this country (for their own
capitalist exploiters. j
It looms as no benefit whatever
to the Negro people of Abyssinia
as all the imperialist nations of
Europe are attempting to seize
the wealth and natural resources
of this country.
YWCA SIGNS ANTI-LYNCHING
BILL PETITION
New York, April 5.—Writing, “It
has been a privilege to get this filled”,
Mrs. Olivia C. Fuller, general secre
tary of the Young Women’s Christian
Association (white), of Houston,
Texas, has forwarded a petition urg
ing passage of the Costigan-Wagner
Anti-lynching bill to the National As
sociation for the Advancement of Col
ored People.
SEIZE CHILDREN OF WHITE
WOMAN BECAUSE SHE
RENTED TO NEGRO
New York—CNA—The society
prevention of cruelty to children,
seized the four children of Mrs.
Lamberson, white janitress ,Uf
; 2917 Eighth Avenue, because she
had a Negro lodger in her flat.
After ihe roomer moved out,
the children were returned but
placed under the supervision of
the society.
HEAD OF BUSINESS
SCHOOL RESIGNS
Hampton Institute, Va.,—President
Arthur Howe announces that Profess
or Clarence D. Stevens, director of the
School of Business, has resigned and
the resignation has been accepted.
Associate Professor Ethel C. Buck
man, giving instruction in law and
commercial education both in the col
lege and trade school, has been ap
pointed as acting director of the
Business School. She has been in .
charge of the department since the
early part of the school year.
Professor Stevens was released in
September to do special work for the
government in connection with the
Indians. His particular task was that
of surveying the economic and socio
logical opportunities for the Cherokee
Indians on their reserve in North Car
olina. He will now continue with this
work.
He has been one of the strong forces
in developing the School of Business
at Hampton and succeeded in helping
to make it one of the strong and ef
ficient schools of the college.
GROUP OF VISITING
YOUNG MISSIONARIES
Hampton Institute, Va.—On a trip
arranged by Miss Mal>el Carney of
Teachers College, Columbia Univer
sity, five young women preparing for
service in the home and foreign mis
sion fields have just spent a short
time at the Institute examining its
plant and studying its system of edu
cation. Two of them have already
served abroad, one in Africa and the
other in India.
SIX DIE FROM EATING ROTTEN
SALVATION ARMY FOOD
(Special to the CNA)
New York—At least six Negro
transients have been taken out of the
Salvation Army station at 224 W.
124th Street, seriously ill on account
of the food. They were carried to the
Harlem Hospital. All of them are re
ported dead.
About 450 youth live there and the
station feeds from 500 to 700 every
day. The meals consist of rotten beef
and yellow, decayed substances which
smell like garbage. The workers who
stay at the station claim that the
food is directly responsible for the
fatal illness of the six transient work
ers. They state that the food “isn’t fit
for a pig”.
Food Like Garbage
Besides serving rotten food to the
workers, all those who work in the
kitchen make 45c a week. Other
workers who are sent to Staten Island
to do hard labor under the worst con
ditions are paid two dollars a week.
The Salvation Army officials at
tempted to divide the kitchen help,
who are themselves underpaid, from
those who eat in the breadline. At ev
ery possible opportunity the officials
incite fights between these two
groups.
ARKANSAS COURT UPHOLDS
LANDLORD’S RIGHT TO
EVICT SHARE-CROPPERS
Little Rock, Ark. — (CNA)—The
State Supreme Court held last Mon
day that landlords here had a right
to evict Negro and white share-crop
pers and under the law the latter could
do nothing about it.
Ten sharecroppers sued H. Nor
cross, white, a landlord, charging evic
tions in violation of the acreage re
duction acts of the Roosevelt A.A.A.
The court held that the contracts cov
ering the arrangement were be
tween the landlord and the federal
government and that the sharecrop
per was a “free agent” who had noth
ing to do with them.
The court declared that the share
croppers had “no obligation to remain
upon the farm . . . and are left free
to stay or go as they choose.”
The effect of the decision is to leg
alize the landlord system of evicting
and starving the Negro and white
sharecroppers in this territory.
POLICEMAN SLUGS WOMAN FOR
COMPLAINING AGAINST
LANDLORD
Coney Island, N. Y.—(CNA)—A
policeman attacked and brutally beat
Mrs. Ada Recutero of 2971 F. 25th
Street, last week, because she com
plained to him about her white land
lady, Mrs. Avitsky, turning off her
gas. Mrs. Recutero occupies an un
healthy basement apartment and her
rent was paid up.
The same officer blackjacked Ed
ward Shaw, white worker, of 2975
[West 25th Street, for protesting the
beating of Mrs. Recutero.