The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, May 18, 1935, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores
OMAHA AITTO PARTS CORP
Omaha, Nebraska
2206 Cuming St. JA. 0019
S. J. Sindelar A. R. Thacker,
Pres. Treas.
VONER and HOUSTON
GROCERY
2114 N. 24th St. JA-3543.
Every Day is Bargain Day Here
Buy Your Garden and
Grass Seeds Now!
Save Money by Using ouj
BULK GARDEN SEEDS
Home Landscape Service.
924 N. 24h St.. JA-5115
Duffy Pharmacy
We. 0009
24th and LAKE STREETS
DRUGS
PRESCRIPTIONS
HARHTNGS
> ICE CREAM
Free Dalivery
HARRIS’ GROCERY
2639 Franklin Street
We Specialize in Fresh Vegetables
and Meats
We Appreciate your Patronage.
NORTH SIDE TRANSFER
Long Distance Hauling
Moving and Storage
Phone WE 3636 2414 Grant St.
FOR REAL BARBEQUE MEATS
Cooked With Hickory Wood.
Always Have the Flavor and Taste.
BILL HARPER
2023 Charles St.
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
Now is the time to change motor
oil and gear grease for Summer
Driving
KOHRELL and CARPENTER.
Expert Auto Repair
and Battery Service
Quick Service Ja. 8103
M. & W. GARAGE
_1706 N. 24*h Street
MILTON WILSON
Says
Come in And Look Us Over.
BULGER TEXACO SERVICE
Goodrich Tires.
Willard Batteries.
Kecharge 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
M YERS|
FUNERAL
HOME
Dignified, Efficient Supervision
Nothing Over-Or Undone
"3g£ I
2416 N. 22 St. WE 0248
*-/
ROMAN BROS.
The North-Side Largest “Food Market.”
Lowest Prices on Quality Foods j
24th and LAKE 24th and LAKE
JUICY SUNKIST ORANGES, doz. -10c
KITCHEN OR PARLOR BROOMS.
SPECIAL; EACH-35c
Valley Seedless Raisins 6 oz Pkg. - -5c
I New Potatoes, per lb. 4 c. 5 lbs.-19c
Fresh Spinach, 3 lb. package-10c
—
MASON & KNOX CAFE j
2307 N. 24 St. Prompt Delivery WE 4208
FREE! FREE! FREE! For A Few Days On'y
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
Bacon, coffee 20c
Storz Triumph Beer On Draught
HOME OF THE BARBEQUE KING
-----'
,---_N
HERMAN'S
Market
WE FILL RELIEF
ORDERS
WE-5444 24th & LAKE Sts.
The Best Quality Foods At The
^ Very Lowest Prices ^
WE DELIVER
k---'
JOHNSON DRUG CO.
We Fill Relief Prescriptions
WE- 0998 .. 1904 N- 24th St.
THOMAS SHOE REPAIR SHOP
First Class Material
Satisfaction Guaranteed
1415 No. 24th St. Omaha, Neb.
WEB- 5666
Call
OMAHA POULTRY MARKET
1114 N. 24th St., We- 1100
FRESH EGGS, FRESH DRESSED
POULTRY
While You Wait
HEADQUARTERS AND REST
ROOM FOR WAITERS AND
PORTERS.
2405 Lake Street AT 8295
RARE’S BUFFET
Carl Rabes, Prop.
Refreshments and Lunch
2425 N. 24th Street, 24th and Lake
Phone JA- 9195 Omaha
BLACK AND WHITE
CAFE
2210 N. 24th Street.
Sandwiches, Steaks and Chops.
C- H HALL
EXPRESS
PHONE JA 8585 RES WE-1056
WE MOVE WITH CARE
Office; 1405 N 24th St. Omaha,
JESSIE’S ORIENTAL
TAVERN.
The Place Where Good Fellows
Meet—Hear
GREGG WILLIAMS AND HIS
FINE BAND
2525 Erskine St. WE-5758
LM- ■" _|
MRS. RANDLE’S
Home Made Candy Pop Corn
Carmel Corn and
ICE CREAM.
2510 N. 24th St. Omaha, Neb.
SWANSON
Plumbing Co.
Plumbing—Heating and
Repairing.
1918 Cuming St.
E. A. Backhand, Mgr.
Phone JA-3434 Night JA-4356
r~f.v 1 ■-» - luuauM »
' ~ " «
Do Ye-u Want Naturally Wavy
Hair?
Try Our
CROQUINGNOLE MARCEL
WAVE
Affords Numerous Changes of
Coiffure.
CHRISTINE ALTHOUSE
BEAUTY SALON
MOTON EXPOSES DIXIE
SENATOR ON LYNCH ISSUE
(Continued from Page 1)
tee the security of every citizen by the
certain functioning of the orderly pro
cesses of the law, we are justified in
looking to the federal government for
the protection which the Constitution
declares must be given to every citi
zen. It must be remembered that
lynchings are not confined to those
charged with crimes against women,
as the records will show, but are re
sorted to on indiscriminate provoca
tion, and as yet there is no guaran
tee anywhere by mandate of the law
against their occurrence- And when
the governor of one of our great states
goes as far as to publicly announce the
pardon of lynchers in advance of their
conviction, it is high time that some
thing be done by higher authority to
put an end to this evil. If governors,
senators, congressmen and state leg
islators will pledge themselves public
ly to see that the necessary legislation
against lynching is enacted in each
state, the occasion for national legis
lation will be removed. Till that is
done we must look to the federal gov
ernment for that protection which the
states still fail o give and the federal
Constitution guarantees. And I would |
be disloyal to my own people, who1
have suffered most from the neglect,
and to the best white people of the
south, in whom I have the utmost con
fidence, if I did not add my voice in
support of this federal enactment- As
matters now stand, every section and
every race is exposed to this danger,
and the application of this law will
bear as heavily on one state as an
other- I am satisfied that outside of
the politics the sober conscience of all
classes in the South will support this
PROGRESSIVE TAILORS
John Hall, Prop.
Cleaning and Pressing Neatly Done
We Call For and Deliver
2120 North 24th Street Omaha
WHY WANT TAILORED
CLOTHES
(Suits A Specialty, $4.95)
At Expensive Prices When You Can
Buy Them Cheaply At The
ARCHWAY SEWING ROOM
_ 1323^ N. 24th Street
■■mHBBHoig
ALWAYS ASK
FOR
FORBES’
BAKERY
PRODUCTS
AT YOUR GROCER
2711 North 24th St.
MORE JOBS
1
| The easiest way to prevent unemploy
ment is to create jobs. This Community ;
I I
| offers a great variety of employment op
j portunities. When you patronize your i
l community merchants wholeheartedly, |
l you increase their volume and make it
| possible for them to give all the mem- j
bers of this neighborhood additional em
ployment.
ARE YOU DOING
YOUR PART
-—-----V
Grant Street Pharmacy
PHONE WEbster 6100 .,,
Registered Pharmacist Prompt Delivery
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED
MIDAS ICE CREAM
Flavor—Quality Always
, P. J. Robinson, Mgr. '• , r
24th and Grant Streets ' Omaha, Nebr.
view, Federal legislation will strength
en those elements in the South who
want to see this blot removed from
our country.”
In the same way that Senator
Black misrepresented Dr. Moton,
he and other sou. hern senators,
employing the polished form of
prevarication tolerated in the
United States Sena.e in the ab
sence of vigorous informed dis
pu.e, distorted the facts as to
lynchings in the south and other
conditions throughout the debate.
The friends of the measure, nor
therners and westerners for the
nios, part, were prepared to vote
for the bill, but were not prepar
ed to debate it. They did not have
the deep personal interest in its
passage which the southern solons
had in its defeat.
Only a few of the advocates of
;he bill were prepared to show
their temper or their disgust, as
in the casts of Senators Clark and
MeCarran, but even they lacked
the knowledge of the problem
necessary to offensives of the sort
required. Most of them were forc
ed to sit back and swallow whole
clothe distoriions which the aver
age informed Negro could have
exposed without a second’s notice.
The northern senators sought to
keep the racial issue out of the de
bate. but the southerners observ
ed no such tactics. They fought
the Civil war over again and pre
sented an illusory picture of
happv. orosperous, peaceful, pro
tected, Uncle Tom Negroes living
throughout the length and
breadth of a fair and beautiful
southland.
ETHIOPIAN DEFENSE PARADE
HELD IN HARLEM
New York, (CNA)—.Demonstrating
?. lively and militant interest in inter
national affairs affecting Negroes, the
Provisional Committee for the Defense
of Ethiopia staged a protest parade
and mass meeting on May 2nd against
the invasion of Ethiopia.
Parade Four Blocks Long
The parade, led by cavalry corps
and band, was four blocks long.
Throngs cheered the procession as it
swung up Seventh Avenue. Banners
demanding “Hands off Ethiopia” and
urging ‘Black Men Arise’ were dis
played throughout the body of parad
ers.
The march ended at Abyssinian
Baptist Church where a large crowd
had gathered to greet the paraders.
The mass meeting in the church was
spirited and demonstrative.
Audience Stands And Cheers
One of the highlights of the meeting
was a dramatic reading rendered by
Madame Marion St. Bishop. Attired
in Ethiopian costume, and reading
with militant dignity a poem decry
ing the anti-Negro institutions in
America, she brought the crowd of
2,000 to its feet, cheering and stamp
ing.
Speakers at the meeting included
Arthur Reid, Rev. A- Clayton Powell,
Jr., A. W. Berry, J. Alleyne and
James W,. Ford. A. L. King acted
as chairman.
Each speaker was frequently inter
rupted by enthusiastic applause.
Warns Against U. S. Fascists
Typical of the speeches was that of
A. W. Berry, in which he said, “The
Negro people must be vigilant against
the direct and indirect representatives
of the Italian fascists in America”.
Casa Itahana on the campus of Col
umbia and Relief Director Corsi were
named as representatives of Fascism.
Berry declared the “rainy season”
lull would not slow up the work of the
committee
“Every day is a fair day for us un
til the last shackle drops from the
blacks the world over enslaved by im
perialism”, Berry declared.
Resolutions were adopted to be sent
to Mussolini, the New York Italian
consulate and the Italian ambassador.
Plans for organization of a league
to promote better relations between ,
American Negroes and Negroes
throughout the world have been an
nounced by the committee.
MUSSOLINI INCREASES
FASCIST MOBILIZATION
AGAINST ABYSSINIA
Rome, Italy, (CNA)—Mussolini,
fascist Italian dictator, has ordered
an increase of military preparations
against Ethiopia, last independent Ne
gro country in Africa.
Another fascist army division has
AN OLD DOG AND NEW TRICKS
There are serious doubts as to the
truthfulness of the axiom “You can’t
LOOK!
WITH EACH OIL CHANGE
WE GIVE A COMPLETE
GREASE JOB
No Extra Charge
24 HOUR TOW IN AND
REPAIR SERVICE
(
Walker Garage No. 5
24 and Lake Sts. Tel JA-7086
j
I
been transported to Africa. There are
already two divisions stationed near
the border now. 150,000 Italian troops
are in arms for immediate warfare
against Ethiopia.
The High Commissioner of Eritrea,
Italian owned territory, is mobiliz.ng
native African troops to shoot down
their brothers in Ethiopia.
In Worst Crisis
Meantime, Italy is in the throes of
the greatest crisis in iti history. Two
pay cuts have been forced on the Ital
ian workers by the Mussolini reg.me,
while the cost of living has jumped
30 per cent since the pay cuts.
The Italian working class is daily
showing its resentment to Mussolini’s
plans to seize Ethiopia. Mutinies
among the Italian troops in Africa
are growing, and the Italian masses
at home, under the leadership of the
Italian Communist Party, are increas
ing their response to the slogan of
“hands off Abyssinia”.
Delegation Demands
Investigation of Murder
Brooklyn. N. Y., — CNA—De
claring that he does not give a
goddam for the Mayor, District
Attorney McGinnis, white refused
to conduct the open hearing prom
ised by Mayor LaGuardia into the
police murder of Aubrey Knight
The promise of an open hearing
came as a result of a mass cam
paign of pro est organized bv the
League of Struggle for Negro
Rights.
The poliee department inform
ed the L. S. N. R. then that ihere
would be a public hearing in
McGinnis’s office. When a dele
gation of white and Negroes visit
ed the District Attorney, he
sought to bulldoze and intimidate
them, and McGinnis refused to •
hold the hearing.
Knight was shot down in cold
blood by the police on the morn
ing of March 26. He had just left
the home of friends at 547 War
ren Street where he had spent
the evening. The police claim
that Knight had robbed a store
although the store owner denied
there had been any attempt at
burglary.
They further asseried that
Knight had been shot in the back
for attempting to escape. An
autopsy showed four bullet
wounds in the chest, stomach and
groin but none in the back.
Negro Denied Visitors
In Auburn Prison
Auburn Prison, X. Y._CXA_
“I am not going to let either one
of you see Allen, so what? I am
warden of this prison and no or
ganization in Xew 5 ork C ity is
going to tell me how to run it,
was the reply of Warden Brophy
to a request by two representativ
es of i he Internationa] Labor De
fense, to see Clide Allen, imprison
ed worker.
Aden was sentenced to 35 years
in the state penitentiary on
trumped up charges of rape. He
was accused by the police of be
ing the mythical Brooklyn Ham
mer Man who attacks white
women. The International Labor
Defense is seeking a new trial.
The refusal of the warden to
permit the T. L. D. representative
to visit Allen will be answered by
an intensified mass campaign to
free Clide Allen, the I. L. D.~stat
ed.
Claimed NRA Wages
Is Then Fired
-Vus in, Texas—CNA—Until a
fen- weeks ago, William B.
Fields, young worker eked out a
living by shining shoes in a local
barber shop. His refusal to lie to
an NRA code investigator has lost
him even these few miserable
pennies.
The white proprietor of the
barber shop instructed Fields to
tell the investigator that he was.
drawing the code wage of $14.50
per week for porters. Instead,
Fields told him that he was de
pendent solely upon what he re
ceived from shining shoes.
The proprietor promptly fired
Fields, and the code investigator
has made no effort to reinstate
him in his job.
——___
8000 Cleaners and
Dyers Strike
New York—CNA—More than
8000 workers in the Cleaners and
Dyers industry went out on strike
here last week.
Their demands are higher
wages, recognition of the Clean
ers and Dyers Union and better
working conditions.
One of the features of the strike
Is the unity between the workers
and the small independent shops.
There is a joint effort against the
large chain cleaners and dyers
sot res which are not only forcing
down the wages of the workers
but are also driving the small
shops out of business.
Score of the trikers and small
shopkeepers are Negrccs.