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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1935)
BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores I BLACK AND WHITE Coffee Shop 2210 N. 24th Street “THE IDEAL PLACE TO DINE.” Good Coffee and Good Food Under New Management DORIS and TOMMIE Open from 6 A M until ? ? JOHNSON DRUG CO. We Fill Relief Prescriptions WE. 0998 .. 1904 N. 24th St. AMERICAN WEINER SHOP 2509 N. 24th, Street. RED HOTS AND SHORT ORDERS SCHLITZ BEER ON TAP TRY OUR DOUBLE DECK CLUB SANDWICH 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 RABE’S BUFFET Carl Rabes, Prop. Refreshments and Lunch 2425 N. 24th Street, 24th and Lake Phone JA- 9195 Omaha OMAHA AUTO 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 Duffy Pharmacy We. 0609 24th and LAKE STREETS PRESCRIPTIONS Free Delivery THOMAS SHOE REPAIR SHOP First Class Material Satisfaction Guaranteed 1415 No. 24th St. Omaha, Neb. . WEB - 5666 ~ 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 5656 2414 Grant St. SPECIAL GET ACQUAINTED OFFER Shampoo, Press with Finger or Marcel..„...$1 25 Homer McCraney’s BEAUTY SALON Two Doors South of Ritz PROGRESSIVE TAILORS John Hall, Prop. Cleaning and Pressing Neatly Done We Call For and Deliver [ 2120 North 24th Street Omaha WHITES SERVICE STATION Standard Oil Products We repair tires WHITE & NEWTON 24th and Grace St. JA. 8954 All Work Guaranteed IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL MAYO’S BARBER SHOP Ladies’ and Childrens’ Work A Specialty. 2422 Lake Street. JESSIE’S ORIENTAL TAVERN. The Place Where Good Fellows Meet—Hear GREGG WILLIAMS AND HIS FINE BAND 2525 Erskine St. WE-5758 MRS. RANDLE S Home Made Candy Pop Corn Carmel Corn and ICE CREAM. 2510 N. 24th St. Omaha, Neb. 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 TOO* OFF 17 LBS. OF UGLY FAT HEEDED DOCTOR’S ADVICE Mrs. Robert Hickey, Roseville, Calir., writes: "My doctor prescribed Kruschen Salts for me—he said they wouldn't hurt me in the least. I’ve lost 17 lbs. in 6 weeks. Kruschen is worth its weight in gold.” Mrs. Hickey paid no attention to gossipers who said there was no safe wf y to reduce. She wisely fol YOU? kerd°Ct0r S advice’ don t Get a Jar of Kruschen to-day (lasts * weens and costs but a trifle) Simply take half teaspoonful in cup or hot water every morning. All Iruggists. C H HALL EXPRESS PHONE JA 8585 RES WE-1056 WE MOVE WITH CARE Office: 1405 N 24th St. Omaha, < SWANSON Plumbing Cx>. Plumbing—Heating and Repairing. 1918 Cuming St. E. A. Backlund, Mgr. Phone JA-3434 Night JA-4356 Do You Want Naturally Wavy Hair? Try Our CROQUINGNOLE MARCEL WAVE Affords Numerous Changes of Coiffure. CHRISTINE ALTHOUSE BEAUTY SALON 2422 N. 22—WE. 0846 -- MYERS FUNERAL HOME Dignified, Efficient Supervision Nothing Over-Or Undone 2416 N. 22 St. WE 0248 -- ■ ———^——BflMCaBr'HW TUCtlMAN BROS. I The North-Side’s Largest “Food Market.” Lowest Prices on Quality Foods 24th and LAKE 24th and LAKE VALU COFFEE, FRESH ROASTED, lb. ...18c LARGE GREEN CABBAGE, Solid Heads,' , Each--5c I SEEDLESS RAISINS, Package-5c KELLOG’S WHOLE WHEAT FLAKES, Two Large Pacakges MORE JOBS The easiest way to prevent unemploy ment is to create jobs. This Community offers a great variety of employment op portunities. When you patronize your community merchants wholeheartedly, you increase their volume and make it possible for them to give all the mem bers of this neighborhood additional em ployment. ARE YOU DOING YOUR PART '--N Grant Street Pharmacy PHONE WEbster 6100 Registered Pharmacist Prompt Delivery PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED MIDAS ICE CREAM Flavor—Quality Always IP. J. Robinson, Mgr. 24th and Grant Streets Omaha, Nebr. --- ^ : y : " I A PEG—A LEG CLAYTON BATES Having returned from a tri umphant nine-month stay in Europe, where he was a sensa tional feature in Lew Leslie’s ‘Blackbirds,’ ‘Peg Leg Bates,’ as he is known in the theater, begins another American tour of deluxe theaters for Para mount this week. He opens at the Roxy this Friday, June 28, and in the words of the Eng lish critics, ‘He is undoubtedly the world’s greatest one-leg dancer (Exclusive, Photograph by Almac Syndicated Features) Wagner Bill Weak Says Workers’ Council New York, June 29, (ANP)—The Atlanta, Georgia, Negro Workers’ Council sent a letter this week to Senator Richard B Russell and to the Congressman from the Atlanta distrist signed by William Belcher, Chairman of the Council, requesting their support for an amendment to the Wagner Labor Disputes Bill which will protect the right of Negro *'*•■-* : - - --•■5LT— --aKTXZSTSTC TIRED, WORN OUT, NO AMBITION HU W many women are just dragging them selves around, all | tired out with peri odic weakness and pain? They should know that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Tab lets relieve peri odic pains and dis comfort. Small size only 2 5 cents. • Mrs. Dorsie Williams of Danville, Illinois, says, “I had no ambition and was terribly nervous. Your Tab lets helped my periods and built me up.” Try them next month. | WHY WANT TAILORED CLOTHES (Suits A Specialty, $4-95) At Expensive Prices When You Can Buy Them Cheaply At The ARCHWAY SEWING ROOM 132ai2 N. 24th Street I ALWAYS ASK FOR FORBES’ BAKERY PRODUCTS AT YOUR GROCER 2711 North 24th St. Compliments of MONTGOMERY CROCERY We carry a full line of groceries and Fresh Vegetables. Give us a Trial. 2531 Lake St. We. 0226 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 I workers- Similar action has been taken by Councils in Ohio, Pennsyl vana, New Jersey and other states, followng the request made by the National Urban League on behalf of the proposed amendment. L. B. Granger, Secretary of the Workers’ Bureau of the National Urban League, isued a statement this week condemning the inadequacy of the Wagner Bill from the standpoint of those workers most in need of protection. “The Bill,” said Granger, “gives the greatest protection to that part of labor least in need of it. It ig nores completely the undemocratic policies which organized labor has traditionally pursued with respect to Negro workers and often with re spect to Jewish or radical or for eign-born workers. In other words, it protects the right of labor to or ganize, but does nothiag to protect the right of minority groups to enter organized labor bodies. No union which brazenly bars workers from membership because of race or po litical and religious beliefs has any right to seek special protection from the Government in its attempts to organize - “Further, as Congressman Mar cantonio has pointed out, the Bill gives no protection to agricultural workers. Thus, the onion and beet growers of the Mid-West, the farm laborers of Imperial Valley, Cali fornia, the Tenant Farmers’ Union of Arkansas, the Sharecroppers' Unon of Alabama, are left out in the cold at the very time when bloody vio lence has shown conclusively that they need protection desperately. “Finally, the National Labor Re lations Board, which executes the provisions of the Bill is placed in the Department of Labor. With the ex ception of the present appointee, the Secretary of Labor has always been a political appointment, dominated by old-time, reactionary A. F. of L. : policies of fhe lowest type- This *s the sort of thing that the rank and file workers are trying to get away from, and the Wagner Bill simply fastens it more tightly around labor’s neck than ever before. Labor will w^ait long and vainly if it ex pects much real benefit to come from the Wagner Labor Disputes Bill as at present flamed, unless it be a benefit to the inside clique and its hirelings who now control the ma ch nery of the American Federation of Labor - ” Rap Chapman For Jim Crow Beach Springfield, 111., June 23—Cam paign for a Jim Crow bathing beach for Springfield, has been roundly condemned by Simon D Osby, Jr.. Vice president of the loeal branch of the X. A. A. C. P. here. [ Ip tie Countv Court cf Douglas County, Nebraska. In the Matter cf the Estate of Board Battles, Deceased: All persons interested in said mat v 3 hereby notified that on the 26th day of June, 1935, Joseph D. ,Lewis filed a petition in said County i Court, praying that his final adminis tration account filed herein be settled and allowed, and that he be discharg ed from his trust as administrator and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said Court on the 20th day of July, 1935, and that if you fail to appear before sa.d Court on the said 20th day of July, 1935 at 9 o’clock A. M , and contest said pe tition, the Court may grant the pray er of said petition, enter a decree of heirship, and make such other and further orders, allowances and de crees, as to this Court may seem pro per, to the end that all matters per taining to said estate may be finally settled and determined. Begins 6-29-35 Bryce Crawford Ends 7-13-35 County Judge Summer Milk Fund Drive Now Open New York, —Two hundred and fifty children, among them the younger brothers and sisters of the Scottsboro boys, will receive a regular supply of milk this summer, many of them for the first time in years, through the ?fforts of the Prisoners Relief De partment of the International Labor Defense, which on June 15 opened a special drive for a sum mer milk fund for the children ol political prisoners. The children of the . political prisoners suffer because of the persecution of their parents. Al most all of these families have been desperately poor. Now with the family’s bread-winnei behind the bars, the lot of these children has become a monoto nous grind of destitution a*nd want. Only the Prisoners Relie! Department of the I. L. D. come; to the aid of these children. Th>> summer, a special drive is bein' made to keep them supplied wit! milk. Tn almost every state in the union, are men and women sen tenced to jail for the “crime” ol standing up for their rights, ol asking for more wages, beitei conditions, equality for the Negro people. To these prisoners the Prisoners Relief Department sends books, newspapers, letters, tobacco, and a small sum ol money for prison comforts. The families of the prisoners receive a money order to help keep body and soul together. The Seottsboro boys were mere children when they were first framed up to elie in the electric chair. But in spite of tlia/ir youth, they were out in search of jobs'* for without their small earnings the families could not make ends meet. Almost every one of these boys left behind him younger brothers and sisters. Roy and Andy Wright, for example, left a small sister, Lucille, in Chattanooga. The mothers of all the Seottsboro boys have been desperately hard put to provide for their families. In the heart of the Alabama Black Belt, are 18 small children who, young as they are, are forc ed to drag a cotton sack through the fie'ds beside the;r mothers. The fathers of these children are serving sentences of five to fifteen years in various Alabama prisons. Their “crime” was defending a neighbor from an attack by a sheriff's posse, sent to murder him after he had refused to sur render his only mule to the land loru. On the chain-gang in Alabama, are Fred Walker and Pete Tur ney, two Negro workers, caught in the general raids when police spread a dragnet for all militant people in the terror ridden city of Birmingham. Walker left one child, and Turney two, when they were shackled in chains on the Alabama roads. Sea tered over the country are many other children, Negro and white, whose fathers were jailed because they stood up for their rights, or were thrown into pris on on the ancient, lying charge of ‘‘rape.” For these children, as t‘or all the 250 children of political prisoners in the United Stntds, the Prisoners Relief Department of the International Labor De fense is striving to make life a ittle easier and a little pleasanter. Funds for the summer milk campaign should he sent to the Prisoners Relief Department, In ternational Labor Defense, 80 toast 11th, .Street, New York City. United States Recruiting- Office Fort Huachuca, Arizona, June 17, L935. Special To The Omaha Guide, 2418-29 Grant St. Omaha, Neb raska. Gentlemen: On July 1, 1935 the 25th United States Infantry, stationed at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, will begin the enlistment of 421 colored youths to fill vacancies which will exist on that date by reason of the recent increase in the enlisted strength of the Army. There is attached hereto copy )f an article which appeared in the May 25th, 1935 edition of ‘The Bullet’ published weekly jy the 25th Infantry, which gives pertinent information. In the procurement of young men to fill these vacancies only m “Keep Cool” Wash Suits Properly Laundered SEER-SUCKER. 50c LINEN AND PALM BEACH.75c 10% Discount Cash and Carry EMERSON LAUNDRY ' and ZORIC DRY CLEANERS 2324 North 24th Street WEbster 1029 the most desirable types of young colored men between the ages of 18 and 35 years of age who are physically and morally fit, who have completed at least a gram mar school education are sought. To our colored men it is heliev- ' ed that Army service with its ! many advantages for bettering ’ their conditions, and prospects of ; adequate renumeraiton upon re tirement on completion of 30 years service which would guar | an,tee a nindependent income in i declining years, is, in itself, an in centive to those who are intelli gent and ambitious. Your aid and cooperation are ( earnestly solicited in this cam i naign by means of encouraging desirable types of young colored i men to tn fill vacancies I which would exist, and by dis seminating in your community | the information embodied in the article appearing in the attached | extract copy of “The Bullet’’ and I in this letter. All eligibles who are interested may write to this Recruiting Of I fice and the necessary application j blanks will be furnished. Hoping that we shall receive 1 your hearty co-operation, and the favor of a reply as to your inter est in this matter. T am, Yours very truly, Signed: Rudolph R, Alamos. Master Sergeant. 25th. Infantry, Assistanr to Recruiting Officer. DECEASED Mrs Caroline Brannon, Fremont. ; Nebraska, died June 15th at her home. Mrs. Brannon was born in Missouri, August 10th, 1847.. She married at an early age, and with her husband, Benjamin F. Brannon, came to Nebraska, at one time living in Omaha. She was a most devout Christian and one of the chapter members of theA- M. E.. church in Fremont. A son, Clyde R. Brannon, a first Lieutenant in the recent World war, preceded her in death, and a daugh ter, Mrs. Vina Bell, died just eight days previous to Mrs. Brannon’s death. She leaves two daughters, Mrs. W. S Watts and Mrs. Gus Herndon, of Fremont, two sons, Charles Bran no i, Fremont, and Austin Brannon, Omaha sixteen grandchildren and tv nty great grand children. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. A. E. Newton, Beatrice, I Nevraska, and Rev. W. S Metcalf, of Omaha. Music was furnished by Mrs Burton of Omaha and Mrs. Adams of Birmingham, Alabama Floral tributes were beautiful, and burial was in Ridge Cemetery with her husband, the late B. F. Branon, Omaha; sixteen grandchildren and twenty great grandchildren. HERMAN’S MARKET 24th Lake Sts. WE 5444 SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY CREAMERY BUTTER Per Lb.■ PURE LARD Lb... OMAHA FAMILY Soap iu cars For.■ PALM OLIVE SOAP Four Bars For . GINGER ALE Quarts. —Deposit for Bottles— SUNKIST LEMONS Per Dozen. ORANGES Dozen . Per In our Meat Depart ment You Find the Choicest Meat and Fresh Dressed Poultry ALWAYS. Prices Reasonable. We Deliver