The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, August 03, 1935, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores
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
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 6AM 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
■——. Ml ||
Call
OMAHA POULTRY MARKET
. 1114 N. 24th St., We- 1100
FRESH EGGS, FRESH DRESSED
POULTRY
While You W'ait
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
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
C. H. HALL
EXPRESS
PHONE JA 8585 RES WE-1056
WE MOVE WITH CARE
Office: 1465 N 24th St. 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.
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
WHY WANT TAILORED
CLOTHES
(Suits A Specialty, $4.05)
At Expensive Prices When Yon Can
Buy Them Cheaply At The
ARCHWAY SEWING ROOM
132a Ms N. 24th Street
^HERMAN'S
MARKET
WE-5444 24th and Lake Sts.
The Best Quality Food at the Very Lowest
Prices
WE DELIVER
I ___—___—
CHAMPION CIGAR STORE
DIRECT WIRE ON ALL SPORT EVENTS
JA 4777 Ladies Wefcome 2047 No. 24
THULL’S ANNEX
24th and Seward
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE—Free Special Delivery Service
BUD McMAQTiGAL, Prop. JAckson 8954
AMERICAN MEMORIAL CO.
Twentieth & Cumings St.
MONUMENTS AND MARKERS
PHONE ATlantic 4927 All Work Guaranteed
“We have served your friends”—Ask them
Be Independent. . .
NO DOWN PAYMENT
Be independent, make money, enroll for a beauty course
before August first. Day or night classes. $2.00 a week.
No down payment.
NORTH SIDE BEAUTY SCHOOL
2204 Ohio Street Omaha, Nebr.
MRS K. WILSON
TUCNMAN BROS
■
The North-Side’s Largest “Food Market.”
Lowest Prices on Quality Foods
WE-0402 24th and LAKE
CRISP FRESH VEGETABLES DAILY
WE NOW FILL GOVERNMENT
RELIEF ORDERS
LET US HELP YOU SELECT FOODS
FOR YOUR
■
PICNICS, LUNCHES, AND DINNERS
Get Your Relief Orders Filled at a
Store That Carries the Largest Line
of Fruits and Babv Beef at Popular
Prices.
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, Nehr.
Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t
get your paper by Saturday, 2 p. m.»
call Webster 1750. No reduction in
subscriptions unless request is com
plied with.
SWANSON
Plumbing Co.
Plumbing—Heating and
Repairing.
1918 Cuming St.
E. A. Backlund, Mgr.
Phone JA-3434 Night JA-4356
Young Physician Had
No Warning of Attack;
Bleeds to Death
PITTSBURGH, K a s. —
Without warning Dr. Edwin T.
Cuntiff, 30-year-old physician,
was shot and killed Saturday
night, July 27, by Edward M.
Graham, 43, as he sat on the front
porch of the Graham home, 206
West First street.
Graham, who surrendered
shortly after the shooting, stood
inside his borne and fired two
shots bt the young doctor through
the screen door, an investigation!
by police showed.
Dr. Cuiidiff. who coiiipleted his
internship at General hospital
No. 2 in Kansas City, Mo., in
June, 1934, bled to death from
the effects of a bullet which sev-j
ered an artery in the right leg.
Another bullet which went
through the doctor’s left hand
was not serious.
Pleads Not Guilty.
Arraigned on a charge of first
degree murder before Judge
Wayne Phelps Monda ymorning,
Graham entered a formal plea of
not guilty. He waived prelimin
aryhearing and was bound over
to the next term of district court
for trial. His bond was set at'
$3,500.
He told police that he shot Dr.
Cundiff because he believed the
young physician had been too
friendly with his wife, Mrs. Cleo
patra Graham, 40, who was on the
Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t
Set your paper by Saturday, 2 p. m.,
call Webster 1750. No reduction in
subscriptions unless request is com
plied with.
TOOK OFF 17 LBS.
OF UGLY FAT
HEEDED DOCTOR’S ADVICE
Calif8 Roseville,
’ 1 *es- My doctor prescribed
wiu?dn'71»fa!.tS for.rne—he said they
lost 17 lbs Uf*n if06 '"the least. I’ve
lost jpg. in g weeks. Kruschen is
worth Us weight in gold.” " ‘S
^‘r.s’ IIick* y paid no attention to
gosstpers who said there was no
i*ofeJVuy t0 reduce- She wisely fDl
YOU? hCr doctor’s "dvice. Wh> don’t
4 ^eksjaie?f,KrUStChe? to-day (lasts
’■•■Jr*5, and costs but a triflel
•if hit tak" half teaspoonful in cup
i?ugglstrater eVery coming. AU
TIRED, WORN OUT,
NO AM3ITI0N
HOW 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 25 cents.
• Mrs. Dorsie Williams of Danville,
Illinois, says, “I had no ambition
and was terribly nervous. Your Tab
lcts^helped my periods and built me
up." Try them next month.
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
Cigars are too strong for me
I’H g° in the house and get some
cigarettes,” Graham said, accord
ing to his wife’s statement.
A few minutes later, Mrs. Grah
am said that she heard the report
of a pistol and heard Dr. Cundiff
who was sitting beside her ex
claim, “Lord, I’m dhot.”
Mrs. Graham said that she fell
over the porch railing about five
feet to the ground with the first
shot. She got up and ran around
the house, she said, meeting her
husband who admited that he had
fired the shot.
Graham telephoned the police
station, saying “I shot a man ’
and then left his home for the
station. Mrs. Graham called an
ambulance.
Admits Firing Shot.
Mrs. Graham told police that
there was no intimation that a
shooting was to occur and that
no argument or disagreement
took place between the two men.
' When Graham Jr. returned
home shortly after the shooting
and ask who shot the doctor,
Mrs. Graham told him, “Your
dady shot him,” according to po
lice.
Dr. Cundiff died within a few
minutes after he was shot. The
fatal bulet entered his right hip,
about even with the hip bone,
went forward through the groin,
severing the femural artery and
plunging through the skin of the
left leg according to Dr. C. S.
Newman, acting coroner.
Had Good Record.
Graham had been employed for
10 years as custodian at the Pitts
burg public library. Officers said
that he had never been in any
trouble before and that on Satur
day morning he had stopped by
the police station hnd asked,
hat is the penalty for a man
to slap down another in case the
latter man had been intimate
with the former’s wife?”
i JJr. Lundiff was graduated
from the Howard university
school of medicine in June, 193,
and took his in-terneship at Gen
eral hospital No. 2 in 1933-34. He
came here to practice about a
year ago. His office and living
quarters were at 110 1-2 West
Third stree.
The. physician’s former home
was Homestead, Pa. His body1
porch talking to the doctor when
the shooting occurred.
Dr. Cundiff, who was not mar
ried, called at the Graham home
early Sunday evening to make a
professional call on Edward
Graham Jr., a s udent at the
Pittsburg State Teachers college.
Mrs. Graham told police that
she and Dr. Cundiff were, sitting
on her front porch talking when
her husband came home about 8
o'clock. Graham asked the
physician for a cigarette, Mrs.
Graham told police, and Dr. Cun
diff having no cigarettes offered
Graham a cigar.
was sent to Pittsburgh, Pa., for
iburial Tuesday after lying in
; state at the Ellsworth funeral
chapel Monlay.
He is survived by his parents,
a sister and two brothers, all in
Pennsylvania.
Ita'o-E'.hiopian Situation in Brief.
Geneva—Italv, Britain clash over
I. ague council topes; Ethiopia says
arbitration “hopeless.” report plan
to keep Italian and Ethiopian arms
stacked during negotiations.
Addis Ababa—War chiefs meet, tell
world Ethiopia will not barter her
independence; war preparations
speeded.
Rome—Mussolini’s newspaper insists
“total solutions” necessary; war
monopoly of coal, coke, copper,
minerals decreed.
Aden, Arabia—Reuters (British4)
news agency reports Ethiopia
seeking Yemenese recruits.
Paris—French place hope for peace
in Premer Laval’s mediation at
Geneva.
London—Informed quarters preset
Italy to demand full control over
Ethiopia.
Cardiff, Wales—Maj. L. Nathan,
Labor M. P., tells political meeting
Italian war on Ethiopia would be
“crime against international law
as black as vidlotion of Belgium’s
neutrality 21 years ago.”
Cleveland—“Fiends of Ethiopia”
society launched after speakng
ers protest Italy’s plans for war.
A plan to keep the arms of Italy
and Ethiopia stacked while their
bitter quarrel is subjected to renew
ed arbitration was reported unoffi
cially to have emerged Wednesday
night from Franco-British conver
sations behind the scenes of the
League of Nations council session
at Geneva.
Premier Pierre Laval of France
and Anthony Eden, Britain, took up
the delicate problem of averting war
n two talks and reputedly agreed up
on a formula for council action that
would include:
Damp Wash
3!c Per Pound
Minimum bundle 48c
Edholm & Sherman
LAlJNDERER and dry cleaners
2401 North 24th St. W e GOoo
“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
!• Continuation of conciliation,
which bogged down in the deadlock
of the conciliation commission at
Schevengen.
War Measures Barred
2. Neither Italy nor Ethiopia
wii! resort to war measures in the
meantime.
3. A fifth arbitrator will be ap
pointed to the deadlocked commis
sion.
4. Signatures to the 1906 trea
ty between France, Great Britain
and Italy, guaranteeing independ
ence and territorial integrity for
Ethiopia, will help to secure a gen
eral solution.
Whether Italy would agree to the
reported draft was a matter of ap
prehension., since it was hinted Mus
solini was unwilling to have men
tioned the matter of non-resort to
force.
Approves Modifications
The formula was understood to
have been agreed upon after Pre
mier Laval approved modifications
demanded by Eden.
An open clash developed in the
council earlier Wednesday between
Great Britan and Jtaly when the lat
ter demanded the dscussion be lim
ited to mere arbitration of immed
I iat •! troubles.
Ethiopia’s representative, Prof.
Gp.ston Jee, who tacked up Britin’s
demand that the council’s agenda not
fc-e restricted, toid the council arbi
tration had failed and there seeced
“no hope of its succeeding.” He
added:
The general situation between
Italy and Ethiopia is steadily grow
ing worse.”
Italy ‘Sole Judge’
Meanwhile in Rome, Mussolini
seized Control of Italy’s metal and
fuel imports for possible war use
while his newspaper. II Popolo D’ltal
ian renewed demands for “total so
lution of the quarrel with Ethiopia.
“The only judge is Italy,” II
Popolo said in an editorial believed
written by II Duce.
Two royal decrees ssued Wednes
day marked another phase of Italy’s
intensive preparation. One gave the
government a monopoly of coal, coke
and their by-products and of copper,
tin, nickel, sheet and other needed
metals. The other empowered the
government to requisition shipping
for troop transport.
II Popolo’s article cited “the vital
needs of the Italian people and the
nation’s security in east Africa’’ as
“irrefutable arguments’’ supporting
Italy.
Emperor Saile Selassie’s Addis
Ababa government—hoping for peace
—told the woi'ld simultaneously
Ethiopia’s independence was not for
sale or barter.
A defiant foreign office commu
nique declaiming Ethiopia would re
fuse outright an Italian or other
mandate appeai'ed as the emperor
met secretly with chieftains.
What A Subscriber
Thinks of The
Omaha Guide
Mr. C. C. Galloway
2418 Grant St.
Omaha, Nebraska
Dear Editor of The Omaha Guide :
M e have been a subscriber of
vour paper for a short time, and
my family and Ienjoy reading it
immensely. We note with inter
est that the paper is steadily im
proving, and we hope for the edi
tor continued success.
. . Yours,
Ned Moore,
222 Decatur Street
Business Woman
Contemplates Divorce
Mrs. Pauline Hayden is expecting
to file for her divorce n the near
future. Mrs. Hayden is a successful
North 24th Grocery woman.
c
Attorney Ray L. Williams, Room 200,
Tuchman Bldg., 24tfi and Lake Street
PROBATE NOTICE
•Tn the Matter of theEstate of
Mary Teel. Deceased.
Notice is hereby given: That the
creditors of said deceased will meet
the administrator of sad estate, be
fore me, County Judge of Douglas
County, Nebraska, at the County
Court Room, in said County, on the
26th day of September, 1935, and on
the 26th day of November, 1935, at
9 o clock A. M., each day, for the
purpose of presenting their claims
for examination, adjustment and al
lowance. Three months are allowed
for the creditors to present their
claims, from the 26th day of August,
1935.
Begins 8-3-35 Bryce Crawford,
Ends 8-17-35 County Judge.
Attorney Ray L. Williams, Room 200,
Tuchman Bldg., 24th and Lake Street.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION ON
PETITION FOR SETTLEMENT
ACCOUNT—
! In the County Court of Douglas
County, Nebraska.
In the Matter of the Estate of
Hattie Austin Ford, Deceased:
All persons nterested in said mat
ter are hereby notified that on the
27th day of July, 1935, Maude Thomas
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 administratrix
and that a hearing wCIl be had on
said petition before said Court on
the 24th day of August, 1935, and
that if you fail to appear before said
Court on the said 24th day of August
1935 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, allowances
and decrees, as to ths Court may
seem proper, to the end that all mat
ters pertaining to said estate may
be finally settled and determined.
Begins 8-3-35 Bryce Crawford,
Expires 8-17-35 County Judge.