The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, August 10, 1935, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    BUILD Your Own COMMUNITY By Patronizing Your Naborhood Stores
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 O R DOUBLE DECK
CLUB SANDWICH
Call
OMAHA POULTRY MARKET
1114 N. 24th St., We 1100
FRESH EGGS. FRESH DRESSED
POULTRY
While You Wait.
Mrr«: „ m tb ~ rs hi. Ji-. mmmmm jnesaani
Do You Want Naturally Wavy
Hair?
Try Our
CROQUINGNOLE MARCEL
WAVE
Affords Numerous Changes of
r oiffure.
CHRISTINE ALTHOUSE
BEAUTY SALON
2422 N. 22—WE. 0846
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.
n VONE_? 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 & SON
Grocery
Now Located at 1410 N. 24 Street
We wish to thank our patrons
for their patronage and hope to
continue to serve you.
Phone—JA. 4118
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
f EXPRESS
PHONE JA 8585 RES WE-1055
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 WTork Guaranteed
IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL
MAYO’S BARBER SHOP
i
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 Com
Carmel Com 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
Legal Notices
PROBATE NOTICE
In the matter of the Estate of
Lucy Jones, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given:—That the
'■rcditors of said deceased will meet
tho administrator of said estate, be
fore me, County Judge of Douglas
County, Nebraska, at the County
Court Room, in said County, on the
3rd day of October, 1935, and on the
3rd day of December, 1935, at 9 o’clock
A. M., each day, for the purpose of
presenting their claims for examina
tion, adjustment and allowance. Three
months are allowed for the creditors
to present their claims, from the 3rd
day of September, 1935.
Began 8-10-35 Bryce Crawford.
Ends 8-29-35 County Judge
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.
Mothers—Let your boys be Guide
newsboys. Send them to the Omaha
iuide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street.
$52,000 FUND CREATED
New York, Aug. 7, (ANP)—The
National Urban League' announced
Wednesday that the executive board
had created a $25,000 Fellowshp
' Fund whch will be known as the Ruth
Standish Baldwin Fellowship Fund.
The Fund is to be raised as a fea
ture of the 25th Annversary of the
National Urban League which will
be commemorated this fall.
The huge number of applications
for Urban League fellowships each
year from young college graduates of
high standing prompted the Urban
League to create these additional
scholarships in order to be able to
aid a larger number of deserving
young men and women desirous of
entering the field of social work.
This year 165 fellowship examina
tions were given, and the few fellow
ships available indicate that there is
a great need for larger funds in or
der to meet the demand.
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
I plied with.
HERMAN’S
MARKET
WE-5444 24th and Lake Sts.
The Best Quality Food at the Very Lowest
Prices
WE DELIVER
CHAMPION CIGAR STORE
DIRECT WIRE ON ALL SPORT EVENTS
JA. 4777 Ladies Welcome 2047 No. 24
__.__
THULL’S ANNEX
24th and Seward
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE—Free Special Delivery Service
BUD McM AN*iGAL, Prop. JAckson 8054
AMERICAN MEMORIAL CO. I
Twentieth & Cumings St.
MONUMENTS AND MARKERS
PHONE ATla-tic 4927 All Work Guaranteed
“We hare served your friends”—Ask them
TUCHMAN 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, Nebr.
V _
Kangaroo Court Gives
A Big Benefit Picnic
Twelve hundred children from the
Masonic home for Children, St. James
Orphanage, C. C. Fresh Air Camp,
Minerva’s Cottage for Girls, Bee
News Ice and Milk Fund will receive
free dinner and supper.
Many valuable prizes will be given
away. Entertainment will start at
10 A. M. and continue throughout
the day featuring ball games, num
erous races, melon eating contest, pie
eating contest, ladies slipper kick, etc.
A large amount of merchandise has
been contributed to be auctioned off
during the afternoon. Miss Agnes
Britton and her Radio Vanities will
entertain. Don’t miss seeing them.
Come and bring the family enter
the contests, buy merchandise at your
own price, also win yourself a valua
ble prize. Prizes will be awarded at
10:00 P. M. Ask your merchant for
tickets that will admit you to the
park, give you free rides and chances
on the prizes^
Mothers—Let your boys be Guide
newsboys. Send them to the Omaha
Guide Office, 2418-20 Grant Street.
MAN FIRED AT SIX TIMES
Sonford, Fla. Aug. 7, (ANP)—
Butcher Hawkins of this city was
fired at six times Tuesday by his
wife. Mrs. Hawkins was fined 50
dollars.
Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t
get your paper by Saturday, 2 p. m.,
call Webster 1750. No reduction in
nubscriptions unless request is com
plied with.
TOOK OFF 17 LBS.
OF HOLY FAT
HEEDED DOCTOR’S ADVICE
Mrs. Robert Hickey, Roseville
a if., writes; "My doctor prescribed’
Krwchen Salts for me—he said they
£st nib11"-'' Rme in the Ieast- rve
worti t Weeks' Kruschen is
worth its weight in gold."
Mrs. Hickey paid no attention to
gossipers who said there was no
safe way to reduce. She wisely fol
YOU? her doctor’* advice. Why don't
i w1eksJaranaKrU8?he? to-daY (lasts
*. weeks and costs but a trifle)
tak® half teasP°°nful in cup
'ruggistrater CVery mornin&- AU
TIRED, WORN OUT,
NO AMBITION
HOW many
**men are
just dragging them
selves around, all
| tired out with peri
odic weakness and
pain? They should
know that Lydia
E. Piakham’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. <
ALWAYS ASK
FOR
FORBES’
BAKERY
PRODUCTS
AT YOUR GROCER
2711 North 24th St.
Compliments of
MONTGOMERY CROCERY
1
| We carry a full line of groceries and \
Fresh Vegetables. Give us a Trial. ‘
2531 Lake St. We. 0226 '
______ 1
LOOK! I
!:
WITH EACH OIL CHANGE m.
WE GIVE A COMPLETE ;
GREASE JOB \
No Extra Charge :
24 HOUR TOW IN AND
REPAIR SERVICE l,
Walker Garage No. 5 }
i
■
24 and Lake Sts. Tel JA-7086 !■
Nazi Press
Features Lynshing
•
i i
New York, Aug- 2—Photo
graphs of the lynched body of
Rubin Stacy, who was killed by a
mob at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on
July 19, are being featured in
German newspapers, according to
dispatches received here this
week, as an answer to protests
from the United States against
the persecution in Germany of
Jews, Catholics, Communists and
W ar veterans. The finger of scorn
is being pointed at the United
States with sharp editorial com
ment to the effect that America
0
should clean its own house before
it attempts to tell other nations
how they should manage their af
fairs.
Photographs of the lynching of
Claude Neal and the report of the
N. A. A. C. P. investigation of
that lynching are being published
in newspapers throughout the
world. Clippings of newspapers
and magazine articles of editori
al comment on the Claude Neal
and other lynchings are being
constantly received by the N. A.
a . as iar as irs means will
permit, the N- A. A. C. P. plans
to continue its campaign of pub
licizing throughout the world the
treatment of the Negro in the
United States. It hopes to be able
to extend this publicity both, in
its appeal to world opinion for tis
effect upon the status of the Ne
gro in the United States, and be
cause of the increasingly interna
tional importance of the race
problems.
Senator William H. Kjng of
l tah, who recently denounced
Nazi persecution of Jews and
Catholics and who has introduced
in the United States Senate a res
olution for an investigation of
conditions in Germany, has been
asked by the N. A. A. C. P. what
he proposes to do about lynching.
Senator King was one of the sena
tors who voted consistently for
adjournment, during the recent
filibuster against the Csotigan
Wagner anti-lynching bill. The
N. A. A. C. P- sharply queries
Senator King regarding the “ap
parent conflict between your so
licitude for oppressed peoples in
Germany and your indiffernece
;f not hostility, to efforts to end
equally barbarous practices in our
own country.’’ Senator King was
asked, “(an you explain how
America can with good grace pro
test against what is happening in
Germany or anywhere else outside
>f the United States, as long as
A-e do nothing about lvnehings in
lour own country?” and he is re
minded* that, terrible as condi
tions are in Germany, that coun
try “has not yet sunk to our own
level of burning human beings at
the stake and inflicting unbeliev
ably sadistic torture upon their
victims, as is done in our own
country.”
COUNCIL BLUFFS NEWS
N. A. A. C. P. Committee to 'inves
tigate Extradition Case.
Rev. Geo. Slater Jr., Rev. Reynolds,
Rev. White, Mr. Manson James, and
Mr. George Cooper of the N. A. A.
! C. P- were appo nted as a committee
I to investigate the case of Mr. La Rue
! Gilbert who was taken from the coun
ty jail and turned over to authori
1 tics from Texas without the Benefit
of an extradition hearing. Mr. Gil
bert had completed a one year sen
tence in the county jail when author
ities from Texas said he was wanted
on a charge of forgery.
Mr. Shong Dickson and friends
drove to Chicago Sunday in order to
attend the Loii.s Levnsky fight
Wednesday.
Mr. Elmer Nowling of 1827 N. 23rd
Street left Friday night for Baker
field and other points in California.
He plans to stay there indefinitely.
A buffet supper was given Sunday
evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Bud Akers, honoring the birthday of
Mr. Henry Hamilton. Guests pres
ent were Mr. and Mrs. /Jim Mize, Mr.
and Mrs. C. Herndon, Mr. and Mrs.
Turner, Mr. James Hope, Mr. Johnny
Floyd. Mrs. Myrtle Goodlow, Misses
OPive Goodlow, Geraldine Herndon,
Evelyn Akers, Cleo Wright, Wilma
Herndon, Mildred Akers, Eddiestean
Seals.
Mr. Ralph Adams, Omaha Attor
ney, was the principal speaker at an
emancipation program given at the
Bethel A. M. E. church Sunday after
noon. Mr. Adams substituted for his
brother John Adams, Jr., who is ill.
A pew rally was also conducted by j
the trustees of the church. Pew
leaders were Miss Tulseye Hender
son, Mesdames Cooper, Alice Davis,
Eva Finyolson, Elizabeth Wilson,
George Slater Jr., Minnie Herndon,
Mr. William Fox, Geo. Stovall and
Rev. Geo. Slater, Jr.
_
A musical will be given at Taber
nacle Baptist church, Aug. 8th in
honor of the first anniversary of the
pastor of the church, Rev. White.
Tho musical is under the direction
of Mrs. W^ Teale.
-,
On Aug. 18, Rev. P. G. Price, will be
tho principal speaker at the anni
versary service of the Tabernacle
Baptist church. All are welcome.
Miss Evelyn Evans an Omaha
Nurse and Mr. Riley Nelson juvenile
officer of Council Bluffs were the
principal speakers at the picnic giv
en at Cockran park, Aug. 5th, by the
Bethel A. M. E. church. The picnic
climaxed a two day emancipation
celebration.
Damp Wash
\
820 Per Pound
Minimum bundle 48c
Edholm & Sherman
LAUNDERER AND DRY CLEANERS
2401 North 24th St. We 6055
‘‘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
TENTH LYNCHING OF YEAR
DEMAND PASSAGE OF THE
COSTIGAN-WAGNER BILL
Roosevelt Asked by N. A. A. C. P. to
Urge Congress to Pass Anti-Lynch
ing Bill Before Adjournment; Sen
ator Bailey of North Carolina
< hallenged to Prove that State
Can Prevent Lynching* Without
Federal Aid.
Now York. July 31.—The lynching
of Go van Ward at Louis burg. North
CaroL'na, yesterday caused the send
ing of the following telegrams to
President Roosevelt and Senator
Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina,
today by the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored Peo
ple. The telegram to President
Roosevelt read:
The tenth lynching of 1935 oc- I
curred at Lousburg, North Carolina, j
yesterday when a man, alleged to be
insane, was put to death in the State
of Senator Josiah W. Bailey, one of
the most vociferous leaders of the
filibuster against the Costigan-Wag
ner anti-lynching bill. This is the
fifth lynching since the filibusters
succeeded in sidetracking the anti
lynch ng bill. Should Congress ad
journ without acting against lynch
-ng it is probable and almjost certain
that human beings now alive will fall
victims to mobs. Situation necessi
tates your urging upon Congress
that it act without delay to pass
Costigan-Wagner bill. Our country
cannot with good grace denounce
barbarism in Nazi Germany as lang
as these mcb outrages disgrace
America.”
The telegram to Senator Bailey,
one of the leaders in the filibuster
which sidetracked the Oostigan-Wag
ner bill in April, though 59 Senators
were pledged to vote for the bill,
read:
“On April 26 you vigorously at
tacked the Costigan-Wagner anti
lynching b.ll and asserted that ‘we
need no incentive to do our duty’ in
preventing lynching or punishing
*>nchers. Yesterday a mob in your
own State, at Louisburg, presented
you and *he State of North Carolina
with a challenge to prove the truth
of your statement of 9pril 26.
many white ci tizens of North Caro
lina, do not believe that lynching
can be stopped except by federal ac
tion. The eyes of the world will be
upon you and your State to see if
you spoke truthfully when you fili
bustered against the Costigan-Wag
ter bill.”
Mrs. Gertrude Galloway returned
Tuesday from a short business trip
in Kansas City, Mo.
Notice, Subscribers: If you don’t
get your paper by Saturday, 2 p. m.,
call Webster 1750. No reduction hi
subscriptions unless request is com
plied with.
When Poisons Clog
Kidneys
and Irritate Bladder
JUST DO THIS
Go to your druggist today and get
this safe, swift and hariViless diuretic
and stimulant—ask for Gold KedaJ
Haarlem Oil Capsules and start at
once to flush kidneys of waste mat
ter saturated with acids and poisons
That’s the way to bring about heal
thy kidney activity and stop that blad
der irritation which often causes scan
ty passage with smarting and burn
ing as well as restless nights.
Remember the kidneys often need
'flushing as well as the bowels and
some symptoms of kidney weakness
are: Getting up once or twice during
the night—puffy eyes—cramps in legs
backache and moist palms. But be
sure and get GOLD MEDAL Haarlem
Oil Capsules—the or.ginal and genu
ine—right from Haarlem in Holland
—the price is small (35c cents) the
good results will fulfill your expecta
tions.
Dept. NP-3
Keg til Hr 50o Bidden
It re II II Algerian Main
I.lick Hue. also samples
Han Dressing Ointment
I'ovvde
and Beauty Bonk all
FREE'
Just stnd irC coin or
stamps t« cover shipping
cos's. No obligation. At
tractive A ils offer is
also In- lu^ Write N P
Bolden Brown ( Item. t o.
Memphis Town
Dept. N P-59