The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, December 12, 1936, CITY EDITION, Page THREE, Image 3

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NEWS NOTES
; I
-H. M. PUNCHES. EDITOR
i<M| i| | |t| | i| | | >f -I-« » ^
ENTERTAIN
Mr. and Mrs. John Turner
entertained at dinner Sunday,
Nov. 29, honoring Mr.s. Violet
Turner of Omah. Present were
some six persons.
Mr. James Holt’s condition is
still grave.
CHURCH VISITORS
Rev. Goldsmith, pastor of a
church at Red Oak, la., and Rev
Nicholson, pastor of church at
.Clarinda, la., were visitors in
the Tabernacle Baptist Church
Sunday night.
#
Ghitterling and Chili Supper
The Missionary Society of the
Tabernacle Baptist Church will
ling) and chili fcupper Friday,
give an African oyster (chitter
Dee. 11, at the home of Mrs.
Nannie Williams, 241-18 Ave.
CREDIT UNION MEETS
The Board of Directors of the
Bethel Credit Union met Tues
day evening at the Bethel Cen
ter.
Mrs. Iiila Mock, who lias been
ill, is greatly improved.
Mr. Iliro Nichols condition
is somewhat improved.
Mr. Dick Lyons, who is now
at 2107 S. 11 St., continues to
improve.
Mrs. Winston of Lawrence,
Kansas, has returned to her
home. Mrs. Winston came to
the city to attend the funeral
of her brother, Mr. Alfred Ber
ry.
Rev. C. E. Green has moved
to the Hiro Nichols, 1G28 Ave B
Miss Kaie Matthews of Kan
sas City, Mo., spent the week
visiting her cousin, Mrs. Blan
che Golden.
Mr. John Mock is ill in the
Edmondson hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Noah Washing
ton, who are confined at the
Edmondson Hospital as a re
sult of a cutting affray, are yet
in a critical condition. Report
has it that one of Mrs. Wash
ington’s eyes has had to be re
moved.
Master Adolph Brown return
ed to his home in Kansas City,
Mo., after making a six months
visit in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Golden.
Mra. M. Slater has been ill
with a cold.
Miss Opal Harris was the din
ner guest of Miss Irnla Mae Hall
on Sunday.
Mrs. Eva Finlayson was giv
en a beautiful fountain pen as
an award in a Bethel contest
Prize will he given Mrs. Hazel
Means Sunday, Dec. 13.
Bethel Sunday School will ,
have a Christmas tree. Watch
the columns of this paper for
exact date.
Connell Bluffs Agents For The
Omaha Guide Are
Me*. Clarence Oliphant, 2456- 6 Are
Little Savoy, 1408 W. Broadway
Misa Mary Teal, 1810 8. 10 t. '
Miss Odessa Russell, 1201-16 Ave.
Be# Your Nearest Agent and Buy
Buy A Guide
Keep Poated on Local Race News.
AMATEUR NIGHT
Friday, Doc. 1!, is Amateur
Night at Bethel Center. Every
one is urged to come out and
take part. Prizes will he award
ed.
At. present. Bethel Center is
busy dressing dolls and mend
ing toys to be, given to the child
ren at Christmas.
Mrs. Mabel Jaco will leave
this week for Salisbury. Mo., to
bring her mother, Mrs. Lewis,
to the city for the holidays.
Miss Lula Mae Hall, who ha
been indisposed, is back on the
job again.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reynold.
and family will be the dinner
guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. H
Reynolds Christinas Day.
Esther Beckner and Allen
Moss were the winners in the
Amateur Contest held Friday
night, Bee. 4, at Bethel Center
Gateway Quartette of Oma
ha, appeared at Beulah Baptisl
Church Thurslay evening.
Cleverettes to Give F estival
The Cleverettes, Counci
Bluffs’ up-to-the-minute clul
will give a Winter Festival Dee
29, at Eagle Ilall. On the squart
if you don’t want to be disap
pointed, you’d better ge tyoui
tickets early for they are go
ing, Going, and soon they wil
he GONE.
The Cleverettes met Sunday
with Miss Corinthia Harvey
The next meeting will be witl
1 Mrs. Maderia Harvey on Bee
13th.
HUSBAND AND WIFE
TO DIE FOR MURDE5
Si1.L*>uis, Dec. 12 (By Floyd J
Collins for ANP)—Allen Mitchel
32 and his wife, Mrs. Minnie Mit
chel, 31, of Fireworks Station, neai
East St. Louis, were found guilty
of first degree murder and sen
tenced to die in the electric chaii
by a jury in an East St. Louis City
Court after four hours delibera
tion.
Levirt Dowdy, 31, who was jointly
charged with the Mitchels, entered a
plea of guilty. He was the chief wit
ness for the state. His sentence
was deferred.
The three were charged with the
murder of Samuel Simpson, 52, in
order to collect $386 in insurance.
Simpson, who lived with Mitchel,
was found unconscious in a lot on
July 26th. He died several hours
later from a fractured skull, which
was caused by a blow with a ham
mer.
Assistant State’s Attorney Wen
dell Phillips introduced evidence
which showed Mrs. Mitchel was
made beneficiary of the insurance.
Dowdy admitted on the witness
stand he assisted the Mitchels in
beating Simpson but declared he
didnot know of the insurance, buit
but thought Simpson had some bon
us money in his possession that he
would share in.
HEFT & NOYES
MONUMENTS AND
MARKERS
At Reasonable Prices
40th and Forest Lawn
KE 1738
»o U; yon nt
**«-, No COM borocd hopo. stop m
i*pt. o. Jersey City, W. J,/
-■"■a
OUR CHURCHES
TABERNACLE BAPTIST
CHURCH
Rtv Whit*. i i«tor
Regular service \vas held Sun-1
day morning. Rev. Geo. White
preached tlie morning sermon.
Covenant meeting was held in
place of the regular evening
meeting.
BETFET, V. M. F. CHURCH
16th Street, Avenue A
Rev. Geo- W. Slater, Jr., Pastor j
Regular services were held I
the past Sunday. Those pr sent
received the Holy Communion.
CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST
1618 Ave. B
Elder A. D. Carter, pastor
Regular services were h"ld
the past Sunday. Attendance
good.
Nigerians To Unveil
Monument To ‘Sand
ers Of The River’
* »
London, Dec. 12 (ANP)—“San
iders of the River,” Edgar Wallace’s
hero of the jungle and more recent
ly a film starring Paul Robeson and
Nina Mae McKinney, will be honor
ed by Nigerian natives over whom
he ruled by a memorial erected on
the highest hill in that section of
Africa with funds contributed by
native chiefs.
In private life, “Sanders” was
Sir Robert L. Bower, who was the
first British resident of Nigeria and
put down slave-traders, fetish-wor
shippers and peace-breakers gener
ally during the early 1890’s. The
legend of his power still remains in
Nigeria.
The new memorial is 65 feet high
and will be visible over practically
all of Bowers’ old territory. As it is
unveiled, native troops will salute
the inscription on the tablet to his
memory:
“ Okunrin na”—“This was a
Man”
His son, Commander R. T. Bow
. |er, a member of parliament, is mak
ing the trip to be present at the
ceremonies.
NYA CAMP FOR YOUNG
WOMEN IN FLORIDA
Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 12 (ANP)
—The Florida Division of NYA has
instituted a camp for unemployed
young colored women at Florida
Normal and Collegiate Institute, St.
Augustine, Fla. 60 girls are enroll
ed in the camp for a period of three
and one half months and work a
minimum of 60 hours on such pro
jects as home making, home plan
ning, recreation, health education
and hygiene.
PROTEST AGAINST MELON
EATING NEGRO IN WPA
MURAL PAINTING
New York, Dec. 12 (ANP)— Fol
lowing the pointed protest of a com
mittee composed of prominent cler
gymen lawyers and other business
and professional men, the objection
able figure of a Negro enjoying a
piece of watermelon—one of 300
figures in the big WPA mural in
the rotunda of the New York Coun
ty Court House—will be erased, and
another figure drawn in its place,
itwas learned this week.
ALBERTA’S
SANDWICH SHOP
Barbecue—Cold Drinks
Furnished Rooms
MRS. HARRY NORMAN
4827 S 26 St. MA 0957
w -or ■ • « » a * » a waaTaa a a a a a a aaaBBBBBaaa
Speakers Make Vivid
LIFE OF DR. HOPE
As Educator and Leader
Atlanta, Ga., Dee. 1H—John Hope
and his life as a teacher, an ad
ministrator, and a force In improv
ed relations among the races of the
world were made vivid to a great
gathering of students and other
friends and associates of the pre
sident of Atlanta university in Sis
ters Chapel, Spelman college. At
this memorial service, chief tribute
was puid Dr. Hope by Dr. Morde
cai W. Johnson, president of Ho
ward university, who has been suc
cessively a student, a fellow-teacher
and an associate with Mr Hope in
many enterprises, and by Dr. I/'uie
D, Newton, pastor of Atlanta’s
Druid Hill Rap ist church and a
trustee <>f Atlanta university and
Morehouse college. Dr. Newton
spoke on the memorial program in
place of Dr. W. W. Alexander whose
new duties as acting chief of the
Resettlement Administration forc
ed him to remain in Washington.
Three great achievements were
Dr Hope’s, any of which alone
would have made him a pre-emin
ent national figure, I)r. Johnson
said at the outset. He named as
these achievements the buliding of
Morehouse college into one of the
great undergraduate schools of the
United States: the organization of
the Atlanta unigersity system,
which by reason of the elements of
its organization, the amount and
character of its support, and the
scope of its program entitled it to
be regarded as a major work of
educational statesmanship, and, fin
ally, his rise to a position as the
trusted leader of interracial action,
not alone in the United States, but
throughout the world, and both by
white leaders of the south and by
his own people.
“The remarkable thing about
these accompishments,” I)r. John
son said, “was (hat Dr. Hope did
not set his eye on these great
positions, but they were instead
the achievements of a quiet, mod
est, Christian gentleman who
made his choices in confirmority
with his inner beliefs. He was like
a tree which grew by the river,
and put forth i<s leaf in season.”
In a dramatic, rapid review of
Dr. Hope’s life from the time he
was graduated from Brown univer
sity in 1894 until his death this
year as he head of the first uni
versity system for Negro youth in
the far south, Dr. Johnson stressed
the fact that' at the outset of his
career Dr. Hope deliberately chose
to return to his native state, and to
live for 30 years “with a sone’s
throw of the disadvantages he had
known as a youth.” He emphasiz
ed that while Dr. Hope might have
remained in the north and lived the
quiet, well nurtured life of a man
of culture, he figuratively descend
ed he ladder which he had climed
and spent his life helping others to
make their way upward.
John Hope was a great teacher,
Dr. Johnson declared, and he told
in detail from his own expreriences
if the technique he used in making
ilive for his classes the aKualities
if Greek literature and of ethics.
Fie was at the same time a master
’Ul administrator, the speaker said,
ind one who from the first took re
sponsibilities gladly and met them
PATRONIZE
OUR
ADVERTISERS
skilfully. In his long career as a
11-Ilege administrat e, I)r. Hope
looked upon the problem* of stu
dents as matters concerning humor
beings, Dr. Johnson said, and al
ways allowed his teachers freedom
t« think, to work, and to aet. Hi?
reverence for individual personal
ity was the center of his life's in
crest, he concluded.
Urgent business in connect ior
with his taking over the duties id
Administrator of the Resettlement
Administration force! Dr. Alexand
er to give up the plan he made
weeks ago to speak on this occast*>r
and obliged him to remain in Wash
ington, Acting President Florence
' M. Read of Atlanta university an
Inounced. In a telegram regretting
'his inability to reach Atlanta, Dr
Alexander said: ‘I regret that this
is the case but as I think Dr. Ho pi
who will be honored, I am sure that
my decisionis in agreement with
the spirit of Dr. Hope whose loyal
ity and devotion to the task immed
iately at hand were lie ruling mo
tives of his life.” Continuing thi
telegram read: “I have given few
men the unreserved confidence
which I had in Dr. Hope. His fri
endship will always be one of tht
high points of my experience. His
life is a source of inspiration ti
all who came in contact with him
and will continue to influence gen
erations to come.”
Speaking in Dr. Alexander s
place on the program, Dr. Newton
paid simple tribute to a man whom
he had long known and deeply ad
mired, one whom he characterized
as “not only a great educator of
our generation, but one of the
great spirits of all time.” Speaking
to the text, “He served his day and
generations, according to the will of
God,” Dr. Newton decared that Dr.
Hope was one who worked for the
good of his generation with great
earnestness, high courage, and un
flagging zeal. At his first meeting
with Dr. Hope, Dr. Newton said he
had been amazed at Mr. Hope’s
ability to do three things at the
same time, including the drafting
of an important resolution, and tc
do all three equally well. Admitted
ly, Dr. Newton said, John Hope liv
ed in advance of the great majoritj
nf his contemporaries, and servec
to quicken their pace.
In a paraphrase of the epitaph ir
I/mdon’s St. Paul Cathedral, “II
[you wohld know Sir Christophei
Wren, look about you," Dr. New
ton said one had only to look at At
lanta university to know Dr. Hope,
RABE’S
BUFFET
BEER
LIQUOR
SOFT DRINKS
DANCING
2425 N. 24th JA 9195
Nebraska Frban
League Holds Dinner
Lincoln, Ncl»r., Dec, 12 (ANP)—
Approximately 150 boys and men
attended the third annual father
j and son banquet Friday evening
sponsored by the Urban League a*
the Hi-Y building. In the principal
addreas, Bernard E. Squires, exe
cutive secretary <>f the Omaha Ur
ibe n League, told the fa1 hers that
they owed her sons, “good breeding,
good feeding and good tending.” lie
I told the sons, “go into partnership
| with your dads.” A special program
i of music was presented. T. T. Mc
Williams was master of ceremonies.
AMERICAN WIENER SHOP
or'0p N 21th. Stree*
REST CHi 1,1 AND Hf’ST
RED HOTS IN’
THE WEST
; Aid. KINDS of S WDWICIIES
____
GofJcn Brown
Hair Dressing
Makes your hair beautifully
•month and ea«y U» drew. Baina f
ii k package that raid by twll« J
Ilona at 60o. at vour favorita /
drug store NOW 2AO.
CAL LUCK BAG FREE!
Wk* Algerian Majo Lurk Hag
and inmiilt'i Hair Dressing. IN \
~ der. Ointment Pree Bend 10c to
cover mailing eoet Golden Hi own
Chemical Co., Dept. G, Memphis, Trim.
Stomach Gas
So Bad Seems
To Hurt Heart
“The gas on my stomach was so bad
I could not eat or sleep. Even my
heart germed to hurt. A friend eug
gested Adierika. The first dose I took
rought me relief. Now I eat as I
wish. sleep fine and never felt better/1
—Mrs. Jas. Filler.
Adierika acts on BOTH upper iWfd
lower bowele while ordinary laxative#
act on the lower bowel only. Adierika
give* your system a thorough cleans
ing, bringing out old, poisonous matter
that you would not believe was in your
system and that has been causing gas
pains, sour stomach, nervousness and
headaches for months.
Ifr. II. L. Shouh, York, reports!
"In addition to intestinal cleansing, Adlerikm
greatly reduces bacteria and colon bacilli ”
Give your bowels n REAL cleansing
with Adierika and see how good you
feel. Just one spoonful relieves GAS
and stubborn constipation*
AT ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
j TRIAL OFFER; For Special Trial
t reatment, send 10c, stamps or coin
to Adierika, Dept. 75, St. Paul,
Minn.
wmssasasssmsrmsmssmmmssm
WANTED TO BUY
100.000 Pounds Brass, Cop
per, Load and Aluminum
20.000 Batteries
50.000 Auto Radiators
Are We Buying? You Bet!
If It‘s Auto P-arts You Want
It Will Pay You To See Us
First We Are Here To Serve
You.
Consolidated AUTO
Parts Co.
2501 Cuming St. AT 5656
Home of Kangaroo Court
NORTH SIDE TRANSFER
l.ong Distance Mauling
Moving and Storage
Phone WES656 2414 Orant St.
HOW OFTEN Gh YOU
KISS AND MAkt UF?
FTKW husbands can understand
why a wife should turn froiu a
pleasant companion Into a shrew
for one w hole week In e\ cry month.
You can say "I'm sorry'' and
kias and make up easier before
marriage than after Ilew We If you
want to hold your husband, you
won't Ih> a throo-quarter wife.
For t tiroe general Ions one woman
has fold another how (o go smil
ing through" with l.yriia I Malt
ham's Vegetable Compound. It
helps Nature tone up the system,
thus lessening the dlsei >n Tor i from
the functional disorders which
women must endure in the Ihrej
ordeals of lift.: 1. Turning fru a
girlhood to womanhood. Vt i'"‘
parnig for motherhood. 3 •
' preaching "mltldle ago."
Don't he a fhrotMiuart.' '-U .
take LYDIA E, FINK HAM'S
VLtlE TAI1L.K OOMl OLAU^u '
Oo "Smiling Through "
* < ,-*s
Duffy Pharmacy
We. 0609
24th and LAKE STREETS
PRESCRIPTIONS
Free Delivery
I
1 cups OI
GuuAFIElB e
to iW WH* #*£ “*V »■
KEEP CLEAN IN5IPtI
You'll like 'he way it snap! you buck,
overnight, to the feeling of "rarin' to go" fit
ness and intide cloanlir.ett! Eliminate the left-over
wallet that hold you back cause headache!, in
digestion, etc. Garfield Tea it not a mirocll
worker but if CONSTIPATION bothers you, It wil
certainly "da w inders!" 10* and J5< of drearier.,
— or, WRITE FOR H.EE 5AMPLcS of Garl eld Tee
and Garfiel) headache Powdert to: GARrlc't
TEA CO„ Dept. C. Brooklyn, N. Y.
ALWAYS DEPENDABLE
Both Our Service and Printing. We are
Equipped To Print Anything From Stamps
to Newspapers. We Call For and Deliver.
OMAHA GUIDE PUB. CO.
2418 Grant Street WE 1517—1518
AGENTS I
WANTED
TO SELL
Cannolene Cannolene
Hair Growet Bleach Cream
(Double Strength) (Double Strength)
. _
50. 50c
And Our 18 Other Cannolene Beauty Creations
Beginning our New Advertising Campaign we will give a Free Start
to Intelligent, energetic men or women who are ambitious to tnaJco
money and build up a business of their own selling beanty products
ef the better kind. Ours la strictly a quality line that appeals to
(he beet people everywhere. You make more money with a quality
line and you win valuable prises. Writ# at once to
Cannon Cosmetics Cow Dept. 20-A. Atlanta. Ga«
N-N-F. Ex. S.__
jft afol n g'the~ Fa m 11V» ThatKtO^aQrwtdoforviTof thafmirvpraaty^- . . 7P1 Tier's
i r ^hn. whw* » ) <( wti««»tmhw'^ - 1 -— ) ' f >*»'-»-. wa toco 'j TWW ^oy ys#\S ']
II WS WOW) _IV Ji I 'M* H»we.D6AJtn«. l\vnu S*sW?S 1 H6. W* ^ '***) 9, \ 6X - t WMn’r 6omn<x
«* r^S. «*rrm*? »(" ,._"V ( THowt. vqutoio IL,-— ^ *X SewW ( S.^ruinGcr I
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