The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, August 12, 1939, City Edition, Page 9, Image 9

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    “Listen to this”
Cop> right by Hoo>ri T. Mitchell
GRADUATED FROM HAMPTON
On June 1 1875, Booker T.
Washington, graduated from
Hampton Institute, after com
pleting a three years course.
Black & White Shrivers
June 3, 1929 the United States
Supreme Court handed down a de
cision in which the right of “Ne
groes of the Ancient Egyptian
Arabic Order of the Nobles of
the Mystic Shrine” to use the simi
lar name and title, emblems and
regalia of the white Shriners was
upheld.
North CaroT'na Mutual
The North Carolina Mu^al Life
Insurance Company, Juitc 1919,
celebrated its twentieth anniver.
sity, thelHneetings were held in
Durham at the White Rock Bap
tist Church, T\yo hundred' and
fifty employees attended.
Secretary of State
Francis L. Cardozo served as
Secretary of State of South Car
olina, from 1868 to 1872 and later
as Treasurer of the state. He was
born of free parents.
Ernest Hogan—Actor
Do you remember when Ernest
Hogan sang his famous song * If
the Colored People Owned All
This Z<and—Now Wouldn’t That
Be a Dream."
Negroes Registered
From June 5 1917 to September
12 1918, there were 2,290,527
Negroes registered for service in
the United Army. 31.74 per cent
of the Negroeh and ijp.84 per
cent of t the whites registrants
were accepted for military ser
vice.
Reoublican Delegates
June 8, 1921 the Repumican
National Committee adopted a
resolution to reduce the number
«f delegates from the South to
the National Convention. The
number of delegate! was redyced
from 62 in 1912 to 32 in 1916.
Tea—
Juno 14, 1929 the wife of form
er Congressman Oscar De Priest,
cf Illinois, was entertained at an
official tea in the White House,
Washington, D. c1.
Prohibiting Slavery ’
Juno 1862, Congre-’s passed an
act, prohibiting slavery in ^11 the
present territories of the United
States, and any teridtory that
might be aeqcired.
Howard University
Forty-six per cent of all Negro
physicians and surgeons now prac
ticing in the United States ar
Howard graduates; 40 per cent, ot
all dentists. Nearly half of the
colored lawyers actively practic
ing law in the United States are
graduates of Howard University
Law school, and a large portion
of Negro leaders in the field of
religion, of teaching, of pharmacy
COLOr^FL IfUSli QUIET . By SCHEEL
!_* i isAdt, • - i
BARON NOBUX By JACK THOMAS
Since the baron
INHERITED $5000.- LYDIA
PINCHDIME- NOW A WIDOW
SUDDENLY APPEARS AND
THREATENS TO SUE HIM
FOR BREACH OF PROMISE -
• IN AN EFFORT TO AN/OID
HER- THE BARON TAKES
* A CRUISE TO BERMUDA
' AND WHO DOES HE FIND
ON THE SAME BOAT
4 WITH HIM BUT LYDIA
} AND HIS UNCLE RUFE
SIZZLEPUSS —
—— -■ /__LJi UL-1LU-1 L — f II it ? II II li t ii* -KJ Li j. n —i.n 7 1 m - -■ mm mm
'soy- SUT IT'S SWELL TO BE SACK IN^ TaH- GOOD EVENING COUNT MEEIN-^ fi-IAW-ER-AH- GOOd' H-M-M- HOW^FmY-MY- H-M-M- I THOUGHT 1 KNEW^
TOWN-- I THINK tLL PHONE THAT by THE WAY- I'M dining HERE TO- EVENING- MAJOR-1 INTERESTING-- THAT FACE- H-M-M- COUNT MEEIN -
COUNT MEEIN 1 MET ON THE BOAT NIGHT WITH MAJOR DORAYMEE-- BROUGHT COUNT 1 ALSO BROUGHT INDEED' WELL-WELL- HORATIO SQUIM
AND INTRODUCE HIM TO MAJOR WHY NOT JOIN US?-I EXPECT HIM MEEIN ALON6- A GUEST- AN OLD FOR A SECOND I DIDN'T RECOGNIZE
DORAYMEE TONIGHT-- iTLL PUT ME ANY MINUTE-- ^ . THOUGHT VOU’D FUAEND OF YOURS- YOU WITH THAT ALFALFA CHIN—
IN SOLID WTH THE OLD BOY- i LIKE TO MEET -- LYDIA . HOW YA BEEN HORATIO AND WHEN DID
aS^\ Jr HIM-- muruniMB ' YOU GIVE UP YOUR JOB AS WAITER
-I INLNBIMB. IN THE BOREMSTIFF CLUB?-- .
rig i I Hi _9
m ICQNT'NUED NEXT \MEEW|_|
junior patrol \ * By quin hall’
ifAsr vjfcEK Noo Know as wav «sc isonior. if stubby was i am ol* meany- -r ;
vus&Y R*wo| AS l Do, S?IK£,TWr Snj Ahi OL' Mvse&
A CAT in -me- got SCARED and wr wha^ ^ FlSHIM6._
CAN6 THE BOYS, XSSP-IED STTJg&y/ -
*S?e?2f£K? WE HAVE NO GAINS H>sti&f'JT' ^
d£Jl ON ANy 3\RT OF . <£&, ^,-7C7 ^
Sg&Dtf® TWVCMBywJ^ia J|P -j
CENTS ORWED KZA- B/ <J> . *! .VfcDSDKT
FOR. the SAFE It mj ' | HAVE any bah;
jS&TUPN <* Wsr JB * ANYWAY.'
pjCTCmAB 9^^r**«tefc' iters 60 wen.1;
£vO TW6 kEX-T
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7WW / 4«- ' ifb 3D\K1
/ PROMISE 70 STUDY HARD - ' \ \miDI2.
/ PROMISE 70 BE CAREFUL WEN CP&9SM SSffiESr
Streets and to aid those in danger - J£rl's£li
/ PROMISE TO BE KIND TO Dm3 ANIMALS - VrvV
/ PROMISE TO RUN ERRANDS INI LUNGER- TUS PltObE
/ PROMISE 70 BE TRUTHFUL- OR A COPY
{ PROMISE TO DO EVERYTHING POSSIBLE- OF IT AND .
TO MAKE MY PARENTS PROUD OF ME-. ^JuTD
SteNED__ JUNIOR
i^DDCESS___7© THIS*
acfcoPBigm —-_- [ PAPER.
_00 YOU KNOW WHY — They Call Tills Mul Vacation ? _ onw nmmU Rato_
, * •,/,* .i v 3 ~
i _ yi - 4- - • - — fly**—
/Mr. I. Knowiu Ki nnv now ioiks get into the wrong roorn __ By ThOmtOn FISh*3f
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I W»«J p »«T HO»J A oLr Of (a* •**-*•*/
S TMk. v*sp*'!«os--y this MotautwC. • \WHoS B&&N <f ) MtitoiNHH^ve^
p>- \hhploo hjLT
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-i•!*=>'?> 'k */
of engineering and architecture
received their education at the
abovo school.
Free People of Color
In 1860 in Charlestown, South
Carolina, there were 360 free peo- >
pie of color, 130 of them owned
3P0 slaves.
Going to Church
About half of the Negro popu
lation attend church once a month.
In other words 6,000,000 Negroes
listen to the Word of God every
thirty days
j Voting
Two or three times more Ne
groes eould vote every year than
do vote. (What a pity)
Medical Society
In 1854, Dr. De Grasse, a Ne
gro, was admitted as a member
of the Massachusetts Medical So
ciety.
Any interesting or unique fact
about Negroes sent to this column
will be published and credited to
the sender. Write in care of this
paper. Address Hobart T. Mitchell
"LISTEN TO THIS.”
-oOo
NOTICE PLEASE
The Omaha Guide wishes to
'state oil and after July 2y your
paper will be 12 pages instead of
8 pages with four new features.
You will get your papei on Fri
day instead of Saturday. If the
mail man misses you on Friday
don’t you be without your paper,
just call We. 15i7 ind we will
gladly send y»u your paper at
once and thanks for the call.
C. C. Galloway, Mgr.
'doodle.^"
® MEADS £ <§
(dod do you DOODLE9)
—————- ■ ■
REG. 0 3. PAT. OFF.
■ i i i
I H ' '
Recently professors and psychol
ogists have had much to say re
garding the "character’ ’revealed in
a person’s “Doodles’’ — those un
conscious little scrawls and scrib
bles one makes on newspaper mar
gins, telephone pads and the like.
But in offering this entertaining
series of ’’Doodle-bug” heads, w#
claim no ulterior motive. We pre
fer to think that most folks just
"doodle" for fun! So go to It with
a soft pencil, and see how many
varied and amusing expressions
and types you can create from the
simple outline heads which will
appear In this paper. Remember,
It’s the latest pastime, and "Every
body's Doodling It!”
— /\
W
SOLI I'lOH TO TOOAl 3
WORD SQL .HE
BLEED
RONDO
OUTGO
W I R E R
NEEDS
Naval Notes
BELIEVE iT OR NOT
‘ Believe it or not, the phrase
‘Once in a Blue Moon’ is not just a
whimsical saying used when ex
pressing! any unusual happening
but actually refers to a condition
r f the moon which on rare occas
ions assumes a bluish color. It
was last reported by the British
Navy in 1863.
“Probably the longest flags used
in the United Stales are the
‘Homeward Bounii’ pennants of the
Navy. When a sh'n ha • served for
more than a year on foreign duty,
it flys the pennant on its return.
The usual procedure is ta allow
one foot e,f pennant far each man
in the crew. The U. S. S. HOUS
TON when returning from duty
in the Asiatic Fleet, had a pen
nant 575 feet long.
“The U. S. S. CONSTITUTION,
Old Ironsides’, was in coma ission
for more than eighty years, dur
ing which time she never last her
Commanding Officer in battle, nev
er went aground and never lost
aver eight men in a fight.
“In 1907, when Pi sident The
odore Roosevelt sent our Battle
Fleet on that memorable tiip a
round .the world, we h d to charter
foreign ships exclusively to carry
fuel and supplies fer these new
Navaf vessels, thu s d m'nstrating
tho value of a merchant marine in
% naval campaign.
“Lighthouse no glood for flog’,
<aid a certain Chinese ‘Lighthouse
bo shine, whistle he blow, bell he
ling and flcg he come just the
iaine. No glood.’ ”
JUST A FEW LASHES ON THE
BACK
‘ The Uucky Bag was originally
in custody of the Marior-at-arms
in which all articles of clothing,
etc., picke<f up around the ship,
were kept. Once each month, this
bag was brought to the mainmast
and the owners of the articles, if
their names were on them, got
them back with a few lashes on
the bare back for their careless
ness. The term ‘Lucky’ in this
case, was sailor humor for ‘unfor
tunate.’
“Only two major powers man
their naval ships with volunteers
—Great Britain and the United
States. The others U3e conscrip
tion. Enlistments in the British
Navy are for twelve years, twice
the new six year enlistment in
our Navy.
'•The United States Navy is the
only Navy in the world that has
in its possession a British royal
standard taken by capture. This
standard, now at the United States
Naval Academy, was captured by
Commodore Chauncey at York,
Canada.
“The bakers on the U.S.S. PEN
SACOLA seem to have the right
idea. Whenever a man on board
has a birthday, he is automatically
provided wnth an individual cake
with the inscription ‘Happy Birth
day to You’. The cakes are large
size layer cakes and are provided
for the lucky celebrant’s table at
the evening meal.
.. “James Fenimore Cooper, the
novelist, was a midshipman in the
U.S. Navy from 1808 to 1811
Most of his Naval service was un
der Lawrence, in the WASP.”
-0O0—
NASHVILLE SCHOOL PRINCI
PAL, 3 VETERAN TEACHERS,
RETIRED ON PEISIONS
Nashville, August 3 (ANP)—
On the list of 24 teachers granted
“honorable discharges” from ser
vice last week by city board of
education, were one principal and
three teachers in the colored
schools of Nashville.
The principal retired on pen
sion was Mrs. Sara Page, for the
past two years head of Atkins,
and prior to that time principal
for a number of years of Hadley
school. She had 31 years’ service.
Also retired was Nashville’s oldest
colored teacher in point of service,
Miss Lena Jackson, teacher of
I,atin at Pearl high school, who
had served the public school sys
the city’s most highly respected
tem for 53 years, and was one of
members of the teaching force.
Her retirement caused greater
comment than that of any otAer
teacher.
Other veterans whose retire
ment was sincerely regretted by
both student body and fellow
teachers were Mrs. M. A. Southall.
22 years’ service and assigned to
Lawrence school, and prof R, E.
Battle, 32 years’ service and a
well known mechanical arts tea
cher at Washington Junior High
-——