The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, August 24, 1940, CITY EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

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    SEE NEBRASKA FIRST
A campaign .addressed to r^si-i
dents of Nebraska to “See Neb
raska First’’ will be carried on in
conjunction with the national cam
paign to increase highway t.r »ft'
ie. Tho local campaign is design
ed to promote week end tours of
Nebraskanr. to the state's parks
and many other beauty spots and
places of interest. A series of
small advertisements will be run
in all Nebraska newspapers and
spot anoun-ements will be schedul
ed on all Nebraska radio stations.
‘‘See Nebraska First’* stickers for
use on letters and envelope's of
H-M Buffet
2420 .V. 24th St JA. 8852
first Chili in Town\
Liquors, Lunches <? fire~
Kidneys Must!
Clean Out Acids
Excess acids, poisons and wastes in your
blood are removed chiefly by your kidneys.
Getting up Nights. Burning Passages, Back
ache, Swollen Ankles. Nervousness. Rheu
matic Pains, Dizziness, Circles Under Eyes,
and feeling worn out, often are caused by
non-orgsnic and non-svstemlc Kidney and
Bladder troubles. Usually In such cases, the
very first dose of Cyatex goes right to work 1
helping the Kidneys flush out excaes acids
and wastes. And this cleansing, purifying
Kidney action, In Just a day or so. may eas- I
Uv make you feel younger, stronger and !
better than In years. A printed guarantee
wrapped around each package of Cyatex In
sures an Immediate refund of the full cost
unless you are completely satisfied. You have
everything to gain and nothing to lose under
thla positive money back guarantee so get
Cyatcs from your druggist today for only 36c.
I. C. C. ex. for N. S.
}
state, county and local govern
ment correspondence and by in
dividuals nnd business firms, will
be made available at cost through
stationery stores throughout the
state.
Cooperation of travel bureaus,
n wspapers, road associations, ho
tels, civic and local government
bodies will be asked in the “See
Nebraska First” campaign. The
advertising commission also anti
cipates that oil companies and
other businesses seeking tourist
trade, will accept its invitation to
tie in with this campaign in their
own newspaper, billboard and dir
ect mail advertisements.
In its advertising to promote
Nebraska’:; industrial development
the state advertising commission!
Will capitalize on the recent Neb
raska ‘'VVHite Spot” campaign
conducted by the Associated In
dustries of Nebraska in 1937-39.
Full page advertisements to be
published on a staggered schedule
in Business Week, Dun’s Review,
LOAN S->LO AN S-LO A N S
We I,oan Money on Clothing,
Shoes, Jewelry, Radios, Type
writers, liuns, Musical Instru
ments.—Anything Valuable.
WE SELL—Unredeemed Suits
—Topcoats—Overcoats or any
thing not redeemed.
BILL’S LOAN BANK
1804 N. 24th St.
Tel. WE-1369
ROTHERY CLEANING SPECIAL
Cone-piece plain dresses
MEN’S SUITS
LADIES’ PLAIN JACKET SUITS
LIGHT TOPCOATS
LADIES PLAIN SPRING COATS
Except White or Fur Trimmed
FDFF °NE PLAIN 8K,RT 0R TROUSERS CLEANED FREE
I KLL WITH EACH $1.00 ORDER
FREE—“Moth-Seal” Haga or Free Storage for Cloth Winter
Coat* Cleaned Now at Our Regular Prices (Not Special
Prices.)
Fur Coats, values to $100, Cleaned and Cold Stored, $4.30
ROTHERY CLEANERS
2515-17-19 CUMING ST. JA. 7383
f^ADD:
M HOURS ol LEISURE
j a TO YOUR WEEK!
..COOK ELECTRICALLY!
Start enjoying extra
leisure and better
living. Modernize
with electric cook
ery. today! With an
Electric Range doing
the cooking job in
your home, you can
enjoy two extra
hours oi leisure every day. Electric cookery
is automatic . . . with it there's no watching
or waiting. Your meals cook by themselves.
While other costs oi living have consistently
gone UP. the cost oi your electric service has
steadily gone DOWN! Today you enjoy elec
tric rates among the lowest in the nation.
LIVE &/SU ffelte*...
ELECTRICITY IS
SEE YOUR DEALER
W OR THE NEBRASKA POWER COMPANY ^
Forbes and Nation's Business mag
azin**s from September to April,
will use the “White Spot’’ theme.
Through these national publica
tions more than a half million in
dustrial executives will be told of
the industrial opportunities Neb
raska offers. They will be told of
Nebraska’s freedom from excess
ive taxation, cheap fuels anl elec
tric power, competent labor and
raw materials available, and of
the good .markets and excellent:
transportation facilities in the ag
ricultuarl empire comprising Neb
raska’s trade territory.
The commission instructed its
advertising agency, Bozell and Ja
cobs of Omaha, to survey the pos
sibilities for material which might
bo helpful in securing defense in
dustries. munitions factories, etc.,
and also in securing large bodies
of troops, arsenals, bombing and
artillery ranges, etc., for Nebras
ka. The advertising agency was
instructed to make a report at the
next meeting of the commission,
August 19, at which time the com
mission will make a final decision
on whether or not to undertake
fchii project.
FolloWup of inquiries from this
industrial advertising will be aided
by the distribution of the elabor
ate “White Spot" booklet used in
the recent Associated Industries
campaign. Several hundred copies
of this booklet are still available
for use in the present campaign.
AH industrial inquiries will be
duplicated and copies sent to all
Chambers of Commerce in the
state after the commission’s sec
retary has acknowledged receipt
and mailed a copy of the White
Spot booklet tp the inquirier.
Followups on inquiries from ad
vertisements on agricultural prod
ucts will be made by several state
growers associations, the Nebras
ka Crain Improvement association
state department of agriculture,
potato and apple growers associa
tions, and miscellaneous inquiries
by the proper bureaus of the pro
per bureaus of the state govern
ment or farm organizations.
Inquiries front ti'altic promotion
advertising will be turned out in,
duplicate to oil companies, motor
clubs and the state highway de
partment for followup after a Irav
el l'oldor has been mailed to the in
quirer by the secretary of ihe
state advertising commission.
In planning this campaign, the
commission has boon guided by
the terms of the law passed by the
last legislature, which defined the
commission’s duties as being'’--to
plan and conduct an advertising
campaign through the United)
States for the sole and only pur
poses of increasing motor traffic
within the state and advertising
the nature, character and quality
of state’s products, the advantag
es of the state as a place of resi
dence and recreation and to attract
tourists, and as a suitable location
for industrial development.”
-— . *
If He’s 19-Keep Your Eye
On Him; He’s At the Ripe
Old Age To Turn Out In
the Criminal World
Wasnington, Aug. 12 (ANP) —
The ripe old age of 19 years seems
to be the one most susceptible to1
criminal impulse and urge, accord
ing to the latest report of the de
partment of justice, which states
that more persons of this age were
arrested tan any other single age
group during the fiscal year of
1939, just ended.
Juveniles continue to comprise"
a large portion of the criminal el
ement in the United States,” the
report states.” Of all fingerprint
arrest records studied for! the per
iod, 17.6 peeent were youths un
der 21, representing a decrease
from the 19.3 percent for the same
period in the first half of 1939.'’
“One out of every three persons
arrested for robbery was under 21
years of age, while one out of ev
ery two persons wiho committed
burglary had not reached his ma
jority. More tnan one half of all
auto thefts were committed by
juveniles.
"During the first six months of
1940, 373 persons less than 21
years of age were charged with
murder or manslaughter, 1,964
WINS JOB AWARD
Jeannette Maund, of 88 Win
field Street, Worcester, Mass., and
graduate of the Hampton Insti
tute, Hampton. Va., being congrat
ulated by Walter S. Mack, Jr.,
President of the Pepsi-Cola Comp
any, upon her winning one of the
Walter Mack Job Awards for Am
erican Youth; +he plan provides
salaried business interneships for
qualified college graduates. Fol
lowing her graduation this year,
Miss Maund was selected by Lor
enzo C. White, Secretary of Rec
ords and Appointments of Hamp
ton Institute, to represent the col
lege in the ylobs Award Contest.
She was reporter for The Script,
student paper, and member of tne
YWCA., the International Forum
and the Creative Writing Group.
I
with robgery. 1,796 with assault,
,228 with burglary and 11,685 wltn
larceny and related crimes.
“When announcing the result®
of this study, Director J. Ed<ur
Hopver of the FBI again emphas
ized the need for community-wide
crime prevention programs throu
ghout the United States and the
need for concerted efforts through
home, school, church and commun
ity influence to reduce juvenile de
linquenc>.’’
IS THIS SOUTH’S AT
TITUDE ON NEW
DEAL?
Washington, Aug. 22 (ANP) —
“Most Southerners, rich and poor,
farmer and industrialists alike,
frov^n on social experiment, mis
trust unions, abhor any truck with
Communists such as WPA has
sometimes harbored. They don't
like the New Deal's catering to the
Negro vote in Pennsylvania, New
York and other nwtliem states.
They resent being called the •nat
ion’s No. 1 economic problem’ as
the President's National Emerg
ency council called the South two
years ago.
Summed up by ’’Time’’ the state
iment above represents what it be
lieves the attitude of the Solid
South toward the president and his
third term ambitions.
Declaring that many Southern
ers are defecting themselves from
the Democratic party and leaning
toward Willkie, somp are predict
ing a landslide, similar to the
Hoover vote which was a complete
rout for tho Democrats back in
1928.
And since most of the voters of
the Southland are white, the re
publican party will have to cater
to these voters if it expects to
Win any considerable majority in
th« South.
The resentment toward the pro
gress of the Negro in the indus
trial centers of the North is un
derstood since it creates unrest a
mong the southern Negroes.
Indicative of this attitude is the
recent outburst in Tennessee a
gainst Negroes registering to vote
Other states are experiencing the
same unrest among Negroes and
the southerner is quick to place
tih^ blame the admini^tation, the
Red influences in the government
and all other possible sources
which might tend to show the Ne
gro the way forward.
The large nu^nber of Negroes
in the Distinct of Columbia, which
is more Southern than darkest
Mississippi, has fielded a power
ful influence on many things for
the District whereby the Negro
as a citizen would share in and
thereby profit, And the same
“dog in the manger’’ attitude is
turning hundreds of Southerners
toward the Republican party. Not
out of love for the party, but just
to defeat the Democrats and the
Democrats and the “reforms’’ it
Hiiimniitmmtiiiiiniuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiminiimiiiimiiuihi .tHimmiiiiiiiumiuiHnmuniuum
DEALERS
PROUDLY
SERVE
Real
1ST. .
has instituted.
If tihe Republican party is cat
ering to these votes, then it is
high time, say some who feel they
sense a change, for the Negro to
Watch his step, as Bert Williams
was won’t to say, and proceed very
carefully along the lines of great
est benefit to him.
*t*t*t*t*****t*a0t*»0athu»m
JACKSON 0288
FIDELITY
STORAGE & VAN CO.
Local and Long Distance
MOVING
1107 Howard, W. W. Roller, Mgr.
LITTLE DINER
Quality Plus Service
Hot Corn Bread or Biscuits
with Your Orders without
Extra Charge.
24th St. At Willis Avenue
|jl!l!lllllll!l!llllllllllllll!llll!llllll!ll!IIUI!l!U
| THOMAS I
s FUNERAL
HOME
2022 Lake St. WE 2022
iiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiil!i!ii!i»iii mi niiii iiiiiii uiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiii
BUY YOUR—
POULTRY
AT THE
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
Get the Best in Quality at the
Lowest Price
NEBRASKA
PRODUCE
2204-6 NORTH 24th ST.
_PHONE WE. 4137
GERBaa^alBfia
IDEAL FURNITURE
MART
R. H. Spiegal, Prop.
We Boy. Sell & Exchange
—NEW & USED—
We Pay Highest Prices for
Merchandise
Sell Us Yours
WE. 2224 2511-13 N. 24th St.
BHmrMHiii.iiiTiiWiiinimiiinnflM'tTiiiTin nrnriiini bttttt r-'iiinnflin iiiuiuiiHiunim'UHm
DUFFY Pharmacy
24tH and LAKE 8TREET8
PRESCRIPTIONS
We. 0609
Free Delivery
Negro
digest
; AUGUST ISSUE ,
NOW ON SALE!
Thousands misted the first issue
which told out before it was a
week on the stands. Be sure to
get your copy of this new, ex
citing number of Negro World
Digest,—94 pages crammed with
readable stories and articles
condensed from thi best in mag
azines and books every month.
Ten minutes a day will keep ypu
abreast Of the moin trends in
Negro life.
Send for a free, illustrated folder
on our amazing subscription and
premium offers. 4
I West 125 Sf., N. Y. C. '
—in ex. fw- CNS
Negrp Presides Over
Philadelphia Mayors’
Court For First Time
Philadelphia. Aug. 24 (ANP) —
For the first time in the history of
the Mayor's Court in Philadelphia
a Negro has been appointed to sit
oil the bench. He is Magistrate
Edward W. Henry, prominent
judge, who wras chosen from 31
eligible city magistrates by Mayor
Robert E. Lamberton to serve in
tnls honored capacity for the
month of August.
Judge Henry's appointment to
this position, according to autnor
itative sources sounds a note of
high regard and recognition for
i i.e Negro race on the part of Ma
yoi Lamberton. The Mayor’"
Court, in existence since 1788
v, hen the city of Philadelphia oo
erated under a charter, hears al1
cases concerning violation of city
oidinances.
ppppipppppippppiw)
LUMBER SALE
After Inventory Sale
on Over-stacked
Lumber Items.
• ••
2x4x6—11c 2x4x8—15c
2x4x10—18c 2x6x6—161/2c
2x6x8—22c 2x6x10—271,£c
2x8x8—29c 2x10x8—361/2c
2x12x6—32c 1x4x6—6c
1x4x8—9c 1x12x7 Rgh. 25c
SPECIAL CLEAR PICKETS 4c
.4 Inch Drop Siding 4 to 7 feet,
per 100 feet-$3.33
6 Inch Drop Siding 4 to 7 feet
per 100 feet—$3.87
1/2 Inch Blanket Insulation,
per 100 feet—$285
• ••
Hth * Nicholas—JA 5000
powder send for free large trial packages
and guaranteed big money making agent's
proposition. Write Lucky Heart Lab., Dept.
CLASSIFIED ADS
3 Room Apt., Furnished. Bills
paid. $4.50 per week. JA. 0986.
A quiet place.
FOR RENT—3 Room Apt] WE.
0360. Call evenings.
ROOM for Rent, 2309 North 27th
Ave., Phone AT. 5134.
One Front Room, 2513 Hamilton
St., Call AT. 1897.
FOR RENT—Apart’ ient o- R > '.n
2607 Binney St.
FOR RENT—ON TOP OF THE
STREET CAR.—One room in pri
vate modem home, for men only.
Price reasonable, 2825 North 24th
St., AT. 5988
FOR RENT ~
Apt for Rent—2527 Blondo St.
House For Rent, 2914 N. 2oth St.
Will pay $1.25 for vacant room—
HA. 1190 between 3 and 6.
Furnished Kitchenette HA. 6672
Apt. for Rent, 2226 Ohio after 2.
FOR RENT- 5 room house, mod
ern except heat, 2914 North 25th
St., WE. 2365.
FOR RENT—3 room modern apt.
2226 Ohio St., JA-0682.
FOR RENT OR SALE
At 2611 Hamiton St., modern
house, full basement, double gar
age—$20 per month—small pay
ment down AT. 4698.
FOR RENT
One Furnished Room. Ha. 2587.
For men only.
FOR RENT—Love’s Kitchenette
Apartments, 2516-18 Patrick, oi
2613 Grant St. Call JA. 7189 Or
WE. 2410.
RABE’S BUFFET
for Popular Brands
of BEER and LIQUORS
*229 Lake Street
—Always a place to park—
I
A Prominent Business I
Woman Praises Mme.C. J. -
Walker’s Preparations \
. r
” I use Mme. C. J. Walker’s
preparations exclusively be
cause I get results from them
that I am unable to get from any
other preparation,” stated a well
known business woman the
other day.
The secret of the remarkable
success of Mme. C. J. Walker’s
preparations is in the fact that
they were blended by the late t
Madam C. J. Walker to reach |
certain definite conditions of the I
hair, skin and scalp, and today,
after over thirty-five years on
the market, they are growing
increasingly popular, and not
withstanding the fact that the
Company has always refused to
reduce the price on these goods,
they are still in demand every
where. <
® Mme. C. J. Walker’s Glossine,
although more than thirty-five
years on the market, is still the
leader in its field. The reason
for this is because it not only
serves as a scalp oil, but it gives
the hair that silky sheen and
natural gloss that is the delight
of every woman.
Mme. C. J. Walker’s Brown
Face Powder is not just another
Face Powder, but is the result of
years of experimenting to pro
duce the perfect blend to impart
a velvetlike softness and at the
same time cooling and refresh
ing. Just the thing for these hot
days.
The Mme. C. J. Walker's won
derful preparations are sold by
Walker Beauticians and Drug
Stores everywhere, or you can
write The Mme. C. J. Walker
Mfg. Company, direct. Address:
The Walker Building, Indian
apolis, Indiana. ^
» y
l————— ■ - ,■»
9 Room House—All Modern—
Will Decorate—$20.00 per month.
On Corby Street. Phone JA5033.
HARDWARE
DOLGOFF HARDWARE
Paint, Glass and Varnish. We do
glazing and make window shades
to order. 182 N. 24th St. WE. 1607.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS '
THOMAS FUNERAL HOME
2022 Lake St. WEbster 20£2
Furnished Apt., 3 rooms, private
bath, 2617 Miami St., WE. 3653.
LAUNDRIES & CLEANERS
EDHOLM & SHERMAN
2401 North 24fch WE. 6066
EMERSON LAUNDRY
2324 North 24th St. WE. 1029
MEN! WOMEN! USE YOUR
CREDIT to get all the stylish
new apparel you need. Great
values. Enjoy terms made to
order for you. Peoples Store,
109 South 16th St.
Front Room, modern WE. 1024.
FOR RENT—A four room Apt.
An Apt. for Rent, WE. 2365
For Rent, 2 apts. WE. 2737.
Furnished Apts., 2 rooms, $3.50—
3 rooms $4.50. Utilities paid, JA.
0986.
7 Room House—Pacific Street.
$12.00 perr month. Phone JA5033.
Fine, clean reconditioned cloth
ing, furniture, and shoes, Good
will, 1013 North 16th. Purchases
at Goodwill make jobs for needy.”
A-B BUFFET, 1616 N. 24th St.
WINES—LIQUORS
at Popular Prices
Courteous Service at all Times
—AN URGENT MESSAGE
to women who suffer
FEMALE WEAKNESS
Pew women today are free from some sign »
of functional trouble. Maybe you’ve noticed
YOURSELF getting restless, moody, ner- |
vous, depressed lately—your work too much i
for you — - E
r Then why not take Lydia E. Pinkham’s i
Vegetable Compound to help quiet weary, *
hysterical nerves, relieve monthly pain i
(cramps, backache, headache) and weak i
dizzy fainting spells due to functional ir- l
regularities.
For over 60 years Pinkham’s Compound I
has helped hundreds of thousands of weak
run-down, nervous “ailing” women to go ?'
smiling thru “difficult days.” Why not give
this wonderful “woman’s friend” a chance
to help YOU? Try itl
I. C. C. At. for N. S.