IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE— IT PAYS TO SHOP For whatever you have to sell, 01 for whatever you want to buy— IN THESE COLUMNS HELP WANTED WANTED A vcjng man, 18 years or older th-f1 can make deliveries and work in a Furniture Store. Salary to begin with $10.00 per week. Working Hours 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. Call at Omaha Guide Office. WANTED ~ 4 men to work at Consolidated Auto Parts Co., 2501 Cuming Street or 1240 South 16th St. Wants two roustabout workers to move around and clean wreckage. Two exper ienced auto wreckers. If in go<-J health, age doesn’t matter. Roust Ibout must be able to handle bea\y parts of automobile. 2501 Cuming Street or 1240 South 16th Street. FEMALE HELP WANTED A woman from 21 to 40 for clean ing and at times to help with cook ing. Birchwood Club, Call KE. 4 WANT TO BUT — Furniture of ail kinds—dressers, beds, end tables, chairs and chest of drawers or complete home— apartment furnishings. Kettles and dishes. Sell us yours. IDEAL Furniture Mart. 24th & Lake Street—WE. 2224 FUNERAL DIRECTORS THOMAS FUNERAL HOME 2022 Lake SL WEbster 2022 Join—Reliable Friendship Ciul’ —vor Marriage. Friendship, oi .'Vasure. Send Dime for memb-r *h.p blank. H. Brookes, 317 W*»r tell. Chicago, IK. NEW! “BACTERIOSTATIC” FEMININE HYGIENE i now finding great favor among women... Many doctors recommend regular use of douches as a precautionary meas ure for women who want to be clean, dainty—for women troubled by at tending odor or discharge. Some products may be harmful to delicate tissues. But not Lydia E. Plnkham s Sanative Wash! Pin!:ham’s Banative Wash Is gaining great favor among women because it's NOT a harmful germicide. Instead — it's a mighty effective‘ bacteriostatic” (tha ■modern trend). It not only discour ages bacterial growth and Infection but thoroughly cleanses and deodor izes Vt-y soothing — relieves minor Irritations and discharge and has a tonic effect on delicate membranes. Inexpensive! Get your bottle of Lydia Plnkham s Sanative Wash today. All druggists. — Acid Indigestion What many Doctors do for it 3 Ww excess 5- es aid rauaa* us. sour ttomach or heartburn, doctors prescribe the filter, -acting medicines known for symptomatic relief—medicines like those in Beil ins Tsblets. Try Bell-.ns yourself a; first sign of distress. They neutraliae idd relieve gas. and bring comfort very quickly—y« are not a Illative: Only 25c. at drug Korea. If your wry list trial doesn't prove Bell-ana better return bottle to us and get double your money back. This week’s Editorial Review WHEN ARE WE GOING TO HELP RUSSIA? We wish a way could be found for sending immediate aid to em battled Russia. Thus far in the war she has borne the greatest bur den. Her losses in then and mater ials have been enormous. Her her oic resistance has given us time to prepare: to produce fighting equip ment Of all kinds, to train men and J women to meet the storm. Are we too late? We hope not. We hope, also :ha*. the like or dislike of the Russian ! philosophy of government will not Interfere with our plan to aid Rus sia. If Russia is beaten and put out of the war, we may expect to fight the aggressor here on Ameri can soil. Surely, we are not going to let prejudices of various kinds help the axis powers to destroy us. Lives will have to be sacrificed in order to win against the axis, and we cannot win without Russia. And while she yet fights, may we not CHOP SUEY King Yuen Cafe 2010'2 N. 24th St. JAckson 857S .Open from 2 p. m. Until 3 a. m American & Chinese Dishes -IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL" MAYO'S BARBER SHOP Ladies and Children’s Work A Specialty 2422 LAKE ST. . 5..... □ Lemon Juice AT HOME TO RELIEVE the MISERIES Money Back If This Rheumatic Recipe Fails ' Good news travels fast—many of the thou •ar-ds of folk* who now take lemon juice for rheuipatlc pain—have found that by adding two tablespoonfuls of Allenru to one tablespoon!# of Lemon Juice In a glass of Water, they get faster relief for the aches and pains caused by rheumatism, lumbago. It's no surprise either, for Allenru is a 1 W Tear old formula to relieve rheumatte aches and palna In fact—if it does not help —your money back. What could be fairer? Oet AUenru today at any live druggist. Onl> *S cents—04 It Now. ^ Gross JEWELRY & LOAN CO. formerly at 24th and Erskine St. NEW LOCATION— 514 N. 16th ST. Phone JA-4635 Did You Place Your FALSE TEETH In a Glass Last Night? Thousands do and wonder why their den tures remain dull and stained - why they suffer with offending denture breath They fail to realise that water alone is not a cleans ing agent - but now there’s a great formula perfected by a dentist, called Stera-Kleen that thoroughly cleans false teeth like magic no brushing! Simply put a little Stera-Kleen Powder in a glass of water-soak your teeth - now they sporkle. are really clean and look like the day your dentist said. • Don't they look natural?" Try Stera-Kleen - lasts long - coats ^ only 30* At all druggists. - Old Farmer s Recipe Mia AUenru and Lemon Juice to get quick relief from poms of rheumatics and neuralgia Druggiats have Allanru— grocer* have lemons. I join the “battle array” and help j beat the enemies of mankind. Whatever the task, we are ready ■ to do it, to the utmost of our abil-, ity. The best news we could receive would be that fighting forces had joined the battle to relieve Russia, s - I | I THE NAAC'P. CARRIES OX . Many times w*- have had occas i ion to write about the NAACP. Now ' at the end of more than thirty years | of its service to America and Amer icans, we know it is needed quite as much as it was when it began. When World War One was de clared, the Association was not ten. years of age Since that time a quarter of a century has passed 3nd we are in the midst of a Second World War And in relation to the ‘‘Color Bar", it appears to be more rigid in the Second World War than it was in the first one, in many re spects. In World War One, colored work ers were employed quite freely in War Industries: in this one. a bat tle has been fought to win employ - j ment for colred workers in War 1 Industries. An din World War i Two we have the unf go ruinate ex ample of the Chairman Of Presid ent Roosevelt's Committee on Fair Employment Practices, asserting that the practical application of this principle would violate - “SOUTH ERX TRADITIOX”: that all the axis tanks and planes and guns could not uproot “white suprem acy” in the South- What the good chairman fails to grasp is that, if the axis powers win the war. not only will “white supremacy” be up rooted. but all freedom for whites and blacks alike will disappear from our land. The XAACP. fights to save Am erica, first from herself, and by so doing .they know they will save her from domination by the axis pow ers. They are. therefore, trying to remove “the blinders" from the eyes -of Chairman Mark Etheridge of the President's Fair Employment Prae j tice Committee, as well as from ! other eyes. The XAACP. knows full well that j whenever justice is demanded for i the colored people in any field of human endeavor, objection is rais ed in the Old South that the grant ing of it would lead to 'Social E qualitv”. Social Equality is “the association between persons like taste, like culture, and like arnoit ion.” It is neither intra-racial nor interracial, and color has nothing to do with it. For instance, there are thousands of white people living in Louisville Kentucky, where Mr. Mark Ether idge publishes the Louisville Cour ier-Journal who could not enter the home of Mr. Etheridge as guests. Even if Mr. Etheridge invited them to his home, both he and his guests would be uncomfortable. And the same thing applies to colored peo ple The factors involved, however, are not racial. The XAACP. knows, too. that when all the people of our land shall have enjoyed full economic, educational and political opportun ity for a reasonabe span of year-, that the prejudices which now div ide us. will have disappeared. The men and women who founded the XAACP. were aware that their Struggle would be long and hard. | with undimmed ardor for a third J of a century proves their faith and j hope. All they have demanded of j their oountry and their countrymen Real Shoe Man— FONTENELLE SHOE REPAIR Cash and Carry CLEANER 1410 North 24th St. CARL CRTVERi» 1 ___* TEL. WE. 2022 OCR PRICES are based on the cost of serv ice pins the cost of merchandise and a reasonable profit. Thomas FUNERAL HOME 2022 LAKE ST. Omaha, Nebr. Evangelist REV. W. C. WILLIAMS. Pasio and Evangelist, under whose super vision a series of spirtual Evangel istic Revival Services were held last week, will close with a mass meet ing Sunday, August 2, 3:30 P. M. at the I. D. Peoples Peoples Mission Church 26th and Franklin Sts. WAITERS’ COLUMN (BY H. W. SMITH) WE. 6458 I—— We often wonder if some of our people give a thought to the unrest that has developed among the hu man race- . .in these last very crit ical years which has caused so much destruction. People! committing suicide .and others becoming insane. Parents murdering their children... airplanes falling. ... rivers overflow ing and drowning people and auto mobiles wrecked.... destroyed lives. . was promised the colored people as well as the white people, "IN THE CHARTERS OF OCR LIBERTIES ’ They charted their course along lines of Evolution not Revolution, an dthey welcome the aid of all men and women who share their faith in the ultimate triumph of right for all men her ein America. It is their desire t0 see “ALL MEN LIFTED UP" an dno men cast down. And they would have this philosophy- to apply to all men everywhere. All this they do and hope to do for HUMANITY. Along these lines they wage their war to win the war and afterwaid the peace THE TRAGEDY OF RGLAND HAYES Roland Hayes, a native of Currys ville. Georgia, a little town near Rome, Georgia .has met with trag edy. He was badly beaten by Rome Georgia, policemen .after they had illegally arrested him. because he inquired about an exchange of words between his wife and a white shoe store clerk. Roland aHyes. world-famous con cert singer: well educated, wealthy, apparently, was thought to have been 'impertinent' by the white store clerk who called policemen “to put him in his place.” Roland ayes believed that his home county was proud of him. He began life there as a poor Negro boy and by dint of hard work lx - came America's greatest TENOR SINGER and one of the greatest of the world. His whole life was de voted to his music. And by his singing he sought to brighten the lives of his fellow human beings. His mission, as he saw it and fol lowed it. was to teac hthe world through sang and make it a han-^ Pier place thereby. He desried to show. also, that he loved his native 1 Georgia. He purchased a plantation j near Rome. Georgia, on which hi3 mother had been born, a slave. By his accomplishments and his acts, he wanted to show how far awav from the old hates the south had grown since his mother was born. And at last he found that nothing could save him from the fury of blind color prejudice in the South. The incident is full of tragedy for all the Negroes of America, vearly all of them have heard Roland Hay es's voice, either on the concert ; stage, on the radio or on records. The champions of race hate, then’ fore, eoud not have chosen a sub ject whose tragedy would have b- ?n more universally the tragedy of the i Negroes of America. AVhat will our answer be when the German and Japanese Ministers of propanganda send out their re ports of this awful AMERICAN ■ TRAGEDY.”? "We shall lay the case in the lap of the NAACP. May they prove to , be the “the goods.” Large and small business houses failing, and numerous other disas trous catastrophes which should, make all of us setup and carefully and seriously study this situation to see if the human race will take . time and look around at ourselves, to try and help get ourselves ad justed. The business houses of our race should be given a very large amount of consideration as when we trade with them: we are helping ourselv es and if we are not pleased with a purchase tell them as we are quite Bure adjustments can be made satis factorily to all concerned and we should not wear out shoe leather trying to save two pennies and also make it known to others about your own business houses good service We contacted the race horse head waiter on Monday afternoon and he was in a streamlined step as usual.. always trying to help the other fel low and instructing his crew of waiters to keep in mind that quick rvice is th* gwiding light i to success. _ The Omaha Guide is going over the top-Are you lending a hand to help in the cause by taking out a one year's subscription. _ We had the pleasure of saying • hello to prof- aCmpbell, one of the old school. The membership drive of the NAA CP. is moving on to a good start. The joint services sponsored by St. Johns AME. Church and Zion Baptist Church on Sunday evening July 26, was a complete success. i The summer resorts are using a large number of waiters and we don't see many on X. 24th Street. Are you a member of the 4C club? The Credit Union would like for you to take out some shares. NOT AS A POLITICIAN Ralph N. Gould, senior member of the R- N. Gould Co., Public Ac countants and Tax Specialists, i- a candidate for County Treasurer on the Republican Ticket. He announces he is offering his services not as a politician, but as a professional man ready to serve in a public office which his profes sional experience well qualifies him to fill. In his 21 years of experience in Omaha as a public accountant ar.d a specialist in tax law he has built up a reputation for efficiency and integrity among his business clients and others who know him. He ha® made a study of operation of the County Treasurer's office and upon the basis of his investiga tions aserts that this office can be operated with the same efficiency as any other large business institu tion. He pledges that if elected he will administer the office with the objective of providing maximum service to tax payers. Mr. Gould. 48 years old. studied law and higher accounting at New York University before coming to O maha. He resides with his wife and two sons at 5717 Rees Street. Both sons are graduates of Cent'-il High School. Mr. Gould throughout his career has taken an active interest in pub lic affairs, but this is his first can didacy for public office Ralph N Gould, senior member of the R. N. Gould Co-. Public Account ants and Tax Specialists, is a candi date for County Treasurer on the Republican ticket. He studied law and higher acounting at New York University and for the past £1 years has specialized in tax law and accounting in Omaha. In the course of his services as a public ac countant. he has set up various typ es of accounting systems and nas had to disentangle and clarify many baffling sets of problems. His wide experience enables him to embrace at a place the various factors relat ing to a case and he has always ac quitted himself with great credit. While Mr. Gould is comparatively new to politics, he has always had a deep interest in both local and nat- j ional government and he has built up a reputation for efficiency and I integrity with the people who know i ' him. He has made a study of the - present set-up in the County Treas-| urer's office and believes there is no , reason why this office cannot be run ] in just as efficient a manner in ev ery -way in the interests of the peo pie of Douglas County. Mr. Gould is not a politician seeking a politic al office so much as a professional man offering his services to the peo ple of this county for a position which his particular profession weil qualifies him to fill. (Reference 1928 edition of Who's Who in Omaha and Shelton's His tory of Nebraska. 1930 edition). MARRIED MEN TO BE INDUCTED LINCOLN, Nebraska, July 31 - Because calls for men for the armyd service are larger than the availably supply of single 1-A men in Nebras ka. many local boards must con tinue induction of married men to meet quotas. Brigadier Guy N. H -n ninger, state selective service dir ector. said this week. “It is true." the general said that recent revisions in selective service regulations direct local boards to call single 1-A men before turning to married registrants. i ‘‘But it is also true that the same revisions order local boards to con tinue meeting their induction calls —a fact which Washington press and radio announcements of the re visions failed to emphasize." he added. Many Nebraska local boards had already exhausted their immedia'ely available supplies of single 1-A men when announcement of the revision0 was made, the genera said, and those boards which still had a sup ply of these men t<» draw from will deplete that supply in August. "It is most unfortunate.” General enninger said, "that many married registrants — particularly those whose only dependent is a wife— apparently obtained the incorrect conclusion that these revisions in regulations removed them from the possibility of induction for several months. "Nebraska is already behind in meeting its quotas.” he said, ‘and I have no information to encourage the thought that calls for men dur ing the coming months will be less than they have in the past few months. •‘I think it is safe to say that by September virtually every local board in the state will be forced to call some married men to help meet its induction quota, despite the fact that eligible 20 year olds who regis tered in June w-jll be moving into the armed service by that time," General Henninger declared. He stressed that a "married man” so far as Selective service is con cerned. is one who not only married to December 8, 1941, but also prior to the time when his selection ap Hugh B. iislirnsre says: “Let's Take Waste ful Spending out of our War Effort” _ Vote for _ HUGH B. ASHMORE Republican For United States Senator (Political Advertisement) Do You Want ••• JHHAIR SYSTEM on your hair 7 days and see it yon are really enjoying the pleasure ol - LONGER HAIR that so often S captures Love and Romance. HAIR GETS LONGER schen scalp and hair conditions are normal and the dry, brittle, break* ing oS hair can be retarded, it has a chance to get longerandmuch more beautiful. Just try the JUELENE SYSTEM 7 days, let your mirrot prove results. Send $L (If C.O.D, postage extra). Fully guaranteed. Money back if you are not pleased. Mail This Coupon to: f^JUEL COMPANY, Dept.B-317 I 3724 N. Clark St.. Chicago. III. . II will try the JUELENE SYSTEM tar I 7 days. If my mirror does not show satisfae- | ■ ton' results. I will aak for mj money back. I . HUH- ! 1 I *“- j * *rr_stitt_J |j)UR CUSTOMERS PARTICIPATE 1W FREE SIFTS | Ralph Gould Republican County Treasurer 21 Tears Experience as Public “Service with a Accountant and Tax Specialist in Smile” Omaha (Political Advertisement) peared near. Some single men. General Henn inger said, have been granted occu pational deferment for limited net iods of time. As these deferments expire, the burden will be on cm ployers to show to the satisfaction of local boards that these men are not replaceable by workers ineligible for the armed service. _ ] COUNT BASIE LOOKING FOR FILM Los Angeles, CaiiL. (C) After his | Kansas City engagement. Count Basie went to Hollywood to angle for an MGM picture. It will prob ably be an all-ofay revue and not Cabin in the Sky, as it was rumor-vl Basie may do a special act. Hus Count never consented to do Cabia In the Sky because he and the stud io couldn't agree on financial terms. So now MGM is talking to Duke Rl lington about the picture, -.vhieii stars Ethel Waters and Paul Robe son. (Political Advertisement) James C. Kinsler -CANDIDATE FOR REPUBLICAN —NOMINATION— FOR CONGRESS SUMMER STORE HOURS 9 a. m. to 5 p. in. Telephone AT. 7334 1595-15 DOUGLAS STREET I For Penny-wise Women Basement ECONO-WISE SHOP READY-TO-WEAR Late Shipment of a Special Purchase ^ DRESSES Q49 2 for 65° 2-pc. suits of chambray in narrow and wide stripes. Wide color selection in blue, rose, brown, red. aqua, green, and combi nations. Suitable for all hot weather informal wear. Dresses with jackets in spun rayon prints . . . beige, green, navy, blue, luggage polka-dots. In sizes 12 to 20. Wear them on week-end trips, at the office, on the street, or to schooL Kilpatrick's Basement— Where 9"ality Is Low Priced UNHAPPY WIVES FIND NEW HOPE IN SPECIAL VITAMIN COMBINATION Clinical Tests Demonstrate Sterile Women May Be Aided—Happy Homes Are Dependent on Babies Nothing equals a baby to bring com-1 plete unity and happiness into the home tod tie husband and wife into a stronger bond of enduring love and mutual in ^ Many homes break up from lack of children and contribute to the amazing American record af one divorce for every five marriages. Unhappy wives, childless due to a vitamin-deficient fine tional weakness, may now enjoy the de sires and activities of Nature’s most wonderful creation—a normal, fully-de veloped, vigorous woman. Sensational clinical tests demonstrate that, in vitamin-deficient instances, a new vitamin of the B Complex group ? has a striking effect on sterility. Twenty two women, with known sterility records for as much as five years were selected for the test. After weeks of heavy dosage with Paraaminobenzoic acid (a vitamin of the B Complex group) more than half of these women became mothers. Many of these women had been told their condition was hopeless. The wta min is absolutely harmless and decided ly beneficial to general health as well. t Thus it is apparent that highly fort> lied vitamin combination may be jnut the thing needed by the childless wile and quickly bring the happiness of * baby into the home. If you are childless and have even giv en up hope, if you wish to eliminate oae of the greatest causes of unhappv mar riages. by all means give the Periex Combination Vitamin System a short trial in the privacy of your home. To introduce this new vitamin combination quickly to a million women, the Pexlex Company, 314 North Michigan Ave»' Chicago, Illinois, will send a regular $2.00 supply for only $1.00 and a few cents postage. You need send no money —just your name and address. Periex comes in a plain wrapper—directions are quite simple, and w> special diet «, exercise i* required.