c 0. © l PAYS TO ADVEI 'TSE— IT PAYS TO SHOP For whatever you have to sell, 01 for whatever you want to buy— IN THESE COLUMNS SELL CHEMICALLY TREATED PRESS CLOTH— Nationally advertised The WEAV ER PRES-KLOTH is sold in all leading department stores. All cloths are individually enveloped, and distinctly priced at 69c. your cost is 35c. Send 35c for sample and full particulars. Marcus Cloth ing Co., 2130-34 Gravois Ave., St Louis, Mo. HELP WANTED WANTED: Licensed Janitor, Good Salary, 3 Room Apt. furnished, Gal] Ruder, AT. 8927. FOR SALE A 5 Room House, modern except heat. In good condition. Will sell at a Reasonable Price. Call—■ AT, 5690. BENEFIT SHOP, 711 SO. 16TH ST. SCHOOL DAYS WILL SOON BE HERE. GOOD BARGAINS IN CLOTHING AND SHOES. LAD IES COATS REDUCED. FOR RENT — At a reasonable price to the right party. 2 centrally located, modern Store rooms at 24th and Maple. A fine location for a Drug store, Beauty Culture Parlor, or Shoe Re pair Shop. For further information call AT. 6656. FOR SALE 1 Lounging Cot that can be used for a den or suitable for a spare bed in a Library room. Like new, price very cheap. Cal] Mrs. Sulli ran. WE. 0475, 3319 Franklin St. POULTRY Poultry Dressed—Fresh Eggs, — Everite Feeds, 2320 North 24th St. Phone AT. -7X8 f. ROOMS. APTS FOR RENT Furnished Room for Rent, 2807 N. 24th St.. WE. 2217. FOR RENT A modern Room, Oal] HA. 1368 between 4 and 9 p. m. 2or 3 ROOM APT7 FOR RENT. Own your home. Use our easy Payment Plan for 90 days. Put your money in escrow in some Bank or a Loan Company or with your attorney. 50 fine houses for sale cheap. E. M. DAVIS, LICENSED REAL ESTATE BROKER 2817 No. 24th St. WE. 1166 Join—Reliable Friendship Club— For Pleasure. Send Dime for mem bership blank. H. Brookes, 3171 Wendell, Chicago, 111. LAU NDRIES & CLEANERS EDHOLM & SHERMAN 8401 North 24th WE. 606fi EMERSON LAUNDRY *324 North 24th St. WE. lOJr ______ W ANT TO BUT — Furniture of all 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—W E 2224 FUNERAL DIRECTORS THOMAS FUNERAL HOME 2022 Lake St. WEbster 2022 HOTEL OLGA NEW YORK CITY 695 Lenox Avenue (Corner 145th Street) Select Family and Tourist Hotel Running Hot and Cold Water in Each Room All Rooms Outside Exposure —Service— Subway and Surface Cars at Door; Rates Reasonable. ED. H. WILSON, Prop. Tel. Aud 3-7920 mMx Lemon Juice AT HOME Pfe TO RELIEVE Wthe MISERIES Money Back If This Rheumatic Recipe Fails' Good newt travel* fast—many of the thou* aands of folk* who now take lemon julo* for rheumatic pain—have found that by fcfhflns two tablespoonful* of Allenru to one «abl**poonful of Lemon Juice In a alas* of water, they ret faster relief for the ache* sod pain* caused by rheumatism, lumbago. If* no surprise either, for Allenru u a U year old formula to relieve rheumatic ache* and pale* In (act—if It doe* not help —your money back. What could be fairer! Get Allenru todty at any live druggiat Only E,«SJ ..it m WAITERS’ COLUMN (BY H. W. SMITH) WE. 6458 By H. W. Smith i waiters column The White Horse Inn with Mr. t Louis White. Mr. Dave Russ, Mr. ■ Isaiah Jones and Mr. Branch are ail very much out in front. — The Fontenelle waiters are on the quick step at all times. RABE'S BUFFET for Popular Brandt BEER and LIQUORS 1 2229 Lake Street —Always a place to park— JACKSON 0288 FIDELITY STORAGE & VAN CO. Local and Long Distance MOVING 1107 Howard, W. W. Holler, Mgr. CHOP SUEY King Yuen Cafe 20^0l/^ N. 24th St. JAckson 8576 .Open from 2 p. m. Until 3 a. m American & Chinese Dishes Fill Your Bin! HELP AMERICA WIN ALL GRADES CO AL. COMPARE PRICES Convenient Plans can be Arranged DON’T DELAY Call or come in and see us. American Coal Co. 17TH & IZARD AT. 3670 Gross JEWELRY & LOAN CO. formerly at 24th and Erskine St. NEW LOCATION— 514 N. 16th ST. Phone JA-4635 Acid Indigestion Relieved in 5 minute* or double your money back When excess stomach acid causes painful, suffocat ing gas. sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for symptomatic relief—medicines like those In Bell-ana Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ans brings comfort in i jiffy or double your money back oa return of bottl* to us. 25c a: all druggists. 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 mg «««*« -but now-,here ,..vrrt °3?u* nerferted by ■ dentitt. called Ster.-Kleen that thoroughly deem i»l«e teeth hke megtc no brushing! Simply put • Irttl* Stera-Kleen Powder in a gle»* of water-aoek -* vour teeth - now they aperkle •re really clean and look like the day your dential aeid. ••Don’t they look natural? Try ttere-Kleen - Ineta long - coau only 30* At ell dniggim.__ Old Farmer'* Recipe; Mix Allenru and Lemon Juice to get quiiji relief from pam* of rheumatic* and neuralgia Dniggul* have Allenru — grocer* have leawm*. ■ _ The Omaha Club with the rapid fire headwaiter and the very much out in front captain, are doing a very fine Job in taking very good care of the service. The Cottonwood Room at the Blackstone hotel is going over big. The Omaha Guide tops all of the weekly news. The Omaha Athletic Club with the very fine force Of polite and courteous employees from the front doormen Mr. Hiram Greenfield and Mr. Goldie Davis to the lovely off ice force, Miss Mary Herman, Miss Ina Erickson. Miss Lillian Tread well, Miss Cecelia Thomas, Earl Monahan and the very lovely littlq lady who has charge of the print ing dept, Miss Jennie Aldera, who distributes the menu cards with a smile, down to the Waldorf Astoria chef cook and the kitchen force and the dining room crew who are al ways quick stepping and giving deluxe Service—ail are tops and how The RR boys are in the running at all times, taking very good care Of the service for the traveling pub lic at all times. Are you a member of the NAACP? This writer had the pleasure of visiting with the very fine crew at the Chamber of Commerce and it was a very lovely exchanging of words. Mrs. Gertrude Smith, the friendly manager and Mr. John Marchellow the rapid fire chef and the musician headwaiter in hjs spotless white suit all were there. THE WEEK— by H. W. SMITH Champion Joe Louis in Omaha. St. Louis Cardinals World BB. champs. Nine Colored graduates from the Army medical school. Mrs. Asilee Dotson Turner was. aamed to the position of Junior Laboratory Technician at Fort Sill Oklahoma. Coordination Council meeting at the Urban League. _ Revival Services at Clair Chapa! 'going good. Rev. Ridley, Pastor of St. Johns AME. Church attended Annual Con ference in Kansas City and was re turned to pastor in Omaha. Mt. Moriah Baptist Church’s roof getting on. Haiti asks for Catholic Priest. Poll tax bill up in Congress Oct. 12th. India continues to contend for her freedom. IN OMAHA PROPER Capt. Earl Jones. Mr. Elias Por ter and H. W. Smith meet in a northside business house. Perry Taylor the barber. very much interested in Mt. Moriah Bap tist church being completed. Sonnie Scroggins in Omaha from Great Lakes Naval training base. Early frost kills grass and leav 93 from the trees are falling off. won’t be long for winter. Wings Over Jordan draws large crowd at City auditorium. Duke Ellington in Omaha, Oct. 26. All Colored business houses giv ing quick service to their custom ers. NAACP. to have a Mass Meeting soon. ; ■' i Attorney Bryant doing good work ; lor the Republican party. Everyone hunting scrap iron to help the defense Allen Johnson of KC. was thru I this week. I Miss Dell Scroggins in the mak N.-V.n, cSSf w,r„ 'w ]jwc L£Zl£&?s,re aY Pic*"* *»* YmXn KCGARci*^ fC0RDm TO %£** cilZT* ° "&¥?«»** IH6 L>CHT {Si »>«• rf *T ABSr WALLACE SERVICE i _ I MY NEW 1943 ASTROLO.Y READING ARE READY. C. S.—I am lost in a fog. Am I really in love with my boss man cr iust infatuated? At times I oaa’t get him off my mind and I ran hardly bear to have him out of sight. Do I care that much fo1 him or am I fooling my own ;e f’ Does he think the same of me. or should I stop asking him to do i y thing for me? Sometimes I thi ik tie is pretending. Ans: You are certainly a gl it ton for punishment to let yourself in for as unrequited affair such ■ s this is. Your boss cares for you.. but he also cares for his wife and two or three other girl friends. In tact, he is just a wolf out on the make ■ • • • and why an attractive gbl who could have any number of boy friends would be satisfied to accept the few crumbs of affection he of fers is more than I can understand. You have thrown yourself at him.. ind he accepted iJt. But you are the loser....not be. Your chances with the single men of your city are 'ast slipping thru your fingers, for •hey know the price this Manpower asks. E. L.—My husband and I would [ike to buy a home. Do you think sve should at this time? We have been married quite a while and have had to pay rent all that time. Ans: You and yOur husband have paid out practically enough rent since you have been married to pay lor a home. Why continue to put out your money and get nothing but rent receipts? A home in your case would be a good investment. Your monthly payments would lie like rent......and you could rent out an extra bed room if you like. L. H. T .S.—I am a young boy suffering from some kind of com plex. I have been to]d that I am handsome and I don’t get conceited over it. I can dance and sing well v.nd I am told I have a swell person ality. Yet lately. I have trouble making friends. .. .and I want to know what is wrong with me. Ans: This pretty little girl you just met has you floored, doesn't anHHingBniiiiiiffit.mm 1 •» k-, ing of the beauty contest. Mr. Charles Moore returning from school on 22nd and Lake St. Wm. Neiss a streamlined Sunday school teacher. Onaha Guide leading in all lat* news. Frank Stewart retired city fire man. going downtown on a Park St. car. Tuxedo Barber shop tops in giv ing service. Branch Murray at the Urban Lea gue on business. Mr. Ed Lee on the job at the Ath letic Club. Mr. McCowan the insurance man a high powered salesman at all tim es. she? It seems that she knows all the answers... .and is used to the same attention you have always had. She likes you all right. But she is accustomed to having boys seek out her company, rather than vice versa. Better get in the chase and turn that personality on her be fore someone with a smoother line beats your time. R. K.—Will my boy friend ever use his head for anything except to hold his hat on and to keep his ears apart? He lets everyone tell him what to do. Now he and an old sweetheart of mine are big buddies and this old flame tells him not to go with me and keeps us confused all of the time. I am getting tired of staying in a strain all of the time. Ans: If your boy friend is will ing to put this other fellow’s opin ion before yours.... then why not give him a dose of his own medic ine? If you will play up to this other fellow and date him a few times, the boy friend will probably see the other boy's motive in runn ing your affairs and change his tune- Invite the Big Buddy every where you go until your boy friend gets thoroughly fed up with him. F. M.—I was married to a very fine man for eight years and have been divorced from him for four years. We have a fine son who is with me. I think Of him constant ly altho’ he is married again and has two children by his second wife. I love him and feel that he loves me. His present marriage was that of spite and I believe he is miser able as well as myself- Please of fer me some helpful advice AnS: It is too late to start rak ing over the coals of your past love. It is just unfortunate that you did not realize you loved your husband before you divorced him. Now he has made a new life for himself with his wife and children. Accept the fact that you gave up all claims to his love when you left him. It would be far better for you to stop I living in the past and build a new life for yourself with someone else. He can find happiness with his present family if you will leave him alone and give him the chance to do so. UNITED W AR & COMMUNITY CAMPAIGN STARTS MONDAY (Continued from page 1) elude a sermon on the underlying theme of the campaign.unseii - j ish giving to help our neighbors at home and abroad. Sunday morning, in all Catholic churches priests will read a pastor al letter by Bishop Ryan urging support of the united fund. In many Protestant churches a simil ar letter will be read from Dr. Ar thur A. Brooks, chairman of -(he spiitual emphasis committee of file Fund. Sunday afternoon at 3:30 there will be a community dedication ser vice in Joslyn Memorial for camp aign workers. The choir of st. John’s Catholic church will contri bute choral numbers. Report luncheons have been sch eduled for the FOntenelle Hotel as OPA ORDERS SPECLAL STUDY OF PRICE INEQUALITIES (Continued from page 1) ! ed by the OPA. to study the prob lems and devise feasible means of wiping out price inequalities in Ne gro communities. Pointing out that if higher prices are found in New York City as the study, “Food Costs More in Harl em”, the NAACP. stated the cost to the Negro on a national scale is in excess of 100 million dollars a year. This figure is based on a mod est estimate of an expenditure of [ $3.00 a week per person as contrast ed with the Bureau of Labor Stat istics estimate averaging expendit ures including those of the South ern sharecropper as $5.00 per week per person. On the basis of the Office of Price Administration’s action. Walter White wired NAACP. branches in Chicago. Philadelphia, Detroit Richmond, Los Angeles. Atlanta, Kansas City and other important cities that it is “of utmost import ance that your branch make study of prices in your city and rush re sults to us. Urge utilization of a vailable resources in persons train fed in making such comparative studies. Wire status of local study and when we may expect findings.” The NAACP. asked for and was assured of speedy action by the newly formed OPA. committee by Leon Henderson, Mr. Harris and other officials. i follows: Tuesday. October 20, initial gifts and national firms divisions; Wednesday, industrial division No. 1; Thursday industrial division NO. ( 2; Friday, residential division; Mcr | day, October 26, business division; Tuesday, schools; Thursday, Octoo er 29th. final reports. — N ATIONAL CRIPPLED CHILDREN'S SOCIETY CONVENTION POSTPONED The Annual Convention of the National Society for Crippled Child ren scheduled for Omaha this month has been postponed until the wa is over, according to Mr. Harry’ E. Dickinson, President of the Nebras ka Society for Crippled Children. This was made necessary by trave] | restrictions an dthe necessity for I the organization to put al] its ef-1 forts into preparing the physically i handicapped to serve in this emcr-1 erency. “However, the Annual meei j ■j|r::r|;iiiii:iini!?l!!^llil"''fftlilll!l!ii[,;iiMn.:Hl!l[!m«'i’xir,ii.. ,nirn-;:im I TEL. WE. 2022 j OCR PRICES are based on the cost of serv ice plus the cost of merchandise and a reasonable profit. Thomas FUNERAL HOME 2022 LAKE ST. Omaha, Nebr. NORTH 24th st SHOE REPAIR 1807 N. 24th St WE. 424u —POPULAR PRICES— LOOK AT YOUR SHOES Other People Do. Our Half Solelng Method leaves No Repair Look on your shoes. We Use the BEST Material. \ s »■».. GETTING WITHIN PUNCHING DISTANCE OF TOKIO PEW YORK—Recapture of the air bases of Chuhskn, Lishui end ex pected ' recapture of Kinhwa by Chinese land forces, places United Nations air forces in position for long-range bombing of the Japanese capital. Tokio is now but seven hours from these Chinese bases. The tig Japanese industrial centers cf Nagasaki and Osaka are much closer, to from now on Mr. Moto can be looking aloft for an encore to the performance of General Jimmy Doolittle and his merry men.j PACKING IN SUPPLIES TO NEW GUINEA FRONT NEW GUINEA—A seemingly endless single file of native portexs forms the supply line to the fighting front in the interior of New Guinea where allied forces are fighting Japs driving on important baa* of Port Moresby. Each native totes about forty pounds of supplies over the hard route to the fighting line. ing of the Nebraska Society which was to be held in conjunction with the National meeting will be con vened at the Fontenelle Hotel in O i maha at 6:30 o Monday evening, October 19,” said Mr. Dickinson. Mr. A. H. Thompson, Director of Extension and Mr. Harry H. How ett, Director of Social Service for the National Society will be in at tendance to outline the work the local Society should do as brought out recently in the conference be tween the National Society and Fed eraj government officials. The meeting is open to the membership of the society which consists of all Persons who contributed $1 or m>»re to the organization in the past year. U. P. APOLOGIZES FOR RACIAL SLUR New York, N. Y.—In answer to a protest the National office of the NAACP. received this week an apol ogy from the United Press Assocul tion for the use of the phrase “ona black Negro buck” in a U. P. story which appeared recently in the Muskogee, Oklahoma Daily Phoen ix. The story was of the Chicago arrest of 84 Negro draft evaders. Girls, does an out-dated TABOO mean you don’t know this help? Very few women cling to the old fashioned notion that certain inti mate facts form a forbidden topic of conversation. That’s why many women who have suffered t^o cramp-like agony and nervous strain of periodic, functional distress at least konw about CARDUI. Try CARDUI, which may iWl* »n one of two ways: (1) as a tonic, it may pep up appetite, aid digestion, and thus help build up energy for the "time” to come; (2) started 3 days before the time, and taken as directed, it may aid in relieving purely functional, periodic pain. "Women have praised CARDITI’s help for 62 years. Try it! ELECT . . . ANTON J. TUS A COUNTY TREASURER Saved Douglas County Taxpayers Over 170,000 During the Seven Years Ho Served As Election Commissioner. •.'* . ticul ttU • Ci .r’C. . *•*. Costs only 3C per day : Pays Map to $325 per year Accidents aad Sickness strike quickly aad Hospitals detnaad Cash. Federal^ Hospitalization fateuranor meets this emergency promptly by providing HOSPITAL ROOM awl BOARD— OPERATING (ROOM X-RAY EXAMINATION—ANESTHESIA— LABORATORY EXAMINATION—MATER N ITT BENEFITS - SURGEON'S FEES-SANATORIUM BENEFITS—EMERGENCY AID—AM BUL A HCI SERVICE — a total aiaritnaat paymca ap la <329 km aofc * a dap. NO MEDICAL EXAMINE. _ TION REQUIRED - CLAIMS PAID PROMPTLY —AVAII« ABLE FOE THE ENTIRE FAMILY. ACT NOW Yoa can’t afford to be n ah cm this Low Coat protection. Lei the FEDERAL PLAN aap the bills.