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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1942)
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 A WAITRESS AT 1402 North 24th Street. WANTED: Licensed Janitor, Good Salary, 3 Room Apt. furnished, Call Ruder, AT. 8927. FOR SALE A 5 Room House, modern excepl heat. In good condition. Will sel at a Reasonable Price. Call-1 AT. 5690. | Be A Detective— 1 Work home, travel. Experience <1 necessary. Detective ParticulaH B’ree. Write. George C-G Wegnl 2640 Broadway, N. Y. H FOR RENT — 9 At a reasonable price to the ri^B party. 2 centrally located, modH Store rooms at 24th and Maple. Hi fine location for a Drug stHj Beauty Culture Parlor, or Shoe H^ pair Shop. For further information call 6656. ■ for-saL!- k 1 Lounging Cot that can be u^B for a den or suitable for a spH bed in a Library room. Like nH price very cheap. Call Mrs. SiH van. WE. 0475, 3319 Franklin Stl POULTRY Poultry Dressed—Fresh Eggs, I Everite Feeds, 2320 North 24th 9 Phone AT. 7884. I ROOMS, APTS FOR RENT fv Furnished Room for Rent, 2807 ^B 24th St., WE. 2217. HE FOR RENT A modern Room. cKj HA. 1368 between 4 and 9 p. m. BB Dandy three room Apt.. 2130 Noi^^Ei 28th St-. Reasonable. rlS 2or 3 iToTom XpT. FOR UEN'O Own your home. Use our eaH Payment Plan for 90 days. PS your money in escrow in some Baifl or a Loan Company or with yoiH attorney. 50 fine houses for safl cheap. fei E. M. DAVIS, | LICENSED REAL ESTATE R BROKER J 2817 No. 24th St. WE. 1166 LAU N DRIES & CLEANERS " EDHOLivr& SHERMAN t401 North 24th WE. 606f _EMERSON LAUNDRY *324 North 24th St. WE. 10‘Z WANT TO BUY — Furniture cf all kinds—dressers, oeds, 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 St. WEbster 202S. | IVSix Lemon Juice AT HOME m TO RELIEVE Wm MISERIES Money Back If This Rheumatic Recipe Fails ’ Good news travels fast—many of the thou sands of folks who now take lemon Julca for rheumatic pain—have found that by adding two tablespoonfuls of Allenru to one labiespoonful 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 IS year old formula to relieve rheumatic aches and pains In fact—If It does not help —your money back. What could be fairer? Oet Allenru today at any live druggist. Only <S eents—Do It Now. 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 realize 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 sparkle. •ra really clean and look like the day your dentist said. ••Don't they look natural?" Try Stera-Kleen - lasts long - costs only 30g. At all druggists. ?Jd Farmer's Recipe: Mia Allenru and emon Juice to get quick reliel from pains of rheumatics and neuralgia Druggiata Whva Allenru — grocera have lemons. ^uperwrom '2 p. m. Until 3 a!!Tr American & Chinese Dishes Fill Your Bin! HELP AMERICA WIN ALL GRADES COAL. 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 minutes 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 1 symptomatic relief—medicines like those in Bell-ana Tablets. No laxatiTe. Bell-ans brings comfort in a ! Jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle I to us. 25c at all druggists. IrO ADVEF~^SE po shop Itever you have to sell, 01 Uver you want to buy— 1ESE COLUMNS news. The Paxton hotel with the raea rse headwaiter, are going along loothly. We wonder if any of the boys are ing to Hot Spring, Ark., for the ison? Brother John Evans is on the job the Rome hotel. "o the members and their friend.- j ! Omaha Athletic Club is very | ich out in front in service. , he two front doormen, Mr. Hir i Greenfield and Mr. Goldie Dav ind the very fine office force of ies. . . .Mr. Earl Mahannah th° o ging auditor and the very friend lady asistants, Miss Celia Thomas 3 Ina Brickson. Miss Lillian id we 11 and the very fine ladies ) take care of the cigars, candy, magazines, Miss Rosa Bush ;s Ruth Page, Miss Emily Chuich all are serving the members h a smile and the very generous stess Miss Gladys Reason can ai lys produce new ideas about giv g high class parties. Miss Mary E:rman, Mr. Algers Sec., Mr. Jam Redda, top man in the liquor dept d Mr. James Alder, all are all ery good spokes in the Athletic lub’s wheel of progress. Mr. Ed. Lee the quick thinking opman from the show-me state nd the two assistants Mr. Bill Son. s from the razor back hog state nd Mr. Chauncey McFarland from he Lone star state, are on the al ■rt at all times to improve the serv le. And the Waldorf-chef Mr. Reno nd his crew of first class cooks nd help are very much in the rurin ig on the food front. Now let’s ive them all a big hand. 'HE WEEK Gabby Watson and Leonard Ow ns on 24th and Lake St. Mrs. Joseph D. Lewis has her i lowers covered up for the winter. C. C. Galloway a very busy man. Omaha’s first black-out a success. Rose bowl football game will be played in Pasadena. Calif., New fear’s Day. Boystown football squad practic es in Charleston, West. Va. - National Horse show held in N. Y. November 7th Army' and Navy calls for more Librarians. Mayor Butler praises blackout. Marion Anderson will sing a; Constitutional Hull in Washington, D. C. Train hits auto and kills five and four ship workers killed in bus crash. Attorney Bryant on north 24 th Street Roy White made a wonderful speech at the big political rally in favor of Gov. 'Griswold and C. C. Galloway introduced the next U. S. Senator. Sanderson Brown. Ed Fletcher and H. W. Smith at Perry Taylor's barber shop at the same time. Mr. Montgomery of 26th and Lak1T St., on north 24th street. Clair Chapel and union memorial quarterly conference held by bis-. trict Supt. G. D. Hancock which was | a complete success. All auxiliaries | made good reports. This writer had the pleasure Of J listening to the election returns at the lovely home of Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Gray and we were all smiles at the large Republican majority. Tropical storms passed over Ha- j vana and Florida coasts. Gimbel’s department store in Pittsburgh closed by retail clerk’s strike. A woman in Kansas sleeps every night in a bathtub filled with water, j George Thomas and Jerry Owens on 24th and Lake Sts. Elder Mudd having his shoes shin ed. E. M. Meiss on his way homo from church with an arm full of books and drinking a bottle of pop. Sam Grevious in Omaha. Capt Earl Jones on 24th and Lake St. talking with a fine group of lad ies. Rev. C. C. Reynolds preached a very lovely sermon at Clair Chapel and also attended union memorial in South Omaha in the afternoon. His lovely choir accompanied him. Col. Henry Black very active as usual. Essex Wiliams on 24th and Lake St., C. B. Wilkes a streamlined Sun day school supt. always doing a fine job for those who are in need also has five beautiful scholars in his care. Let's give him a hand and help him. Jimmie Lunceford’s orchestra in 8iiiuiiiinmimiiinmmiiiiiniiiniHiiiini;i!iiiiii;'iLiiiiiiinMii!iiittiiiiiiniiiniiiii[imu<ninuiiimunim!n!siiiiQuimi!inr!iiuuiiiu!.:iHmii;uiimninmiiimmHmiHiinnniiF ■WATS OOP NEW NEIGHBOR AND THE money he saved where prices are low™ KILPATRICK S SPECIAL SALE Beautiful Imported Darwin Tulips 50c Doz. 100 for 4.50 ' Several Beautiful Varieties Cut Flowers—Mala Floor Madam, here's one TABOO you can forget when you want relief You can thank your lucky stars that women are no longer squeam ish about discussing their troubles. , Otherwise you might never know of the 2-way help that CARDUI may bring when nervousness, headaches, and cramp-like pain are due only to periodic functional causes. ( Many women find that, started three days before the time and taken as directed, CARDUI aids in relieving functinal periodic dis comforts. Used as a tonic, CAR DUI often wakes up sleepy appe tites. aids digestion by increasing the flow of gastric juices, and thus helps to build up resistance against the days it’s needed most. Try it! War Stamps Sold I By Harlem Church With more than $16,000 in War Bond sales to its credit during the past 5 months, St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, 230 Lenox Avenue, New York City, is becoming one of the most active centers in Harlem for the promotion and distribution of War Savings securities. Sunday announcements and appeals by Dr. John H. Johnson (shown at right), pastor, and weekday efforts of Guy C. Payne, sexton, stimulate systematic investment in War Bonds and Stamps among the 3,000 members of the congregation. Sale of Stamps alone averages over $30 daily—in addition to the $3,200 average monthly sale of Bonds. Enrolled as a branch of the Federal Credit Union, the church is legally entitled to handle War Bonds and Stamps for direct sale, and its office is open every Wednesday evening for the convenience of all persons in the neighborhood, regardless of whether they are members of St. Martin’s or not. The church itself subscribed for $4,000 in War Bonds and various clubs and societies have made block purchases. A number of middle-aged women worth of Bonds. banded together and invested their savings in $400 The picture at the top shows Miss Lorraine Baily, church secretary, selling Stamps to a member of the congregation, at the church office. Mojor Issue ! (Continued from page 1) as i u nce than ever oefor,» of their 1 irate solutio" -| Omaha. j Frank Hughes on an Omaha St. t car. Sgt. Bivens very busy with U. S. ! boys and Old Gory and also always ( lending a helping hand wherever its | needed. I Rev. F. C. Williams of Zion Bap tist church has the record for short sermons. I _ COORDINATING COMMITTEE ON NEGRO HEALTH PLAN HEALTH FORUM NOVEMBER 19th AT URBAN LEAGUE At a meeting of the Coordinat ing Committee on Negro Health plans were made for a series of health Forums to be held through-1 out Omaha to acquaint the people > with the serious health needs of the j community. The first in this series of Forums is a discussion entitled. “Your Health Your Community. Your Re sponsibility'', to be h?ld at the Om aha Urban League at 8:15 p. m. on Thursday. November 19th Mr. T. P. Mahammitt, local civ.c leader, will lead the discussion. Panel members include Dr. S. L. Pearlman, Director Communicable Disease Control. Omaha Health De partment: Raymond R. Brown, Ex ecutive Secretary. Omaha Urban League: Dr. Craig Morris, Chairman Coordinating Committee on Negro Health: C. F. McNeil. Executive Sec retary, Community Welfare Coun cil. War has greatly changed the health picture in many communities largely because of population move ments, entrance of many men and women in war industries, and shift ing of soldiers in and out of com munities, and the mental effects of war itself on the genera population. ‘‘Health is an important cog in home defense and in production for our war effort. Thus the Coordin ating Committee on Negro Health states Dr. Craig Morris Chairman, “urges every citizen to plan to at tend.” Questions to be discussed will in clude: 1. What is OUR Community do ing about Health Protection? 2. ARE WE defending OUR cit izens’ rights to health? 3. Are WE providing THEM with the facilities they need? 4. How has the war affected rhe health of OUR Community? These and other vital health mat ters will be considered at this meet ing. The audience will be encour j aged to ask questions. The full text O: Ur O iliver’s let te-’ released by the U. S. Office of Edi rt.on. The purpose of this or- ' BaJ. zttion is to mobilize the bJy ; u 4 girl-power of the Nation, to ut i rre fullv -.heir o-»g -ness to r'f.., co organise thi eagerness in t> eiiective action, and to chancel >t : to areas of increasingly crit ical need. Com n ss’ou t' J-tuUbn »or has emphasize* the t that t vi i a war. . . no. only of armies an! navies, of factories and farms, b ■! also a war of home? and schools snd therefore, that education lias an ii c ispensable part to play. He !-a« sain that “Schools must help to ford, individuals the isues it staky to train them lor their vital part in the total war effort; to guide them into conscious personal relat ionship to the struggle.” “The Victory Corps otters every Negro high school and every Ncgrcl student an opportunity to partic ipate and share in the war effort the most gigantic and urgent task this Nation has ever undertaken. I am particularly glad of this oppor tunity and respectfully urge every principal and teacher to give their students a chance to make the’r full contribution. ‘ Negroes have a very important stake in this war. It is to their personal and group interest that we win the victory as speedily a3 pos sible .for their only hope lies in de mocracy. Our boys and girls—and adults, too—should be made to real ize that in spite of the many disa 1 vantages and discriminations faced by them, we are better off tk 1:1 many minority groups: that pro gress is being made slowly but sure ly toward realization of the democ ratic principles of freedom, equality and justice: and that, imperfect a3 I our present situation is, we still have the right and opportunity t> i use every legitimate means to im prove our condition. This most cer tainly would not tie poss; .le under an Axis dominated country. There is a great deal of truth in the fol lowing excerpt of an article appear ing in the Pittsburgh Courier and reprinted in the Norfolk Journal and Guide, September 12 1942: 'What we call Negro progress will most certainly be ended in case the Axis wins, and every Negro who has managed to lift his head above the mired mass NORTH 7 4th st SHOE REPAIR 1807 N. 24th St. WE. 4Z4 —POPULAR PRICKS LOOK AT YOUR SHOES Other People Do. Our Half Solelng Method leaves No Repair Look on your shoes. We Use the BEST Material. i»i< will be ruthlessly shoved down. “Every colored citizen with a municipal. State or Federal job will lose it. “Every college for the educat ion of Negro youth will be closed and colored students will be barr ed from white colleges. “Every Negro who now is ably McGILL’S — BAR & BLUE ROOM E. McGill, Prop 2423-2.1 NORTH 24th St. WINE, LIQUORS and CIGARS Blue Room Open 8 p. m. to 1 a. in. Open for Private Parties from 2 to 7 p. m. —No Charges— WE SPECIALIZE IN MIXED DRINKS. Free Delivery from Ha m to . 1 *• ®* IV »4lI WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF BONDED LIQUORS to vote will be disfranchised. “All Negroes may lose their citizenship, an act that would re quire but a stroke of a pen. ‘‘Public education for Negroes, if not discontinued altogether, will go no farther than the fourth grade. “Skilled industrial labor will not be closed to colored people, as will most professional work. ‘‘These things have happened to Jews and Poles, and there is no reason to believe that a Nazi Gauleiter in Washington would [ fail to exercise the same meas ures here against Negroes and Jews.” “While we must continue to com bat race and color prejudice and discriminations, in our present ef fort to save democracy, wo should keep ever before us that the major issue of this war is Freedom.... not race or color. Where the latter have been made to appear as the main issue they are used merely as a smoke screen. When we win this war and establish Freedom ss the animating principle in life, the prob lems of race and color which remain can be attacked with greater assur ance than ever before of their ult imate solution. I hope, therefore, that we can make this task easier by a 100 percent participation of your school in the High school Vic tory Corps. Further information concerning it should be secured I from your local school superintend ent or your State department Of education.” Bertha’s bar-b.q and HOME COOKED MEALS 1024 So. 11th St. Omaha, Nebr. i .-«V.vr.V^.V^>-.V»V.'AW 24th AND LAKE STREETS PRESCRIPTIONS —Free Delivery— WE. 0809 DUFFY w.v.v.v.v.v.,.v,,.v.,.vw Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis 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 •gxsyz; 'Art&rs. -*vrr^ r * • .-r*. * 'y-,~v:'c y i ■ ^ry-g^sgRCTacyT^ Help Wanted! Wanted A Young man, 17 years or an older man* who can be a Mechanical Helper in the shop. Good Pay. CALL AT — UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER CO. 1721 Douglas Street i Cost* only 3C per day x Pays tip to $325 per year j Accidents and Sickness strike quickly and Hospitals demand Cash. Itdtnll Hospitalization Insurance meets this emergency promptly by puvriding HOSPITAL ROOM mmd BOARD— OPERATIM0 ROOM X RAT EXAMINATION-ANESTHESIA LABORATORY EXAMINATION—MATERNITY BENEFIT3 - SURGEON S FEES—SANATORIUM BENEFITS-EMERGENCY AID—A M B U LA MOB SERVICE — a total maximum payment a* to $32) fa* only 3c a da*. HO MEDICAL EXAMINE* TION REQUIRED -CLAIMS ft PAID PROMPTLY-AVAIL. \ ABLE FOR THE ENTIRB IV FAMILY. ACT NOW Yoa can't afford to be wilfe oat this Low Cost protection. Let the FEDERAL PLAN pw the bills. Tamr &vimm mi m^i i’esp^ J>liIJ1 311fr'di I \ 5lily ★ ★ -*★** FEDERAL LIFE and BENEFIT ASSOCIATION Citizens Bank Building Wilmington. DaL O. G. N. Gentlemen:—Please mail me. without obligation, full Free details about rout to I a day Hospital and Surgical Payment Plan. 1 under stand no agent trill ~n | Nazm ___ Itraat___| Cky as Toua_.. mm. |