The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, June 05, 1943, City Edition, Page TWO, Image 2

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    NEWSPAPER DELEGATES
TO TOUR FORT KNOX
Louisville Defender, 619 West
Walnut Street.
The publishers are expected to
bring to the meetings their editors,
advertising managers, photo-en
gravers, circulation department
heads and shop foreman for the
important discussions to take place
on problems affecting their various
department.
HIGHLIGHTS INCLUDE:
The Annual Message of the Pres
ident to be delivered at the Friday
June 11 Luncheon at 12:30 p. m„
a public Mass Meeting where dele
gates will hear an address by Dr.
J. E. Walker of Memphis, Tenn.,
under the sponsorship of the Falls
City Chamber of Commerce; and a
Special Luncheon meeting at which
the delegates will be the guests of
The Courier Journal and Times.
Luncheon speaker will be Mark
Etheridge, Editor of the Courier
Journal, and former Chairman of
the President’s Committee on Fair
Employment Practices.
OFFICERS
THE OMAHA GUIDE
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Published Every Saturday at 2418-20 Grant St
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
PHONE WEbster 1517
Entered as Second Class Matter Maxh 15, 1927, at
the Post Office at Omaha, Nebraska, under Act ot
Congress of March 3, 1879.
S. J. Ford. — — — Pres.
Mrs. Flurna Cooue**, — — Vice Pres
C. C. Gallowav. — Publisher and Acting Editor
Boyd V. Galloway, — Sec’y and Treas.
SUBSCRIPTION KAIL i.N o1Vi„„;s
One Year — - — tz o*
Six Months — — - — $1.28
Three Months — — .76
One Month — -- - ' 26
SUBSCRIPTION RATP OUT op |'(i’,VA
One Year — — ~ — $2 60
Six Months — — — *1.50
Three Months — — — 41.00
One Month — — — .40
All News Copy of Churches and all organizat
ions must be in our office not later than 100 p. to.
Monday for current issue. AH Advertising Copy gj
Paid Articles not later than Wednesday noon, pre
reeding date of issue, to insure publication.
OCD NEWS
Cleveland—Louisville, Kentucky
will be the seen#, of the Fourth An
nual Conference of the Negro News
paper Publishers Association June
11 and 12, 1943, where in a three
day streamlined conference at the
Brock Building 9th and Magazine
Streets, publishers, editors and de
partment heads of America’s most
Influential Negro newspapers will
King Yuen Cafe
CHOP SUEY
2010^2 N. 24th St. JAckson 8576
.Open from 2 p. m. Until 3 a. in
American &. Chinese Dishes
discuss problems growing out r,f
the war.
The official program released
this week through the office of the
Associaton's President O. Walker
of the Cleveland Call and Post, em
braces sessions throughout Friday
and Saturday, June 11 and 12 at
the Brock Building, and a Special
Tour by the delegates to Fort Kncx
Kentucky on Sunday, June 13, un
der the auspices of the War De
partment.
The decision of the Executive
Committee of the Association to
hold the convention in a southern
city grew out of its desire to em
phasize the importance of the Ne
gro problem in the South in the
scheme of the Negro Press’ fight
for full citizenship for American
Negroes.
Commander J. E. Davidson of the
Omaha Citizens Defense Corps Urg
es that everyone in Omaha should
become familiar with the new air
raid warning system that will be
Used for the frst time in Omaha's
next unannounced day air raid test
early in June.
It is recommended that the fol
lowing explanation of the three air
raid warning signals should be
clipped and posted in every home
for ready reference:
McGILL’S —
BAR & BLUE ROOM
E. McGill, Prop
2423-25 NORTH 24th St
WINE. LIQUORS, and
CIGARS
Blue Room Open 8 p. m. to 1 a. m.
Open for Private Parties from
2 to 7 p. m.
—No Charges—
WE SPECIALIZE IN MIXED
DRINKS.
Free Delivery from 8 a. m W>
1 a. m.
JA. 9411
WE CARRY A FULL LINE
OF BONDED LIQUORS
The Committee expressed a de
sire to attract as many of the Sou
thern newspapers as possible to
the convention.
In issuing the call for the Fourth
Annual meeting, President Walker
declared:
‘‘With our nation deep in war,
and the problems of the Negro
soldiers resting squarely upon the
shoulders of those of Us who re
main at home, plus the fact that
government regulations and res
trictions imperil the very existence
of our business, it is more import
ant that we meet this year than
ever before”.
In charge of local arrangements
for the delegates at Louisville will 1
be Frank L. Stanley, Editor of the
Tb« TESTIMONY of THOUSANDS:
H’s the
HOTEL
THERESA
When In
NEW YORK
any season
of the year
7th Are. at 125th St
,..!n the Heart of Hartenr
tOO spacious, all oatsida roomsl
luxurious suites. The beautiful
Orchid Room for dining; coc* tail
lounge and bar; the lovely Mes
sanine for relaxation. Ideal atmoa*
pbars for rest, study, /"fed comfort.
Large rooms witk polrato bath
•1.00 Sadi—*2.50 DaaMa tad a
Without prtrata bath
•lJO Sad*—*2.00 Barth lad a
WALTER W. SCOTT, ttanajor
HOTEL THERESA
Th Asa. stl2S» It, !!«■?«* OH
R. R. S.—I live on the lot vrhereS
I work and my employer does not
I
President, William O. Walker,
Cleveland Call and Post; Secretary
Treasurer, Howard H, Murphy,
Afro American Newspapers; Eas
tern Vice President, Mrs. Robert
L. Vann, Pittsburgh Courier; Sou
thern President, C. A. Scott, At
lanta Daily World; Central Vice
President, Louis E. Martin, Michi
gan Chronicle; Western Vice Presi
dent, C. C. Dejoie, Lousiana Week
ly.
Executive Committee members
are: John H. Sengstacke of the Chi
cago Defender; Frank L. Stanley of
the Louisville Defender, and Miss
Olive Diggs of the Chicago Bee.
***** / ***** LO^
Uavice ON THE *****
PROBLEMS OF LIFE
COUKACi AMD MinAATIOM TO YOU WMO U« MR# *t>A
AMO GtMDAMCt ...IM OVtKOMIHQ YOU* TAOUUJt ^
_by ABBE' WALLACE SERVICE
*’ ABBE’S 1943 ASTROLOGY READINGS ARE NOW READY”
Note: YOUR problem will be analyzed in this column free. Simply in
clude a clipping of the column with your letter. For a “Private Reply—
send a Quarter (25c) for ABBE’S NEW ASTROLOGY READING covering
your birthdate; you will receive with your Reading a free and confident
ial letter of sound advice analyzing three (3) Questions in private. Please
sign your full name and correct address to all letters; give your birth
date; and please include a self-addressed, STAMPED ENVELOPE for
your “reply.” Explain your case as fully as you feel necessary and con
fine your problems within the scope of logical reasoning. Wrap a Quar
ter with your questions and mail today! Write to: The ABBE’ WAL
LACE SERVICE, P. O. Box 11, Atlanta, Ga.
Ipay me but four dollars per week.
I need more money so badly.
Please tell me must I stay?
Ans: You are justified in desir
ing a change. Even tho you are
furnished with room and board,
your salary is too small for the ser
vices you gvie in return. Explain
how you feel to your employer and
ask for a raise |n salary. You’ll
get it.
i
L. C.—My husband gives me ev
erything I ask for except love. I’m
married and have a lovely furn
ished home. I would be supreme
ly happy if he would only show
some form of affection for me.
Should I leave him?
Ans: He may not show his af
fection in “hugs and kisses” but
nevertheless he loves you. Proof
of this is his unselfihness and gen
erosity in giving you a beautiful
home, fine clothes and suffjicent
spending money. You had better,
hold this boy and not consider j
leaving him. He may not be the
affectionate type, but he doesn’t
object to you showering it upon
him. Fact lis, he likes it.
S. S. c.—Should I judge the gi]l
I love by the character of her mo
ther and her sisters?
Ans: If you do, you will lose
her. It’s not the girl’s fault that
her people are not all they should
be. Her character is unblimished
and she has certainly done right
by you. Judge the gtirl for what
she is and leave her people out of
it.
X. X.—My job ran out a few
months ago and I was forced to
leave my home in search for work.
I have a job in a Defense Plant in
a distant city and my wife refuses
to join me. What should I do?
Ans: If you can’t convince your
^ife to join you there in the city,
then you must make up your mind
BUY YOUR
POULTRY
AT THE
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
2204-6 NORTH 24th ST.
Get the Best in Quality at the
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
—LOWEST PRICE—
Phone WE. 4137
Real Shoe Man
FONTENELLE
SHOE REPAIR
Cash and Carry
t'l KAMI If
1410 North 24th St.
CARL CRIVKKm
WHEN YOU HEAR
BLUE Two minute steady
Warning blast of sirens,
horns or whistles.
RED Two minutes of warb
Warning ling notes of sirens
and short blasts on
factory whistles.
WHITE No public warning.
(All Radio stations will
Clear) carry the message.
IT MEANS YOU DO THIS
AIR RAID Civilian Defense
PROBABLE Mobilizes. Traffic
and pedestrians move
ment continues.
AIR RAID CD workers at posts
IMMINENT ready for action.
Traffic stops, except
emergency vehicles.
Public takes shelter.
RAIDERS Civilian Defense de
HAVE GONE; mobilizes. Com
DANGER IS munity returns
PAST to normal status.
LOOKING AROUND HARLEM
«^^*8#a*J*§** (by DON DeLEIGHBUR)
NEW YORK—The John Kirby
band is a clannish outfit. The boys
have been together so long and
their minds blend along one line of
thought so completely that they
have built a tight little social circle
among themselves that few outsid
ers can crash.
When you see Buster Bailey, you
might see Charley Shavers tagging
along. K Russell Procope is on the
Avenue, he might be with either
Kirby or Bailey or O’Neill Spencer
the drummer, who last week, took
suddenly ill on the stage at the
Apollo Theatre and had to be rush
ed to the hospital.
The pianist, Clyde Hart, who took
over when Uncle grabbed off Billy
Kyle, is fast getting into the clan.
Clyde is a quiet and reserved sort
of chap who plays an awful lot of
box. The boys like him.
Socially the John Kirby outfit is
made up of the wives of the mem
bers; Mary Bailey, Margaret Kirby,
Helen Procope, Blanche Shavers,
formerly Blanche Bowman the well
known dancer; and Mrs. Hart.
One of the wives told me the oth
er night that if a family spat is go
ing on in any of the boys’ home,
the rest of the musicians won’t
speak to the wife until the situation i
has cooled off.
Izzy Grove, the promoter, told
me that he welcomes Negro pat
ronage at his affairs, most of wh:ch
are given in the Broadway area on
Saturday night. He went all out
on the Barnet presentation and ov
er 600 colored dancers went down
from Harlem.
Barnet has Howard McGhee,
trumpeter; Trummie Young, trom
bonist; Oscar Pettiford 0n bass and
Peanuts Holland on cornet. These
colored boys are with the band on
all its dates or there won’t be any
dates at all, according to the way
Barnet operates. And that includ
es hotels, ballrooms, theatre and
nightclubs, plus the movies. Bar
net is considered the “whitest”
man in show biz.
*****
Teabone Walker, singer of the
lowdown blues, has Harlem by the
ears this week. Teabone popped
in with the Milton Larkin band, a
new aggregation for these pares,
and mopped up at the Apollo where
the band is now finishing out ils
week’s engagement.
Teabone brought something to
Harlem that wasn’t there—the blu
es. In Harlem the emphasis is on
sweet music and commercial swing.
It is a fact that there are few
Negro musicians around Harlem
who know the blues and like them
well enough to play and sing them
as they should be played and sung.
That’s why Cafe Society catapulted
into the national limelight as a
mecca of blues and boogie woogie.
No spot in Harlem features the
blues nor features a real, honest
to-goodness blues singer, excepting
the Elks Rendezvous where Albin
ny Jones is going to town every
night.
Teabone Walker woke the good
folks around here up to what they
have been missing_the blues
sung only as a native of Texas can
chirp ’em.
JIMMY GENTRY
IN CHIGUGO
(Continued from page 1)
whose business it is to handle
drunks. CHICAGO—and what a
town.._this “City of Winds’ is
crammed with excellent characters.
People with whom anyone would:
like to converse or visit. One of •
the most widely respected and
deeply admired men I ever knew
is Judge Patrick B. Prescott. Judge
is a superbly tolerant individual
who does not know what it means
to be smug and hypocritical.
The Kirby gang topped the Ap
ollo presentation in a big way last
week, especially after Troy Brown
and Baron Lee were off the stage.
Complaints were registered bv
many in the audiences who saw the
show that “people today don’t like
all that vulgarity from performers.
It isn’t necessary at all to get
laughs.”
Brown and Lee, both veto:1
went to the heights in turning •
stomachs of most of the better
class element that came to the Ap
ollo to hear Kirby and see the rest
of the show.
The jokes used were definitely
on the blue side and the sort of
thing that gives Negro showfolk
a black eye- Neither needed to
crack such filthy tales. Neither
had the need to put on sketches
that were definitely out of order in
any civilized community theatre.
For example: while Lee was sing
ing a song in French, Brown, who
weighs at least 300 lbs. was walk
ing around the stage doing a strip
tease act with all the unsubtle ges
tures that go with such an exhib
ition. Frank Schiffman muffed
that one.
*****
Charlie Barnet, who is doing
more today in actual practice to
demonstrate what democracy real
ly means, took his band which fea
tures four topflight Negro music
ians, to the Hotel Riverside Plaza
on 73rd street in downtown Goth
am Saturday night to play for tile
Young Men’s League affair.
to carry on alone. Your wife does
not like the idea of taking the child
ren out of their present environ
ment and occupying them up in a
| roorriing house. This is war time,
brother, and your part in it should
I be to do the best you can and
make the best of life in the city.
You can arrange to spend a few
days a month with your family.
R. T. T.—I am not sick but I am
worried all the time and can't
rest. I believe my husband is the
cause of it. What must I do to b:
happy again?
Ans: You just have too muon
.time on your hands. If you w:lj
| find some worthwhile interest or
I work, you won't have the time t'>
sit around and pick faults With
your husband. Why don’t you
join the other ladies in your com
munity in their war activities.
There’s work to be done and the
Red Cross will welcome your ser
vices.
SUBSCRIBE
NOW!
Atty Euclid L. Taylor is about
ready to crack the cast from liis
broken leg which he received from
a horse throw-Maxis Barbour
(Commissioner Sneed’s “sec”.) pre
dicts a hot “August Day’ for the
East-West game here to end the
huge membership drive.Dr.
James McCaskell is out of Provid
ent Hospital where he took a much
needed rest_.. Horace ICayton is
fast becoming a civic leader of the
first rank-The Billy Kirtleys
are up in their Michigan grape)
farm for a week or so_What has
happened to Edith Know-Fuller?..
... .After scanning through the Bill
of Rights while riding a bus last
Friday, I now realize that Liberty
(if we can get it) is something more
than the head of a goddess on a
dime_..“Cabin in the Sky” closed
Friday night at Regal—and we are
glad... .Well, it appears that the
DeLisa and Cocktails for Two Tav
erns are going to g3t their licenses
back, and will probably be open by
the time you read this. ... Fisk’s
Andrew W. Allison is the new
Provident Hospital Supt.Monk
Harris is working for “Uncle Sam”
He’s a Quartermaster employee...
Pretty Dolores Brown is starring
at the Rhumboogie. •• .Nahum Bras
cher is still the grand greet-a-guy
of this town_Uncle Bob wants
his friends to write him more... .
Alberta Hunter is at a loop nitery
’hirping ditties... .Leonard Reed j
passed through “Chi” enroute west. ;
|i Plain Talk.. :l
!’ «!
ELMER A. CARTER
"When this war is over there will
be thousands of colored boys who
have gone down to the sea in ships.
There will not be a few who have
studied navigation and meteorolgoy
and other sciences necessary to
guide ships over the trackless
oceans. And there will be ships,
hundreds and thousands of ships
available for commerce,'to convoy
the raw materials of undeveloped
countries to the harbors of the
great industrial countries. i
The United States is going to he
a real competitor for world com
merce when this war is over. Make
no mistake about that. Great Brit
ain’s strangle hold on world ship
ping and on world commerce is go
ing to be broken and the right to
equal access to the raw materials
of the earth is going to be demand
ed and achieved by he United Stat
es. No matter what the cost—no
matter how great the resistance.
A new century and a new world
is in the making. Americans will
penetrate the remote and hither-to
forbidden hinterland of Africa, of
India, of China. Wherever there
is gold or tin or precious stones or
Cassava, or palm oil or cocoa, or
copper or hemp, or iron, Americans
will seek and find it. American
ships manned by American crews
will follow engineers, prospectors,
and merchants. In their holds wi-l
be carried the riches of the earth
for exchange or sale to those where
ever they are who want them.
Commerce transformed a little
island into the British Empire. It j
made possible the rise of the great
city-states of Venice and of Genoa
during the Renaissance. It enabl
ed Holland and Belgium to emerge
from static poverty to great wealth.
It has been the difference between
national weakness and national
strength. It is the interstate com
merce within the United States be
tween the states which has com
pensated for its lack of overseas
commerce and enabled America to
become a great and powerful na
tion. „
The one thing about this program
of the late Marcus Garvey which
had a chance of success was his ill
fated venture into foreign comm
erce. The causes of this failure of
his dream of a black political em
pire need not be discussed here.
But his plan to acquire ships and
to compete for a share of the world
commerce directing his efforts to
those countries predominantly Ne
gro in population had much to
commend it. “But even the great
white shipping companies must be
subsidized’’ I can hear the critics
saying. “What chance has a Ne
gro company?”
Well, this is not a crusade for a ,
Negro shipping company. But it
is a suggestion that it might be in
the realm of possibility to interest
white and Negro capital in a ship
ping venture after the war is over.
There might well be commercial
liason between the people of Nig
eria and the Gold Coast who raise
sixty percent of the world’s cocoa
and whose rights to the resources
and products of their native land
are incontestable.
For almost a quarter of a cent
ury ther-y cocoa .'rowers of Niger
ia and the Gold Coast have sought
to sell their products directly to
America and to other parts of the
world. They have waged a sus
tained and courageous fight against
powerful British interests who have
sought to control the price and the
market. They have been duped by
American companies which bought
their cocoa and then avoided pay
ment for it. And they have learn
ed bitter lessons.
America is the greatest cocoa ,
consuming country in the world, i
; The greatest producers of cocoa
are black men from the West
Coast of Africa. There are ships
1 and men to sail them. We might
plan to make a bridge between the
Negro farmers of Nigeria and the
Gold Coast and the American Negro
EntrepeneUr which might be the
beginning of the pareicipation of
the American Negro in world com
merce. It’s worth our thinking a
bout.
WP* m m sw *> v W v w w v m p> r
THE OMAHA GUIDE IS YOUR
PAPER— READ IT WEEKLY.
IBPOE. OF W. HEAD CALLS
FOR INVESTIGATION AT
CAMP STEWART, GA.
(Continued from page 1) l
who are sick or have been beaten.
These men are used to being treat
ed in a decent way, as citizens, and
as soldiers should be treated sim
ilarly; and this expectation on thf-dr
part appears to be the cause of the
insults and brutalities that have
been inflicted upon them by white
soldiers and officers at this camp.
These soldiers and officers are
prejudiced againse Negroes and
particularly hate Northern Negroes
who have been used to enjoying
citizens rights".
“Such treatment has damaged
seriously the morale of thesd
trained soldiers and the reports
concerning it, which will be used
by Nazi agents ,and which are
more than likely to be true because,
of the well known attitude of many
southern whites toward Negroes,
can seriously affect the morale of
Negroes throughout the country
and their faith in the Justice with
which their country treats them”.
“In order to dispel these stories
as baseless rumors if they are Un
true, or to remedy the conditions if
they are true, I respectfully urge
that you appoint a commission of
prominent civilians, to include at
least one prominent Negro leader
such as‘Judge William H. Hastie
who was formerly with the War
Department, to make a complete in
vestigation and a prompt report.
Many of the parents and members
o fthe 369th are members of the i
Elks and I feel that it is the duty
of our organization, whose patriot
ic record in support of the war
through the purchase of bonds and
24th AND LAKL' STREETS
PRESCRIPTIONS
—Free Deliver*_
WE. 0*509
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If You Had MYJOB
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when I have Acid Indigestion.
The family says I am a lot
easier to live with since I have
known about Alka-Seltzer.
'Have you tried ALKA-SELT
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a package today? Large package
60*, Small package 30*. also by
the glass at Soda Fountains.
Ml If"tffc GETSPEEDr
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