The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, January 01, 1944, CITY EDITION, Page 3, Image 3

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    Use The Omaha Guide
As A—
Medium of Advertising
BOWELS SLUGGISH?
• Feeling like you lost your best friend
h,'^d?,C^y_dull_,U1 because of sluggish bow
"by put up with constipation misery?
Chew modem FEEN-A-MINT, the pleasant
tastmg chewing-gum laxative. Chew FEEN
A-MINT tonight at bedtime, taking only in
accordance with package directions. Next
morning—thorough, gentle relief, helping you
feel swell again. Millions rely on FEEN-A
MINT . Chew like your favorite gum. Tastes
good. Try FEEN-A-MINT-a whole family
lunrilv rnata t Ae
[wigs
MADE FROM
HUMAN HAIR
Reasonably priced. Also many
styles of hair attachments
' Write for._ j
I FREE CATALOGUE
HARLEM HAIR
MODES, INC.
i 74 WEST 125th ST., DEPT E.
' ; NEW YORK CITY, 27, N. Y.
i! THE ART BE GOSPEL
ji SINGING TAUGHT BY ji
ji THELMA S, POLK.
' DIRECTOR ZION BAPTIST
CHURCH CHORUS
Thelma S. Polk, teacher of Gos
pel Music, has been chosen Pianist
Director for the Gospel Chorus at
Zion Baptist Church.
Mrs. Polk, a native of Chicago,
comes to Omaha very much pre
pared in this line of work having
served in^ Union Baptist and a
number of other prominent church
es in her borne town.
OPENS STUDIO
The Rev, S. K. Nichols, uncle of
this fiae young woman, has opened
for her a studio at 2424 Erskine
street, where she will teach Gospel
Singing exclusively. For inform
ation CALL JA-3229.
#########* »#####»#»##
headache 1
IS SUCH a I
I BIG 1
little thing
ALL SET for a good full day’s
work when a nagging head
ache sneaks up on you. You suffer
and so does your work.
'Ready for an evening of relax
ation and enjoyment — a pesky
headache interferes with your fun,
rest, enjoyment or relaxation.
DR. MILES
Anti-Pain Pills
usually relieve not only Head
ache, but Simple Neuralgia, Mus
cular Pains and Functional
Monthly Pains.
Do you use Dr. Miles Anti-Pain
Pills? If not why not? You can
get Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills at
your drug store in the regular
package for only a penny apiece
: and in the economy package even
cheaper. Why not get a package
today? Your druggist has them.
! Read directions and use only as
directed. Your money back if you
are not satisfied.
Auto Parts Wanted
BURNED, WRECKED or
DILAPIDATED. CARS AND
TRUCKS. BRING ’EM IN
PARTS FOR CARS
CONSOLIDATED AUTO PARTS
CO.
2501 Cuming St. Phone AT. 5656
Omafia
! TIME* AND" TIDE WAIT ON f
NO MAN—NOW IS THE TIME J
TO GET YOUR SHOES RE. }
; BUILT. I
; Quality Material & Guaranteed J
Quality Work
FREE DELIVERY
Call AT. 7060 |
The LAKE SHOE
SERVICE
J. L. TAYLOR, PROP. |
BUY YOUR
POULTRY
AT THE
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
220-L6 NORTH 24th ST.
Get the Best in Quality at the
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
I
—LOWEST • PRICE—
Phone WE. 4137
Encourage your white neighbors to subscribe
to THE OMAHA GUIDE and learn what the dark
er one tenth of the American population is think
ing and doing.
WE HAVE SEVERAL VACANCIES IN
OUR LAUNDRY FOR EITHER EXPER
IENCED OR INEXPERIENCED WOMEN.
GET IN TOUCH WITH MR. SHERMAN
AT THE LAUNDRY OR CALL WE-6055.
EDH9LM&SHERMAN
2401 NORTH 24th STREET
-PHONE WEbster 6055
iiww^WTrTnrra
FREE INSPECTION
» Examine this amazing Policy
without fail. Send coupon for
complete FREE details and 21
day FREE INSPECTION offer.
No obligation. Mail it todayl
PIONEER LIFE INSURANCE CO.
1640 Pioneer Bldg..
Rockford, 111.
• Now, every man, woman and child can
afford reliable LIFE INSURANCE backed
by Legal Reserves! No need to be without
protection! BUDGET-PLAN permits you
to decide how much insurance you want.
Over 2i Billion Dollars budgeted insurance
now in force proves its tremendous value!
PAY AS YOU GO!
Pay as little as 5c a week if you wish! 10c
pays double benefits; 15c pays triple ben
efits, etc. So easy on the pocketbook, so
easy to own, all members of the family
should have their own individual policy.
NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION
I No Red Tape—No Agents—No Collectors.
Pioneer Life Insurance Co.,
1640 Pioneer Bldg. - Rockford, 111.
I Please senameFri* detailsabout Budget- \
Plan Life Insurance and Free Inspection oner. |
■ Address.I
jJCity. State ■
| Try This New Amazing
Cough Mixture
Gutsells All Others in Canada
on Merit Alone—Made in USA
The King of all cough medicines for
, coughs or bronchial irritations resulting
tnm colds in cold wintry Canada is Buck
: ley’s CANADIOL Mixture—Fast working,
triple acting Buckley’s Mixture quickly
loosens and raises phlegm lodged in the
tubes—clears air passages—soothes rasped
raw tissues, one or two sips and worst
coughing spasm eases. You get results-fast.
Compounded from rare Canadian Pine
Balsam and other soothing healing Ingre
dients Buckley’s CANADIOL Mixture is
different from anything you ever tried. Get
a bottle today at any good drug store.
r. x -c ts
RABE’S
Buffet
for Popular Brandi
of BEER and LIQUORS
2229 Lake Street
— A-lwaya a place to park—
Join the NAACP
i—-it-. I— - . —
• I PAYS TO LOOK WELL
MOD'S UAKHl.il SIM if*
l.xiien and (Jlilltii Ui. to 11 ui to
A Specially
2122 LAKE ST
I Johnson Drug Co. |
2306 North 24th f
FREE DELIVERY (
We. 0998 I
Acid Indigestion
Relieved in 5 minutes or
double your money back
When excess stomach acid causes painful, suffocat
es gaa. sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually
prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for
symptomatic relief—medicines like those in Bell-an*
Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ans brings comfort In a
jury or double your money back ca return of bottle
to us. 25c at all druggist*.
THE OMAHA GUIDE
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Published Every Saturday at 2420 Grant Street j
OMAHA. NEBRASKA—PHONE HA. 0800
Entered as Second Class Matter March 15. 19 ’7
at the Post Office at Omaha, Nebraska, and „*r
Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
C. C. Galloway_Publisher and Acting Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATE IN OMAHA
One Tear ________ $2.00
Six Months _ $1.25
Three Months _ .75
One Month _ .25
SUBSCRIPTION RATE OUT OP TOWN
One Year ________ $2.50
Six Months ________ $1.60
Three Months ___ ___$1.00
One Month ____ ___ .40
All News Copy of Churches and all organiz
ations must be in our office not later than 1:00
p. m. Monday for current issue. All Advertis
ing Copy on Paid Articles not later than Wed
nesday noon, proceeding date of issue, to insure
publication.
National Advertising Representative:—
INTERSTATE UNITED NEWSPAPERS, INC.,
545 Fi.'th Avenue, New York City, Phone
MU- ray Hill 2-5452, Ray Peck, Manager.
Double Day and Doran Announces The
George Washington Carver Memorial Award
This award is offered by Doubleday, Doran and Company
and is open to any book that deals with American Negroes. It is
an award of $2,500 ($1,500 ouiright, $1,000 as an advance against
( royalties). The offer will remain open indefinitely in our discretion.
It will not be based on manuscripts received dming a particular
period but the award will be given whenever a full-length manuscript
seems in the estimation of the judges to be worthy of this special
recognition. The judges will be the editors of DouLleduy, Doran and
Company.
It is the hope of Doubleday, Doran that this award will
serve as one moans of keeping alive the memory of a great American,
and that it will also help to give wide distribution to books about the
American Negro. It is certainly an exaggeration to say that Unde
Tom’s Cabin brought on the Civil War, but it is certainly no exaggera
tion to say that the moral indignation it aroused in the North had a
great deal to do with ending the inhuman institution of slavery.
Books are weapons.
A book entered for the George Washington Carver Memorial
Award may take any foim as long as it is an effective book and has
something to say. It may be fiction, non-fiction or poetry. It may
be written by anyone who illuminates the Negro’s place in American
life. Doubleday, Doran reserves the right to publish any book sub
mitted even if it does not win the award, on terms to be arranged.
The George Washington Carver Memorial Award winners
will be extensively promoted and their authors will receive the fol
lowing scale of royalties: 10 per cent on the first 2,500 copies; 12%
per cent on the next 2,500 copies; and-15 per cent thereafter.
Manuscripts should be addressed to the Editors, George
Washington Carver Memorial Award, Doubleday, Doran and Com
pany, Inc., 14 West 49th Street, New York 20, N. Y.
ENTRY FORM
Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc.
14 West 49th Street
New York 20, New York
I would like to submit my manuscript for the George Wash
ington Carver Memorial Award, at the same time submitting it for
regular publication by Doubleday, Doran and Company if it fails to
win that award.
Name _________
Address .........
The OMAHA GUIDE
wishes you..
HAPPIEST AflD.YI
..... /944
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Nation’s Largst Negro
Business School
New Orleans (ANP)—The Y.
M. C. A. School of Commerce,
co-op institution sponsored by the
Dryados Stroot Y. M. C. A., New
Orleans, enrolled a total of 506 stu
dents from 10 states for the 1943-,
1944 session, making it by far the'
largest Negro business school in the]
nation. Its complete business ma
chines equipment cost thousands
of dollars. The faculty of eight
full-time persons is highly train
ed. Some two hundred graduates
of the school are employed by the
government in Washington, and
hundreds more in civilian jobs.
During the past week more than
one hundred alumni of this school
who are employed by the govern
ment attended a dinner meeting
sponsored by the school at the Phyl
lis Wheatley YWCA, Washington.
Mr. Emmor M. Lancaster, of the
U. S. Department of Commerce;
Mrs. Irene C. Hypps, supervisor of
business education in the Wash
ington schools, and Jesse O. Thom
as, of the American Red Cross,
were speakers. Presiding was W.
H. Mitchell, Jr., executive secre
tary of the New Orleans YMCA,
and director of the school.
NEGROES “SASSY” SAYS
ny. guard Commander
New Yrk, NY.—Governor Thom
as E. Dewey was asked this week
to investigate the reported state
ment of Col. George W. Martin of
the New York State Guard that
Negroes are “getting rich and sas
sy.”
Col. Martin, in command of tne
4th Regiment of the State Guard,
located in Queens, was quoted by
a reporter for PM, after his regi
ment had put on a demonstration
of how to deal with “agitators.”
Martin also included labor in his
remarks. There have been several
indications that many of the State
Guards over the country, organized
to replace the National Guard units
now in regular Army service, are
being drilled to quell "agitation.”
The NAACP, in its wire to Gov
ernor Dewey, pointed out that
State Guards should not be trained
“in methods suppressing legitimate
democratic processes employed by
citizens in pursuit of their rights
as Americans.” It demanded the
removal of Col. Martin if he was
quoted correctly.
SUBSCRIBE
NOW!
MWW - - ■* wmMtM_
5RIDE AT TUSKEGEE
First Lt. William Richardson,
second from left), former Comm
tnding officer of a Trucking Com- j
pany with the 8th Air Force in j
England, was recently married to ]
Uiss Erma Merriweather, daughter j
>f Mr. and Mrs. Chester Merriwea- !
;her of Indianapolis, Ind., in the !
Post Chapel at the Tuskegee Army
Air Field. First Lt. Willard B.
Pansom of Indianapolis, Ind., (left)
was best man and his wife, (second
irom right) the frmer Miss Mari
inne T. Orrid of Indinapolis was
aridesmaid. Lt- Ransom is the
Post Chemical Warfare Officer,
rhe groom is shown placing the ,
wedding band on the bride’s fin- j
?er. Lt- Richardson, who recently :
returned to the United States to :
take up pilot training in the Army
Air Forces Training Command, saw
service overseas for one year. He
is the son of Mrs. Beatrice Maxey
of 1240 W. 26th St-, Indianapolis,
Ind. (Press Photo Service.)
ffimiiuiiDiii]Hllimfniiiiui)iOiii[iuiiiilUilini!tii;iimiiiii!!!i:Li:!:i!iiinitfnfrTi!!<i'ii":;r:!ir
The TESTIMONY of THOUSANDS
ft’a thm
MOTEL
1 THERESA '
| When la
NEW YORK
. any aaasoa
[| •! M»a yaar
7th Ava. at 125th St
am #iia IJn mt A t UerjaMS
s*ain rne neorr or nunc*u
IN spacious, all outaidc room* I
luxurious suites. The beautiful
Orchid Room far dining; cocktail
lounge end bar; the lovely Maa
saains tor relaxation. Idas! atmos
phere tor rest, study, Cmd comfort.
targe rooms eJM yMrsle hat*
•2.00 ax* —*2.50 Mb M «
W/lleet prtvm re hash
•li« Sx*-»2J>0 MM art ^
WALTER W.aoorr. Manajur
I
7* Aw. at 125* St, Rot York Oty
i;iiinnrrTTnrriuiiiri'i"iinri'mii'irihiiriiiiiHiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiMM
You Read It. Now Write
.him. Nothine helps the
morale of the bovs in the
armed forces like a .let
ter from vou. Every sol
dier likes to have implicit
faith and fel that vou are
-always thinking: of him
as he is of vou. Don’t let
him .believe what the
bovs will tell him. “Out
.of sig:ht out of mind.”