NEGRO 4 H CLUBBERS ON NETWORK...... Broadcasting from Washington, D. C., on the Blue network’s National Farm and Home Hour recently, three Maryland 4-H club youths described what they are doing to help increase wartime food production. Left to 17-35 YEARS OP AOI snappy nurse’s uniform, your ___ complete tuition, room and board, and a regular allowance of $15 to at least $30 a Yf Fer information about all nursing f «J| | schools write: I 1:m vWy I u. s. cadet nurse corps I ^lErtftjK: J f BOX 88 NEW YORK, MY. right, they are: George W. Queene, 18, who produced enough food last year to feed three fighting; Martha Duckett, 17, who raised 600 broilers in 1943 and is raising 800 this year; Frederick Mason, 17, who in addition to his pig and poultry projects, col lected a ton of scrap metal last year, and supervised five Victory Farm Volunteers. Others on the program were Charles A. Bond of the USD A radio section, John W. Metchell, Fed eral Extension field agent, and Mar tin G. Bailey, Maryland county a gent...—USDA photo by Hunton. “IT’S GOOD TO OBEY SAYS MRS. SLOAN IN TESTIMONIAL By Mother Sally Sloan We are thanking and praising God. We have obeyed His spirit. We clos ed our ten day revival conducted by Mother Mattie Lenord if St. Louis, Mo., Frday, July 14 which was a great success. Many were blessed in every way. How we miss her God. bless her. We had five added to our Mission as follows: Deacon JoSeph Sloan, Mother Sally Sloan, Sister Jessie Mayweather, Miss Mara Wal la and Miss Louise Thomas. The spirit was high in every meeting and noon day prayer and her demonstra tion of spirit speaking by voice and Jesus' lecture by voice was wonder ful and was witnessed by many. God wrought miracles through proph et Hess and such as was done in the day of Our Lord. Mother Sloan’s Testimony. “I am a living witness prophecy and healing is real. In 1939, I went to prophet Hess. The Lord healed me and through his prayers my sis .er was -aised after a serious operat ion. Doctors said it was impossible for her to live. He then told me my calling and gifts of healing and pro phecy a Mother for nations. God blessed me so many ways and all my suffering relatives straightened out. 1—!!=-:-■ IP== IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL” MAYO’S BARBER SHOP Ladies and Children’s Work A Specialty 2422 LAKE ST. 11 What Price The captive crow, who prefers the charity and protection of man to his freedom, never set a value on his independence. He learned his tricks, obeyed his master, and lost his will to be free. From the earliest days of American history Americans fought and died to establish a nation where a man would be free to make his own way. Even today our fighting men are paying the supreme price for independence. It is up to us at home to see that they have not fought in vain. NEBRASKA POWER COMPANY UouvrUbt. 1844. BcxeU & J*e .n. |fort huachuca nurse......._ Lt. Doris Heath is one of the Army Nurses at Fort Huachuca; all of whom are doing a commendable job. Coming from the "Lone Star State” she is a product of Cleburne, Texas, and the wife of Cpl. Hilary Heath who is stationed at Maxwell Field, Ala. Lt. Heath is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Slaton, Jr., of + a & & tx-m&M tfiS'sird Cleburne, and joined the Army Nurs es Corps in September of 1943. Her first assignment was in Camp Beale, Calif., where she served for three weeks before being transferred to Fort Huachuca. Lt. Heath attended the Nurses’ Training school at Tus kegee Institute, Ala. Photo by Cpl. Earl Morse. Our difficulties that war was too hard for us. Helped our home, my husband and grandson with all these blessings I was too stubborn and a shamed to confess and obey. Sham ed for people to know I had been to the prophet and failed to take up my work for the Lord. My conscious condemned- me day by day. I began to be sick and had no pain and yet just seemed to go away* to nothing. This conditiorf Doctors could not help I finally went to see prophet Hess. He prayed for me and God helped me. I went home after visiting at these meetings. The Lord talked to me and told me how I had mistreat ed prophet Hess and told me I had to join First Mission of God-Sent Light and help build him a church. On Monday, noon, July 10th I just , had to go to 12 o’clock pravier! and confess how wrong I had treated him, but was too stubborn to say God told me to join his church. We prom ised to be out on that night to serv ices. Later in the day Miss Thomas who I partially raised got a telegram that her sister was stricken by a stroke. I called prophet Hess and asked for prayer for her and told him we would hot be out on his ac count. He replied now is the time you need to come. Prayer changes many things, and the Lord is oble to deliver come. I refused and went and laid across the bed to pray for God to let me stay with Bethelt did not want to change my church. God moved from me. Stroked my tongue for disobeying His spirit. Prophet Hess did not command me to join his church. God did. I obey ed. He took my speech, paralyzed my tongue. I was left in that condi tion for hours. I promised God, if He would loosen my tongue, I would tell the world. I want the world to know it. When my husband came into the room and spove to me, I could not answer. I made signs for a pencil and paper. I wrote, I can’t talk, call prophet Hess. When the word reached him. He rushed to me. When he got there they took him to me. He rushed back to his home and came in church, took me in I BUY YOUR POULTRY AT THE NEBRASKA PRODUCE 2204 6 NORTH 24th ST. 1 Get the Best in Quality at the NEBRASKA PRODUCE —LOWEST PRICE— « Phone WE. 4137 the service room, prayed for me and touched my jaws. Gave gave me my speech. I joined the First Mission of the God-Sent Light. I want the world to know it. Children it pays to obey. I further testify. Miss Thomas asked prophet Hess to pray for her sister. He said, "daughter be of good courage, your sister will live. On Tuesday a wire came say ing Miss Thomas’ sister in California had passed. Prophet Hess prayed for power to raise the dead. On my back steps Thursday. Miss Thomas had made arrangements to leape and meet the body in Texas. Friday the word came your sister is alipe. Today, Sunday word came that she had had a stroke but was living. In this I know God is True and it pays to o bey. Visit our Mission. God thru prayer of the prophet Hess will de liver, 2734 Blondo street. AT. 6508. Crack Negro Artillery Unit Blast Nazis’ Race Theory with Shells.... (The following story of a Negro combat unit in France is an excerpt from the July IS, 19 Sh edition of the “Stars and Stripes,” U. S. Army ov erseas publication.) A. U. S. ARTILLERY COM MAND POST, FRANCE—Showing utter contempt for "msater race" div isions facing them, U. S. Negro art illerymen, firing 155-mm howitzers, are blasting German installations and troop concentrations, pounding to pieces the Nazi theory "of inferior” and “superior" races. First Negro combat artillery team to fight in this sector, this outfit is the howitzer member of a fouf-unit artillery group that includes a bat talion of 105s and two of 155-mm Long Toms. They make music horrible to en emy ears, but to U. S. doughboys of the infantry division being directly supported by their fire it is the sweetest song this side of Heaven. A few weeks ago these were the kids who enlivened English villages when they “swung" cadence drill on training hikes to the tunes of "What cha Know Joe?” Now, when these cannoneers join in a group “serenade' the rhythm is not as regular, but Yanks in observance posts on the line report that the Jerries are dancing to it. Results: shattered tanks, wreck ed 88s, smahed fortifications, dead Nazis. “It's a hell of a different tune,” observed Technician Fifth Grade Joe Hodge, a survey section man from Detroit, “and we know those Germ MR. AND MRS. CRAIG,— are Happy to Announce that MRS. GERALDINE CRAIG IS OPENING A Grill & Sandwich Shop IN HER COZY LITTLE HOME Saturday, June 17, —4 p. ra. at 2615 N. 24th St OPEN FROM 4 P. M TO 4 A. M CALL FOR RESERVATIONS—JA. 4336 V.---.----/ ‘ JIM’S Place | I -2701 “Q” Street- ’ LIQUOR BEER WINE AND LUNCH j I We buy the best that can be obtained for your w approval. We appreciate your patronage with i \ prompt, courteous service to all, at all times. THE OMAHA GUIDE A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Published Every Saturday at 2420 Grant Street OMAHA, NEBRASKA—PHONE HA. 0800 Entered as Second Class Matter March 15, 1927 at the Post Office at Omaha, Nebraska, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. C. C. Galloway_Publisher and Acting Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATE IN OMAHA ONE YEAR — — _ _ _ $3.00 SIX MONTHS — — — — $l.?5 THREE MONTHS - — — — $1.25 . SUBSCRIPTION RATE OUT OP TOWN ONE YEAR — — — — _ S3.50 SIX MONTHS — — — — _ |2.00 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, preceeding date of issue, to insure publication. National Advertising Representative:— > INTERSTATE UNITED NEWSPAPERS, CNC., 545 Fifth Avenue, New York City, Phone MUiray Hill 2-5452, Ray Peck, Manager. _Comes The Day of Decision! TRB ^ x WENSUCA PARTY - BORE THE TORCH OF TREEDOtt JNEWDEM. \ KINDLED \ THAT LIGHT / FOR all MEN, SHOWING the WAY TO A more ABUNDANT LIFE ans up there don’t like it a bit.” The battalion's uniqueness far tran scends the fact that it’s a Negro com bat unit. Its firing record, accuracy and output are acclaimed from corps artillery headquarters to the foxhole —pitted ridges of Hill 122 where muddy infantrymen fight. A faulous amount of intricate mathematics—plotting and comput ing—precedes the sending of fire di rections to the individual batteries. Armed with this data, computers Staff Sergeant Lawrence E. Innis of New York City; Private Van Q. White, of East Orange, New Jersey; Private Otis B. Walker, of Passaic, New Jersey and Technician Fifth Grade Charles A. Petersen, of Plain field, New Jersey, went to work with their graphical firing tables (slide rules to non-artillery folk) and quick ly made their calculations. A litle later the guns spoke their thunderous language, and the Germ ans miles away caught its meaning. The end of the mission came when the number one man of the 10-man crew pulled the lanyard and the bat tery computer at battalion called out “Charlie on the way 1” Soon it all comes down to where 12 Joes in the unit, known as numbet one men, pull down and out on their lanyards, sending the projectiles screaming through space. Very im portant Joes, these number one men. By yanking on their cords, primers set off the powder charges which force the shells on the long trip to the target. They receive the biggest part of the concussion. 1 o numDer one man rrivate r irst Class Arthur Broadnax of Autauga ville, Alabama, went the honor of pulling the lanyard for the first round fired by Negro Artillery a gainst the Nazis. Number one men seldom go beyond private first class, but look upon their jobs with im mense pride. One number one man in Baker Battery, Private First class Robert Lee, from Montgomery, Ala., refused a chance to become a gunner and go up in rank. “I want to pull that lanyard and watch the shells go off,” was his ex planation. Other lanyard pullers in the outfit: Private Horace Jacob, of Kaplan, Louisiana: Private T. J. Deramus of Montgomery, Alabama; Private Grady Clay, of Tatum, Tex as : Private Eddie J. Lynn of Edw ards, Massachusetts; Private First Class Tom Thomas of Stamford, Connecticut; Private First Class Wil lie Cannon, of Columbus, Georgia: Private First Class Adam Tinned of Waxahachie, Texas; Private First Class John Trim of Bate ford. Miss., Private First Class Jim Leatherwood of Tupelo, Miss., and Private First Class John Battle of Wadley, Ala. Lieut. Colonel Harmond S. Kel sey, the unit’s commander, knows ar tillery, having been an artillery of ficer since 1918. Of his Negro can noneers he says proudly: “I’ll put them against any artillery outfit ov er here.” RANDOLPH SAYS PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT SHOULD ISSUE NATIONAL PROCLAMATION TO ABOLISH SEGREGATION AND DISCRIMINATION IN THE ARMED FORCES. New York City, July 14—It was learned at the National Headquar ters of the March On Washington Movement at the Hotel Theresa Build ing in New York, from A. Philip Randolph, National Director, that the ! March On Washington Movement is beginning a nation-wide campaign to get individuals and organizations to write telegrams and letters to Presi dent Roosevelt urging him to issue a National Proclamation abolishing se gregation and discrimination in the armed forces, as an indication of the right of the United States of Amer ica to claim the moral leadership of the democratic forces of the world. Mr. Randolph stated that the Ne gro people are entitled fo this, and unless discrimination and segregation are abolished in the armed forces, the peoples of color will be constrained believe that they are not to be con sidered in the making of the peace as part of the people of mankind who are to enjoy freedom and democracy, for which black and white boys are dying on battlefields all over the world. He concluded that President Roosevelt has this power and that it will be the greatest act of democracy GRAY HAIR % kept her telephone from ringing HOW... her line is always busy *.. Bring new loveliness to your hair quickly and easily with Godefroy’s Larieuse Hair Color ing—obtainable in 18 beautiful, natural looking shades. Goes on evenly—won’t wash out or rub off—permits attractive sets and permanents—leaves your hair soft, smooth and shining* Godefroy's Larieuse H air Color ing has been used successfully ior 48 years. 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