The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, January 27, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    PLAIN!
TALK..
BY DAN GARDNER
ANOTHER REASON H IIY WE
DON'T GET ANY PLACE.
Two weeks ago the newspaper PM
ran a feature story on “The Negro
Who Started An Airlines Company”.
The story told of the first Negro
Company to make a bid for national
air transportation lines and mention
i A Good Place to Eat i
Home Cooking !
1
LITTLE Diner!
2314 North 24th St.
Regular
Meals
“READY TO SERVE”
—11 :30 A. M. TO 8 :30 P. M—
IVarreti Webb, Proprietor j
nr utinfantile
FlGnrr”
How women and girlsl
may get wanted relief
from functional periodic pain
•
Cardui Is a liquid medicine
which many women say has
brought relief from the cramp
like agony and nervous strain
of functional periodic distress.
Here's how it may help:
^ —Taken like a tonic, It
* should stimulate appe
tite, aid digestion,•
thus help build resist
ance for the “time” to
come.
Started 3 days before
‘ your time”, it should
help relieve pain due
to purely functional
periodic causes.
Try Cardui. If it helps,
you’ll be glad you did.
CARDUI
ed that it was christening its flag
ship- The office of the company.
The Union Airlines, is located in
Washington and the president is
\\ illiam H. Hawkins, at 2228 Geo
rgia Avenue.
The PM account went on to des
cribe Mr. Hawkin's and his person
al views on his pioneer venture
“Well, the Union Airlines, you see
it is a subsidiary of the Union Busi
ness Society of Amtrica,” Mr. Haw
king told PM. “That's a corporat
ion organized to promote big busin
ess among colored people, to organ
ize the numerical strength of the A
merican colored man to participate
in big business. I am president and
chairman of the board- There are
about 13 or 14 million colored people
in the L nited States.” Hawkins con
tinued in his statement to PM., "you
understand, and we don’t have busi
ness in proportion to the number of
People. We don’t have factories
and stores, or those things to get
for ourselves that type of business.
"Now what we want to do is, if
you could get the colored American
to organize himself so he could op
erate factories and things like that
so he could manufacture clothes and
hats and suits and dresses and sho
es. they wouldn't be always begging
for jobs from other people but they
would make jobs for themselves.
"The airlines.” he went on, "is
just part of the over-all program of
the Union Business Society of Am
erica- We have other subjects on
oaper, but we have gone farther with
the Airlines than anything.” He
told then how his company is trying
*o line up the manufacturing busi
ness, including such ventures as the
Sai-Mai Frocks for ladies’ clothes
and a man’s suit called the Hawk’s
I Special, and Silver Service Cafes,
lime and Tide Wait on ,Vn Man"
HOW IS T11E TIME TO GE'I
TOUR SHOES REBUILT
Quality Material and Guaranteed
Quality Work"
lahe shoe service
2407 Lake Street
a. •* x£as*r e-c «** « ***#*» -
-«1 ~T"ri—t~t ' 0»ti
THE NEGRO WORKER
A Magazine Owned. Edited. Published
and Circulateo bv Negroes to serve
the BETTER INTEREST of Negro
Workers—Points the wav to Success
and Happiness—
Interesting and Inspiring
Subscription Price—
12 Issues—$1
FREE—With each year’s subscription
will be given “THE FIVE KEYS TO
A FULL PURSE.” the practical aids
of Monev Handling that will make
you a successful person.
Send your order today to
THE NEGRO WORKER
Box 278-B
Tuskegee institute. Alabama
Banish Your
GRAY HAIR
Blues
Do you look older than your age? Are
you embarrassed and self-conscious
because of what people may be saying
about your gray, drab looking hair?
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Shampoo Before Applymg Larieuse Hair Coloring.
CAUTIONt If your dealer
doesn't have
Larieuse
(LARRY
USE) send
$1.25 direct to
. . . Godefroy
Mfg. Co. 3510
Olive St. St.
Louis, (3) Mo.
and a chain of Elite Flower Shops
The flower shop is located next door
to the Union Airlines office
In October 1943 Hawkins filed an
application to the Civil Aeronautics
Board for a certificate of public
convenience and necessity for Union
Airlines to operate three routes- He
is president and general manager.
The routes he seeks are :
Washington. Baltimore, Philadel
phia, New York, Buffalo. Cleveland
Giicago, In<|iajiapo?i£. Cincinnati.
Memphis, and New Orleans.
Chicago-St. Paul- Minneapolis,
Fargo. Butte. Seattle, Tacoma, Port
land San Francisco and Los Angel
es.
Washington Louisville, St- Louis,
Kansas City, Omaha. Denver. Salt
Lake City, and Los Angeles.
“Union Airlines is the only color
ed airlines in the world filed with
the Civil Aeronautics Board. We
know there are lots of white air
lines operating now. Well, if we
show we can do it too. that we can
run it efficiently and economically,
the CAB would naturally give us
some routes- They might not give
us exactly the same routes we’re ask
ing for but I think they'll give us
some routes out of fairness
“I don't think the other airlines
will be so much interested in giving
jobs to the colored boys now over"
seas, so colored people should oper
ate airlines for themselves. What
we could do is open up the avenues
for those boys so they use the skill
they learned overseas in civilian life.
Haw-kins said that he wouldn't
draw any color line in hiring pilots.
He will hire colored and white, if
they want the jobs, and added that
he would naturally have to hire a
white man to handle the airline be
cause he is the only one who has
had experience in airlines
Hawkins also revealed that his
venture has no financial status. “We
are just a promotion company now"
he explained
His five-passenger WACO plane,
which is the flagship, was christen
ed by Dr- Mary McLeod Bethune
on November 12th
One of the most interesting things
about the whole incident is the next
step taken bv PM's reporter who in
| terviewed several prominent Negro
es around Washington as to w-hat
they thought about Hawkin’s ven
ture- Leading off was Charles H.
Houston, famous lawyer and coun
sel for the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People,
who probably expresses the vieW
I point of that organization in state
ments of this kind. Houston broad
ly bet Hawkins couldn’t do it in tell
ing the white folks why Negro ven
tures couldn't succeed. He said,
"\es. I know;who the man is- Per
sonally. 1 dofi’t see how this thing
can go in competition with the estab
lished airlines. There are very few
Negroes at present w-ho are riding
planes and he’d hardly get any white
traffic. The airline traffic is the
cream of the passenger business and
how on earth is he going to get the
cream, of the passenger business?
‘'About his flower shops: the Ne
gro florists will tell you that their
mam source of business is funeral
orders. You don t have Negroes
buying flowers for dances and other
occasions- So the level of business
is small. I don t know if Mr. Haw
•c.ns could start a line of suits eith
er. I doubt if he’d be able to wea>»
the Negro living cloe to his salary,
like a lot of the white Government
workers, away from the department
'tore charge accounts. Unless he’s
so good he can compete in anybody's
market- No, I m afraid it's just one
of those darn dreams.”
There were two or three other
Negroes around Washington who
spoke about it also and attempted to
belittle the venture before it gets
started. This reveals the type of
thinking among our leading Negro
es which keeps us from getting
places economically as well as rac
ially. If left to them, we would al
ways be in position of glorified
beggars and alms-seekers, living on
the largess of the white man, but,
thank God, there are enough little
Negroes with the vision, courage
and the tenacity of purpose to make
them out a liar by going ahead and
doing what they say cannot be done
Instead of encouraging ventures,
people like Houston and the others
who were interviewed have a phil
osophy in tearing down everything
JUNIOR WINTER COATS
Fine all wool coets In boy box, Chesterfield and fitted styles. Light shades, brown,
black, hunter green, cadet blue. Fine tailoring and detail, excellent fabrics, warm in*
teriining. Sixes 9 to 15.
$25 $29 *35
Kilpatrick's Junior Section—Second Floor
FOR JM1ARY ONLY
Personalized Matches.|?5
104 matches with 2 or 3 initial mongram stamped in gold. JL
Stationery Section—Main Floor
— 11 - .. ' . .
WATER WORKS BASIN SAVING $18,000 A YEAR
Savings in chemicals to aproximately $18,000 a year have been made
at the Florence water works as a result of the new mixing basin put
into service last June, according to six months’ operating reports releas
ed by Frank L.. Frost, Board Chairman of the Metropolitan Utilities
District.
“The new mixing basin ’C’ cost $75,000. At the present rate of chem
ical saving, it will pay for itself in less than four years,’’ Mr. Frost said.
Just as important, however, the new basin has increased the capacity of
the Florence plant for water treatment during the sumer season when
turbidity or silt content of the river water is highest and water con
sumption greatest, and has resutled in clearer, more potable w'ater for
Omaha uers.
"During the first six months of operation, ending December 31, 1944,
the new* basin has saved 312 tons of alum and 267 tons of lime. At
stock-pile cost this is aproximately $?,000 for a half-year. This saving
has ben made despite the fact that the Water Department pumped more
tran 600 million more gallons of water during this six months period i*
1944 than during the same period of 1943.”
that would be constructive and prac
tical if given the support it needs
Some day Negroes will wake up and
get rid of a lot of excess baggage
in high places and go ahead by leaps
and bounds as a result of the re
pressions this natural inclination has
been placed under by Ntgroes who
purport to lead and speak for the
best interest of the group.
To show how basically sound Haw
kins' plan is, we can quote from the
New York Daily Mirror of January
10th, in which Charles Lo Piccolo
general manager of the Packard
Plane Service- announced at its Os
sining headbuarters that it expects
to start its air commuter service in
the Metropolitan area about March
1st.
It is almost certain that, at the end
of the war, this country and- in fact
the whole world will embark on
mass production of planes of all typ
es, revolutionizing almost overnight
the ordinary transportation as we
know it today. Heliocopters- small
sea planes, cabin cruisers- Fairchild
24s, and other cabin planes on float
will criss-cross the country with a
greater network of transportation
setups than ever before or ever
before or
dreamed of by Jules Verne
In the New York era, for exam
ple- Metropolitan Airways plans four
main lines operating out of Manhat
tan-to-Stanford through New Roch
elle and Port Chester; to White
Plains through Yonkers; to Newark
through Jersey City- and to Hemp
stead, LI., Shuttle service will be
maintained between Manhattan and
LaGuardia and Idlewild airports, if
present plans go through.
The time schedules and fares ten
tatively worked out follows:
Flying Time One Way
Minutes Fare
Stamford . 22 $1.50
New Rochelle .11 .75
| Port Chester .17 1.12
White Plains . lfi 1.05
Yonkers .10 .65
Newark . 8 .50
Jersey City .3 -18
Flempstead . 14 .90
LaGuardia . 5 .30
Idlewild . 8* .55
Whether Hawkins gets one plant
off the ground is not the question
here- The question is the man has
a vision, the courage, and the desire
to do something for his people- Ir.
connection with this, he is willing to
pioneer and endure the laughs, gibs,
insults and derisions of the highly
educated Negroes while doing so.
The fact remains that with the five
passenger plane Hawkins can make
money flying people back and forth
between Washington and Philadel
phia- or Washington and Richmond
Virginia, which shows that the ven
ture is not entirely a pipe-dream.
Had Charley Houston and the
others seen the thing in its proper
perspective, they would volunteer to
jump in and help the man set up the
business on a sound basis and even
help him raise the funds necessary
to establih a first class airline for
we certainly need more for our rac
ial diet than the constant holler that
is raised about eating in a white
man’s restaurant or sleeping in his
hotels.
Army to Call 11,200 from
Nebraska Selectees....
. < CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
were 145,000 male agricultural work
res of all-ages in Nebraska- Nebr
aska selective service believes th^t
the induction of 5-000 of these work
ers, ages 18 through 25—less than 4
percent of the total— wall net leave
large sections of land uncultivated n°.r
seriously hamper food production in
the state- In addition, while the
5.000 are being taken from the farm;:
for induction, an estimated minimum
of 3,GOO discharged service men will
be returning to the state. Some of
the 3600 veterans will revert to farm
work, thus offsetting a number of
the men being inducted from agricul
-ture
MEN IN INDUSTRY AND
BUSINESS—As of January 1, 1945
there were only 684 unexamined Ne
braska men. ages 18 through 25, de
ferred in Class II-A and Class I IB
for all work other than agriculture.
More than half of the 684 are in the
Merchant Marine service and can
not be considered for induction now
The remaining 300 are special cases
—sciestists, expert technicians and
advanqedj /medical stqdeints—whose
current contribution, or immediately
pending contribution to the war ef
fort is so great that induction at this
time cannot be accomplished prudent
ly
Since industry and business have
no available, physically qualified reg
istrants, ages 18 through 25. select
ive iervice must look to the next age
group—men 26 to 29—for inductees.
On January 1, there were 4,845 such
Nebraska registrants, and selective
service is contemplating the induct
ion of 2.000 of them.
MEN AGES 30 THRU 37--Since
the acute need of the armed forces
is foo young men, capable pf the
highest degree of efficiency under
battle conditions, Nebraska selective
service is counting upon men, ages
30 through 37, to make tseir contri
bution to the war effort by working
in civilian activities essential to the
i war effort rather than by serving in
the armed forces- Therefore. Ne
braska selective service wants its
men, ages 30 through 37, who are al
ready working in essential activit
ies, such as war plants and agricul
ture, to stay on the jobs they now
have so long as there is a recognized
need for their services- Nebraska
selective service wants its men. ages
30 through 37, who are not now en
gaged in essential work to shift to
essential work as rapidly as possible
by obtaining proper clearance thru
the United States Employment Ser
vice and their selective service
local boards, or, in the case of agri
culture, by obtaining proper clear
ance through the county agricultural
agent, or his representative, in the
area where the farm is located, and
their selective service local boards.
For men, ages 30 through 37, who
are in essential work and refuse to
stay there, and for those who are
not in essential work and refuse to
get there, selective service has noth
ing but induction to offer- It is es
timated that during the first six
months of this year, there will be
2.000 registrants, ages -30 through 37
who will be inducted for general
military service. This does not in
clude “job jumpers’’ who do not
qualify for general military service
but who will be inducted for service
other than of the general military
service category.
Carver Savings & Loan
Association
OF OMAHA, NEBRASKA
To Whom It May Concerns,
Be it known that we- the under
signed, residents of the City of O
maha, Douglas County- Nebraska,
for the purpose of forming a corpor
ation under the laws of the State of
Nebraska do- by these presents as
sociate and incorporate ourselves un
der the name and style of the
Carver Savings & Loan Association
of Omaha, Nebraska and have «
dopted the following articles and af
fixed our names thereto:
ARTICLES OF INCORPOR
ATION OF THE CARVER SAV
INGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF OMAHA, NEBRASKA. .
Article 1
This Corporation shall be known
as the Carver Savings & Loan As
sociation of Omaha, Nebraska and
its principal place of business shall
be at the City of Omaha, State of
Nebraska
Article II
The object of said Association is
to transact a mutual savings and
loan association business- and to
have and exercise all the rights,
powers and privileges, and immuni
ties accorded such a corporation by
the laws qf the State of Nebraska;
to raise funds by the sale of its cap
ital stock and loan such funds to its
members- to assist its members in
procuring homes, and freeing the
same from debt; to afford them »
safe and productive investment for
their money; to buy- own, improve,
and sell real estate.
Article III.
The maximum capital stock of
said Association shall be the sum of
Fifty Thousand Dollars and the
minimum capital stock upon which
said Association may commence
business shall be the sum of Five
Thousand Dollars- Said capital
stock shall consist of the cumulative
payments made by the members of
T' 1C1 OR Y Bowl
2110 LAKE STREET JA-9175
Hours from 12 P. M. to 12 A. M.
Friday only 12 P. M. to 5 P. M.
Start 12 Midnight each Friday till 4 A. M
Saturday morning
“Bowl for Health”
said Association and dividends |
credited thereto and shall be repre
sented by shares. Said Association
shall be authorized to issue a maxi
mum of five hundred shares. Every
share shall have a par value of One
Hundred Dollars and no certificate
shall be issued until the shares rep
resented thereby are fully paid at
par. Certificates for shares that
are fully paid shall be issued to
members upon demand
Article IV
The business of said Association
shall be conducted by a Board of
nine directors—three directors of
the first class- three directors of the
second class and three directors of
the third class. Directors of the
first class shall serve until the first
annual meeting of the year of 1945,
at which time three directors shall
be elected who shall serve for *
period of three years therefrom.
Directors of the second class shall
be elected to serve until the first an
nual meeting in 1946 and thereafter,
three directors shall be elected to
succeed directors of the second class,
and such directors so elected shall
serve for a period of three years.
Directors of the third class shall be
elected to serve until the first an
nual meeting in 1947- at which time
three directors shall be elected to sue
ceed said directors of the third
class, and such directors so elected
shall serve for a period of three
years- Except as otherwise provid
ed herein, directors shall serve for a
period of three years or until their
successors are elected and qualified.
As qualifications for holding office,
I directors must be stockholders of
said Association, must be over the
age of twenty-five years, and must
be a legal resident of the State of
Nebraska for five years- continu
ously, or more immediately prior to
election as such director. At all
meetings of stockholders, each stock
holder, in person or by proxy, shall
be entitled to cast one vote for each
share owned by him and fully paid
for. irrespective of whether or not
certificate therefor has been issued;
provided, however, that no person,
regardless of the amount of stock
owned by him, shall be entitled to
vote in his own right or as proxy
more than fifty shares of stock, ex
cepting in such cases as are provid
ed for by statute. At the annual
meeting, a quorum shall consist of
the stockholders voting at such meet
ing. At special meetings of stock
holders, a quorum shall consist of
at least fifty members- At all a*
nual meetings of stockholders, bal
lot boxes shall be provided where
stockholders may deposit their bal
lots and vote for the election of dir
ectors, and such ballot boxes shall
be open at least from the hour of
ten A. M. until three P. M- on the
day of said annual election.
Article V.
The Directors shall manage the
affairs of the Association, subject
to the provisions of these Articles
and the provisions of the By-Laws
The Association shall have power to
adopt By-Laws not inconsistent
Considerate Dependable
No favoritism is ever shown
in our impartial service to
those whom we serve. We
endeavor to serve the family's
needs with impartial consider
ation. Serving as we would
be served.
THOMAS
FUNERAL HOME
—WE. 2022
2022 Lake Street
with these Articles. Vacancies oc
curring in the Board of Director.
may be filled by the other directors
until the next annual meeting, when
such vacancies shall be filled by vote
of the stockholders- ,
Article VI
The officers of the Association
shall consist of a President, Vice
President, Secretary, Assistant Sec
retary and Treasurer. The Offic
ers shall be elected by and from the
Board of Directors and hold office
at the will of the Board.
Article VIII.
The manner of holding the meet
ings of the stockholders and of the
Board of Directors shall De pre
scribed in the By-Laws.
Article VIII.
The highest amount of indebted
ness or liability to which the As
sociation may at any time subject it
self shall not exceed ten (10- per
cent of the capital stock actually
paid in. The private property of the
stockholders of said Association.
shall not be subject to the payment
of the debts of said Association
Article IX
The existence of this corporation
having commenced on the twenty
second day of September. 1944. shall
have perpetual existence unless dis
solved as provided by law
In witness whereof we have here
unto set our hands this eighteenth
day of September, 1944.
In presence of Mabel Davis
Elmer Gant,
Leonard Norris•
John Davis•
Major Underwood,
Charles Sims,
Herbert Richardson,
Charles F. Davis•
State of Nebraska)
County of Douglas) SS
On this twenty-first day of Sept
ember, 1944, personally appeared be
fore me Leonard Norris. Elmer
Gant- Major LTnderwood, Charles
Sims, John Davis, and Herbert
Richardson, personally known to me
to be the persons whose names are
subscribed to the foregoing articles
of incorporation and who acknow*
ledge themselves to be the incorpor
ators of the within and foregoing
corporation, and they do hereby
acknowledge the foregoing articles
of incorporation to be their volun
tary act and deed for the purpose
therein set forth.
In witness whereof I have here
unto set my hand and notarial seal
this twenty-first day of September.
1944.
Charles F. Davis,
Notary Public.
State of Nebraska)
County of Douglas) SS
On this twenty-first day of Sept
ember, 1944, personally appeared be
fore me. Charles F. Davis, person
f--->
January Sale
on Luggage!
• Metal Trunks,
• Metal Locker,
• Gladstone Bags,
• Matched Luggage,
for Ladies & Gents
• Suitcases,
• Over Nite Cases,
® Brief Cases.
MARCUS
Loan & Jewelry Co.
320 North 16th Street
“See Marcus for
Bargains”
WPB
“Brownout” Information
Effective February I, 1945, the WAR PRODUC*
TION BOARD has issued an order prohibiting
certain unnecessary uses of electricity.
Prohibited Uses
No person shall use electricity for
any of the following purposes:
1. Outdoor advertising and outdoor pro
motional lighting.
2. Outdoor display lighting except where
necessary for the conduct of the busi
ness of outdoor establishments.
3. Outdoor decorative and outdoor orna
mental lighting.
4. Show window lighting except where
necessary for interior illumination.
5. Marquee lighting in excess of 60 watts
for each marquee.
6. White way street lighting in excess of
the amount determined by local public
authority to be necessary for public
safety.
7. Outdoor sign lighting.
Naturally the NEBRASKA POWER COMPANY
will comply fully with the WAR PRODUCTION
BOARD “Brownout” order, a part of which has
been set out above, and we are confident that our
customers will co-operate with the effort to con
serve fuel.
Nebraska Power Company
If you would like further information,
telephone our office or ask any employe.
Funeral
Eulogy
Touched by
tho Hand of
tho Dark Vtoltor. .
MRS• MYRTLE BRYANT.
Mrs. Myrtle Bryant, 24. of 2517
Hamilton Street, died Thursday at
a local hospital. Survivors: Hus
band, Richard; sons. Jackie. Richard
Jr.,; mother, Mrs. Annie Harring
ton; sisters. Mrs. Sarah Bowden.
Mrs- Hortense Brown, Mrs- L. B
Barris, Mrs. Nancy Couch, Mrs
Louise Franklin, all of Omaha ; bro
thers. Owens Harrington, Omaha;
Andrew Harrington Santa Monica,
Cal., George Harrington. USA. Ser
vices were held Tuesday 10 a. m-,
Myers Funeral Home, with burial
in Forest Lawn cemetery.
ally known to me to be one of the
persons whose name is subscribed to
the foregoing articles of incorpor
ation and who acknowledges himself
I to be one of the incorporators of the
within and foregoing corporation
and he does hereby acknowledge the
foregoing articles of incorporation
to be his voluntary act and deed for
the purpose therein set forth.
In witness whereof I have here
unto set my hand and notarial seal
this twenty-first day of September.
1944.
M- Agnes Duffy,
Notary Public•
BOWELS SLUGGISH?
• Feeling like you lost your best friemj -
headachy—dull—all because of sluggish bow
els? Why put up with constipation misery?
Chew modern FEEN-A-MINT, the pleasant
lasting chewing-gum laxative. Chew FEEhi
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. Taster*
good. Tty FEEN-A-MINT-a whole family
fUDI.lv costa mil, IIU
4
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. nr> Vo
1 a. an
JA. 9411
WE CARRY A FULL LINE
OF BONDED LIQUORS
“IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL"
MAYO'S BARBER SHOP
Ladies and Children’s Work
A Specialty
2422 LAKE ST.
PAGE BOY WIGS
Improve your appearance. Wear our
glamour attachments for style and
attractiveness- Price $2-75, 50c ex
tra for gray hair. If COD- postage
extra. We carry a full line of all ov
er wigs, braids and curls. Write
RENA HART HAIR MODES 2131
7th Ave., New York, 27, NY
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
«vmptomatlc relief—medicines like those in Bell-ans
Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ans brings comfort in a
jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle
to us. 25c at all druggists.
. According to the be*
authorities, the mini
mum daily A, D and B
Complex Vitamin re
quirements of the aver
age person are:
A 4.000 USP Units, D
^?®usp t’nits. B1 3.13
—^ vj U?P Units, B2 2,000
_ ^ Micrograms, and an
proximately 10,CC0 V.icrograms Xict
othf reQuired amounts ft
other B Complex Vitamins have rot
yet been established. not
Many people do not get enoueh nt
these essential Vitamins. DO YOU*
Why not play safe by taking '
ONE-A-DAY brand
iLchOXE-AW'vi11" -TAB1-ETS
D Tablet clnfai^J1^
cod liver oil vitamins tht the mil*}®
™h<1'oftEIfXfSX"Yd«d s-**
Complex Tablet containsVfidimm- B
mum daily requirementJvlnu™
B1 and B2 and 10 nonvr of Vltamms
Nicotinamide 1oS°rSramSt
stantial amount of other^i-? ^
When you buy Vitamin Vitamms.
potencies and prices N^ il C0,IlPare
A - DAY Tahhftf ’ N?te h°w ONE
average h<Wn rett01™ 40 the
»°£tretCnable 4heqco*mentS- See
Get them at yoUr drug store. ‘