South Omaha Merchants’ Buyers Guide = “f; plt,e 2 ★ ‘‘THE GREATER OMAHA GUIDE” Continuous Publication for Nineteen Years— ' But You Can Be Wise.. gjby ‘Taking Advantage’ of ithese Ad Offerings which I Means - “Take Home Sa'ings” s after Patronizing the South Omaha WMerchants herewith listed. Everything that is available, 1 hese South Omaha Merchants Have. in the NEWEST and BEST in FOOD. FURNITURE, MOTOR CARS, as well as in CLOTHES and ENTERTAINMENT, and some 36 other Major Groups of WANTED GOODS and SERVICES. By Popu (by George II. MeDavia) DEAR SI B>< RILI KS: Ihe MERCHANTS OF SOUTH OM Ml \ h: r rrpr: - tiled below. Iia- made this page, for VOL . POSMBLE: Aou can do your SHARE by referring to tin -e Vd». when in n. etl of necessities for the Home. I’ A I ROMZE THESE VDVERTISERS! _A MADSEN SUPPLY CO. REFRIGERATORS—STOKERS— WASHERS CAS STOVES— RADIOS—OIL BURNERS • Bendix Washers 4713 Sill TH 24TH MA. 3806 r- —=ni ■ nr= 1 ■ ~-n ..hi-=t ~ - •' '=11 ■■ : ■—ir= . ][= 1' -=l EXPERT-WATCH Repairing —GUARANTEED WORK— W ATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY L. T. HERDZINA, MGR. 4720 SOUTH 24TH MA-5050 FERRIS SEED CO. —“Farmer* Cash-A-icay"— FIELD & GARDEN SEEDS CHICKENS • POULTRY SUPPLIES & REMEDIES • FARM SUPPLIES 5029 SOUTH 24TH MA. 6340 !»=■- EK=E:~- ,r . If— • !f= ■ 1 r=-f ja"S."S~- ==11-- 1' 1 f==-"■■■•■ ' ~lf= 1 FORBES FURNITURE CO ‘EVERYTHING for the HOME’ “JTe Appreciate Your Trade” 5012 SOUTH 21TH STREET r .^Lsrrr-- Z3r~ I -Hr==^=][==Z=[ I- ~~"]L2 - =][= ^SF=======ir==^=====-ir=:-- ir Hermansky’s Pharmacy J * Prescriptions Exactly Compounded • FREE DELIVERY We Appreciate Your Trade EBONY'S ON SALE MONTHLY 2725 O’ MA-0260 MODERN APPLIANCE CO. Expert Radio & Refrigeration Service • AUTHORIZED MAYTAG SALES & SERVICE MArket 6969 4910 SOUTH 24TII ! Len*s BAR | 25th & ‘Q’ Street —WILL APPRECIATE YOUR TR ADE” (OPEN EACH DAY AT 6:00 A. M.) TRIAL OF COLUMBIA NEGROES BEGINS IN TENN. LAWRENCEBURG, Tenn, Aug. 15th—In a prejudice ridden at mosphere, the trial of 25 Negroes indicted on charges of attempted murder, when they reissted a how ling police-led lynch mob in Col umbia, Tenn. last February began Tuesday in the two-story Law renceburg Councy Courthouse. Southern mob-rule tendencies were quickly revealed to observers1 in the packed sourtroom from the outset when NAACP attorneys de fending the courageous Negroes failed to win a single argument, with the court ruling with the state prosecution on every issue., The court has also consistently refused to allow the defense to argue the points of law they arej attempting to press. They were • only able to get these arguments across n raising objections to the adverse ruling of the court. Z. Alexander Looby, Maurice j Weaver and Leon A. Ransom, at torneys for the defendants, imme-1 diately challenged the jury panel on the ground of systematic ex cluesion of Negroes from the jury. Looby charged that in Tennesee. it had long been the custom to eliminate certain qualified Negroes and, due to illegal manipulation of the lists, the indicted Negroes would not be granted a fair trial. There were over 300 names on the panel, 25 of whom had served on the April or January panels. Inquiries on its method of picking the jurors was not permitted by the court. Apparently realizing, however, that it had made an er ror. the names of those 25 were stricken off. The names of 13 Ne groes were on the original panel and two more were later picked up off the street as talesmen, ma king a total of fifteen Negroes on the present jury panel. Weaver charged the placing of a Negroes’ names oh the list was not an honest gesture, that the Ne groes on the list were hand-picked and that the jury box was packed City'Wide Excavating ® Basements & Hauling ® Grading “Dozer ® Heavy Machinery Hauled -FREE ESTIMATES— —BOB & JOHN OLIVO— M. 2324 -aisc Radio Repairing • GUARANTEED PARTS AND SERVICE CAR RADIOS OUR SPECIALTY —M. P. DiGiorgio— 4716 So. 24th M A. 2111 GOOD JOBS IN THE REGULAR ARMY for specially qualified men Enlistment in the Regular Army offers new higher pay and other I 070 Draftsman benefits to men aged 18 to 34 who ■ ,,4 Moehini,t are qualified for and have served H for at least six months in certain ■ 120 Me3‘ and Military Occupational Specialties. I Dairy Inspector With these qualifications you can ■ 149 Pharmacy Technician now enlist in the grade called for ■ 166 Powerman &uhSio“f,™SX£“it"y I 530 ..»« ^ 250 Veterinary Inspector If you have had six months or 304 Electric Motor more of Army experience in a ■ Repairman I «■ o—-r-o Station today for full details. I ^ Medical Technician g 945 Photo Laboratory ■ Technician ■ 965 Wheel Vehicle ^ Automotive Mechanic ' MING YOUR MILITARY DISCHARGE PAPERS Your Nearest Army Recruiting Station 1516 Douglas Street., Omaha 2, Nebraska So. Omaha V. S. Post Office, 24th and M Sts. Call for Medics DR. E. I. ROBINSON, Los Angel es, president of the National Med ical association which convention met at Louisville. Kv., August 20 to 23rd._(ANP). _ against the defendants. No evidence as to the method of making up the array was allowed by the court, aside from the man ner in which the jurymen for the present term, July, were picked. This would seem to be borne out testimony of District Atty. Paul Bumpus, Atty. General for 11 years, who admitted that dur ing that time, he had known only ONE Negro that had actually been called for jury duty. The defendants were also de nied the list of the names of the jurors on the panel a reasonable time before the hearing. They were refused this right which is theirs under Tennessee statutes and not furnished the list until the hearing itself. Research Poll Misleading “Negroes are not receiving fair treatment in the United States', according to A. A. Liveright, ex ecutive director of the American Council on Race Relations, who charged a recent opinion poll on the subject had created a false im pression of the true situation. The charge was made before the So ciety for Social Research meeting at the Universitv of Chicago, on Friday, August 9. Addressing the meeting on ‘Pro lems in Social Action’, Liveright referred to the recent poll conduc ted by the National Opinion Re search Center in Denver. Colo., on attitudes toward the treatment of Negroes in the United States. Re sults of the poll, published widely (August 4) in the nation's press, reported that 66 per cent of the white Americans polled believed that most Negroes are being treat ed fairly. Liveright pointed out the danger of publishing such fi gures without due caution and in terpretation, lies in the fact that many persons reading the results of the poll would mistake figures published for actual facts. “Public opinion polls, although a valuable medium for determining the temper of public opinion, are frequently misleading unless care fully framed and reported, Live right declared. In refuting the findings of the NORC poll, Liveright quoted the following facts: On Employment: The final re port m«ued bv the now-defunct Fair Employment Practice Com mrtee slated: “Studies made by and for this committee since V-J Day showr that the war time gains of Negroes, Mexican American and Jewish workers are being dis sipated through an unchecked re vival of discriminatory practices’. This report stated in its conclu sions: “The war veterans of these minority groups today face greater difficulties than other veterans in obtaining training and finding work’. Military Service: Despite the fact that a special committee was appointed to review segregation in the armed forces and to make re commendations for a new policy, the Negro does not even have an equal share in the army as now constituted. Veterans’ rights: Despite the fact that no GI legislation differ entiates between whites and Ne groes, reports conducted by the Urban League, NAACP and the ACRR show varying types of dis crimination with respect to Negro veterans. Civil rights: No person who has read newspapers for the past few months can believe that Negroes in the United States are securing an equal break so far as civil rights are concerned. Lynchings in Columbia and Georgia and Free port, Long Island and Monroe, Ga. combined with the resurgence of Ku Klux Klan activity, provide vivid proof of the terroristic acti vities being used to intimidate Ne groes. Not all such cases are, how ever, recorded. For example, the fact that there have been 35 bomb ings or burnings of Negroes who have moved into homes in white communities in the Chicago area, has been singularly overlooked by the white press. As a corrective for the probable injury to minority groups invol ved in publication of a poll such as that on opinion about Negroes Liveright suggested that as a pu blic service, and in accordance with the responsibility of the free press for providing facts, any such polls should be accompanied by at least as full, accurate and hon-; 9 PL.4IIS TALK,—by John M. Leo-— — 0 i THE LAWLESS MOBS I The dress rehearsal for the advent of American fascism was held in Athens, Alabama last week, and th's lime, the mob was a solid, impressive thing, numbering over two thousand representative (Southerners, Athens, as you must know, is not a large community. A mob of over two thousand persons must indeed he accepted r being truly representative of die law and spirit of the community. Athens, then, is an outlaw community, a lawless hole where the spirit of American Libeity and Freedom was raped and hallered with shameless exhibitionism. Over one hundred Negroes were bruised and beaten up by the cruel monsters who write of their superiority in the blood of the de fenseless, and only two members of the mob were injured slightly. The old and the crippled and the innocent young were kicked and beaten, and herded from the streets like cattle. Reportedly, onl\ two shots were fired. This, then, is the new order, the new daring of the southern mobster, who feels that the Negro is sufficiently in timidated, so that he can be conquered by the sheer force of num bers. I A mob rampant against the color of a man's skin is as great a menace as is a pack of rabies infested dogs. The law in Alabama is not dsigned to protect the life and prop erty of Negro Americans. The Lederal Government is pussy-footing ducking delicately around the sensitive nerves of the cracker killers, while Americans are slaughtered. Reluctantly, an observer of the American scene must admit that the Hitler formula is in the hands of native murderers. est coverage of the facts about the situation. Senator Tells How He Bypassed Anti-Strike Rider NEW YORK. CITY— (WDL)_ ! Senator Glen H. Taylor of Idaho has told the Workers Defense Lea gue just how he bypassed the Ball Russell rider, under which govern ment emplovees must sign affida vits that they do not belong to any organization recognizing the right to strike. In a letter to Rev. Aron S. Gil martin, national WDL chairman, who had congratulated him on his opposition to the rider, Senator Taylor explained: The financial clerk revised the affidavit to con form to the statute by inserting the words ‘of government employ ees' after the word ‘organization' I I was advised by the Sheet Metal Workers Union that with the affi davit thus revised I could properly sign it. Senator Taylor had previously refused to sign the affidavit on grounds that the Sheet Meta) Workers Union, to which he still belongs, has never forfeited the right to strike against the govern ment. But the Sheet Metal Work ers Union is not an organization of government employees, and so Six* 120 o^207T^TtTVT7Sc Size 116 or 616.38c 8 MM Univex Movie...... .$1.09 16 MM Color, 100 ft.$8.75 35 MM Color, 20 Exp.$1.45 00 Univex.15c 35 MM Supreme. 27'/x ft...$1.98 35 MM Plus X, 36 Exp.95c A&Lnimnm Mall Order $2.00 Add 10c for Postage J_ Sorry, No COP Order* i I j .... | when the clerk revised the affi davit to read ‘organiation of gov ernment employees’ Senator Tay lor signed. His letter continued: "I was happy to learn subsequently that the precedent thus created was of considerable assistance to the Kaii way Brotherhoods with respect to the employees of the Alaska Rail way. The revision does not, of course, change my opposition to the Ball-Russel rider'. In a previous letter to the WDL Senator Taylor said he is convin ced of the measure’s unconstitu tionality and added it is indeed en couraging to know that so many people feel strongly on this issue. CALL JA-6500 For Free Estimates On All Your Home Improvements INSELBRIC Brick Design Panel Siding Eagle Insulation ARRO LOCK Shingle-type Reof RUSCO Combination Screen and Storm Sash Stop Sagging Floors with Micklin Adjustable j Steel Column System —NO DOWN PA YMENT Easy Terms MICKLIN Home Improvement Co. JA 6500 1702 CUMING ST. r i-n-i M i___ Tuskegeean Returns with Son Victim of Polio The above picture shows Mr. and Mrs. William | Jackson (right) of Birmingham, Alabama, leaving their son, Vi illiam Jr., after a trip from Indiana polis, Indiana where he was afflicted while on a visit William Jr., is the first polio patient admitted to the Tuskegce Institute Infantile Paralysis cen ter whose parent is a graduate of this institution. On the extreme left is Miss Elizabeth Campbell, Physical Therapist at the Infantile Paralysis cen ter, who is also a Tuskegee graduate. (ANP),