The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, October 26, 1946, Page 6, Image 6

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    FOR GALA HOME-COMING
WILBERFORCE UNI. SET
On Saturday, October, 26, 1946,
Wilberforce University expects to
play host to the largest number
of alumni, former students and
friends ever to return to the in
stitution for the annual homecom
ing season.
The main attraction will be the
homecoming football game which
brings together a thus far unde
‘ feated Tennessee State College
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—AT 1725—
VikllllMUIIMIIHIIIiMilllUIIIIIIIMIIli
team coached by Henry A. Kean
and the Wilberforce University
Green Wave under the tutelage
of Coach Gaston F. “Country”
Lewis. The kick-off is scheduled
at 2:30 Pm. Saturday, October 26
1946.
The entire week-end will be fil
led with a program of homecom
ing festivities. On Friday night
preceeding the game the Wilber
force students will hold a gigantic
bon-fire football rally on the old
athletic field after which a stu
dent dance will be held in the gym
nasium.
Husbands! Wives!
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ALTHOUSE BEAUTY SCHOOL
Telephone ATlantic 1675
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IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM
Keep—
Kelso Morgan
REPUBLICAN
COUNTY
ATTORNEY
HE HAS BEEN FAIR and
KEPT HIS PROMISES.
•
iimiiinuiiHmitiiminmtfmmiNiiimiiiniimimniiiini
vuiuHnmimimimMnimHimmmMiMimimimmimumiHnmniimiimiuinimmmniiimiiiminMnmiiiuft
(Political Advertisement) (Political Advertisement)
The Regular Army has
GOOD JOBS
for specially qualified men
Any man from 18 to 34 inclusive
who has served at least six
months in certain occupational
specialties in the Army, Navy,
'Marines or Coast Guard, and
was discharged on or after May
12, 1945, may enlist in tile Reg
ular Army in a grade not higher
than held aVtimo of discharge.
Non-commrssk>rvod grades are
MOS
059 Foremen C«w»erti»e
114 Machinist
229 Modical Equipment Maintenance
Technician
304 Electric Malar Repairman
341 Parts Clerk
314 Radar Crewman (Designated Sot)
*23 Finance Tfpist-Ctofc
M3 6ombsigttt Mechanic
740 Radio Operator, •
Intermediate Spaed
754 Radio Mechanic, AAJ
661 Surgical Technician
941 Camara Technician
—
jpen now m many Military Oc
cupational Specialties in addi
tion to those listed below. Call
at your nearest Army Recruit
ng Station for hill details.
In*e balk your dhcbarga caHtihala end
M.D.A.G.O. Fern KM.
1516 Douglas Street
Omaha 2, Nebraska
So. Omaha tT.S. Postoffice
24th and ”VT Sts.
Coach Rains’ Football Hopes for Lincoln U. j
___— :—_ __
JEFFERSON CITY. MO—Ma
terial for what Coach David Rains
1 in~oH U. (Mo) hopes will be a
winninq team han b^n *-ele'f<H
from this group of almost sixty
football men. The Tigers started
their gridiorn secsoc with a win
over the Louisville Municipal
College eleve 1 Oct. 5th when the
M-.naiv. ,Tyif ^ 11 MM ■ HM
Lincoln men beat the Kentucky'
team 12'6 on Lincoln field.
— -.. i —. —
• Radio Programs
SUNDAY RADIO PROGRAMS
Oct. 27. 1946 WOW (590 kc 508.
2m) (CST)
6 30 Sunday Serenade
6 55 News
7 00 Revival Hour
8 00 Chapel in the Sky
8 15 Midwest Report
8 15 Chapel Service, Rev. R. R.
Brown
9 30 Nebr. State Federation of
Labor
9 45 Cheer Up Time
10 00 WOW News Tower
10 15 Geras and Jottings
10 30 Furs on Parade
10 45 Solitaire Time. NBC
11 00 World Front, NBC
11 30 House of Beauty
11 45 Canary Pet Show
12 00 WOW News Tower
12 15 Farm Magazine of the Air
12 30 Your University Speaks
Democratic Committee
12 45 Life Time Favorites
1 00 RCA Victor Hour, NEC
1 30 Harvest of Stars, NBC
2 00 Carmen Cavellero, NBC
2 30 One Man’s Family, NBC
3 00 The Symphonette
3 30 Nebraska Iowa Quiz
4 00 Quiz Kids
4 30 Circle Arrow Show
5 00 Catholic Hour, NBC
5 30 Bob Burns
6 00 Jack Benny, NBC
6 30 Bandwagon, NBC
7 00 Edgar Bergen & Charley
McCarthy, NBC
7 30 Fred Allen Show, NBC |
8 00 Manhattan Merry Go i
Round, NBC
8 30 American Album of Fami
liar Music, NBC
9 00 Don Ameche Show, NBC
9 30 Meet Me at Parkey’s, NBC
10 00 WOW News Tower
10 15 Show Time
10 30 Nebraska Educational
Foundation
10 45 To Be Announced
11 00 WOW News Tower
11 15 Music by Sbredinik, NBC
11 30 America United
12 00 Midnight Melodies
12 15 Mary Ann Mercer. NBC
12 30 Symphony of Melody
12 55 News, NBC
KOIL (1290 kc)
7 co Paul Harvey, News ABC
! 7 15 Tom Glazer’s Ballad Box,
7 30 Coffee Concerts, ABC
7 45 The Chosen People—ur.
Joseph Hoffman Cohn
8 00 Sunday Morning Melodies
8 15 Christian Science Pgm El
8 30 The Christians Hour, El
9 00 Old Fashioned Revival El
10 00 Church of the Air
10 30 News
10 45 The New World Coming
11 00 This Week Around the
World. ABC
11 30 Melodies of the Southland
12 00 News
12 15 Your Sports Question Box
With Leo Durocher
12 30 Your Univerpitv Speaks
12 45 Vagabond Dreamer
1 00 To Be Ann
1 30 Friendship Hour, ETS
1 45 Portraits of Music, ETS
2 00 Sammy Kaye’s Serenade
2 25 News
, 2 30 Geislers Canaries
I 2 45 Sam Pettengill, News ABC
3 00 Are These Our Crildren?
3 30 Green Hornet
4 00 Darts for Dough, ABC
4 30 Counterspy, ABC
5 00 Sunday Eveniny Party,
5 30 Easy Aces, ET
5 45 Flight with Music, ET
6 00 Drew Pearson, ABC
6 15 News
6 30 Stump the Authors, ABC
7 00 The Paul Whiteman Hour
8 00 Walter Winchell, ABC
8 15 Louella Parsons, ABC
8 30 Jimmy Fidler, ABC
8 45 The Policewoman, ABC
9 00 Theatre Guild of the Air
10 00 News
10 15 Vera Massey, ABC
10 30 Music You Want R
11 00 News, ABC
11 05 Clyde McCoy’s Orch. ABC
11 30 A1 Donahue’s Orch., ABC
11 55 News, ABC
12 00 Sign Off.
>'!■ hrt-Htr'r ( overage
ADVERTISE in the Guide
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Don't overload y^ur wI
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NEBRASKA-IOWA E
(LINCOLN UNIVERSITY (MO.) TIGERS
' IS 14 6 UPSET OVER LANGSTON UNIVERSITY
JEFFERSON CITY Oct 19—
Lincoln university’s surprise num
ber one of the football season was
the Tigers defeat of the favored
Langston university Lions, 14-6,
in Oklahoma City Saturday even
ing Cct. 12.
Led by the brilliant defensive
work of Lewis Polk, substitute
center, who intercepted two pass
es and ran SO and 85 yards for
touchdowns, the Tigers played
ttheir best game of the early sea
"son.
Both teams confined their scor
ing to a hectic fourth neriod. Nei
ther team in the earlv stages of
the game could get their offen
sives to click for scores.
Three plays after the beginning
of the fourth period, Langston
[ suddenly opened up with a pass
) ing attack that carried deep into
I Tiger territory where Polk, pluck
ing the ball out of the air on hi3
| own 20 yard line, flashed 80 yard3
I in a broken field to give the
Tigers a 6 to 0 lead, upped to 7-0
on Edgar Dunlap’s conversion.
Returning five plays later to
break up another Lion passing at
tack, Polk intercepted his second
successive pass and running 85
yards he made his second score of
the evening. Dunlap’s conversion
made it 14-0.
The Langston eleven in a last
minute struggle managed to score
with p last minute pass. Inability
to make the conversion left the
scores' Lincoln, 14; Langston, 6.
SHORT
SPORTS
BY JOHN M. LEE
It’s Either one Thing
Or Another for Sugar
DETROIT—(CNS)—Ray Sugar
Robinson, who is a clear-thinking
young athlete, not given to super
stitions and hunches, may break
down any day now and get him
self a first class rabbit’s foot or
some similar charm to knock over
the jinx that seems to dog his
foot-steps. While the little grem
lins have -pot teen able to take
anything away from Ray’s lethal
wallop and his —winning streak,
they have succeed in making a
nuisance of themselves. Just re
cently, Sugar had to postpone a
scheduled bout with Cecil Hudson
because of a heavy cold. The
match was moved up one week
bringng the date closer to Hallo
ween, when not only will there
be jinxes and gremlins to worry
about, but witches ard goblins too.
Our money is on Robinson, tho,
to beat the jinx ar.d Hudson too.
No Armistice for Polo Grounds
Th's November Eleventh
NEW YORK CITY—The date on
which we mark the ending of hos
tilities of World War I will be
anything but Armistice Day for
the gridders from A and T college
of Greensboro, and the Underseas
Raiders, a Negro and white team
from the navy base at New Lon
don, Conn. These two teams will
.v ^ s.r-_s. r .
Re-Elect
W. H. “BILL”
DORRAKOE
for SHERIFF
A Successful Business Man and
Taxpayer for 48 Years in
Douglas County
A Record of Law Enforcement,
Business Organization and Ad
ministration That Recommends
His Re-election.
HE HAS KEPT HIS PROMISES
(Political Advertisement)
ring system. When you
vide ADEQUATE WIRING.
.ECTRICAL COUNCIL
i
meet in a determined contest at
the Polo Crounds, snonso^ed by
the As'-osi-t^d Football Charities
headed bv Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt
and New York’s Mayor O’Dwyer.
Jackson Can 85 Yards
But Yale Lost The Game
NEW HAVEN, Conn—Levi Jack
son, sensational fullback at Yale
plav d enough football in the game
against Columbia to win single
handedly and to break the morale
of tbe toughest opponents but Yale
lost tbe game. -Tackson ouened in
the assault against the lions with
a breath-taking 85 verd run in
the third period, but. his hrilkant
plaving had made the other two
touchdowns possible. Jackson rn
tbmv’.gh the entire Columbia team
to srov'ds one of the greatest
thrills ever witnessed in a foot
ball stPd:”m. He o’-ifteft
chsne-ed nnee shook off Col
umbia *ocki<-rs like thev were so
man" flies, but Columbia won 28
to 20.
Joe Louis Autobiography
To Re Published Soot
NEW YORK CITY—Joe Louis’
autohio°raphy is soon *o be nub
i lished by Duell Sloan & Pearce.
! Contracts were signed bv Joe be
fore his one round battering of
I
Tami Maurlelli at Pompton Lakes.
Adequate publication date has
not been set yet though it is hoped
it will be ready for spring, 1947.
The Week
By H. W. Smith
V. Newton of Redland, Calif.,
hanged himself in the county jail.
He was being tried for the mur
der of his two young dauehters
and also an attempt to kill his
wife.
Mrs. Mary Anderson of Chicago
disappeared from Silver Cross ;
hospital Sept. 7 and was found
on Oct. 8 sitting on the bank of
Sprink Creek four blocks away.
Tokyo Janan reports a shortage
of coal. A young men’s associ
ation expects to mine 10,000 tons
and another group 30,000 tons to
relieve the shortage.
The shortage of oxygen has been
solved and many patients lives
will be saved. A city official said
o::ygen tanks would be shipped
from Nor til Bergen, N. J. to the
New 1 u.a hospitals.
Two Bulgarians have registered
in the US as alien agents at our
nation’s capitol.
Baltimore, Maryland, celebrated
the end of the OPA with m°at at
OPA prices Oct. 15.
US Price Administrator said in
Washington, D. C. on Oct. he is
sued a long list of items that
would remain under OPA juris
'i
LOANS
$10 TO $1,000
You can obtain a loan fr»m us for
almost any purpose and repay in
small monthly payments.
Salary loans on your signature
only. We also make auto and
furniture loans.
We will gladly make you a small
loan or a large one.
Phone AT-2300, tell us what you
need, then come in and pick up
the money. Prompt Service
COMMERCE
LOAN COMPANY
190] Faraam St. Ground Floor
Corner
Larry Flinru Mann err
GOOD READING
★ The GREATER
Omaha Guide
—__ __IM|, !
k From wnere I sit... Jcz Mzrcb
#/
r '-— ---
A: ~ 1 “Sura*ng Vo: 2: r r. 3
#/ID2'??Sr33!ii,‘'0/
Daring the war you heard a let
shout hav «tM ii was going x 3
/cr reiurstiag r^ierer.s to jet cc
icotsd k* .he . . . .:ow
•*x>7’^ j6 “d.vO»ati„ ’
"V/oB* :,**«**<* «£ them “ir.vs re
turr.ec x our xwn. and r. liner,
steam* toaji. you roaldr.’t as.e
lor. hSasfe «1 3to are had: at the
same j.eus . . . going with the
same nice home-town girls (get
ting mamhou, seme of them, and
setting up families) . .. renewing
the same aid friendships.
Evoa isfcair asKisements arc the
same. Nothing more errciti-.g Ih -1
fishing Seward’s cree.: cr site,
ing horseshoes . . . enjoying ■
outdoor barbecue witn Trier._ <
wholesome oe :r ar.d pleasant -a...
If they’ve enangec at &JI it’s 1:
the direction of maturity end toi
erance... tolerance for oves-ptir.'
except dictators, and thopj tre:
would destroy our aemocrati:
principles of live arc .e* _ive. An;
from where I sit, that’s anothe;
reason to oe prone of -hem.
'^opyng.ct* 2Mot Lruieu ^reicen -
_
diction.
US senator Connally of Texas,
blames the war on the American
people. He said a US Congression
al group supported the British at
the expense of American interest.
Attorney Megan of Chicago
has initiated a new pardon for
Roger Toahy the kidnapper who
tried to break cut of prison. The
attorney contends the case should
be reopened.
Gen. Eisenhower told the army
to comb out the old officers who
are unfit for service.
cut with this mateo8806l- •
WALTER H. HOLLINS, assistant
professor, Lincoln University of
Journalism, came to Lincoln thi}
fall after teaching printing al
Florida A & M college, Tallahas
see, 17 years.
A master of arts from the Uni
versity of Minnesota, he was elec
ted into rremfcershiD of that
school’s chapter of Sigma Delta
Chi, national and professional
journalism fraternity, last year
while studying there. He is' the
second Negro to gain membership.
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.,
Metropolitan Utilities
District of Omahp
SPECIAL ELECTION
November 5, 1946
NATURAL GAS PROPOSAL
SHALL THE METROPOLITAN UTILITIES
DISTRICT OF OMAHA, AS PROVIDED BY
THE LAW Of THE STATE OF NEBRASKA,
BE AUTHORIZED TO USE AND SUPPLY
STRAIGHT -NATURAL GAS?
YES
NO
■
This is the NATURAL GAS BALLOT
Look for B November 9t ;%• JWTOAL GAS
PROPOSAL appears at the bofb»m of the regular
Metropolitan Utilities District ballot La (he Board oi
Directors. The above photograph wiu enable you to
identify the NATURAL GAS BALLOT, and read the
proposal as it will be printed on the official ballot
handed to you at the polls* Qroqhcr urgently neecfc
-*■ yonr approval oi straight Natpral Oas . * . to insure
economical, abundant gas ..seryfcia. ](pr f&e city—now
and for the future*
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Eugene D. O'Sullivan, Chairmen
W. 0. Larson, Vice-Chairman Willard H. Quigley, M. L».
Prank L Froit Allan A. Tukey C. Con Healey
Walter S. Byrne, General Manager
If you wantNATURAL GAS VOTE 0 YES
(Folifciae* afljfcsertiaement )