The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, November 02, 1946, Page 7, Image 7

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    -"TRY HOME FIRST"
& WORTH 24TH STREET BUSINESS DIRECTORY
_ _ C SA^f , By a 'Peep-in* on this Alphabetically
" OU w ^ and Lots of Time Classified Business Directory.
You May Find Just What You are Looking for “Right at Your Door, or at Your Neighborhood Store”. You Can also SAVE that Car Check and Lots, and Lots of Time!
This North 24th Street Classified Business Directory Page is Your “Best Money-Back Guarantee”.
_ __—————^
— 111 1 ..—
You Can TSow Buy Your
Fresh Fish
OF ALL KINDS
—AT THE—
Nebraska Produce
0 Poultrv Dressed FRESH FARM
WhH.- ‘IT Wai. EGGS
2206 North 24th St. WE. 4137
Quality and Service
,__ *
*mmm " 1 1 ■
Cozy Grill
—“Where Friends Meet and Eat”—
Starting Sept. 1st
Sea Food - Lobsters, Shrimps
Oysters & Fillet of Fish
2615 North 24th
PHONE FOR RESERVATIONS— JA. 4336
Geraldine Craig, Proprietor.
__________________„/
JAekaon 4111 1833-35 North 24th St.
Chicago Furniture Co.
• LARGE SELECTIONS of STOVES and LAMPS
Our Fall Special LOW PRICED CHILDREN’S
DESKS
--- -
BUD'S
7 exaco Service
• GAS and OIL
“We Appreciate Your Trade”
30th & Wirt Sts. AT-9760
■ > ■ '
APEX Bar Inc.
“FAVORITE BRANDS WHEN AVAILABLE”
-(Under New Management)
Nate Ferer, Manager
1818-20 NORTH 24TH JA. 9331
- M
a TRIANGLE SHOE REPAIR a
• QUALITY MATERIALS,
• GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP,
• CLEANING & PRESSING,
• HATS CLEANED & BLOCKED.
1608 NORTH 24th ST. JA. 0850
. hi . ———.—.
THRIFTY LIQUOR STORE
.• WINES, BEER, LIQUORS
“We Appreciate Your Trade”
24th & LAKE AT. 4A18
fine Quality -
Personalized
PRINTING
- , JUST CALL HArney 0800_
L____
---
Buyers’ Guide
• Services, Foods,
Accessories, House
hold Needs, etc.,
which may be had
, at these 24th Street
Places of Business.
EDITORIAL
.BY GEORGE H. McDAVIS,
Advertising Manager
“ANOTHER FIRST”
IN keeping with our policy
of giving our READERS and
ADVERTISERS the Best pos
sible SERVICE. The OMAHA
GUIDE is FIRST again with a
new FEATURE which to our
way of thinking, will he of
IMMEASURABLE VALUE to
all CONCERNED.
WE are striving to keep a
j breast of the times, with
| NEWS, ARTICLES & FEA
< TURES. KEEP vour eve on
this PAGE each week,— here
you will find the answer to all
your household NEEDS; and
STATEMENT OF THE
OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT,
CIRCULATION, ETC. REQUIRED
BY THE ACTS OF CONGRESS
OF AUGUST 24, 1912 AND
MARCH 3, 1933
Of the Omaha Guide, published
every Saturday, at Omaha, Ne
braska for October 1st, 1946. State
of Nebraska, County of Douglas
before me, a Notary Public in and
for the State and county afore
said, personally appeared C. C.
Galloway, who, having duly sworn
according to law. deposes arid
says the he is the Publisher of the
Omaha Guide and that the follow
ing is, to the best of his know
ledge and belief, a true statement
of the ownership, management
(and the circulation) etc., of the
aforesaid publication for the date
shown in the above caption, re
quired by the Act of August 24,
1912, as amended by the Act of
March 3, 1933. embodied in sec
tion 537, Postal Laws and Regu
lations, printed on the reverse of
this form, to wit:
1. That the names and addres
REASONS Vim
increasing millions 4
l Snap Back W/th J
D Designed to speedily relieve
simple headache and painful
discomforts of neuralgia.
Measured doses — In powder
form for quick assimilation.
Proof of m«1t. Same type for
mula over One-third century.
Q Standard U. S. P. Ingredients.
Laboratory tested, controlled.
tn In price range of everyone,
g/ 10c and 2Sc sizes.
Caution: Use only as directed.
1 7~Z _ ■■ FWjJ
PATRONIZE THESE AD
VERTISERS.
“Be Wise and Advertise in
The Guide— The Midwest’s '*
Largest Weekly
ses of the publisher, editor, man
aging editor, and business mana
gers are:
Publisher.C. C. Galloway, 2418
Grant Street, Omaha, Nebraska.
Editor.C. C. Galloway, 2418
Grant Street. Omaha, Nebraska
Managing Editor.None
Business Managers.C. C. Gall
oway.
2. That the owner is: (if owned
by a corporation, its name and
address must be stated and also
immediately thereunder the names
and address of stockholders own
ing or holding one per cent or
more of total amount of stock. If
owned by a corporation, the names
and addresses of the individual
owners must be given. If owned
by a firm, company, or other un
incorporated concern, its name
and address, as well as those of
each individual members, must be
given.)
The Omaha Guide Publ. Co., C.
C. Galloway.
4. That the two paragraphs
next above giving the names of
the owners, stockholders, and se
curity holders, if any. contain not
only list of stockholders and se
curity holders as they appear upon
the books of the company but also
in cases where the stockholder or
security holder appears upon the i
books of the company as trustee
or in any other fiduciary relation,
) the name of the person or corpor
ation of whom such trustee is ac
ting, is given: also that the said
two paragraphs contain state
ments embracing affiant’s full
knowledge and belief as to the
circumstances and conditions un
der which stockholders and secu
rity holders who do not appear
upon the books of the company
as trustees, hold stock and se
curities and in capacity other than
.that of a bona fide owner; and
this affiant has no reason to be
lieve that any other person, asso
ciation, or corporation has any in
terest direct or indirect in the said
stock, bonds, or other securities
than as so stated by him.
5. That the average number of
copies of each issue of this pub
lication sold o r distributed,
through the mails or otherwise, to
paid subscribers during the twelve
m SNA CK Stop
• HOT DOGS-A FOOT LONG—* HAMBURGERS
• CANDY—* ICE CREAM—* MALTED MILK
• REFRESHMENTS—• FOODS
-Opqa 24 Hours A Day
2108-10 NORTH 24TH Phone. JA. 9434
We Are Once More
LAUNDERING CURTAINS
• SEND OR BRING THEM IN
Edholm & Sherman
—LAUNDERERS & DRY CLEANERS
2401 North 24th St. Phone WE-6055
Cleo’s Nite & Day Bar-B-Q
2042 North 21st Street
• ALL KINDS OF DELICIOUS SANDWICHES
—Open 24 Hours A Day—
Deliveries Made—Small Fee Charge the same.
CALL ATlantic 9541
— *
months preceedmg the date shown
above is 5,848.
Signed—C. C. Galloway
Sworn to and subscribed before
me this 23rd day of October, 1946
Signed—Lucy Mae Britt,
Whose Commission expires
Dec. 6th, 1947.
THE COMMON
DEFENSE
—By Rev. William C. Keenan
AMERICAN ACTION, Inc.
A new national organization,
calling itself American Action
Inc., has made its appearance.
Suspicion will be aroused as to
its intentions and purpose by
reading the names of some of the
people who have been mentioned
as being connected with it..
General Robert E. W’ood, once
head of the isolationist America
First Committee which sponsored
meetings attended by known pro
fascists and at which the Hitler
propaganda line was featured.
Colonel Robert R. McCormick,
an arch-isolationist who, accord
ing to the New York Times of
May 18, 1943, was praised by Ra
dio Tokyo as a ‘‘one man crusade
for the defense of true American
ism and for the salvation of the
United States from the hands
of the..radical 'interventionists”.
It wasn’t hurting the cause of the
Axis any when Colonel McCor
mick’s paper The Chicago Tribune
said on Pearl Harbor Day, 1943
that “whatever may have been the
ulterior designs of Germany and
Japan, neither at the time wished
to involve the United States”.
Overlooking every historic fact
concerning Nazi aggression while
he disliked, Colonel McCormick’s
Tribune of September S, 1941 ac
cused American Jews of working
for war.
Merwin K. Hart, founder of the
National Economic Council, who
on February 14. 1940 told the Nas
sau Club in Princeton, N. J., that
“democracy is the rallying cry
under which the American system
is being prepared for despotism”
and who expressed himself fur
ther about democracy when he
declared on September 19, 1940,
before the Union League Club in
New York City that “it is time
to brush aside this word ‘demo
cracy’ with its connotations”. Mr
Hart denies that he anti-Semitic
but in his pamphletls Your Town
Red? he recommended two books
by Mrs. Elizabeth Dilling one of
the best known anti-Semitic pro
pagandists in the country. Wny
did he do that?
Upton Close, a radio commen
tator, who was dropped from the
National Broadcasting Company
in 1944 and from the Mutual
Broadcasting System in 1945, but
who is now sponsored on the ra
dio by Mr. Hart’s National Eco
nomic Council. As recently as on
September 3, 1946, the Most Rev.
Bernard J. Sheil, Auxiliary Bish
op of the Catholic Diocese of Chi
cago broadcast a stinging rebuke
Ito Mr. Close who had accused
him, by innuendo, of being “a
communist and an apologist foi
communism”. Bishop Sheil had
previously said in an address,
“People who are well-fed, well
clothed and well-housed are not
interested in communism. If we
make American democracy work
not only politically, but economi
cally and socially as well we
can conquer any ideology”. That
ought to be recognized as good
old-fashioned Americanism and a
fine defense against both com
munism and fascism. But to Mr.
Close it meant communism. We
do well to remember that one of
Hitler’s propaganda tricks was to
call every opponent a communist
and to brand as communistic
everything he sought to destroy.
What,* therefore, can be said
about American Action? Is it is
olationist, anti-Semitic, anti-dem
ocratic? Does it condone the pro
fascist, isolationist, and anti-Se
mitic records of some of its good
friends? Is it really fighting com
munism, which ought to be fought
by every loyal American, or is it
using an anti-communist slogan
to cover up an attack on all pro
gressive reform? These are some
questions American people are
asking. It’s up to American Ac
tion to provide the answers.
■ H
By CARL HELM
NEW YORK—"It’s all right for a
visit,” say the folks from out yonder
of this isle of Manhattan, “but I
wouldn’t live there if you gave me
the place!”
Well, the folks who live here for
a variety of strange reasons wouldn’t
visit the place—so there! It’s enough
for them to know that Broadway,
the nightclubs, the Empire State
Bldg, and all the rest is there wait
ing for them, outside the door, if
they want it.
For the most part, though, they
stay at home, go to the neighbor
hood movies and taverns on their
weekly night out, and only see noisy,
jammed, glittery Broadway as an
effulgence in the distant night sky.
Except, of course, when some of
you folks come to town and expect
to be entertained by local relatives
or friends. Then the New Yorker,
with many a concealed groan and
sigh, has to forsake his slippers and
easy chair to escort you around
packing into three or four nights of
hospitality more fast gadding and
bibbling than ordinarily he would ii
three or four years.
Tired but happy,’ you folks gt
thankfully back home t£en, shaldni
a head over ‘poor Jirfw-don’t-se©
how-he-stands-New-York!’ for tb
1 fasfcjifc he leadsl
READ The BEST OF WEEKLIES
YOUR PAPER THE GU10E!
Neighborhood Furnace Co.
2111 NORTH 30th ST.
-GUTTERING SPOUTING & REPAIRS
INSTALLATION OF OIL, GAS, COAL, also STOKERS
ESTIMATES FREE A m—M A
& TERMS ARRANGER IvlO
V■
CROSSWORD PUZZLE ''
. ...;...
; ACROSS
I 1 Watch pocket
I 4 God of earth
(Egypt)
7 Coin (It.)
| 8 To select
andgather
10 Hindu prince
'll Regions
.13 External
se.ed coating
114 Heavy
hammer
'15 Fish
16 Any soggy
mess
17 Gold (Her.)
18 Forest
goddesses
21 Otherwise
*23 Grass dried
for fodder
24 Enemy
25 Heavenly
) body
27 Capital
(Colorado)
30 Public notice
31 Merry
32 Negative
reply
33 Island off
Italy
! 36 Refuse ap
' proval to
,38 City (Okla.)
39 Basque cap
40 Form
41 Culture
medium \
42 Letter G.
43 A fuel
DOWN
1 Group of
Pacific
islands ' " I
2 Verbal
3 Expression
of disgust
4 Token of
i victory
Solution in Next Issue.
No. 19
5 River (Eur.)
6 Shed blood
7 Covered
with lard
9 Seaport
(B W Afr.)
10 Shower
12 Wither ,
14 Distress
signal ' '
16 Timid v
19 Unit ot '
conductance
(Elec.)
20 Kitchen
utensil
21 An age
22 A coin ’
(Bulg.) J
24 Fate (Scot.)
25 Spar
26 Hatred
27 Period of
time
28 Come in
29 To dig with
the snout
31 Open space
in a wood
34 Wooden
soled shoe
35 Small island
36 One of
brightest
stars of
N sky Jfj
87 Epochs ,
39 Sack
Answer (o Pottle J
Number 18
II l 11 l ill l i I
Scries G-M
THEY’LL NEVER DIE gy Stem
@/9*i \
SJv*
» THIS SUCCESSFUL MAN,
WE SON OF A WEALTHY
PLANTER.WAS BORN 1839
IN ALABAMA*DESPITE HlS
SLAVE STATUS HE WAS
GIVEN MANY ADVANTAGES
AT M- HE WENT TO OHIO
FOR AN EDUCATION AND IE
YEARS LATER,WITH MONEY
"EARNED IN A CALIFORNIA
RESTAURANT VENTURE.
ENTERED THE LUMBER
. BUSINESS IN MICHIGAN*
BOR 20 YEARS MR. •
^ ATWOOD SOLD LUMBER
IN NO LESS THAN a
\ large Cities, including
/ ' BOSTON, CLEVLAND,
AND CHICAGO/
iJtakT
W.Q.
ATWOOD
lumber merchant
Coariamtal Future*
Read The Greater Omaha Guide!
-MARY’S- ^
CHICKEN HUT
• BARBECUED RIBS &
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
“OUR Chicken Dinner a Are
Something to Crow About.’*
I ROBERT JONES, PROPRIETOR
IjA. 8946 2722 North 30th St.1
Service Station I
24th & Ohio Streets
Appaeafafted.
★ To AH Onr Friends—Your Business Will Be
Complete line of Lubrication
& Accessories
JA 8848 GABBY WATBON, PROPRIETOR
v~-- 's
' •
Finlay & company-]
'ICE
—24 Hour Service—
SCORED ICE AND CUBES ■
(Open Sundays)
WE. 0232 24CH * SEWARD