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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1947)
J 3^ ^ Fill Your Coal Bin NOW! Clean and Repair Your Furnace! Stokers - Furnaces and Oil Burners Cooperate With These Merchants. They Solicit and Appreciate Your Trade. Each year The Omaha Guide launches its Annual “Prepardness Campaign” in cooperation with the local Coal and Heating Merchants. We widh to particularly call your attention to the fact that due to the numerous coal strikes the price of fuel must necessarily be rais ed. To avoid paying higher prices land to reassure prompt delivery in the fall, it is wise to place your order NOW.; also to have your furnace cleaned and repaired. “Don’t delay act NOW.” The following Merhants whose Ad appears in this Special Edition and elsewhere appreciate your trade. —By George H. Me Davis FOR YOUR COMFORT— Burn Burn-Rite Semi Anthracite ^ Smokeless O Low In Ash O Sootless Q High in Heat Units PROHASKA COAL CO Office - Yards 26th & Dorcasl Sts. Tel. JAckson 1526 - Frank A. Gundersen 28th and K Streets PHONE MARKET 0108 FOR COAL OF CHARACTER Distributors of MAJESTIC S-P COAL Call fors— ARVESTES PITTS or NR. AL BANKS Salesmen Pint Seed Sale Agricultural seeds were first soM commercially in the United States • Kot* 1747 SPELLMAN Fuel and Supply Company Quality Coal and Coke Courteous Treatment PROMPT DELIVERY 20th and Izard JA0478 Why Prepare for War? By ZERITA THROWER (peace Caravan) At first man clans and tribes fought against each other. You would think that the more civiliz. ed man becomes the les fighting would extis. But man still hasn’t learned how to live peacefully to I gether or is it that he just isn’t | willing to give it a chance. We | have passed ou of the gunpow J der age into the atomic age. There I fore, military men say that we should train men ahead of time just in case there should be a war They ,or rather, Truman, wants (to call it universal training. On | purpose they left the word “mili j tary” out of the title. Of sourse a rose by any oher name would smell just as sweet or should I ysa sour ? Army experts even say ' that another war wouldn’t last 6 J months yet they are wiling and so efficiently advertizing an all 1 out peace-time army program. Never before in the history of the U. S. have we had peace-time military training. Why put all the interest on war now? Why not emphasize the happiness brought by peace? Let’s spread the news about peace! Military discipline has a certain indoctrination policy. For one thing, segregation patterns would STEAM and DOMESTIC Coal, Coke ,Fuel Oil STOKER COAL Our Specialty AK SAR-BEN CITY FUEL CO Telephone ATantic 4114 OFFICE AND YARDS 14th and Paul Streets MRS. WM. JOFFE JONES FUEL & SUPPLY CO and PACIFIC COAL CO., ING: “SATISFACTION GUARANTEED r , Our Speialty GOLDCREST STOKER COAL IMmDl.iVE DELIVERY Of fie* and Yard Phone 20th & Nicholas AT 5631 still exist. It creates a robot which is subject to orders from someone who is supposedly high er. A man isn’t allowed to think independently. Is that dem ? ocratic? The man is forced to be a faithful and obedient servant to his superiors. He’s told when to eat, slep and what to think. It is thought that a man’s health would be improved. It is a fact that it is in the early years of childhood and only in those years that we can produce sound bodies. The medical profession cannot, and surely the Army cannot, create health at the age of 18. A great degree of veneral disease existed in the army due to the fact that it encouraged promiscuity. There ! have been many mental casualties I and suicides as a result of war. ] The money used for military | training could be used to finance i every boy in America through college with money left for hos. | pitals, libraries, etc. $3,000 000 000 j of the taxpayers money would he used yearly to help carry out such a program. As it is now we are only using $2,000,000,000 a year I toward education. What’s more constructive-building strong, ■ healthy, intelligent minds or building toy soldiers whose lives wouldn’t be worth a nickel if war should occur. There is no defense against an atomic war. When boys are trained to kill it is difficult for some of them to 1 make the transition back to nor. mal life. Therefore his program causes an increase in crime. Universal military training will not bring peace. It will mean the by.passing of the United Nations. We should place in the U. N. the only international police force. Yet the army has stopped so low as to spread propaganda in order to have military training. It is do ing its best to sell it to the public. It is the job of the true Ameri can to see that this menace is wipe out of the minds of the people. If it is passed it will change the entire character of American life. Handled lViany Times Iron ore is handled five times from the time it is removed from the earth until it emerges from the furnace as liquid metaL Only Huguenot Church Only Huguenot church in Amer ica is at Charleston, S. JC. It was founded in 1687. Good Semi'Anthracite Coals Jewel - Paris«Excelsior Buck Creek Call us for Information about these Coals. We are oversold on Je^sei but can make immediate delivery on the others. Rivett Lbr. & Coal Co. 2736 No. 65tad St 4115 Lake St WE 5621 GL 1234 Crocheted Double Pineapple Bedspread Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to this paper and receive com plete instructions cn how to make this centerpiece at home. SARAH VAUGHN ON KING COLE TRIO TIME —_ XT - By popular demand Sarah Vaug hn returns to “King Cole Time” j for her third visit on this Satur day (July 26th) at 5:45 p. m. EDT over NBC and station. Nightingale of the nighteries, Sarah has been chanteuse-ing in leading clubs from coast to coast, and last appeared on “King Cole Trio Time” when the boys were appearing in Chicago at Easter time. Her requests from the Trio | will be “My Heart Is A Hobo”, “Lazy Mood”, and “The Trouble With Me Is You”. Miss Vaughn will wind up the program by sing ing on© of the many numbers that has made her honey-toned | voice the talkof show business. NEAR NORTHSIDE ^ UNDERWAY THIS WEEK Mr. Milton Johnson, chairman of Near Northside Business and Industrial Survey Committee re ports the survey of businesses in the Near Northside area got und er way this week. Letters are be ing sent to all business men ap prising them of the committees plane and asking for theij «) operation. ~"*T ~L CHICAGO CHURCHMAN TO HELP IN CRUSADE HERE Dr. Charles R. Goff, pastor of the Methodist Temple, Chicago’s unique skyscraper church in the' Loop, comes to Omaha at the in-' j vitation of our Evangelism and Spiritual Life Committee to lead1 off in the community-wide church attendance crustde sponored by the committee this fall. Dr. Goff will meet with the min. isters of the city at noon on Thursday, September 25, and will speak to the assembled workers from the churches in an evening meeting to be held at the First Cenral Congregationtl Church. Detailed plans for the Crusade have been sent by direct mail to all churches and participation cordially invited. During the first week of Oct. 17 outdoor billbotrds will carry “Come to Church” messages to all Omaha. Theaters will carry church mes sages throughout the period of the crusade. Attractive “Come to Church” posters have been purchased to be displayed on successive weeks in October and November in stra tegic windows throughout the city. In the churches, the suggested action is an every-member-visit ation on Sunday, Sept. 28, and the enrollment of as many people as possible in a church attendance pledge for the period Oct. 5 to November 23. Each church is ne couraged to make anw adaptation in timing which fits in with de nominational or local plans al ready far advanced. You are urged personally to join with others in the meeting Thurs., Sept. 25„ Four of the sixteen committees are accounted for as follows: 1. Program Commission a cabinet of the chairmen of ali the above committees which carry responsi bility for program. 2. Interracial Committee, a subcommittee of the Social Education and Action Committee as also are the remain, ing two committees. S. Youth Act ivities, and 4. Publio Morals Com mittee. On the second Tuesday in 8*4*., which is th« regular meeting date at the executive committee, it is planned to bring this entire body of workers together to review the entire developing program of the Council. Prvident Parry has prepared a visual demonstration with the aid at each chairman, to present an architect's view at this stmctuf* at the spirit. SEVENTY-FIVE CHURCH LEADERS MAN 8IXTEEN COUNCIL COMMITTEE8 The writer has been watching with admiration the progress of a skyscraper building being erect ed in Omaha. Week by week and month bby month the steel gird ers have been flung upward in a mighty structure calculated to carry the stresses of what is one of Omaha’s beautiful buildings. In less spectacular fashion, another structure is being built in Omaha. It is the framework in tended to carry the paultiform activities of a Council of Churches in a metropolitan community. This structure, too is yet to be coveded with the finished texture of work and program. Its girders are of fine material, however and we believe they have been put in place well. Great care and de liberation has been exercised in choosing widely representative leaders from the churches. Com mittees have been meeting sys tematically and approaching their tasgs with care, establishing the essential fellowship within each committee which is an intergral part of this denominational work. Gradually one after another of these action groups projects phrtses of its program with nor. mal variations in boldness and type of activity. The creation of structure is going on in program building in each committee. Twelve of these committees are major activities of the Council: 1. The executive committee, 2. The Evangelism and Spiritual Life Committee, 3. Extension and Church Planning, 4. Finance, 5. Interfaith Relations, Ministry to Public Institutions, 7. Public Meetings, 8. Public Relations, Pro. motion, and Publicity, 9. Rtdio Ministry, 10. Religious Education 11. Social Education and Action, and 12. World Friendship. COLE TRIO NOT AWRKWARD NOW King Cole Trio fans—particular ly the ones who knew them “when and feel pardonable pride in their discovery—will be interested in four sides recently re-issued by Decca—The numbers include “This Will Make You Laugh,” “That Ain't Right," “This Side Up” and “Scotchin’ With the Soda’ If you’re wondering how the Trio played those days, lend an ear to a trade paper review: “The spin ning proves those plenty great Robert Saxton, Attorney 70S (teeline Building Omaha, Nebraska IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, NEBRASKA Bird Finance Corp., a corporat ion, Plaintiff vs. Schandorf Hardy and Lenora B. Hardy, Defendants. Execution Docket 35, Page 99. TO Schandorf Hardy and Len ora B. Hardy, also known as Le nore B. Hardy, if living, and if dead, to her heirs, administrators, assigns or devisees, defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the 23rd day of July, 1947, the plaintiff filed an affidavit and motion for revivor in the above case, the object and purpose of which are to obtain revivor of the judgment of $362.79 and costs rendered against you in the County Court of Douglas County, Nebraska, Book 32, Page 119, on or about the 8th day of November, 1939, and transcripted to this Court in this action on January 2, 1947, and upon which there is now due and unpaid the sum of $453.20 as of December 6 1944 together with interest at 6 per cent on $362. 79 from Decem ber 7, 1944, until paid, together with court costs of the County Court of Douglas County, Nebr aska, in the amount of $18.85 and together with court costs in the Disrict Court of Douglas County Nebraska, in the amount of $1.00 and acuring costs. You are further notified that on the 23rd day of July, 1947, plain tiff obtained a conditional order of revivor of said judgment againt3 you which provides that said judgment be revived against you unless you show sufficient cause or answer on or before the 27 day of August, 1947, why the same should not be revived. EIRD FINANCE CORE., a Corporation, Plaintiff BY Robert Saxton, Its Attorney Beg.. 7-26-47 End. 8-16-47 4 j in that earlier year. As much zest and individuality in their playing and singing then as to day. ’ Those were the day3 when agents were telling Nat (King) Cole that his combination of piano bass and guitar war too “awk ward’ to please the public— Funny that this “awkward” com bo. should now be “the hottest thing in the music business,” to quote a national magazine. Gearhart Feed and Coal Co. “EVERY FEED FOR THE FEEDER” MA 2224 4733 So. 2?th St. COAL _ FEEDS Paris Lump - Baer X Semi - Aflko Stoker ALSO Sweet Lassy Feed* - Hay - Straw — JTE APPRECIATE YOUR TRADE