f*I* Four ■IV GUIDE U$t jj™jPjijrj7^^|[yi|j^^ WANTED: Houses, Apartments, and the Names and Addresses of people that are looking for a place to stay; and for people who want to rent an apartment. Call HA 0800. FOR RENT: 3 Kitchenette Apart ments. Nice Location with Utilities paid. Call HA. 0800. FOR RENT: Nice room for single person. Call JA 6684. ^ FOR RENT: 2 large Chairs, newly unholstered in red. Also a large Mirror. Call after 2 P.M. 2510 Erskine. PR 0994. FOR RENT: Nice large room for couple. Share kitchen. Ultilities paid. Call HA. 0800. FOR RENT: 1 3-roof unfurnished Apt 1 block from 2 bus lines. Call HA. 0800. FOR RENT: 3 3-room furnished Apts. Call HA. 0800. FOR RENT: One very nice sleep ing room. All modern. For working man or woman. Call AT. 1499 FOR RENT: One 2 room unfurnish ed apartment. Call HA 0800. FOR RENT. A 2 room furnished apartment on bus line. Call HA 0800. FOR RENT: One 2-room furnished apartment and one 3-room un furnished apartment. Call HA 0800. WANTED. WANTED! WANT ED: We want to rent that Apartment you hare for Rent. Call HA 0800. We want to sell that ear or truck you have to sale. Call HA 0800. We want to aeli that piece of furniture you have, for sale. Call HA 0800. -- -- i REMEMBER We are in tha Rent ing and telling buaineea. Give ua a ring. HA 0800. WHAT HAVE YOO TO RENT OK TO SELL 7 WE HAVE RENTERS AND BUYERS WAITING FOR WHAT YOU HAVE. GIVE US A RING. HA 0800. CALL GROW GLOSS for Hair appointment. Hair dresser and oil. 2512 N. 24th. Phone PL 9016. FOR RENT: 1 3-room furnished apartment 2 2-room apartments. 1 2-room unfurnished apart ment. 2 1-room furnished P&rtment for working man or woman. Call Ha. 0800, Omaha Guide Office. FOR RENT: 3 modern unfurnished rooms, all utilities furnished. Call Ha 0800 before 9:30 a.m. or after 5:00 p.m. WANTED: A cook for private home call Mrs. Pettis, Ha 0323, 404 S. 39th St. FOR SALE: TWO LIKE NEW TELEVISION COMBINATIONS. WERE $500.00, NOW $195.00. EVANS RADIO & TV SERVICE, 2936 N. 24th. PL 9879. FOR RENT: A large 'sleeping room right on a bus line for only $7.50 per week. Call PI. 4318. FOR RENT 1 3-room unfurnished apartment. Call Ha. 0800. FOR SALE: 2 large chairs, newly upholstered in red. Also a large mirror. Call after 2 P.M. Ja. 0994. 2510 Erskine. RELIABLE PERSON Man or woman from this area to service new revolutionary Cig arette Vending Machine. 6 to 10 hours weekly nets up to approx. $3,000 00 yearly. Great opportunity for capable person to expand. When fully es tablished, party selected should earn $15,000.00 yearly. $1,195.00 cash investment required. Ful ly secured. For local inter view give full particulars. Write P O. Box 7047, Minne apolis 11, Minn. Announcement The Waller Radio Re pair Shop, which was located at 1904 North 24th St has moved to 2525 North 20th St 1 block north from Lake St on the north side of North 20th St FOR RENT: Dne 3 room furnished or unfurnished apartment at 2520 Lake SL Call PL 3165. FOR RENT: 1 4-room house. Call At. 3747. Between 2 bus lines. FOR RENT: Nice room for settled couple or elderly single person in a private home with use of kitchen. Call HA 0801. 2310 N. 22nd St. FEMALE HELP WANTED WOMEN sew easy ready-cu^ house coats at home. Earn from $17.40 to $26.16 dozen Write — AC CURATE STYLE, Freeport, New York. FOR RENT: Several nice exclusive rooms for men. Price reasonable. Call HA 0800. FOR RENT: 1 large furnished room for working coupU WE 1477. FOR RENT: Two nice rooms for couple or single person $7.00 and $7.50 Nice location. PL 6376. FOR RENT. Kitchenette apart ment. Utilities paid. WE 1523. Lincoln May Get Shrine Of Pershing Lincoln, Nebraska has been urged as a site for a proposed | memorial to General John J. i Pershing by Senators Roman Hruska and Carl Curtis. The Nebraska Republican sent a joint letter to the American Battle Monuments Commission urging that “every consideration be given the interests of the city of Lincoln, and of all Nebraskans, in the erection of the Pershing Memorial.” A resolution authorizing the Commission to build a Memorial has been approved by the Senate and is pending before the House, i hruska and Curtis expressed con- ] fidence that the resolution “will be finally enacted in this session of Congress.” The Senators wrote that Persh ing “is truly regarded as one of the honored sons of our State.” Hruska said the Commander of the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I graduated from the University of Nebraska Law School and later was Pro fessor of Military Science at the University. “The General’s sister, the late Miss Mae Pershing, lived most of her life in Lincoln,” Hruska said, "and for the last forty years of his life, General Pershing listed 1748 “B” Street, Lincoln, as his iegal residence.” Rruska noted that Lincoln lead ers are energetically urging that the Pershing Memorial be located in Lincoln through a Mayor’s Pershing Memorial Committee. He concluded, “I am sure Lin coln will be given every consider ation as a site to honor one of America’s greatest military lead ers.” 'fovtirmtrwnie PULL THE PLUG ON STOMACH UPSET Half-alive, headachy, when constipa tion sours stomach? Black-Draught* relieves constipation overnight. Helps sweeten sour stomach too. Laxative-Stomach Sweetener Works Overnight! No harsh griping. Made from pure vegetable herbs. Thoroughly but gently uncorks clogged intestines. Brings comforting relief in morning. Then life looks sunny again! Get Black-Draught today. •/n Powder or Granulated form . . . and now in new. easy-to-takc Tablets, tool I I When constipation 1 1 sours children's di gestion and disposition, get Syrup of Black Draught. They love this honey-sweet liquid' No surgery needed to reduce swelling of painful piles! In doctor’s tests, amazing new Stainless Pazo instantly relieved piles’ torture! Gave internal and external relief — without surgery! 6 medically-proved ingredients re lieve pain,itching instantly! Reduce I swelling. Promote healing. You sit, j walk in comfort! Only stainless pile remedy. Stainless Pazo® Supposi tories or Ointment at druggists. Want fresher breed? PICK_ COLD SUFFERERS ^COLD discomforts yield quickly to STANBACK S prescription formula. STANBACK tablets or powde’-s work fast to bring comforting relief from tired, sore, aching muscles, neuralgia and headaches due to colds. Captain Of The Capstone Article From TIME Magazine In a University of Paris class room an American Negro attend ing a meeting of religious leaders sat reading and rereading a cable that had just come from the U.S. The year was 1926, and for Morde cai Johnson, 36, the news that he had been elected president of Howard University in Washington, D. C. should have been cause for celebration. But, recalls Johnson, it was not: ‘ My happiness on my trip was destroyed.” A Baptist minister with two bachelor’s degrees (Morehouse Col lege, the University of Chicago), an M.A. from Harvard and a divin ity degree from the Rochester Theological Seminary, Johnson was already familiar with Howard’s pre dicament Though known as “the captstone of Negro education,” it was scarcely a third-rate institu tion. Only two of its eight schools were accredited. The plant was run down; its annual appropriation from the Government was heading into ever-mounting opposition from Southern Congressmen. Running Howard would have been a tough task for anv man, but it seemed especially so for the one who was to be its first Negro president. A Moral Obligation Today, after 30 years of Mordecai Johnson, Howard is the nation’s leading Negro campus. Nearly half of all U.S. Negro doctors and dentists are Howard men, as are a fourth of the Negro lawyers. But the university’s influence is not limited to the U. S alone. Among American colleges and universities, it ranks thir l in the percentage of foreign students enrolled. When Johnson took over, the university had few things to boast about. It had a flourishing medi cal school, and its faculty included such teachers as Philosopher Alain Locke, the first and only Negro Rhodes scholar. 'But it had little money, and when Mordecai John son appeared before Congress to ask for mote, one Representative bluntly warned him: “Young man, we may as well come to an under standing. We have no obligation to consider the needs of Howard.” Johnson tool: his case to the De partment of the Interior, persuaded Assistant Secretary Edward Finney that the Government had a “moral obligation.” In 1928 President Coolidge finally signed a bill mak ing the university’s annual feder al grant (now $3,000,000) perman ent. Phi Beta Kappa & A Nobleman A proud and portly man with a flair for oratory and a willingness to travel 25,000 miles a year to plead Howard’s cause, Johnson has seen his budget swell from less than $956,000 to $5,658,500. . His enrollment has climbed from 2,155 to 4,800; his faculty has near ly tripled to 442. He built a new library and a power plant, build ings for the School of Engineering and Architecture, the College of Dentistry and the College of Phar macy. Five women’s dormitories have gone up, as well as one for men, and three recitation halls. Johnson established full-fledged schools of graduate study and soci al work, gradually got all ten of his schools accredited. In 1953 Phi Beta Kappa at last gave permis sion for a Howard chapter. This week Tau Beta Pi, oldest engineer ing honor society in the U.-S., will become the 14th honor society to do the same. as uowara nas grown in size, it has also grown in stature. Among Howard’s top faculty appointments: Nobel Prizewinner Ralph Bunche, Federal Judge William Hastie, Sociologist E. Franklin Frazier, Surgeon Charles Drew, who pio neered in the blood-bank field. Chemist Percy Julian has given medicine a whole new source of in expensive cortisone. Historian John Hope Franklin has made such a name for himself that he is the first Negro ever to head a depart ment at Brooklyn College (Time February 27th.) A Long Way To Go Of all Howard’s accomplish ments, those of the law school are in a way the most important. Both training and practice ground of Negro civil rights, the school has been indispensable to the long battle against discrimination. How ard alumni won for the Negro the right to be served in white Michi gan restaurants, and to picket em ployers who refuse to hire Ne groes. Former Dean Charles Hous ton, who took up the case of Lloyd Gaines v the University of Mis souri, in 1938 won the first major Supreme Court decision against segregation in public education. In 1954, after a set of historic law suits, argued before the court by Howard-trained Attorney Thur good Marshall, segregation in the public schools was declared uncon- j stitutional. fCeffom. Kapers 250 Jam Kellom Gym For Al! Stars 250 See All Star Games Two hundred and fifty paying customers crowded the Kellom gym last Thursday night to wit ness the second annual Kellom All Star Basketball Games. The crowd got their money’s worth from the first game which started at 6:00 p.m. through the 9:00 feature game of Senior League boys. A special treat was added at 8:00 as the City Athletic Director Charles Mancuso, and his brother, Frank Mancuso gave hair raising 1 exhibitions in self-defense. Fol lowing the Mancosos, a group from the Center’s square dancing ; club gave a fine exhibition in square dancing, and Art Breaker field topped the program with two breath-taking renditions. As was expected, strong West ern teams dominated the All In the 6:00 opener, Charles Skaggs and Bill King’s 10 and 12 scoring efforts led the Western Division to a 31-21 victory over the Eastern All Stars. In the 7:00 game, John Nared hit for 18 points to lead the West to its second victory and in the 9:00 feature game, the West’s Bill Jones outscored the East’s Rob ert Burgess 25-24, and the West ern Stars won their third straight victory 60-44. BOX SCORES JUNIOR HIGH LEAGUE Western Stars fg ft tpts H. Shields_113 R. Allen_0 0 0 V. Bennett_,0 0 0 C. Skaggs_ 4 2 10 B. King_6 0 12 A. Armstrong_0 0 0 E. Parks_14 6 Totals _ 12 7 31 Eastern Division fg ft tpts P. Love_0 1 1 J. Connolly__ 12 4 J. Hunter_10 2 R. Headley_ 0 1 1 D. Hall_0 0 0 C. Henry_ 0 0 0 L. Hawkins_2 5 9 H. Taylor_ 2 0 4 j C. Richards_ 0 0 0 j Totals _ 6 9 21 Boys 14-15 YAL League Western Stars fg ft tjts J. Nared_8 2 18 R. Stubblefield_2 0 4 L. Littlejohn_ 2 2 6 D. Steward_ 2 0 4 1) Townsend_2 0 4 B. Hall_113 Totals _ 17 5 39 Eastern Division Stars fg ft tpt; L. Brown _ 4 19 G. Olsen _ 0 0 0 J. Darrow_ 10 2 G. Whittner_ 10 2 J. Fowler_Oil T. Griffey_ 0 0 0 K. Brink_0 0 0 Y. Di Giaomo_4 0 8 Totals _ 10 2 22 Senior League Western Stars fg ft tpts B. Jones_11 3 25 D. Seefus __ 3 17 K. Fosse__ 2 2 6 B. Tighe_0 0 0 T. Mahoney_2 0 4 B. Semin_0 2 2 B. Brown_10 2 R. Poore_ 7 0 14 Totals _ 26 8 60 Eastern Division Stars fg ft tpts E. Mayhue_ 4 19 R. Burgess _ 12 0 24 B. Titsworth_1 C 2 B. Connolly_ 0 0 0 H. Nero _ Oil B Winters_0 2 2 T. Butera _ 3 0 6 Totals _ 20 4 44 Lar <’ers Saves Ro>es Robert Landers’ follow in bask et in a sudden death overa .e peiiod gave the Roses a 37-34 v tory over Rockets in Monday night's edition of th< Senior Roys League and renewed then- hope for a piece of the second half crown as they remained 1\^ games behind the pace setting Celtics. A free throw by the Rocket’s Han sen had tied the game at the end of the regulation period 34-34. After 2^ minutes in the over time period Bill Titsworth put the Roses ahead as he made the first of a two shot foul and Rob ert Landers became the hero as' he tipped in Titsworth’s second ---I In spite of these victories, Presi-1 dent Johnson knows as well as any1 man that Howard still has a long way to go. The Negro public school in the South is still so in ferior that many of his students come ill prepared for college work. Nevertheless, Johnson feels that he must take in as many of these students as he can. “We cannot be completely selective,” says he.! “Therefore we are still adolescent I in quality. We need 20 more! years to mature intellectually as a! university.” shot as it went astray. Other results: Celtics -—- 58 Falcons --34 High score winner—Jack O’Con nor 15 High score losers—Alonzo Pat terson 14 Crusaders--- 63 Purple Tide-- 36 High score winner—Harold Nero 16 — High score losers—John Buck les 12 Bouncers -30 Courtmasters-35 High score winner—Bill Jones 22 High score losers—Gary Harr nish 12 Main Christ Child Wins YAL Crown The YAL basketball league for 14-15 year old boys came to an end Tuesday night with the Main Christ Child team winning the League Championship by 4 games over Crusaders and Deputies who tied for second place honors. League Standings W L Pet. Main Christ Child — 11 3 .800 Crusaders Jr.- 8 7 .533 Deputies _8 7 .533 Browns- 7 8 .466 Nationals _5 10 .333 Knights -4 11 .66 The Crusaders’ John Nared won the league’s scoring contest by pouring in 176 points in 14 games for a 12.5 points per game aver age. Runner-up to Nared is the National’s Don Keefe with 146 while Main Christ Child’s Di Giacomo finished with 144 for third place honors. Tuesday Night's Results: Nationals _33 Crusaders ---32 High score winners—Don Keefe 15 High score losers—John Nared 24 Main Christ Child - 41 Knights _29 High scorer winners—Terry Griffey 19 High scorer losers—Joe Darrow 13 Deputies _31 Browns _26 High scorer winners—Roose velt Stubblefield 10 High scorer losers—Harold Amos 13 Lake Jr. High-Y Advance In Midget Tournament Lake Jr. High midget basket ball team defeated Social Settle ment 15-13 Saturday morning to advance into the semi finals of the Kellom Midget Double Elimina tion Tournament. Lake’s semi finals with a stunning upset vic tory over the Kellom Jets. The Jets have now advanced to the quarter-finals in the losers bracket as they eliminated Social Settlement 31-8. In a third game, Sacred Heart No. 6 eliminated Sacred Heart No. 5, 29-6. Browns Outlast Rosebuds In the YAL league for Junior High School boys Wednesday night the Browns continued to hang on to a share of first place as they nosed out the Rosebuds 30-29. Hero fyr the Browns was Charles Skaggs who not only scored the winning basket but also made 13 points to add to the Brown’s cause. In other games played the Golden Knights valued into a first place tie as they won two games from the Red Raiders, 58-18 and 38-29. With only two weeks of competition left, important games will pit the Browns against the Knights on March 14 and the Knights and Rosebuds on March 21. Class And Club News The Kellom. Senior Citizen Club was guest of the Adult Council at the annual All Star Games Thurs day night, and they were cheered by the return of their volunteer leaders, Mrs. Beatrice Jenkins. Mrs. Jenkins missed three weeks as she was in South Carolina at tending the funeral of her mother. The Youth Council is busy plan ning for their show, Stars of 56 which will be presented on Mai 1 and 2 and their Panel on Delin-1 (ililliiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiifiiimiimmi which will be presented on May on March 26. Any person with musical or theatrical talent who would like to appear on Stars of 56 is asked to contact Mrs. Pat Hopson in the Center office Ja. 1116. The Rifle Club will present a movie of four films on March 22 starting at 7:30 p.m. in the Cen film will be “Rocketship XM”. Admission is 25 cents. New Shoes And Leathers Being Used By Eva Mae Davis This spring, the sterling char acter of good leather, well polish ed, is fashion unlimited. Leather buttons, for instance, (just add a herringbone tweed coat.) On the new suede leathers, borrowed from a man’s sporting wardrobe. And for the penultimate in deep country luxe, there’s even the leather sweater. Watch for these —and further—changes in the leather, the new patent leather luggage, the two faced glove, in black and white capeskin, the leather cased umbrella and a kidskin daisy to blossom on a lapel. We look at fashion this way— from the hat down. The new deep-set hat is essential, and a fine starting point. Here and now we’re going at the news from an angle that’s an equally good place to begin: the new city shoe. With every smart dress and suit and coat keeping itself slender (even pleated skirts fall into the category), the shoe-line should look polished to slenderness. But it should al so have this to be at it’s best: new color. This spring, even a woman of the most conservative elegance will do well to consider adding some color to the black and brown shoes in her wardrobe. And she should take the step, no matter how uncertain she may feel in the beginning. The smartest in the beginning. The smartest colors: blue from near—gray to near—navy; the new golden brown; reds newly clear or gold n. Consider this; carbon blue calf skin pumps chosen for pale blue tweeds, as their only colorful ac cessory. Hat, handbag, could be black or part white. White gloves in either case. Or. musty blue sandles, quite bare, worn for late day this way—with a silk dress in a blue Persian print, a deep-set hat of dark blue ribbons, dark blue bag, and white gloves, and to color any black dress for later day or at little dinners; blue green suede opera pumps with black patent leather heels. The brown shoes in golden shades are good fashion for almost any new beige costume you can name. And very dark amber opera pumps would be excellent with one of the russet speckle-print dress. Which hat? Amber straw, Butterscotch opera pumps look wonderful wit ha costume that's entirely navy blue from the hem line up. The same shoes might wear, another day, a black and brown spatter-print dress, and a conical hat of natural straw with chestnut pumps; a peridot green coat, darker green hat. About the new red shoes: for the moment we like them later in the day. (Late spring, all sum mer, they can start on a 9: A.M. schedule.) Slender red leather opera pumps could go to cock' tails tomorrow with a blond wool sheath, a turban that’s a kalerdo scope of reds and browns and beiges. And try golden red suede opera pumps with a gun metal silk sheath, a black straw beehive-hat. Finally, the arrival of a shoe that may give city fashions a whole new stance before the year is out—the new city flats. Cut with so much elegance they look like opera pumps set on inch-high heels. Wear them with town tweeds, jerseys, flannels, with confidence. (Quote- The Vogue and The Harpers Bazaar). mmiiimimtmmiiimmiiiiiiiiimiiii BEAUTICIANS! | It’s Real Smart to be Listed in Our 1957 DIR ECTORY. Your Name Will be Seen in 100 CITIES Across the Nation by Over a Million People. THINK, Write for Details Today. NEGRO NATIONAL BEAUTYLOGUE P. O. BOX 3, TIMES SQUARE STATION, NEW YORK 36, N. Y. YOU CAN’T QUIT ADVERTISING YOU’RE TALKING TO A PARADE NOT A MASS MEETING Boatswain's Mate First Class, U. S. Navy Recruiter Ted R. Luster Phone: JAckson 7900 — Ext. 8311 — Ext. 420 U. S. Navy Recruiting Sta. U. S. Navy Recruiting Sta. 30th and Fort Streets 24th and O Streets Omaha 11, Nebraska Omaha 7, Nebraska WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF PACKAGE LIQUORS We Make Free Delivery on Orders Of $10 Or More B & R GROCERY 2302 North 27th Street Phone PL 9831 j Spotless Cleaners 1704 North 24th Street FEATURING ONE DAY SERVICE Quality Workmanship-We Lead, Others Follow CLEANING — DYEING — ALTERATIONS — PRESSING Claytee Brazier Phone AT 8526 Imclriat conplitt Official BintiU Mu tritt Iptr prttjtlm t*l rarlsa* tcarlif rain. HiiimiiimiiiimiHiiiiiiiii! IN CONSTANT USB BY SPORTS ANNOUNCERS, WRITBBS, CLUB OFFICIALS AND FANS This book b authorized by Ford Frick, Commissioner of Baseball, and the presidents of the two major leagues. No baseball book offers such complete up-to-date Intern motion on overages, highlights of previous season, pirn turns of teams, etc. it covers everything, including euM standing records, etc., etc There are also schedules of the American and National Leagues, as well as playing dates of outstanding miner leagues. I-* 1 THE SPORTING NEWS, National Base bail Weekly j 3011 Washington Avenue, Si. Louis 1, Missouri | Please sand Official Baseball Guido, postage paid, at ! low price of SIXOl Chock or money order enclosed. n I NAME j AOPtESSB J ’ I cmr ZONf STATE ! . J iimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillilllllil -PICK UP ! | . Cleaners & l Laundry j >NE DAY CLEAN | ING, LAUNDRY I SERVICE CROSSTOWN CLEANERS 1 2101 North 24th Street Webster y»P° | IllllliiillllllllllllilllllllllllllillllllllllllllllUlllllliilllllliillliilllllllllllllllllllli f •» different flavor' A Delicious NEW cracker treat Honey 'n sugar 'n spicy cinnamon (TOST BY THE BAKERS OF SUPREME SALAD WAFERS MOM