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About The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1956)
WANTED: Houses, Apartments, and the Names and Addresses of people that are looking for a place to stay; I and for people who want to rent an apartment. Call HA 0800. ___I FOR RENT: One aingle room for working woman at 2114 Burdette St. Call Ja. 6884. rOR RENT: Nice large room for couple. Share kitchen. Ultilitiea paid. Call HA. 0800. WANTED WANTED! WANT ED: Wa want to rewt that Apartment you have for Rent. Can HA 0800._ We want to tell that ear or track yea have to aala. Call HA 0800. We want to cell that piece of furniture you hare, for eale. Call HA 0800. _ REMEMBER We are in the Rent ing and aelling boaiaeaa. Give na a ring. HA 0800. WHAT HAVE YOU TO RENT OR TO SELL? WE HAVE RENTERS AND BUYERS WAITING FOR WHAT YOU HAVE GIVE US A RING. HA 0800. __ 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 east side of North 20th St Let us Repair your Radio in the car or your home. Day & Night: Service. Call JA 0669. WANTED TO RENT: A 4 room bouse. Call Mrs. Cobbs. PL.8063. FOR RENT: Three 2-room furnish ed apartments. Three 3-room furnished apartments. Two 4 room furnished apartments. Call HA 08UU. FEMALE HELP WANTED^ WOMEN sew easy ready-cut house coats at home. Earn from $17.40 to $28.16 dozen Write — AC CURATE STYLE, Freeport, New York. FOR RENT. One 3 room furnished apartment. Call PL 3546. FOR RENT: To couple, 3 unfurn ished rooms for rent. Private bath. Must be sober. PL 4493. FOR RENT: One large Kitchenette apartment One large room to the front Two one-room large, with side entrance. Both of the downstairs partmenl* can have use of kitchen. Call HA 0800. If You Want the low - down, the inside baseball news, you'll want to take advantage of this spe cial offer. We'll send you 12 weekly Issues of THE 5PORTING NEWS (reg ular value $3.00) PLUS a copy of the big, brand-new 528-page 1954 edition of the Official Base ball Guide (regular price $1-00) for only $2,001 IT'S OFFICIAL, AUTHENTIC This famous book contains major and minor league a vo rages, records, offi cial playing rules and thousands of facts about the game. Ps free to you — along with • 12-week subscription to THE SPORTING NEWS for $2.00. Lot's get acquainted—use this coupon, without de/ayf RESPONSIBLE PERSON man or woman, from this area, wanted to service and collect from automatic vending ma chines. No Selling. Age not essential. Car, references, and $600 investment necessary. 7 to 12 hours weekly nets approxi mately $250 monthly. Possibility full time work. For local in terview give full particulars, phone. Write P. O. Box 7047, Minneapolis 11, Minn. FOR SALE: House. 5 rooms on one floor, many built-ins. Nice location on level lot, at 2587 Pinkney St. Picket fence. A home you will like. Special price to cash buyers. Call PL 4198. FOR RENT: 1 furnished room for working woman or man. Only Hi blocks from bus line. Call PI. 3397. FOR RENT: 1 3-room unfurnish ed apartmenL Private bath and private entrance. Only $60 per month. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: 1 furnished kitchen ette apartment with private bath. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: one 4-room furnish ed apartment. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: One 8-room house. Now ready to move in. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: 2 3-room Apt Un furnished. All utilities paid by owner. Call PI. 0256 or Ja. 3634. FOE RENT: One 5 room Apt un furnished. All utilities paid by owner. Call PI. 0256 or Ja. 3634. FOR RENT: One 3-room unfur nished apartment One 2-room furnished apartment. One 3 room furnished apartment Call HA 0800. FOR RENT: 2 room furnished a partment. Will accept one or 2 small children. This apt. is north of Lake St., only % block from bus line. Call before 9:30 a m. HA 0800. rOR RENT: 1 four room furnish ed apartment. All utilities paid by owner. % block from bus line. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: A 3-room partly furnished basement apartment Very reasonable. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: One 3-room unfur nished apartment. Ready to move in 8-2056. Call Ha. MOO FOR RENT: One 4-room un furnished apartment Phone Ha. 08M. FOR RENT: One 5-room unfur nished apartment. Private en trance. Only $40 00 per month. Call Ha. 0800 FOR RENT: A beautiful 3 and a 4 room unfurnished Apartment with modern gas stove and a Re frigerator furnished. All utili ties paid by owner. In the new Beautiful Mafburn Apt. at 21st and Burdette St. Call AT 4114. After 5 PM Call GL 1411. FOR RENT: 3 Unfurnished room Apartment Private entrance. Private Bath. Large Living room at 2517 North 20th Street. Ja. 7563. Rev. Robert Sherman, owner. Will accept 1 or 2 , small children. f OR RENT: 2 room unfurnished apartment. One large livinb room. At 2517 No. 20th Street, Ja. 7583. FOR RENT: A large furnished 2-room apartment Call PL 5003, Mrs. Davis, 2004 Wirt St EARN $40~WEEKLY COMM, sew ing Babywear! No House Sell ing! Rush stamped addressed envelope. BABY GAY, War saw, Indiana. FREEI FREE! FREE! A Free Room to some man just for care of a furnace at 2122 Spencer St Call PL 5401. CINDY REDLEGS STILL WOULD LIKE NEWCOMBE FOR $300,000 Cincinnati, Ohio. . .(CNS). . The Cincinati Redlegs never give up— at least not when they want a thing real bad. They offered the Dodgers $300,000 for big Don Newcombe right after he "got belted in the second World Series game” claims Manager of the Year in the National League, Birdie Tebbetts. Now back from Europe, Birdie insists they have the offer still open. “We would have not made such an offer if we didn’t think he was worth it. He’s (Don) a great picher,” elaborated Tebbetts. The fiery manager is out chopping for a first line pitcher — believ ing that all he needs is this to be at the top of the league. The Last Word By Elizabeth Davit Pittman Marion Anderson s new book, an autobiography entitled My Lord, What a Morning, is a de light to read. After one has read the book, there is a warm feeling of simple enjoyment such as one entertains after one of her con certs. This book is written with a feeling of deep humility. She is ever grateful to fortune for her good luck in her career and says that each step forward was so natural that she jus! seemec ti pass from one phase to another, j There is frequent reference made to Billy King, Sol Hurok, Franz Rupp and others who have con- j tributed to her success. Mean- j while she does not forget casual associates, music lovers, who have given her moments of happiness just as she has given them mom ents of happiness. She mentions the well remem bered discrimination at Constitu tion Hall in Washington, D. C. some years ago, but she glides smoothly forward saying that she cannot allow such things to dis turb her. She is a singer from the heart and she has a deep, abiding belief that her voice is her gift from God to make music. That, she considers more impor tant than all else. Truly a book written in sim plicity, it is about a great singer who has, as Toscanini has said, “a voice that is heard only once in a hundred years." Jewish Congress Urges Hearings on Disfranchising The Southern Negroes The American Jewish Congress has urged the United States Sen ate to hold public hearings as early as possible on the uncon stitutional disfranchisement of United States citizens. The AJ Congress request, addressed to Senator Albert Gore, chairman of the Senate Sub-Committee on Privileges and Elections, followed the disclosure recently by War ren Olney 3rd, Assistant Attorney General, that Negroes in, Ouachi ta Parish, Louisiana, and else where in the South, are being il legally deprived of their right to vote in the Federal elections. In a letter to Senator Gore, Shad Polier, chairman of the AJCon-! gress’ Commission on Law ond Social Action, commended Mr. Olney for submitting evidence of wide-scale interference in the South with the Negro's voting franchise. “We believe that Mr. Olney’s statement merely samples a much larger body of evidence of illegal disfranchisement that would be revealed by intensive Com mittee investigation,” Mr. Polier declared. The importance of this issue, Mr. Polier said, cannot be mini mized. “The election process is the foundation of our political system. Wholesale, illegal ex clusion of a large part of the pop ulation from the ballot vitiates the results of any election that may follow. This kind of interference is surely no less grave a threat to our institutions than the other matters to which your Committtee has already given its attention.” The President, the Vice Presi dent and the members of the Sen ate and House should not be chosen in elections, Mr. Polier continued, “that are rigged by unlawful curtailment of the elec torate." In another letter addressed to Assistant Attorney General Olney, Mr. Polier declared that Mr. 01 ney’s recent statement revealing disfranchisement activities in the South showed “an acute grasp of the details of the present assault on the franchise of Southern Ne groes and an understanding of its implications as a threat to our democratic freedom." The American Jewish Con gress, Mr. Polier said, “has long urged amendment of existing Federal statutes to provide the Department of Justice with more effective means of halting inter ference with the right to vote in Federal elections. We have also urged that more could be done under existing Federal laws than has been up to now.” The facts revealed by Mr. Ol ney, Mr. Polier asserted, “show that Federal penal status have been violated on a wide scale in Ouachita Parish and elsewhere. I believe that the Department oi Justice should make every effort to prosecute the guilty parties. r uiiy resuming mai 11 is uiuicuu and often impossible to obtain in dictments and convictions in Southern states for such crimes even, when the evidence is clear, we nevertheless urge that the Department of Justice has the obligation to demand indictments and convictions. When it does not do so, the onus for failure to enforce the law rests on the Federal authorities instead of where it belongs.” BITS O’ BUSINESS — Farmers’ total assets are $170.1 billion, the Guaranty Trust Co. of New York calculates . . Anthracite prices have had their seasonal rise — 75 cents a ton for commercial stoker sizes . . . Cotton exports totaling six million bales in the current year are forecast by the Depar ture of Agriculture. Federal Power Is Needed To Half South's Persecution Of the NAACP Efforts New York, Nov. 9 — The A merican Jewish Congress has called upon the three branches of the federal government to take immediate steps to halt cur* rent legal and legislative action against the NAACP in the South. A resolution adopted here by the Congress’ administrative committee asserts that recent southern legislation and legal proceedings “to outlaw or par alyze” the NAACP in that region are “a greater menace to con stitutional liberty than mob violence.” Citing court proceedings ban ning the faAACP in Alabama, Louisiana and Texas, a new Vir ginia law designed to cripple the NAACP, legislative investiga tions of the NAACP in Florida and Virginia, and other recent southern anti-NAACP measures, the resolution calls for the fol lowng action by the federal gov ernment: 1. A public investigation Dy the . S. Congress "of the extent to which constitutional freedoms have been invaded by these at tacks." Using this information, Congress should “take appro priate action under its legisla tive power to enforce the Four teenth Amendment.” (The theory of the Fourteenth Amend ment is described earlier in the resolution as follows: “At those times when state governments oppress their own people, the na tional government must inter vene to protect the democratic processes necesary to the repub lican form of government.”) 2. Intervention by the Depart ment of Justice “in the various proceedings in the southern states that are designed to out law the NAACP, paralyze its lawful activities or curb advo cacy of its program of desegre gating the public schools." 3 Public condemnation by the President of . the United States of "this campaign of oppression” and influence on his part to “bring it to an end." ACHING MUSCLES ftaliava paint of tirsd, aara. ashing «»tt with STANBACK, tab lata ar pawdam STANBACK acts fast ta bring comforting ratiaf.. . b—auto tha STANBACK format# tombinot aavaral prescription typs In* •radiants far fast ratiaf of gala. Stop pain of piles today at home -or money back! In doctor's tests, amazing new Stainless Pazo* Instantly relieved piles' torture! Gave Internal and external relief! # medically-proved ingredients including Triolyte, re lieve pain. Itching intlanlly! Reduce swelling. Promote healing. You sit, walk In comfort! Only stainless pile remedy. Stainless Pazo* Sup positories or Ointment at druggists. irk of (irvn* Lmbontoritt, In*. Ointm*nt *n4 Suppotil*net. r WD * w l 0M OOWIU C0«C*O‘ COHSI*®0'0* The Portland Cement Association, a national organization dedicated to improving the quality of concrete and other Portland cement products, is at your service on special construction problem!. Through this office architects, engineers and builders can obtain assistance and information oo concrete mixtures, methods and construction proce dures. New developments from the PCA's labora tories in Chicago and in field tests coast to coast are published in scientific reports and technical booklets. Concrete has many advantages—great strength, unusual durability and resistance to fire, weather, wind, rats and termites. It delivers law snmisf-co# construction, the true measure of economy. Whether you are a large or small cement user, there’s helpful information on concrete construe* tkm in the PCA’s large assortment of free literature. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 504 South ISth Street, Omaha 2, Nebraska A notional organization to Improve and extend the uses of Portland cement ee4 Concrete ... through scientific research and engineering field work The document also calls for defense of the NAACP by "all individuals and organizations dedicated to the maintenance of constitutional liberty” because of recognition that in attacks a gainst the NAACP lies “a threat to that freedom of association! necessary to the exercise of other constitutional freedoms.” I The AJC resolution was adopt ' ed on Oct. 21. David Harris David Harris, age 5 months, of 2417 North 22nd Street, expired Thursday evening November 13, at a local hospital. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Walter Harris; 2 brothers, Walter, Jr., and Fred; sister, Alice, all of Omaha; 2 grandfathers. Rev. Thornton Har ris of Jackson, Tennessee, and Mr. George Harrold of Beloit, Wiscon sin; cousin, Mrs. Annie Cliff of Omaha; 7 aunts; 9 uncles and other relatives. Funeral service^, tentatively arranged for Friday November 16, 1956 at 10:00 A M. from the Myers Brothers Funeral Home Chape] with Rev. J. C. Wade of ficiating. Interment will be at i Forest lawn Cemetery. Myers Brothers Funeral Ser vice. COLD SUFFERERS COLD discomforts yitld quickly to STANBACK'S proscription formula, STANBACK tablets or powders work fast to bring comforting relief from tired, sore, aching muscles, neuralgia and headaches due to colds. PULL THE PLUG OH STOMACH UPSET Half-alive, headachy, when ronstipa tion sours atomach? Black-Draught* relieve* constipation ooerntpht. Help* aweeten sour stomach too. Uiatht StMuek Sweetener Warts OrertrtfM' No harsh griping Made from pure vegetable herbs. Thoroughly but gently uncork* clogged intestine*. [rings comforting relief In morning. Then life looks tunny again! Get Black-Draught today. •In /•mater or Ore*elated form . ted now m new. emy-lo-tnte Xablete. tool I | When run.tlp.UuD I__I Hun eh!l4r»n'§ <U rauoa ud art ttrrsp at Black DrataaM. The, lm toi. bw.r-ir.it Hauls' w Toirn House TOv“r Tantalizing.. Crumb-Free. • Oval Shaped., TOWN HOUSE CRACKERS They’re the talk of the town BY T!!E BAKERS OF SUPREME SALAD WAFERS Spotless Cleaners 1704 North 24th Stroot FEATURING ONE DAY SERVICE f i Quality Workmanthip-Wo Load, Othor* Follow CLEANING — DYEING ~ ALTERATIONS — PRESSING Cl ay too Braiior Phono AT SSM -PICK UP Cleaners & Laundry ONE DAY CLEAN ING, LAUNDRY SERVICE CROSSTOWN CLEANERS 1101 North 14th Stroot Woh*tor 040* If HE had to do it... HE'D get an ELECTRIC DRYER No back-breaking, time-consuming trips to hang up and take down the wash for him. No freezing fingers, pulled muscles and clothesline tragedies. Dad would say, "There must be a better way"—and he’d be so right! The easy way—the economical way is with a completely automatic electric dryer. Why not modernize your washdays with v modem electric equipment? See your dealer today and learn how you can have a modem push button laundry on easy, convenient terms. Nebraska-Iowa Electrical Council 1104 W, O. W. Building • Omaha, Nebraska —■