The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, September 20, 1957, Page Four, Image 4
~ --- . . - .. 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. birth announcement __ .l s a new car. the la The htrth of* ** Motor Company »nnoonr«l ° L are cor «f Deurbem. Mlr^l“a"Vl,« ISLJt addi RESPONSIBLE person male or female, rfom this area, wanted to service and collect from automatic vending ma chines. No selling. Age not es sential. Car, references, and $600 working capital necessary. 7 to 12 hours weekly nets to $250 monthly. Possibility full time work. For local Interview give full particulars, phone. Write P.O. Box 7004, Mpls. 11, Minn. __ ASHLEY In loving memory of my dear wife and mother, Mary L. Ash ley. A silent thought, a secret tear keeps her memory ever dear, who passed away September 4tb 1956 Thomas J. Ashley 1841 No. 23rd SL TOR RENT: One 2 room furnished Apt. only $12.50 per week. Call HA. 0800. TOR RENT: 1 3-room unfurnished apt- Near school North of Lake St. C all Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: 2 lovely room apt. North of Lake St. Call the All furnished ready to move iu Omaha Guide office, HA. 0800 or HA. 0801. TOR RENT: 2 2-room furnishe apartment Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: A 2 room furnished Apt. for a working couple. Call: WE. 3372. All utilities paid by owner. FOR RENT: 1 3-room furnished apt. at 28th St. and Pratt Cali PI. 3185. TOR RENT—1 2-room furnished apartment on two bus lines. Close to 24th & Lake St Cal [ Ha. 0800. j TOR RENT 1 3-room furnished apartment north of Lake Sti All utilities paid by owner ; Only $15.00 per week. Call' Ha. 0600. FOR RENT: 1 2-room unfurnish ed apartment north of Lake St Will accept children and A.D. mother. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: 1 6-room unfurnish ed apartment north of Lake St | Will accept children. Also A.D. mothers. Call Ha 0800. i FOR RENT: For single man or working woman, one large furn ished room. One block from 2 Bus lines. Use of kitchen. HA 0800. FOR RENT: 3 lovely furnished rooms, 2 blocks from school. All Utilities paid by owner. Only $15.00 per week. HA 0800. FOR SALE. Bought an apartment have now found himself with too many refrigerators, want to sell one large gas refrigerator. Price $75. Cost $350 seven years ago. HA 0800. FOR RENT: Two 3-rooms, large, furnished or unfurnished. HA 0800. FOR RENT: Two 4-room unfurnish ed apartment. HA 0800. WHY WEAR OUT YOUR SHOE leather and lose 2 or 3 days work looking for a room o an apartment. All you need to do is to call Ha. 0800. W have the right place for th right person. Just call the Omaha Guide, Ha. 0800. FOR RENT. 1-5 room house. Call Mrs. Williams. JA. 2631. FOR RENT: 1 furnished 2-room apartment. All utilities paid by owner. Call Ha. 0800 FOR RENT: One 5-room apart ment, unfurnished. Will ac cept children under good con trol. Private entrance and . private bath. Very reasonable Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: 1 lovely nicely finished room with kitchen use. One block from bus line 3 blocks from 24th and Lake In a good Christian home Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: A lovely front large room apartment. Private bath and private entrance. Only $15.00 per week. Owner pays all utilities. Call Ha. 0800. FOR RENT: Large room and living room with kitchen use for $12.50 per week. Utilities paid by owner. Cali PI. 7401. Located at 2611 Bristol St Walter Brown, owner. FOR RENT: A 3 room furnished Apt. Call PL 0186. FOR RENT: 1 large sleeping room for working man or wo man. In a lovely home with: use of kitchen. Located a 2811 Bristol St Call PI. 7401. Walter Brown, owner FOR SALE: A store room 40 x CO on North 30th St. Large Park ing Lot. Fine for a Doctor's of fice or cleaning shop. A fine location for Tavern. Box No 119, Omaha Guide, 2420 Grant St. or call Ha 0800. I For RENT: 1 large 3-room un furnished apartment. Priced right for the right family Owner will accept children if they are under good control. Call Ha. 0800. Quakers Ask President of Integration The American Friends Com mittee appealed to President Eisenhower to speak by radio and television to the nation regard ing the crisis surrounding the school integration issue. The message was sent by tele- ( gram to the President at his va cation spot at the Newport Naval Base. It was signed by Henry J. Cadbury, chairman of the Com-; mittee. The Committee said, "Beyond the avoidance of further specific incidents, men of goodwill need; the encouragement of your strong and unequivocal support at three ( points. “The first is mobilization of public opinion to accept school integration wholeheartedly on the basis of fundamental human rights. The second is warning of. the danger in the growing resort' to violence as a way of solving problems. The third is recogni tion of the large amount of skill ful end effective work already. being done to bring about peace ful integration as communities, i North and South, face the chal-! lenge of a changing society." Dr. Cadbury expressed concern1 at reports of defiance and vio-' lence in opposition to the high-1 est law of the land and to re ligious and moral principles. He commended the firm action taken by the Federal Government and by many municipalities. An address to the nation, Dr. Cadbury said, could "reaffirm the orderliness of the democratic method and reassert the fairness of the democratic goal. Such a broadcast is but the first of a. number of positive steps that you can take reflectiong your own religious and democratic j commitment.” WORLD FISH RECORD Nebraska waters in 1944 pro duced a world-record fish for Bob. ert E. Nuquist of Ericson. Fish ing in Ericson Lake, Nuquist caught a 31-pound ll>4 ounce channel catfish. This record has since been surpassed. •) The Schlitz label is a PLEDGE of extra satisfaction Your thirst can'feel* the difference There’s no substitute for Schlrtr The genuine premium beer Brewed for quality never for prioe The Beer that Made Milwaukee Famous BEVINGTON & JOHNSON INC. ■ WHOLESALERS 1424 Wabttwr WEbttar 3880 OMAHA, NEBRASKA President Hews To Middle Road By William H. Stringer Chief, Washington News Bureau, The Christian Science Monitor Washington President Eisenhower sees himself as a middle-of-the-road Presi dent—hence likely to oe attacked by extremists at both ends of the political spectrum. In what amounted to a point-by-point defense and enunciation of his record, Mr. Eisenhower told his final press conference before leav ing for a Newport, R.I., vacation that the public is preceiving the merit of a midroad philosophy of government. And he proceeded to develop that midroad position on such urgent issues as inflation—our major internal problem—school deseg regation, the budget—and the future of “modern republicanism.” In practice, as the President defined it, his philosophy remains conservative in matters of finance—“no tax cut if the budget cannot be reduced further”—and progressive in coping with the “needs of a great and growing population.” Missila Threat Weighed Only on the status of long-range missiles and the disarmament talks was the President not “middle of the road.” Mr. Eisenhower said to his press session September 3rd that the Soviet Union's an nouncement that it had developed an intercontinental ballistic missile was “more notable in what it did not say than in what it announced." There is a great distance between testing a long-range missile and firing that missile in sufficient quantities and to be effective, the President declared. For a long time ahead the 1CMB will not be the best means of carrying hydrogen bombs, he added. As for American development of the 1CBM, he said the Penta gon's present program had th« highest possible priority and that development was speeding ahead as fast as was possible considering American natural science and organizational capacities. On the disarmament front, the President took a less optimistic view than his disarmament specialist Harold E. Stassen. He said it was up to the Soviet Union to make the next move. He didn’t see any further constructive step that the United States and its allies could make at this time. And he added that no Soviet policy change seemed likely just now—unless there was some move not visible yet. Meanwhile, Mr. Stassen has returned to London from conferences here. Stirred by Inflation - President Eisenhower said inflation was the nation's most im portant domestic problem today, and he urged Americans to help combat it by careful, selective buying. He empahsized that he was not advocating a buyers’ strike, but he said reckless buying adds fuel to inflation. Here again Mr. Eisenhower hewed to the midroad. He said the government is not considering mandatory controls on the economy—such as price controls or rationing. On the other hand, he is going slightly beyond the “classic" anti-inflation devices— tight money and restricted credit—to urge the public (a. 1 ndustry and labor) to curb their appetite for goods, wage boosts, and price boosts. Simultaneously, the President said Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr., is investigating the use of National Guard troops to prevent school desegregation in Little Rock, Arkansas Justice De partment spokesmen said Mr. Brownell would get in touch with Federal Judge Ronald Davies, who issued the school desegregation order. The President's comments on desegration were occasioned by the reopening of schools in many southern communities this week and by the action of Gov. Orval E. Faubus of Arkansas in calling out national guardsmen to prevent a handful of Negroes from reg istering at Little Rock. Governor Faubus said the move was aimed to prevent “violence and bloodshed.” Here again the President strove to invoke midroad reasonable ness. He said integration was bound to be a slow process, as there were strong motions on both sides of the question, including the apprehensions of those who "fear a mongrelization of the races.” The problem will be solved, he counseled, not so much by laws as in the hearts of the people, by Americans being tru« to themselves and recognizing the principles which the founding fathers envis aged for the nation. Wisconsin Election Turning to the Republican defeat in the recent senatorial race in Wisconsin, President Eisenhower placed the blame on exaggerat ed public notions about “modern Republicanism.” He pointed out that whereas a liberal GOP candidate, Walter J. Kohler, had been trounced in August this year, Senator Alexander Wiley, another liberal Republican, won in 1956 by a big majority, despite the op position of Old Guard professionals in Wisconsin. The Presdent sad he understood that 60 per cent of the people who voted for Senator Wiley did not vote in last week’s election. He said he thought this mass Republican absenteeism was due to an ex aggerated idea about the distance between the left and right wings of the Republican Party. People had allowed themselves to be misled by catch words and slogans which incorrectly delimited the political Left and Right, the President commented. Quite obviously, the White House has given careful attention to the Wisconsin results and is seeking to persuade the GOP's liberal and conservvative wings that they have more in common—in the Eisenhower program—than some of the GOP Old Guard has believed. Tax Cut Ruled Out When Mr. Eisenhower was asked his comments on Congress’s record this term, he said that the lawmakers, despite all their claims to having cut the budget, had not produced sufficient savings to warrant talk of a tax cut. Actually, Mr. Eisenhower contended, the congressional cuts a mounted to a billion dollars or less. The President said that the rest of the four to six billion dollars in savings claimed by Congress —the re have been conflicting figures—represented paper savings or bookkeeping changes. That is to say, much of the money alleg edly saved will have to be reappropriated later. For instance, he said, under the defense heading about $1,300, 000,000 was pruned out of revolving and procurement fundss but this simply must be pumped in again as needs develop, he contended. Mr. Eisenhower said that when only a billion dollars or less can be cut from a budget, this can’t mean a tax cut. He added, however, that if further government economies actually are achiev ed and the economy booms as the year goes on, then consideration could be given to reducing taxes. Seein' Stars New York City (Calvin New* Service) — Dorothy Dandrige’* press people certainly ought to take advantage of all the front page headlines and get the newspapers some glamourous pictures of th* star to run with it . . One New York daily ran the same photo of Dot in a dif ferent sue each day to break the monotony. The Steve Alien-Pearl Bailey routines are so adorable they keep repeating the idea of a musical duet . . . What Johnny Mathis needs is s big buildup a la Sinatra and Presley—and he'd be one of the biggest stars in the country. ' * * It did our hearts good to see and hear on* of our favorite actors. Prank Stivers, take the lead on "Studio One" TV and turn In one of the most appeal ing performances we’ve seen on that summer series . . A* • concert guitarist who. poor but proud defies the vogue of modern flamingo guitar playing to stick by th* classics, even in face of losing his Job and socur ity for his family —Silvers does credit to his profession and his race . . . Playing the part of aj Spanish-speaking American liv ing in Greenwich Village, Sil-j vera was a little darker than the rest—but that didn't bother anyone .. . They caressed him and treated him as a real father and friend . . . Silvers, with hir thining hair at the top, and hir sensitive, creative fingers, made a most impressive artist. Never had we seen such s heart-warming, aensitive story with a Negro In the lead of an all-wihte cast ... a story about1 poor people yet without any racial angle Th« story is a simple one . . A poor guitarist with a wife, son babe in arm* and another cut the way, refuses to tench guitar lessons to a neighborhood youti* who shows no love for the in itrument , , , The wtf# then tells her husband la few words he is too poor to be so proud and the children must eet The guitarist passes a pawn shop In pouring rain, holds »> to Ms beloved instrument and joins his pa's. »ho all suffer from the same disease, poverty Nest, the guitarist tries In earnest to convince a cheap 1 chiseier booking agent that he is a good soloist but soon gets discouraged at the lack of in terest and seemingly gives up Then, at the right moment, a job comes to light: his wife'r cousin is leaving for Hollywood and needs a replacement at the small cafe. The pay is fair but there is one catch: he must play "flamingo" guitar—a form of rock and roll . , .The poor guit arist is a lover of the classics and refuses to change . . .But to feed his family, he must. The second half shows his great determination to pfease the public, but his soul tears at him and he stops in the middle of a fast number to announce he will play classics ... A pin could be heard falling ... At first the public is rebellious but soon they get used to the idea . . The old crowd remem bers the days: the young oner find the love themes haunting and beautiful . . . The poor guit arist is now a hit ... No drinkf are served as he plays . . . Soon the crowds take him to their hearts and hoist him in trium phant fashion . . . When a top critic tries to describe his great artistry into words, our guitarist breaks down. His friends arc so many, anc all there to share in his joy.. His wife is so proud—his son tells him he’s the best ... No one notices his pants are too short and he cannot afford a new pair. ... At the end of his work at the cafe, the cousin returns, and jealousy fires him To a sensitive, creative man this is a frightful blow which hurts him to his heart . . . But he cannot tell his family—their hopes are so high . . . All ends happily when a big concert manager is eager to sign him We know that from there on the little guitarist with a heart big enough for everyone will make the grade . . . And we hope that Silvers enjoys more roles on this order: as he does i them supreme justice. ! ‘ Mrs. Pearl Tolbert Mrs. Pearl Tolbert, age 72 years, of 5219 So. 331st St. ex pired Tuesday, September 10, 1957 at a Lincoln hospital. A native of St. Joseph, Mis souri, Mrs. Tolbert was a resi dent of Omaha for many years. She is survived by two daugh ters, Mrs. Hattie Nelson and Mrs. Florence Orduna; two sons, Elgie and Charles Tolbert; 12 grandchildren. Funeral services were held Saturday, September 14, 1957 at 10:00 a m. from the Allen Cha pel A.M.E. Church with Rev. L. A. Parker officiating. Interment was at Graceland Park Ceme tery. Pallbearers were Messrs Char lie Reed. Howard Starks, John Curtis, Wade Carroll, Gavanis Marion and George Myers. 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