The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, September 22, 1937, EMANCIPATION EDITION, Page EIGHT, Image 8
THE LOYAL DINER ensues a. - c«h--v - * J1H55. Ai na Trplott Grand Opcnii g was Saturday. Ser'-nih r 25*h. The Loyal D'ner j «t 2210 North 21 h t„ under on t'r jy n< w m’rr (joint n'. Mrs. A! . a T.i l ft rnd Mrs. Hu!en To to. V. , ore T : t.i ing Coo l Homo I Cooking, >tr , ..r d ond re ved in til'! ("oXi- t ty'o. Ono tty is a’l we are asking— after thst, we n ed ti say no more. Cur service will speak for ii. 1,'. PATRONIZE orn * RVERTISERS ; vx r.'.rr iiar.'ra with OIL HEAT AT LOW COST O Say goodbye to ashes and uneven heat this winter — en joy the comfort of clean, con trolled, healthful oil heat. The Norge lleat Circulator is ns economical to operate as a ■ messy, old-fashioned coal stove and actually saves you money In cleaning bills and labor. See these beautiful heaters today. A sire for every need from one room up to five. See Your Nearest Norge Doale: A. Y. McDonald Mfff. Co. DISTRIBUTORS BEFORE AND AFTER Why not admit it? Criticism makes one mad. Dreams no more come true than most suspicions. One swallow will cat 3,000 to 4,000 mosquitoes a day. Sometimes a friendship begins with no more than a smile. Men who feel that they have too much modesty execrate it. Too many would mend the world by shattering it to pieces. Do men diet? If they do, they tell all their friends about k. “Dove will find a way" into trou ble but not so easily out of it. Rescue the under dog in a dog fight, but better do it with a pole. V.'hen you get to the end of your , v, lie a knot in it and hang on. D <nrnark has re. trictad the bn ), ;. i,,on of hairpins and seaweed. We ought really to envy the man vmo is not const1 ous of having any faults. It is roteworthy that a doughnut v. .ut a hole in it is not very Rvu'.nr. Don't expect child hncss to dis a p?ar from among grown people. U will not. I i creature, human or otherwise, t ... w.loonva you quits as whole heartouly as a dog. If you have savage opinions, peo ple will be hypocritical to you to keep on good terms. Best way to know what is going on in a ci*y is to belong to Us Chamber of Commerce. If evolution had permitted ur, to retain cur tails, there would 1 ' on "Etiquette of the Tail." That red mark across your f ire head shows what kind of a straw hut you shouldn't have got. Funniest tiling in any country is to 6oe a "revolution" undertaken without the aid of the people. Plant Breeding Methods Hard to Use on Animals Inbreeding and outbreeding are the basis of modern plant breed ing, say scientists in the United Stutcs Department of Agriculture who study Inheritance. Theoret ically they should give comparable results with animals to which they have been applied much less. Both are discussed in the 1930 Depart ment yearbook. Inbreeding is mating closely re lated individuals, such as brothers with sisters, or fathers with daugh ters. the resulting offspring being superior or inferior in many ways. Outbreeding, the mating of unrelat ed individuals, Is a means of sud denly leveling family differences and starting a new family. Some experiments with inbreed ing and outbreeding of animals on a scale comparable to that with plants have been begun. Inbreed ing of guinea pigs at the National Research Center of the Depart ment of Agriculture at Bcltsville. Md., is a classic example. Some work has been done with larger animals, but it has been tentative, halting, and partial because of the practical drawbacks of cost, time, and lack of adequate numbers of animals. Animal breeding to advance, say forward looking breeders, should be along the path of modem plant ,1 breeding. Brava Mat. Country Boy—Say, mister, can you tell me what an orator is? Man—Sure. H's a fellow who Is always ready to lay down your fffe for his country.—Windsor Star. F KING 1 ofajl I FRESH FROZEN I J Sbessettr^ | 7'+i_^4 &■% jRT* *1 ,{ Now On Sale at | mum DBBfi co. 1406 N. 24th JA 7183 | JOHN BROWN The man that broke the first llnk in the chain of savory. After kiss. ing a little black boy on the head, bo remarked, “I willingly go to the gallows; tnat you may nave a chance in life.” RED MARROW BONES ARE BLOOD MAKERS The University of Chicago sur geons who recently reported to the American Medical association their discovery that blood cells are made only in the marrow of bones main tained at all times at body heat, have given valuable now informa tion to med'eal science. It was al ready known, notea a writer in Pathfinder Magazine, tha' only bones w.th red marrow are blood makers and that all the bones in the body have red marrow a', birth But why the bones in the extremi ties should drop this function and why their marrow should turn yel low a few years after birth was no: known. In their experiments, how ever, these Chicago scientist placed rats in incubators and fcun that when all the bones in the boci; were kept at body tempera tun they once more began to produce blood cells. The most evident result of this discovery is the basic support it gives the new method of treating diseases by producing an artificial fever. Experiments with this fe ver treatment indicate that by rais ing the temperature of the body more blood cells are produced which aid in fighting off disease. This seems to hook up very def initely with wliai is noA known uf the blood-milking function of worm bones. However. ; cars of e::p -r-i mentatkm are necessary to prove the actual practical value ui th? discovery. Shark Fi.Mrj Profitable Norwegian fishermen rei -.t tint shark fishing oil the Shetland Is lands is now more profit able than trawling. They say that this sea son they have been able to make catches worth $3,500 to $4,000 In a few days. Large galvanizcd-iron swivel hooks 50 fathoms apart on stout lines are baited with had docks. The sharks, from ten to fourteen feet long, are hauled aboard by means of derricks. Ev ery part of the fish is used, flesh being salted for food and skin pre served as fine leather. While the shark lines are in the sea the fish ermen shoot dolphins, which are used as food on silver-fcx farms. ! Small Wives “Bully” Mates; Called Best Aberdeen. — Small women I make the best wives, according to, the Right Reverend Mr. Fred eric L. Deane, Protestant bishop of Aberdeen. He advised Shetland islands j schoolboys that if the-y wished to “live good, useful and long lives,” they should choose a bride of about live feet in height , . “It generally is better when a wife is ‘top dog’ in the home,” Bishop Deane declared. “Small wives can ‘bully‘ their husbands.* but big wives are nearly always bullied, even by small.husbahds.” -- Why a Man Love* Hia Dog You have no rival In your dog's affections—his love Is all yours, lie never tells you his troubles. He trusts you to the uttermost with a faith that Is wonderful, blind. In explicable. lie Is polite nnd thaftks you with his tall for every kind word you give him. You do not have to make company of him. lie thinks that whatever you do Is all right. Me will follow you to the end of the earth, lie respects your moods nnd tries to please you. He never pries Into your secrets and does not constantly tell you his troubles, lie misses you when you are away and always welcomes your return. Cropping Dors Ears Barred The cruel cropping of dogs' ears, to give them a more alert and "classy” appearance, is legally banned in six or seven states in the United States. So painful are the after effects of the operation thal many of the leading veterinarians of the United States refuse to per form it. Must Have the Sand^ "Man is like an hour-glass.” "Huh?" "No earthly good without sand."> A system of stenography was de vised by Dr. Timothy Bright, pub lished In 15S3 and dedicated to Queen Elizabeth. lie was rewarded with a Yorkshire living and given sole right for 15 years to publish and teach any new methods of char acter writing. Aruant History Even the man who c'. lims to have orgotteu ever.' thing he learned In ctiool Is likely to remember that the Pilgrim j leaded at Plymouth Hock, and (Hal ;!:p flghti- * of the American Povo’ < n beg.ui with a muster of JL.nntc iutn on Lexington {reen. Signers of Declaration Half of the 5<5 signers of the Dec laration of Independence were col lege bred; 16 had classical educa Hon, two were instructed entirely ! by tutors and 16 had little learning. RAYBON’S CAFE Come to Raybon’s for home cooked meals and delicious home made pies. _1922 No. 24th St. cPfae 7933 MotSicta HOME RADIO V America's Finest Home Radio made by the makers of America's Finest Auto Radiol Has the Talking Dial, electric station tuning, auto matic network tuning, beau tiful cabinet and many other outstanding features. LONG EASY TERMS Select ti e model you want and tell us how you can pay. Tiiero is no red tape or delays. SEE IT . HEAR IT . TODAY Ij £/aJv|XR-%£%&& ¥m y-f >* A 5T&j rJR si v3<$ 1#^%^«i»l$Ewf 20th and Douglas Downtown Store upen Evenings and Sundays I 2406 L Street .South Omaha WOMEN TAKING OVER MANY AUSTRIAN JOBS Women are making such rapid Inroads Into Austrian trades and professions that some men fear lu a few years they will lose control of nil key positions, asserts a Vi etina United I’ress correspondent. A recent census of all trades and professions showed the npprnxl mate •geiiderial" division of two thirds men and one-third women. . At the rate women have beet nenetrarlng the higher-paid prnfes slons since the war it is feared tin percentage soon will he' reversed because ns the women advance t< hotter positions they engage fern Inlne assistants Instead of men. The women, as might be expect ed. dominate certain trades !!!;• ladies' tailoring, clerking and stenography, lutt the astoundin' dung is that lit per cent of the country’s pharmacists are women 3 per cent of the country's doc tors. to.2 per cent of the dentists and 3.1 (ter cent of the lawyers. One fourth of Austria’s prlvntr instructors, musicians writers and iournalists are women while evet in the field of enginering there nrt 3d accredited feminine engineers In addition, there arc 13 eon tractors. 175 mall carriers. 15’ rhatiffenrs and eight chimney sweeps. In the textile Industry 110 to Rh per cent of (lie workers nre worn •'n, while one.third of the tola) farmers nr. female. Structure Euilt in 1SI3 to Rfs'iirs Its Old Form Gr&an Bay,. Wls. — The "T" wing of Fort Howard hospital, built in 1810, is being restored as nearly as possible to a semblance of its original state for a storehouse of antiques connected with personali ties prominent in the 300-year his tory of the white man’s occupation of this region. Fort Howard once was the cen ter of military, social and civic 1 affairs for a wide area here. Protests Trainmen 4 < Using Rest Room Raleigh, N. C., Sept 22 (Ja?. A. Boykins for CNA)—Dr. T. L. Scott of this city has sent a protest to the Southern Railway headquarters >n Washington in connection with the invasion and use of the jim row women’s rest room on a train } between Atlanta, end Greenville, S. C., last July 24lh by a white •lilroad employee for tho purpose changing hb clothes. The man invaded the rest room while it was be.'ng us;-d by a woman Dasscnger, who screemed and told him to got out. The inc:dent was promptly reported to the conductor in tho train. Sec MOi Firs! Everyday is Fa'e Day at Andy’s 1933 Chev. Town Sedan $458 11)35 Ford V8 Coupe 385 *936 Ford Tour Sedan Radio, heater 450 1934 Olds S»dan, Radio new tiros 31)5 1934 Ford V8 Tudor or Sedan 265 1933 Chev. Sedan or Coupe 275 19?:; Ply. Sedan or Coach 275 1922 Chev. Coupe or Coach 175 1932 Ford V8 Tudor or Coupe 195 1931 Chev. Coupe or Coach 145 1930 Chev. Sedan 125 V'29 Chev. Sedan or Coach 95 1930 Ford Coupe 85 ) A €. MELSEN Auto Sale* Inc. 2C42 2041-2112.2200 Ilarncy Street Phone ATlantic 2425-2426 • OF UNSAFE TIRES • ! I I I j ! I I I j i l * PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR PURSE .Don’t pinch yourself by •paying cash. Keep your money for other thing* you need and use your credit to get new tires | now. You’ll be surprised how easy it is to buy on our credit plan. There’s (absolutely no red tape or 'delays. Quick service. CREDIT TO EVERYONE 20th and Douglas i Downtown Store 1 Open Evenings and Sundays I 2406 L Street ISouth Omaha