The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, July 30, 1938, Page Six, Image 6

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    •shine on harvest moon" j* ; DIDTLI AC A COkl/* ' From ASCAP Fi,es
Jack Norworth and Nora Bayes '-Ss. , D IK. I II V/l A JvItNJ By Joseph R. Fliesler and Paul Carruth
JACK NORWORTH it a Philadelphia boy. who made geod
at a tongwriter. He began at a blackface ertiit without
♦ven proper billing. ~
Many performers in those day* wrote their own songs *
and patter. Jack wrote his "Moon" song through a harvest ^
of clothes poles.
t He tang it with Nora Bayet in the Ziegfeld Folliet of
f 1907, and the tong caught on. It tet Norworth over th*
borderline from acting to tongwriting. _ ^
He wrote a London Revue with R. P. Weston. The open
ing night was marked by a Zeppelin raid. - -
' ' . —
"COME ALONG TAKE
MYMANDY" ME
“OVER ON THE OUT |
JERSEY SIOE" TO;
“HONEY BOY “ THE
"IVE A GARDEN BALL
IN SWEDEN”
"GOOD EVENING
CAROLINE”
“SMARTY
I i».»a h ramw^a...,j
Norworth went back to "trouping" with a vaudeville
skit, married hit pianist and made a series of short films in
.Hollywood before double-features.
Norworth had forgotten hi* early *ong hit, but a little
Texas orchestra fooled around with the tune and it began to
show new signs of life.
Ruth Etting picked it up from there, and when Norworth
returned from a cruise he discovered that after 20 years he
was again the author of a hit song.
Vaudeville has passed; songwriting isn't what it used I
be, but Norworth can depend on hi* membership in the Ame§
can Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.
f -TVVM-i- ?
j tr_ tPsSV HO^J, 1
\m«S.«».lNaJe.-NC>U) I
1 of voo <2o<“iesr- <
'—7 tHEPEAj
ya it h-*»v_
nO YOU KNOW W'Y--. fiasnline Isn’t Dangerous - It’s The Man Behind Hie Matdi? *»t»mm Ffetor
. J _ ——^
BABE’S BUFFET
2228 Lake Street
far Papular Brands
of BEER and LIQUORS
—Always a place to park—
DOUBLE COLA
IDEAL BOTTLING
COMPANY
WEbitw 3043
BURNING v^FEcT
tin tha aching, itching, mmsm and (
pain of tit ad fact oimt night I |
Bo raady lot yoor na*t day's work. Usa
T USON’S AkAFOOT
Satisfaction gaarantaad ot yoaf wonay I
rofondad. $t 00 postpaid lioaa
1037 Noatrand Av*. IteptA.,
Brooklyn, New York
Effective May 1st:
20 cant Discount
I on Laundry & Dry Cleaning
Cash and Carry
Edholm and Sherman i
Launderers & Dry Cleaners
WE 6055
... . . ..
, <* - ——————————
-TAX TERMITES EATING YOU
Those who still believe i nthe an
cient fallacy that the “rich can pay the 1
:ost of government” will be startled
’y a recent survey shoVng that if
jveryone had to turn over to the gov
ernment all incdme in excess of $5,000
a year, the sum collected would pay
only one-fifth of the total cost of gov
ernment federal, state and local.
In other words, the bulk of texes
are “hidden taxes”—and they are paid
principally by the person of small and
moderate means. A loaf of bread, for
example, is taxed 57 times. The tax col'
lector gets h‘s share when you pay your
rent, buy a suit df clothes, go to a mo
vie of do almost anything else.
_^
Farmers fear that they will lose
wat°r resources that are vital to agri
culture. And cities and towns, say the
reports, fear that it s possible that the
government projects would result in
higher ehetric rates charged by pri
vate companies now in addition to
the fact that the socialization of the
I industry would automatically remove
I great sources of tax revenue and add
new tax burdens.
It is curious commentary on the
state of the political mind that the elect
ed administrators of government are
attempting to force such ventures as
this on a tax burdened people—in the
face of the fact thatt in election after
election the people have voted down
government ownership of power pro
perties. The American people today
aren’t worrying about budget. They |
are worrying about employment. They
are worryng about political destruct-1
ion of productive industry. They are
w'orr\ving about their savings. They
are worrying about increased taxes.
And they are worrying about the
mounting public debt.
Untold millions have been sT'ent
in Nebraska and elsewhere'for project
which simply duplicate a service the
country already enjoys—and which
frighten and depress heavily-taxed
private industry. Now the politicians
want to spend still more for purposes.
The only encouraging factor in the
situation is that signs are now appear
ing that the public is beginning to
wake up and protest.
| Calvin's Newspaper Service
TESTED RECIPE
‘——By Frances lee Barton—
ON a summer Saturday, when the'
.youngsters go off on tbelr own,
bearing baseball' naraDhernalia or
home-made fish
ing rode, it ia up
to mother te
provide the eat*
abiea. The young
ones take the v
sandwiches for *
granted — but
they always get
a thrill over the _
little frills you "
add to the lunch. These coconut
date bars will get a rousing hand.
In fact, your own grown-up guests
will find them just as acceptable.
Coconut Date Bars
1% cups sifted cake flour; 1«4
teaspoons double-acting baking pow
der; ft teaspoon salt; 1 cup sugar;
2 eggs, weU beaten; I tablespoon
melted butter; 1 cup finely cut
Hates; 1 cup shredded coconut; 1
tablespoon hot water,
i Sift flour once, measure, add bak
ing powder and salt, and sift again.
Add sugar gradually to eggs, beat
ing thoroughly. Add butter; then
dates and coconut, mixing thor
oughly. Add flour, alternately with
water, beating welL Turn mixture
into two greased pans, OxpxS laches,
• spreading batter thin. Bake in alow
even (333* F.) 30 to S3 minutes.
Cool. Cut la bars. Mill Inches.
Remove from pans. Makes 4 4oxen
hare.
USED CAR SALE
1932 Pontiac sedan $146.
930 Ford Coach $110
929 Chrysler 75 sed. $66
930 Ford coupe $86
929 Nash, new tires $50
937 Chevrolet coach $525
Many other* to choose from
Small Down Payment—Balance
Easy
OMAHA MOTOR Co.
?215 Harney —WE-4444
I ' '
!
i
100 guaranteed coemetic*, flavoring, medicinea
and curioa. Ciiacomcrt buy on aignt and buy
tha neat tima you call. Maka up to $40.00
a track fill time, ff.00 n day apar* time.
Get Lucky Heart a FREE aamplaa. fl-page
Uluatratad baautr book. $9.00 worth of
guaranteed product# *nf 1 bin aampla ntt
JR£8 ai extra coat. Writ* Lucky Heart Co.a
DEPT. 1-7-33-Mem phia Tenn.
Patronize
Our
Advertisers
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