The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, June 09, 1945, Page 2, Image 2

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    (Continued from Page One)
ulation: the Caribbean islands
(Jamaica, Haiti, etc.), Brazil with
the whole of South America, and
Africa. In these various regions,
Negroes speak different lan
guages, but in spite of that—the
American Negroes feel instinct
ively in sympathy with their own
blood, the black men of the whole
world.
One ('amp — One Fight
M~For a long time, Africa will
still be under the control of Euro
peans. But in all countries, Negro
es must stand in one camp, fight
ing for freedom and social justice.
“We have not the slightest idea
of Africa, as a united continent of j
Negroes, ever standing against the
other races. No, all of our hope
lies in the development of freedom
in the world. But, meanwhile, Ne
groes should unite and systemat
ically develop their own culture.
The world today is full of barbar-1
ism, and I feel that this united |
Negro culture could bring into the
world a fresh, spiritual, humani-1
tarian principle, a principle of
human friendship and service to
the community.”
Paul Robeson speaks the univer
sal language of the Negro, divided
by the different languages of dif
ferent nations, because he speaks
the universal language of freedom.
So I belive that Private Mel
bcfarne Smith of Brooklyn, Pan
ama, Casablanca (where he was
naturalized) and every other place
where men measure freedom
against the sword, speaks the un
iversal language of freedom.
Most of us don’t know the Latin
American Negroes like Private
Smith who have come to the
United States and settled among
us. But we ought to encourage
more of them to come to this
country since they are not only
good citizens but militant citizens
reflecting the “united Negro cul
ture” which helps “the develop
ment of freedom in the world.”
Thousands of Spanish-speaking
Latin American Negroes from
Puerto Rico live in Lower Harlem.
They occupy the same houses and
attend the same schools with white
Puerto Ricans, and you won’t find
one Uncle Tom among a thousand
of them.
Every two years, the Negro
Puerto Ricans of Lower Harlem go
to the pools with the white Puerto
Ricans and send to Congress a
man who fights in Washington for
the rights of Negroes throughout
the Western hemisphere.
That man is Vito Marcantonio,
world citizen and representative
from the 20th New York district.
Right now, Congressman Mar
cantonio, kept in office by colored
Puerto Ricans, has bills pending
in Washington to abolish the poll
tax which disfranchises the col
ored Americans of the South, to
establish a permanent Fair Em
ployment Practices Committee
which would protect all Negroes in
their job rights, and to grant
Puerto Rico its independence.
Marcantonio is also president of
the Inetrnational Labor Defense
which has saved one Negro after
the other from the gallows and the
lynch pyre. Negroes throughout
Latin America know him, and are
proud of him because he appointed
a Puerto Rican Negro as one of
his secretaries.
My space is getting short so
I’ll wind up with a promise to tell
sometime soon what another Latin
America Negroid group—the Cu
ban tobacco workers of the Florida
coast—are doing to establish de
mocracy down in deep Dixie.
PROBLEMS OF HUMANITY
By Abbe Wallace
L. M. P.—I am married to a
man whom I respect very much.
We get along nicely. He has two
children and I have one. So far we
have no grievances except one. Be
fore marriage I was teaching
school. Since marriage I have ex
pressed my desire to go back to
the profession but my husband
objects. I love the professional
world very much and am also fond
of home life. Tell me what I
should do?
Answer: A mother with the re
sponsibility of three young chil-1
dren should not seek outside em
ployment unless it became abso
lutely necessary. You, as a teacher,
should realize, more than anyone
else, the importance of a mother’s
care and training in the early
years of a child’s life. Your hus
band married you because he loved
you, but he expected you to make
a home for the children as well.
As long as he provides as abund
antly as he does at the present,
you should not think of outside em
ployment. Being a housewife
doesn’t necessarily mean that you
must become martyr and never
have an outside diversion. Make
friends with the teachers there in
the school and take an active in
terest in the Parent Teacher work
and in this way you can keep in
touch with the professional world.
E. M. G.—I met a young man]
from near my home and when we
met he told his age and gave me
his address and I gave him mine.
We write regularly. He is in the
Army. On his own accord he sent
me his photo. His letters are
friendly but he always strats them
with “dearest” and ends “with all
my love.” Now what are his feel
ings for me?
Answer: Friendly, but not the
least bit serious. It is usually the
custom for young men to begin
their letters and end them in the
manner in which he is doing and
you cannot afford to take this as
a mark of love. He’s just another
G. I. who enjoys your letters im
mensely. So much so that he sent<
you his photo and his present plans
are to see more of you in the fu
ture.
D. M. W.—I am 25 years old
and am in love with a married man
who has a family. He loves me and
I love him. I want to marry him.
Should he leave his family or
what must I do?
Answer: If you insist on this
man giving up his family to mar
ry you, your conscience would
bother you for the rest of your
life. You might succeed in fasci
nating him temporarily but it
would wear off in the matter of a
few months as his family is a part
of him and he cannot throw them
aside for any woman. Don’t try to
satisfy your desires at the expense
of innocent children. Give him up
and seek the firendship of some
nice single fellow.
B. B. J.—I have been having
trouble with my husband. I left
and went to California and he in
sisted that I come back. He said
he would do better. Now that I
am back I can’t get him away from
her and she doesn’t allow him to
go out with me any place. He
won’t give me any money and
fusses if I spend the room rent
money on myself. He won’t agree
for me to work and I just don’t
know what to do. He doesn’t tell
me any of his business or what
he makes a week and if I try to
>talk to him about our affairs he
flies all to pieces. Now what
should I do?
Answer: You are going to have
to look at your problem from a
common sense angle. Either he sup
ports you or allows you to go out
and work for yourself. The lat
ter should be preferable as it will
give you the independence neces
sary for you to stand on your own
and to find some source of happi
ness. Evidently he cares for you
or he wouldn’t have insisted on
your returning home. He has be
come so deeply involved with this
woman that he is finding it hard to
free himself from her. Stand on
your own right there at home for
awhile and it will make him take
a different outlook on conditions.
Damascus, Syria, Soundphoto.—
A panoramic view of the city of
Damascus, the oldest still inhab
ited city in the world, in French
mandated Syria, which was shelled
last week. After a virtual ulti
matum from Prime Minister
Churchill to General Charles De
Gaulle a cease fire order for French
forces sounded in the Levant.
New York, Soundphoto.—Allied
strategy in China, according to
military analysts, is designated at
cutting off overland supply route
leading from rich East Indies to
Jap war factories in Japan proper.
Following recent announcement by
Lieut. General Brehon Somerville
that our forces will eventually land
on China coast, Chinese armies
began to step up their attacks
against enemy in anticipation of
such action. When U. S. forces
do effect such landings, analysts
predict that they will drive to meet
Chinese armies now battling east
ward. Large arrows show how
much such a junction would throt
tle complete flow of raw material
and supplies moving overland to
Japan.
Germany.—German prisoners of
war and civilians serving time for
infractions of Allied military gov
ernment regulations are cleaning
up a street in Kitzingen, Germany,
while guarded by infantrymen of
the 394th Infantry Regiment of the
99th Infantry Division.
Edward N. Scheiberling, national
commander of the American Le
gion (right) advises Secretary of
State Stettinius (left) of the Le
gion’s determination to see that a
strong and lasting peace follows
World War II. The Legion com
mander says: “Now that the can
nons roar no longer in Europe there
will emerge from present obscur
ity many organizations and indi
viduals who seek a soft peace, who
would have America retire again
into the false shell of isolationism.
It is our duty, for the sake of
future generations, to warn
against this false and dangerous
doctrine. The forces of the axis
powers must be kept in restraint.
This is not a doctrine of hate, but
the same common sense that pre
vents the criminally insane from
Prefabricated houses of the type
shown above will be shipped over
seas through lend-lease by the U.
S. for 30 thousand British families,
victims of the Nazi rocket-bomb
blitz. Fixtures, such as gas ranges
and kitchen sinks, shown at right,
supplied by Britain, are bare of
luxurious touches familiar to
American housewives.
Okinawa, U. S. Marine Corps
Film via News of the Day News
reel, Soundphoto.—U. S. Marine
corpsmen carry mud splattered
Okinawa youngsters found in caves
which the Leathernecks cleaned
out in Okinawa. This little girl
looks plaintively at the camera
man.
CONNOR INSTITUTIONAL
A. M. E. CHURCH
2624 Caldwell Street
Rev. A. Davis, Pastor
Sunday School, 10 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11 a. m.
Evening Worship, 7:30 p. m.
Baptism of Infants. Mothers,
bring your children for baptism.
Text: Matt. 3:11. *
Theme: He shall baptize you with
the Holy Ghost, and with fire.
Change Rules and Regulations Governing Overseas
Publication Mailing; Subscribers Please Read!
HKGI I.ATIIINS PERTAINING TO
NEWNPAPEIO. MAGAIINES. ETC
BEING SENT MV MNII. OVERSEAS
qPublications for Overseas Army
Forces Must Bear An Organizational
Address and APO Number (Postal
Bulletin No 18823, May 15. 1945).
—
Attention is renewed to the fact
that thousands of copies of public,
atlons are being received daily at
ports of embarkation Army Post Of
fices vyhich do not bear complete
addresses in tha tboth a unit or or
ganization address and an A P.O.
number are not given.
Effective Immediately, postmas
ter* should decline to accept pub.
lications addressed to Army pers
onnel in care of postmasters at ports
of embarkation unless both a unit
address and an A P O number are
included in the address
CLIMAX
TAILOR &
HAT
CLEANING
SHOP
•
1837 North
24th St.
J. H. A N KIIBWS. Prop. —
—Phone JA. 4117—
THIS IS IMPORTANT Postmas
ters are requested to give this mat
ter immediate and vigorous atten_
tion, and promptly to bring it to
the attention of all publishers of
publications admitted to the second
class of mail matter at their post
offices Publishers should be re
quested to search their mailing lists
and discontinue mailing copies to
Army personnel at A P O 'g whose
addresses do not include both the
organizational designation and A.
P O number It may be suggest
ed that publishers should secure
the complete military addresses, in_
eluding unit or organizational des
ignation and APO number, from
the person who tiled the subscrip
tion, or from the next of kin. or
such other relative of the addressee
as may be available.
It is suggested that postmasters
not attempt to determine the suffic
iency of the organizaional designs
tion, but merely require that addi
tional identifying particulars be in
cluded in the address following the
name and Army serial number of
the addressee and preceding the A.
P O number and indication 'care
Postmaster, .
These instructions supersede in
structions in notice appearing in the
Postal Bulletin of March 14, 1944,
headed 'Publication for t1 verseas
Army Forces Must Bear an A P.O.
Number.'
PI.EASE COME IN AND SEE
IF VOIR BOY OR GIRLS’
APO ADDRESS IS CORRECT
The Omaha Guide Pub Co.
All Publishers of Second Class Mat
• ON APRIL 23rd WE WILL BE
LOCATED AT 25th & CUMING STS.
with our same good line of Bulk Garden Seed,
Tomato, Cabbage and Pepper Plants. Plants for
Porch boxes and Flower beds. Grass Seeds and(
Fertilizer.
-THE OLD RELIABLE- i
Home Landscape Service
L_—TELEPHqNEJAckson5115—
17 Satisfied Customers
You Rre Next
i ___-___ - i
•l7 Satisfied customers in Bedford Park Addition.
(Let us build that new home for you. We use
only skilled workmen and the very best of ma
’terial at pre war prices, with three government
(inspections.
! Realty Improvement
; COMPANY
, 342 ELECTRIC BLDG
Phone JA-7718 or JA 1620
, Omaha, Nebraska
ter, Omaha, Nebraska.
Gentlemen: In connection with the
above notice, it will be necessary
for you to examine the A.P.O. por.
tion of your mailing list and remove
those names which do not bear a
complete unit ororganizational des
ignation and an A.P.O. number,
until such time as a complete ad
dress is obtained
Very truly yours,
JOHN HOPKINS,
Postmaster.
NEW REGULATIONS GO INTO
AFFECT JULY X, 1»45;
GET YOUR OVERSEAS SUB
SCRIPTION OR RENEWAL IN
NOW..
All Publishers of Second Class Mat.
ter, Omaha. Nebraska.
Gentlemen: In connection with
the above instructions, requests for
such subscriptions received after
uly 1st, 1945 must be presented for
examination at the Office of the Su
perintendent of Mails Room 229,
Main Post Office Building, 16th and
Dodge Streets.
Particular attention is also invit
ed to Paragraph 6 of these instruc
tions, with regard to the endorse,
ment to be placed on such copies.
Very truly yours,
JOHN H. HOPKINS,
Postmaster.
UNITED STATES POST OFFICE 1
Omaha 2 Nebraska.
May 8, 1945.
Newspaper and Periodical Publica
tions for Personnel of the Navy,
Marine Corps and Coast Guard Ov
erseas .
Order No. 27851; Dated May 1, 1945
D B. No. 18820.
At the request of the Navy De
partment. effe4ctive July 1, 1945, in
order to conserve shipping space
and to prevent nonessential mailings |
the following arrangements between
that Department and the Post Of_
fice Department shall govern the
acceptance in the mails of newspa
pers and other periodical publica
tions addressed to personnel of the
Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast
Guard overseas.
1. Individual copies of newspa
pers and magazines offered for mail
ing by publishers, addressed via the
fleet post offices at New York, N.
Y , or San Francisco. Calif ., to Navy
Marine Corps, and Coast Guard per.
sonnel on duty overseas, shall be ac
-cepted only when they are being
sent in fulfillment of written re
quests INITIATED BY THE AD
DRESSES for subscriptions or re.
newals of subscriptions.
2. Postmasters at the oflices of
mailing shall require publishers to
present for their examination the
requests from the addressees for
subscriptions or renewals of sub
scriptions .
3. Relatives and friends may pay
for the subscriptions or renewals of
subscriptions provided the addres
sees have INITIATED requests there
for.
4 Complimentary copies sent by
publishers, Copies paid for ny adv
ertisers, and copies sent under any
kind of an arrangement whereby
the requests of the addressees are
solicited shall net be accepted
5 Copies mailed in fulfillment
of subscriptions which are unexpir
ed on the effective date of this or
der shall be accepted until the sub
scriptions expire.
6 Publishers mailing copies in
accordance with the foregoing shall
include with the address a certific.
ate reading: "Mailed in conformity
with P. O. D Order No 27851.”
Copies not bearing this certicate
should promptly be returned to the
publishers
The Navy epartment has also sug
gested that through press and radio
the public be encouraged to include
We Carry a Full Line of
Beauty & Barber
Supplies
—Write for Price List—
“We Ship Anywhere”
KLAREX BEAUTY
PRODUCTS CO.
1730 Fulton St.
Brooklyn 13, New York
— — ' - .a.
clippings of particular interest in
letter mail rather than send com
plete issues of newspapers and oth
er publications.
Postmasters should. therefore,
give wide publicity to the foregoing
in order that all persons concerned
may beinformed of the necessity
tor conserving shipping space.
JOYIN' BRITTON.
Superintendent of Mails
Provide Land With
Nitrogen Regularly
Com Yield Will Be
Materially Increased
AXTHILE farmers can establish a
» V “soil nitrogen bank account,”
it is necessary that they manage
the land on the basis of small nitro
gen deposits made regularly for
withdrawals in the immediate fu
ture, rather than on large deposits
designed to build huge reserves for
use over long periods of time, ac
cording to F. C. Bauer, professor
of soil fertility of the University of
Illinois.
Professor Bauer declared that ex
periments indicated that nitrogen—
one of the most essential plant food
elements—cannot be amassed in
large reserves in the soil for use
during succeeding years of crop pro
duction.
Nitrogen supplies necessary to se
cure attainable yields may be re
stored to the soil previous to grow
ing crops which have large nitro
gen requirements, he added. Crop
rotations must be planned so as to
provide legumes for transferring at
mospheric nitrogen to the soil either
directly or through livestock feed
ing and the use of manure. Such
rotations do much to maintain nitro
gen supplies of the soil, if desirable
legumes are seeded on the same
field once every four or five years,
he pointed out.
Professor Bauer cited results at
the Aledo Soil experiment field in
Mercer county. Here, during the
| /careful henry.'if anything' 'N.
Y HAPPENS TO THIS INA60N YOU CANT )
l GET YOUR FERTILIZER EARLY_'
--- ,--At-'
last 34 years, untreated land has
averaged 58 bushels of corn in a
four-year rotation, consisting chiefly
of corn the first two years followed
by oats and wheat in the absence of
legume crops. The quality and
durability of the soil is evident in
the yield of 61 bushels obtained dur
ing the past four years. But when
sweet clover was seeded in the
wheat and plowed under as green
manure, the long-time average yield
of corn increased from 58 to 78
bushels and from 61 to 102 bushels
an acre during the past four years.
Bauer attributes the increases in
yield to the favorable influence
of sweet clover on the nitrogen sup
plying power of the soil.
Find Vitamin C Aids in
Healing Broken Bones
Broken bones will not heal in the
absence of vitamin C, and even a
slight deficiency slows the healing,
according to experiments just con
cluded by Dr. David M. Greenberg,
professor of biochemistry at the Uni
versity of California.
Dr. Greenberg and associates in
vestigated the healing rates of
broken bones in guinea pigs receiv
ing graded doses of vitamin C.
They found that the bones did not
heal at all when the animals re
ceived so little of the vitamin that
they developed scurvy. With a
somewhat larger dose of vitamin C
the animals had mild scurvy and
the bones healed very slowly. Mild
vitamin C deficiency, known as sub
clinical scurvy, also caused slower
bone healing than in the control ani
mals which had adequate amounts
of vitamin C in their food.
In addition, lack of this vitamin
caused the begttf to become ,more
brittle and to break easier, the
scientists found. Bones of animals
which had mild cases of scurvy had
about two-thirds the strength of
bones of animals with plenty of vita
min C.
—
Steaming Vegetables
Steaming is a good method for
cooking such vegetables as carrots,
beets, squash, parsnips, sweet pota
toes, okra, and others. Green vege
tables lose much color, however,
when steamed for any length of
time. Steaming requires a special
type of container which many homes
do not have. Cooking by steam in
a pressure saucepan or a pressure
cooker requires the shortest time
for cooking. However, the higher
temperature of steam under pres
sure makes it necessary to use care
and accurate timing to avoid over
cooking. The waterless cooker
steams and cooks with the addition
of little or no water, thus saving
food values.
Any pan of heavy metal, which
allows the heat t<> be evenly dis
tributed and which has a tightly
fitted lid may be used for so-called
waterless cookery, or cooking of
vegetables on top of the stove with
the addition of just enough water to
create steam.
Share Taxes
Of the 48 states levying excise and
sales taxes, 8 share collections
with their municipal governments on
the following basis: California, 50
per cent to cities, counties of origin,
but not available for strictly local
purposes; Massachusetts, reim
bursement of old age assistance'
costs only; New York, nearly 50 per
cent to counties for “wet” communi
ties by population; Oregon, 10 per
cent to “wet” counties of origin;
Rhode Island, 50 per cent to com
munities of origin; South Carolina,
12 cents per gallon spirits where
sold, 12 per cent of beer, wine ex
cise where derived; Tennessee, 4/17
of beer tax to incorporated com
munities; Washington (included in
monopoly receipts) also 50 per cent
of the added 10 per cent war liquor
tax, by population; Alabama in ad
dition shared 75 per cent of addition
al state 1 cent beer tax levied in
Jefferson county wth cities and
towns in that county.
Shotgun Gauges
Comparatively few sportsmen, I
many of whom have been using shot- I
guns for years, know how the sys
tem of naming shotgun gauges
came into existence.
Back in the muzzle-loading days
round balls of lead were used in
shotguns. One sportsman would like
a gun of a certain type—another
would like another type. After a
number of years standard gauges
were adopted by gun mai ' i turers
Those gauges were has-- >o the
number of spherical tesC oalls
which would fit into the muzzle of a
gun_and weigh one pound For in
stance. the 12 gauge shotgun got its
designation because 12 round pel
lets of lead which would fit in its
bore would, grouped together, weigh
a pound.
The same applies to the way in
which other gauges, such as the 16,
the 20, the 28 and others, got their
names.
Subscribe For
Omaha Guide
To-day
Call Ha-0800 By Week -Month
v- 6 Month or by The Year
I
USO Mobile Service Quiz Show in Mullet Key
MULLET KEY, a small island off Florida in the Gulf of Mexico, is
the bombing range for the huge B-29 training base at MacDill
Field, Tampa, Fla. With the exception of the radio, the only contact
soldiers stationed there have with the civilian world is the USO Mobile
Service which makes the 7-mile boat trip to the island every Tuesday.
It brings a sound movie projector with a current feature, candy,
magazines and anything else the men may have requested the week
before. Games with prizes, such as this quiz show, are conducted by the
unit’s dire, or, Harry W. Lang, former Jewish Welfare Board director
of the USO in Phoenixville, Pa. USO is financed by the National War
Fund.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Fellow
5 Soapstone
9 Beach
10 Smells
12 Surplice
(Eccl.)
13 Kind of cap
14 Steals
15 Malayan
dagger
16 Employ
17 African palm
18 Candlepower
(abbr.)
19 Lowest level
21 Twilled
fabric
22 Question
23 Native of
Denmark
24 Crinkled
fabric
27 Gasps
28 Thrashes
29 Conflict
30 Beast of
burden
31 Inorganic
35 Italian river
36 An auction
37 Guido’s
highest note
38 Attractive
40 Insects
41 Kind of duck
42 Cry, as a
sheep
43 Plural of
radius
44 A shield
45 Wildcat
46 Antlered
animal
nowN
1 Select
2 Place to raise
seedlings
3 Branches of
learning
4 Edible seed
5 Site of
Solution in Next Issue.
No. 3
African
battles
6 Revoke (law)
7 Learning
8 Emblem of
Turkish
empire
9 Rub hard
11 Vast level
tracts
15 Male fowl
17 Quantity of
medicine
20 Knocks
21 Flowed
23 Venture
24 Bell ’nngue
25 Gallinaceous
26 Type
measures
27 Piece of
window glass
29 Crafty
31 Mold to
cast type
32 Fail to fol
low suit
33 Constellation
34 Endures
36 Mug of beer
39 Whirlpool
40 Toward the
lee
42 Defective
Answer to Puzzle No. |j
Series D-43
New & Used Furniture
Complete Line—Paint Hardware
We Buy, Sell and Trade
IDEAL FURNITURE MART
2511-13 North 24th— 24th & Lake
—WEbster 2224—
"Everything For Thet Home"
BEE IN THE
BOSS' BONNET
Is Rochester asking Jack Benny
for the night oft or a raise? What
ever the request, the boss’ expres
sion isn’t encouraging. Hear them
Sunday over the same NBC Siatloa
same time.
Phillips
Medical Co.
1215 FARNAM STj
BARBER SVRPIES and
BEAUTY SUPPLIES
soar--innnnr=innnnr=innn
King Yuen Cafe
• CHOP SUEY
2OIO14 N. 24th St. JAckNon 8T.76
Open from 2 p m. until 3 a m.
AMERICAN A CHINESE DISHES
DRINKING
IT CAN BE DONE!
Thousands have
learned from me how
I broke the whiskey spell. If alco
hol is rotting your Home, Health
and Happiness, let me tell you the
way to end the curse of Drink. Get
the answer to your Droblem, write
NEWTON, Dept. CPl, P- O. Box
861. Hollywood California.
I
!_
I
[
i _
WHEN Functional Nervous
Disturbances such as Sleep
lessness, Crankiness, Excitability,
Restlessness or Nervous Headache
interfere with your work cr spoil
your good times, take
’ Dr. Miles Nervine
(Liquid or Effervescent Tablets)
Nervous Tension can make you
Wakeful, Jittery, Irritable. Ner
vous Tension can cause Nervous
Headache and Nervous Indiges
tion. In tiiqes like these, we are
more likely than usual to become
overwrought and nervous and to
wish for a good sedative. Dr.
Miles Nervine is a good sedative
—mild but effective.
If you do not use Dr. Miles
Nervine you can’t know what it
will do for you. It comes in
Liquid and Effervescent Tablet
form, both equally soothing to
tense and over-wrought nerves.
WHY DON’T YOU TRY IT ?
•Get it at your drug store,
Effervescent tablets 35* and 75*.
Liquid 25* and $1.00. Read direc
tions and use only as directed.