The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, June 23, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    VETERANS OF ITALIAN CAMPAIGN ARRIVE HOME FROM GERMAN PRISON CAMPS
Three Mustang fighter pilots of the 332nd Fighter Group and a battle-hardened Doughy of tne 92nd Infantry division are pictured above at Camp Shanks, New York, shortly after their arrival on May 29 with 2,675 American soldiers liberated from German priso
camps by the surging Allied armies. Veterans of the Italian Campaign, they had distinguished themselves in combat against the Nazis until they were captured in spirited engagements. Pictured, from left: First Lieutenant Charles T. Williams, Los Angeles, Calif
breaks the good news to the folks back home; he flew nine missions before engine trouble forced him down in central Yugoslavia. Second Lieutenant Richard D. Macon, Birmingham, Ala., who was shot down on his fifth mission while strafing German radar equipment 1
France, surveys the scenic surroundings at Camp Shanks. Private Rothacker C. Smith, Detroit, Mich., (left) enjoys his first meal back in the States. He was captured near Pisa after being wounded. First Lieutenant Roger B. Gaiter, Seaside Heights, N. J. (right)
point* out the location of the area in Hungary where he was shot down to Second Lieutenant John H. Grimes of the Camp Shanks Public Relations Office. (U. S. Army Signal Corps photos from Bureau of Public Relations.)
^ Most people regard the soot
which accumulates in their fur
naces as just a dirty nuisance. It
is that, of course, but more seri-j
ously, it is also a waster of fuel,>
and as such it needs to be periodic*
ally removed. 1
I- In the first place, soot is un'
burned fuel. It is the carbon fron*
*the coal which should have gone!
into heat. Secondly, it is one ofl
'the best known insulators, and if
it were not so dirty it would make
jthe finest kind of insulation mate
rial. When this insulation is de-l
posited on the inside of a furnace
radiator, it stops the heat front
passing through to the distribut
ing system. To obtain the required
amount of heat, more fuel must be
fed to the fire, and this, in turn,
creates still more soot to rob you
«f still more heat. It becomes one
iOf those vicious circles which eats
Snto the coal pile most scandal-!
ously. (
One large furnace manufacturer
with several hundred factory
branches maintains a special de-l
partment for the mechanical clean^
ing of furnaces through means of
a suction apparatus, which pulls
out the soot and carts it away
without muss or fuss. This serv-i
Xce is inexpensive, and should be
made an annual operation for the!
sake of fuel economy. After the
war you will be able to buy a coal
burning furnace that burns up all
the soot and never needs to be de
sooted, but until then you had bet-1
ter keep your present furnace in
good shape by having it regularly
de-sooted, the same as you regu*
larly de-frost your refrigerator.
Fitting Meal
Does the salad fit the meal:
Green, leafy salads with hearty
meals; hearty salads as main
dishes; tart salads with fish; fruit
salads for dessert?
No. 3
| VACATION AT
AK-SAR-BEN
RACES
OMAHA
4
THRU JULY 28
ENTIRE PROCEEDS USED FOR
PATRIOTIC AND CIVIC PURPOSES
POST TIME 015
RAIN OR SHINE £g Daily
Except Sunday and Monday
ADMISSION
Including Grandstand.
State and Federal
Taxes.
NO CHILDREN PLEASE!
LADIES’ DAYS rmoAv?
Ladies Admitted Upon Payment
of 35c Tax and Service Charge.
Armed Force* in Uniform Admitted Free
Dean S. Yarbrough, 316 E.
Church St., Xenia, O., Club Direc
tor, Mediterranean.
Leolyn S. Yearwood, 982 Pros
pect Ave., New York, N. Y., Sec
retary, S. W. Pacific.
Mr. Christopher was employed
by the U. S. Government Print
ing Office, Washington, D. C., and
is a graduate of St. Thomas, Vir
gin Islands, U. S. A., High
School; Hampton Institute Acad
emy, Va., and School of Agri
culture, Hampton University, Va.
Mrs. Christopher will remain in
Washington.
Miss Dawson was employed' by
the State Department of Educa
tion, Los Angeles, is a graduate
of Edison Junior High School,
Berkeley, Calif., and of University
High School, Oakland, Calif., and
attended Metropolitan Business
School, Los Angeles.
Miss Irby was employed by W.
Roderick Brown, Pittsburgh, and
was rewrite editor of the Pitts
burgh Courier. She attended Duff’s
Iron City College.
Mr. Lillard was with the United
Service Organizations, Inc., (USO);
is a graduate of the University
of Nebraska and attended the
University of Minnesota.
Miss Lingham was employed by
the U. S. Office of Finance, Wash
ington, D. C., is a graduate of
Brown University (Ph. B. 1929),
and attended Harvard University
and the University of Pennsyl
vania.
Miss Mason was employed by
the War Department, Army En
gineers, Chicago; is a graduate of
DePaul University, and attended
New York University, iNorthwest
em University and the University
of Chicago.
Miss Miller was employed at the
Philadelphia Navy Yard, is a grad
uate of Philadelphia High School
for Girls, and attended Temple
University.
Miss Puryear taught at Jordan
Sellars High School, Burlington,
N. C., and, previously, at Lee Coun
ty Training School, Sanford, N. C.
She is a graduate of Atkins High
School, Winston-Salem, and Win
ston-Salem Teachers College (B.
S. 1939), and attended Bennett Col-'
lege.
Miss Reed was employed by the
War Department, Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Spelman College, At
lanta, Ga., and attended Atlanta
University and the University of
| Pittsburgh.
Mr. Watkins was employed by
the War Department, Dayton, 0.,
and attended Ohio State Univer
sity.
Mr. Winfield was a club director
with the Brooklyn Urban League,
is a graduate of Virginia Theo
logical Seminary' and College,
Lynchburg, Va., and attended Co
lumbia University and New York
University. His mother, Mrs. Lucy
Winfield, lives at 721 Clay St.,
Richmond, Va.
Milk Supply
Sixteen per cent of the U. S. milk
supply is used for war and 84 per
cent for civilians.
Clean Generators
There are a number of ways to
Clean or renew the generators Of
gas pressure stoves, heaters and
urn burners so that they function
like new ones insofar as service or
operation is concerned. The most
successful method of removing the
carbon is to disassemble the gen
erators and pass the parts through
a solution of saltpeter which has
been made liquid by heating to a
temperature of about 2,000 degrees.
The generator parts, when treated in
this manner, come out entirely free
of carbon, and when reassembled
the generator works like new. This
method, of course, can only be used
when the generator renewal vol
ume is great enough to justify the
expense.
on the work for one year. A Com
mittee consisting of a chairman
for each denomination was ap
pointed to work with the Execu
tive Secretary in this Drive.
Among the highlights of the
meeting was the report of Reverend:
Jernagin on the activities of the
Washington Bureau. Many lead
ers were impressed and commented
on this report. They saw clearer
than ever before the vital need
for the Bureau. Among those who
commented was Bishop R. E. Jones
who said that he had worked with
Rev. Jernagin for 50 years, had
studied his character and watched
him grow. “He has developed as
one of the most unique characters
in this race of ours.”
As a reward for the outstanding
achievement of Rev. W. H. Jar
nagin as Director of the Washing
ton Bureau, he was chosen by the
Fraternal Council to represent the
entire Negro Church to carry good
will and cheer to our men and
women of the U. S. Armed forces
at the war fronts. He will go as
an official visitor for the U. S.
government.
The Council voted to become in
corporated under the laws of the
District of Columbia and the new
name selected for incorporation is
National Fraternal Council of Ne
gro Churches in America.
The Officers chosen to carry on
the work of the Council are: Bish
op A. P. Shaw, President; Rev. E.
W. Perry, Vice-President-at-large;
Bishop R. R. Wright, Jr., Execu
tive Secretary; Rev. J. H. Moore,
Recording Secretary; Rev. J. L.
Horace, Chairman Executive Board;
Rev. W. H. Jernagin, Director
Washington Bureau; Dr. V. M.
Townsend, Treas.
THREE OUTSTAND
ING NEGROES OF 1945
In memory of three outstanding
Negroes and their contributions
to the fields of American literature,
art and poetry, many USO clubs
are introducing cultural programs
throughout June which will last
from one day to a week. Club
directors, both white and Negro,
will develop their own programs.
Some are considering having dram
atic readings from the works of
prominent Negroes, others musi
cal events, and still others art ex
hibits.
The three men to be honored are
Charles Waddell Chesnutt, Henry
Ossawa Tanner, and Paul Law
rence Dunbar. Mr. Chesnutt was
the first Negro novelist in the
United States. He was born 1858
and died 1932. A native of Cleve
land, Ohio, he moved to North
Carolina where he taught school
and later was admitted to the bar.
He is best known for a series of
short stories entitled “The Con
jure Woman” which originally ap
peared in The Atlantic Monthly.
Mr. Tanner, living during the
same period as Charles Chesnutt,
studied painting in Philadelphia
and Paris and gained renown for
his paintings of biblical sbjects.
Mr. Dunbar who lived from 1872
to 1906 in Dayton, Ohio, produced
many outstanding short stories and
novels in dialect verse.
WINS THE BERNAYS
A\VARD OF §1,000
The individual who did most in
radio to further democracy in
America during the last year is
Nathan Straus, President of Radio
Station WMCA of New York City,
iai'e Juice
Avoid loss of juice in preparing
meat, poultry, and fish by never
soaking in water. Meat may need
to be wiped off with a clean moist
cloth, and poultry or fish may need
to be rinsed after cleaning.
COOL... CLEAN... CHEAP
Is Coming Your Way
<
With electric cooking, you’ll serve piping hot meals
on warm summer days without heating up your whole
kitchen. With electric cookery, the heat stays in the
range. It cooks the food—not the cook.
And you’ll have cleanliness to glory in! Pots and
pans stay bright—clean-up time is cut in half. Elec
tric cooking is clean cooking! And electric cooking
is economical, too.
Plan for your electric range now. Make it the first
step toward your all-electric homel _ _a
Nebraska Power Co.
Mulch Depth
The mulch should be only of me
dium depth after it has settled down,
about two inches. A very deep or
thick mulch may defeat the purpose
by absorbing the water from any
light rain before it reaches the soil,
thus making the water shortage
more serious. In rainy areas, too,
mulching may be harmful because
it helps to keep the soil too wet.
This mulching material, when it
has served its purpose, may be used
as the start of a compost pile.
Comfort Wounded
One of the duties of the air trans
port command chaplains is meeting
the many hospital planes that fly
from the battlefronts to hospitals
and rest camps back in the United
States. In all kinds of weather and
at all hours of the day and night,
the ATC chaplain is on hand with
the flight surgeon and nurse to serve
the spiritual needs of the wounded
men and wish them Godspeed to
the next stop on their journey
homeward.
Small Turkeys
Some of the small-type turkeys,
recently developed by the poultry
scientists of the U. S. department
of agriculture, are proving to be ex
cellent layers. Records of the bureau
of animal industry show that, during
1944, one turkey hen bred at the
Beltsville (Md.) research center laid
211 eggs and another 206 eggs. Av
erage turkeys normally lay from
40 to 60 eggs during the spring
months and few, if any, during the
remainder of the year.
ADVERTISEMENT
JIM SPRINGER BETTER KNOWN AS THE VAMP
Mr. Jim Springer, better known as the vamp at one
time was the fashion plate of South 13th St. and a
great mixer among his people is now at the corner
of 11th and Jackson with E. H. Camel. Headquar
ters for those Red. Mellow Meat Watermelons, also
Remember the location, lltn and Jackson. Mr. Jim
Springer is in charge from 10 P. M. to 5 A . M., so
if you’re out for a drive and you want some high
Home Grown Strawberries and many other high
class vegetables or fruit just stop by 11th and Jack
son and see Mr. Jim Springer.
Ja-9318. We are at your service 24 hours per day.
class vegetables. Open all night. Stoo by, we never
close. For information about stock on hand call
24th and Lake Sts.
PRESCRIPTIONS
»'»••« I •• X
WE. 0909
DUFFY pharmacy
iiliiiiimmiiiiiiiiimiiur iiiiiiiiiin
“TT PAYS TO LOOK WELL"
MAYO’S BARBER SHOP
Ladies and Children’s Work
A Specialty
2422 LAKE ST.
I Attention!
! Feel Old? Gef Real Pep!
I Lacb Ambition ta Ga Placao 4 Da Tklnga? I
, JnM Uia Original 4 Ganulna Pog-O-Taba
I Wr Ai^ GET results at onceiI
BE A REAL MANI \
ENJOY LIFE AGAIN!
HELP NATURE! NEW PEP! 1
NEW FEELING! NEWl
MANLY VIGOR! •clwitlUc ,
■ Prescription prescribed by doctors for men ■
' I over 30 years of ape. Absolutely harmless. I
J Thousands of happy and satisfted customers !
I over past 25 years hive told as and othars I
I how pratsful they are about uilrp Pep*0* I
J Tabs. Comos la plain wrapper—200 Tablets. J
I 30 days' supply, $3.00—or 400 Tablet*. 60 |
\ days, supply, $5.00. Save $1.00. Money with |
CREATES NATURE ..
for both parties. Relieves asthma,
colds, pains, bronchitis, sinus and
nervous disorders. Send Si.00 for 8
oz-; 50c-3 oz-; 25c-l oz.; Pav postage
on delivery. FISHER’S FAMOUS
FORMULA 77, 914 E. Long St-.
Columbus, 3, Ohio, Agents Wanted
Classified Ads Get Resuits!
For rent, a nice furnished front
room in a modern home for man
only, Call WE-0BR6.
FOR Kent, Nice Room in modern
home — for rent to man only, WE_
(Mtoil
FOR SALE—A SEVEN ROOM
modern house, 2106 Maple at a
bargain price. Only §3500.00.
Down Payment $1000.00 cash.
Balance like rent. Double
garage in good condition. Call
GL-2607 Evenings.
WOULD LIKE TO HAVE A
lady too help in resturant.
2513 N Street. Phone MA.
5909.
-_
Men Wanted
For Food Processing and
Meat Packing
We need a few good. "killed and un- I
"killed men interexted in eNMential f
work to help the war effort Ax'
well a" a guod job with a regular
peace time company that will go
rilfht on operating: when the war 1"
all over. See ux at our employment
office.
Wilson & Company, Inc.
27th & *Y» Street
Omaha
OK SEE UNITED STATES
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
210 SOUTH 18TH STREET,
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
OR 30 PEARL STREET,
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOW A
Buy A New Home_
—Small Down Payment—
See Mr. Dee
PHONE JA-7718 or JA-1620
FI NEKAL IlIltlXTOItS
THOMAS Fl.VEIlAI, HOME
2022 Lake St. WEkatrr 2022
LAUNDRIES A CLEANERS
EDHOLM A SHERMAN
2401 North 24th St WE. tto.'.a
EMERSON I. A I NORN
2:124 North 24th St. WE. 1028
NEIGHBORHOOD FURNITURE
& CLOTHING SHOP
BIG SALE—Overcoats, all sizes
Shoes, No Stamps; Ladies Dresses
Rugs, Beds. Gas Stoves and Oi
Stoves.
“We Buy and Sell” —
TEL. AT. 1154 1715 N. 26th ST.
^TODAY! ~~
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GUIDE
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Crosstown Dres&s™Paking
{ —TAILORING & ALTERATIONS—
ATTENTION, LADIES!
You can get hand tailored suits, dresses,
and slacks designed to suit your personality
by an experienced Lady Tailoress. We
Specialize in stout figures. Men and Ladies
general repair work done. We also special
ize in Tailored shirts.
Mable L. Williams, Proprietress...
_-—2022 NORTH 24th STREET
-THREE O’CLOCK ... •
AND I HAVENT SLEPT A WINK"
WAKEFUL NIGHTS — how the time drags!
Minutes seem like hours, we worry over things
done and left undone. After such a night, we get
up in the morning more tired than when we went
to bed. Nervous Tension causes many a wakeful
night and wakeful nights are likely to cause Ner
vous Tension. Next time you feel Nervous and
Keyed Up or begin to toss, tumble and worry after
you get to bed —try
.»■ DR. MILES NERVINE
• (Liquid or Effervescent Tablets)
- MILES NERVINE helps to ease Nervous Tension — to permit re
ri68*™8 Sm?p'j When y°u 016 Keyed Up, Cranky, Fidgety. WakefuLtake
Dr. Miles Nervine. Try it for Nervous Headache and Nervous indigestion.
Pbe£2L1M.1c1“i?Sv^* atZour. dru8 store- Effervescent Tablets. Large
5ick??fha<^kagC 35<: Li3uid- LorKe Bottle $1.00, Small BottlS
at, both equally effective as a sedative, both guaranteed to satisfy or
,your money back. Read directions and use only as directed *